wpm. jgpi 1 ill I .J. " j 1 r ft Y WUVIJ I v I t -I V fTv ill iAVlVlXU VlVft ZsAe JVSctJ .,., vrr:-v; a v in .... ttv : ' iV;.nxKV 11111 , i v slv- : : r.r :.. i i I . lit-''.. x ' III ..-'.-. ...-t.. ,a ..ril , ,niri.M .hit- I W ft - - . 1 B p ; . II T -ill ; IK ... , . a o- ; '. , . ;Tripping the Light f antastic in the Mystic Twilight of Sweden's elcome to Spring By Henry Goddard Leach, Ph. D. t rmtTtnttm In 0s-At-.air4a t T7a vm,mw,J TT-tla,1t it O I- wv-.a-aiaiB-aB-aa VSI TVtMt : M j lEW-'of us, in this century of scientific Mi progress, are aware that there actually persist to this day, in tanas otherwise Christian, some of the ancient rites end occult ceremonies of a dim heathen past. SPagan customs do not easily perish, not when they are beautiful in themselves and dear to the people who have cherished them from time immemorial." K U ne sacrifice ana me aance Of iuaj-- tner five is One of the last of these ' fcSfyUals to fhe advance of civilization. Far - in the north of Europe, in the province of Dalecarlia, in Sweden, this . mysterious holi day ds still observed by the descendants of the vikings. And thither I made the long : pilgrimage for the purpose of studying the customs of our Germanic forefathers. In VDalecarlia, at the village of Leksand, I assisted in the annual fete of Midsummer eve-pin raising the masfolc, dancing the ring dance and building the fres of sacrifice to the" dawn, in the bright violet twilight of the region of the midnight sun. - I tf COMPANT with aeveral Swedish visitors, I approached Leksand village on the afternoon of Midsummer eve, tbo ld of June, A small steamer - boro us across tha tranquil lake of Slljan. "Th Eye of Dalecarlia"; and tha first slsbt of Lsksknd was tha white church. With Its quaint xvusslan tower, 011 a blurt overlooking tha lake. As wa drew near tho lauding It see mad as though not only all Leksand, . but all tha people of Dalecarlia, the province In Which-tha village la situated, bad aasembled to meet us. Tha great wharf and the bluff behind it were, I cannot ay, black with humanity, but purple and red and green and blue, a scene of barbaric, almost orien tal ; splendor, For tho Dalecarlians UU wear the highly colored apparel of long ago, and many of the visitors from Stockholm and other parts of Sweden, had donned peasant, tbat la "national." dreas for tha occasion. In this gathering I was apparent: tho only tort. nr. ' On tho drive from the Wharf to the Inn we passed -the village common with tho maypole- lying prone upon it, ready to be raised In the evening. Than we tirove - through a long lano bordered , with typical Swedish , birches, and hero X had opportunity to lauune in mora detail tha costumes of the promena cers. Kvery township has Its own distinctive dress, and hero were merrymakers from every village In tha tirovlnco of Dalecarlia. Tho native Leksand girl wore a white waist with full sleeves and surmounted by a laced bodies, with a ilose-Ottlng red cap, and an embroidered kerohlef over hr shoulders. The back of her skirt was of plain black woolen; but tho distinctive feature of her attire waa the red. white and black apron effect which fronted her skirt, the stripes running perpendicular to the ground. Tho aktrt front Is. indeed, tho badge, tho ' lucaT flair, of the Dalecarllaa woman. The jrirl from the village of Rattvlk. bordering on IksandT weaves tho stripe of her skirt front horl tontaliy and multicolored, giving her skirt the gor- -ous effect of a Roman scarf. Tho Rattvik lass also tk--ra. Instead of a can. a Jaunty black helmet r-rKsaa, unmmoa witn rea or srald and rod dangling tw THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND,: SUNDAY I -. v-' - V J l it . - :. . . li w. i X 4 - '4 i Pretty lasses from Mora thero wars, too. made famous ortr tba world by tho portraits painted by Ing by tho roadside, attracted my attention oven more The F rTM&ENCH literature hat a new light, a woman. She comes from the holy city of Jerusalem, of all places; and, of all creeds, or no creeds, that have overlaid that most despoiled of cities, she is said to be a pagan. It is the f any us French litterateur, Jules Lemaitre, who hat passed upon beautiful Myriam Harry that curious verdict; and he is at once her first adviser, her most stern critic and her most sin cere admirer. ' Until now thi name of Myriam Harry has re mained comparatively unknown. But the publica tion of her latest romance, "La Divine Chanson, in Pari is stirring-interest in her talents, which are strange, and her personality, which is far stranger. ' . . ,. . , . Few women living can dispute the stage 01 literary eminence which this stray -from Jerusalem has attained while she is yet only in her twenties. ER career itself reads with much of the flavor adventure that France loves to And. lending glamour to the romances It reads. "It la now aoma veara since. I received a. lttp from a woman," writes the famous Lemaitre, apropos of , the publication of "Th Divine Chanson." "She asked me to give her literary advice. She said: '1 wish to be great.'": T- ..... ; "I Invited her to call on me. She was young, tall, thin, with lively eyes and a drolb accent I gave her some good kdvlce and did not ses her again for a long time. Meanwhile. She published "The Passing of the Bedouins,' little Wives' and The Conquest of Jeru salem.' , When ahe visited me for the second time she brought her book on Tunis.' X learned the story of her life." Few women living have had so-curious a life story, and probably no other writer has passed through so many scenes. '....- s .1 Sti waa born In'Jerusalem. tha granddaughter of sn Israelite and an orthodox Slav and the daughter . of a German Protestant; and so she had ia bar veins 1 1-8 I -111 OrientmLdgl " li.i. .Mwnnt nf th rcm.rk.bla aku . .n- wn--; 0f th i-irhn-M VTKf -" - of her dreas. which sugtested a nower garaen,, tor, from head, to fdbt,, bar cap,, wis bag suspended . by her side, everrtber-shoos, were all eJhfoldered'Wlth-wsst rosea j., ?.' "of every hue.,'-"!- ' '".'' ( i-Yondef's ' a Uss from rioda," my driver remaricea. "Slis's had a long Journey. She'll bo belle) at tbo dancing tonight 1 reckon.? : A ' ', ..t, .;.,.' . As a rule these girls were tall.. athleUcvwlth fair hair and blue eyes, the-Dalecarllan type. This after noon their facea were flushed in anticipation of alld aummer eve. Bo were those of the young men, for that matter. They, too., wore gay costumes, put on. most of them, in honor of the occasion; for, sad to relate, the men. especially tha young men, are discard ing more and more the old country dress and adopt ing tho conventional garb of the cities. Blue knicker bockers were a characteristic feature of the boys costumes and whlto leather aprons of those of their grandfathers. For the old folks were In. evidence, too, smiling Hi the spirit of the holiday. , When at length we drove up before the red. trei llsed Inn of Leksand and I asked for a room, the aged proprietress looked at me In sober astonishment, "Young mm. ahe said, "you can have all the meals you please here, but as for a bedroom, that Is Impossible. All tho rooms in the inn were bespoken long ego, and we have secured every other ava labia room in the village for our guests. And besides, she added, looking st me in a kindly way. over her spec tacles, "who ever heard of a young man sleeping on Midsummer eve"" . CHARACTERISTIC HOSPITALITY Being an American, however, I thought It neces sary 10 go forth In quest of a bed. and at last founa a farmhouse near the village, where a kindly farmer s wife improvised a couch for me In one corner of tne kitchen. This act waa characteristic of the hospitality for which the Dalecarllans aro famed. I am told that when a Dalecarllan locks his house for the night .or temporarily leaves It in summer, he bangs the key on a nail outside the door, so that tho unexpected guest can enter. ., ' ' From the farm I returned to the Inn for a Swedish dinner. It was served from side tables which the Swedes call the smorgas bord. One helped himself to nut soup or fruit soup, to cracker bread, honey and goat's cheese, to mountain trout and reindeer steak. The dining room was full of fashionably dressed ylsiu . ;' .; v.t. .-,-. .--.;:--... :'--i.' 1 -. v;' that mixture of blood and Are which can flow from ' German. Israelite and Polish ancestors. Until she was 14 years old th sacred places of the Holy City were as familiar to her feet as Broadway la to a girl In Nsw 1 m m MORNING, JUNE 18, 1911 I.M .HIT- li W ft uiA'AuMM 6r from Stockholm and iaidod rentry from aountrr ' hd "W"f ., put on lor movsccaiiou om -nauour ' poaaani 90 tuine of their districts to take part In this most demo cratic of holidays. - . At rtln-ier I waa oreaented to a nrettv Stockholm 'rlrl baroness, whom her friends sailed Tnga." She -ayly explained to me tho program of the evening and . promised to guiae me arouna we meypoiaw At a, ane explained, wo were to assemble In the church; at 11. I th maypole was to be raised; then wo were to dance 'until 1.10, when we were to proceed up the mountain to build fires to welcome the sunrise. . The concert In the vlllafe church was like a Christian prelude to tha pagsn ritss of tho night. Tho church holds tOOO people . and it was full to suffoca tion. Folk songs rendered by a choir of Leksanders In' their native dreas were followed by organ and violin . recitals from tho great m altera. And the audience was well trained to appreciate. For the Dalecarllans are .' perhaps the best all-around educated farming race in the world. They weave tapestries and play the violin With equal facility.- ; . At 11 that evening my Stockholm friends and Z took our plates on - the village green, where the . great mystery, waa to be enacted, .half an hour before midnight, the raising of the maypole. In Sweden the maypole ia almoat as cherished la popular belief as ' the baptismal font- Thousands of maypoles were to be raised on the village greens of Sweden simul taneously with the great event here at Leksand. In England, on tho other hand, the maypole waa sup pressed as a heathen Institution by the stern Puritans as long ago as 1144. Later, after a brief revival, tho raising of the maypole In - England . became " extinct, But in remoter Sweden this practice survives today as a symbol of warm weather and rich harvest. And It Is called the maypole, the MaJ atang, in Swedish, although It Is actually raised, not as It was In Knv land, on May 1, but on June f J. For tho aeaaone are late In these northern climes, and May finds Sweden still white with snow. . It was sn expectant multitude which Ailed the vil lage common of Leksand, laughing and chatting in lew, musical Swedish voices. In the center a long oblong marked the place where tho maypole lay in state. Around tho huge giant a score of Leksand men were busy putting the finishing touches to the decora tions, twining the white trunk with spirals of flowers and greens, Creatine; it-with, all tho reverence a savags people pay a symbol of the deity. ' . tbs sun naa already set in a purple base over the n 01. eiijant -ior : jexsana, Arctic circle, cannot boast of ;ivz&"iXStii "kodak fiends" In the crowd. York. She spoke German, "English, a little Hebrew and Arabic; and she fairly starved for French, of which she learned a' few phrases from one" of the family servants. -:' -'':''':-i 'r:;3vi" "l Her' abiding'' p'laeV was 'in -uC:. ancient garicen d welU Ing that breathed the adventurous life of the deserts, and often she Was her father'ecompanlon in his jour-' neys through Syria and' Arabia Petnes, , . " When he died she went with her mother to Ger- many, and lived until sh was 17 in a girls' boarding , school in Berlin, acquiring German so well that one of the leading Berlin papers published a story of hers, and falling in her examination in French, for which - her soul hungered. ' .1 ;-?' She went to Paris. Sh determined that she would not speak German at all. she felt as if she had no. tongue, there among strangers; but she vowed that - this French language and literature, which fate seemed 1 bent on denying to ner, snouia at last oe ners, for thraa veara aha atruxaried. and at laat felt that aha had acquired th language she knew she was born to love. ..- Than aha traveled back to her native Jerusalem and into Syria, .Arabia, India, 'China, Ceylon, Indo- China, half of Europe, Tunis always with eyes that aaw avervthlna and a memory that forxot nothlnr. She began to write; and th, value of her studies was' . Instantly apparent.";- ' ; v ',v--, ,' "She has no relterlous faith," declares Mons. Lemaltrer "She- Is high-tempered and Independent a pagan who,' at first, received biblical culture in Protestant,-Judaic and Germanic ideas. To that loin French romanticism. : impressionism, - humanltarlanlsm,- anarchism, and all that could be learned In Parle ten years ago of 'ad vanced" literature and art, and you have a picture of . the intellect and temperament of Myriam Harry. 'That which charms In her romances, outside ot the story she has, to tell, is the. amazing- manner-In v which this bram, f so filled with its chaos . of Ideas. -sentiments, fancies, education and memories, has been - ordered and clarified by tho genius for French, which demanded possession of her . when she .was 17 years . 'Old." '-" "" v-y-- f " v-"---"i-'-;; ' f':: A ':----; Her books show a marvelous power of observation and description, with the glow of oriental passion, the. ' sadness- and the senauousness of the lands which : Europeans can never really know, the nostalgia - of -white races among the brown air the tragedies of existence that arise In the old civilisations in their - . conflict with the new. Her "Conquest of Jerusalem" Is esteemed by Mons. Lemaitre as a magnificent effort of . . the imagination into which th woman has put her ' whole spirit, aa she tells of the mystic who sought to trace there the footsteps ot the Redeemer ana suc cumbed to th lur of love. 'abort Interval of too aun'a dlaappaaranoa wn U dlflVy cult to raad, or taka pbolog-rapb- lo too opto, 11 waa airaaar a quartar o i oaiora tna roapma MautBolnUy faatooaad to aatlafr tna faatldloua taata of tbo Laktandara. BuddanJy-Mlaa loga. mjr Stockholm companion, touchad aay arm. 'i'ha tiurmur of tha throng aubalded, Tha ''mapola bagaji to fiao, puahedup from banaatli by' tba young awalna and hald to piaca by cablaa. A buah of bait-ralgiuta awa fall ovar tha apaotatora. At laat tho foot of tha pvla . ettlad Into tua hole, and alood quivering .for a moment end than tail and aract Uka a ahlp'a maat . Circular garlanda of laurel on hoopa impended to tha maat by rlbbona awung gayly In tua breese; and fruia tha top fluttered a jiUkea pennant of tho purpla and id of Swedan. - - ' murmur of applauaa, not a about, enaea taa aaa pnej for tha aturdjr deecandanta of tho Ttkinga ara quiet people and atUl watera run deep. Than wrr man talsad tha handa of hla neighbor and wo danoad, or rather awayea In ono vaat surging ma as. aroond tho maypole, chanting tha refrain of a folk aong. From tho village common we daaoondad,-still dano- , Ing, down tho hUtalda to tho ah ore of tho lake. No ono thought of ouch an effeia luxury in tho world M a" ballroom floor. Tho groat boat landing aorrod aa floor for aararal soore of couplaat tha others danoad on tho graaa. Tbo mualo was supplied by aa orobastra:of -riddles In a pavilion on tho hillside. 1 wad a bold as to mount tbo boards and try a Dalsk polka with my. pretty friend from Stockholm. Instantly we were daahing about with lightning speed -over tho damp, slippery quay. Tba movement was a. little too faat and unfamiliar for an American; attar aeveral lunges, and narrowly escaping a plunge Into tha lako. wo oaino Into full - collision with a buxom LKsana lass ana ner stalwart xarmer swain ana were mb roUn Into tho rln, of -poctkton. H.r. a 8w.d h m,,r , th mturuua.diaiiaa of a. muui.i.ii my parcnor, aa 1 w oonunt to , wau for to nzt waHW. V mjvb -IVJaj vwi, gVHil fwssasa -WeMIMW MV ' Atnoncu wain. - " . - - t - - A WHIRL OF RAINBOWS "vV;v Looking around tha ring. I caught sight of the , netlto Floda girl In a rose embroidered frock, which I. had noticed in the afternoon. I bowed before her. asking in broken Swedish for the pleasure of a danoe. She smiled consent from under the rim qf her quaint bonnet. , ,, . . . , It was a strange sight, tha whirling, laughing hun- ,. dreds, in their rainbow eoatumea. To a foreigner-Ilk. myself It seemed a great open-air pageant. There was . something weird about tba whole effect; - I waa tempted to plnoh my arm to make sure that after all - X was not taking part with Oberon and hla fairies In : a Midsummer night's dream; to danoe here out of doore in a violet dawn, a few minutes after midnight, a- little under the Arctlo circle, among people dressed . In Aaistlo splendor 1 The twilight had been met half way by the dawn; the two seemed to wrestle with each other, and Lake Slljan beside us became a fur nace of blood-red and purple. On tbo grass near the wlrarf they were dancing Intricate ring dances, the steps of which had bsea handed down by centuries of tradition from tha old . heathen religious festivals. . The dancers accompanied their movements by.aong.- Perhaps 100 young man formed a ring with spectatora peering; over their shoulders. In the center of this circle a group of girls danoed hand in hand, In a eraaller ring, with ' eye bent modestly on the ground, singing the words; The maid foes In a ring, .Treading with even sup. Then their fle-urea atralrhtanaA nA . ...v 1.1 darted a furtive glance around the encircling ring of men, singing ,.-..,, , .. v .- to nna aersaif a mate Who Is so lovely. - ' --.-,( Then with the words. 1 R " sing, hoppsaa sa ' . rallerallala, . - th" ring " of girls broke up and each maid -'sprang safe-a-sa sxsLsAsS pretty movement together, singing the refrain -hoppi aan'Sa." This dorie, the men went back "to: their f . " 4 " V" circie, na tne , girls repeated i Iheir Ing , dance. I saw a' handsome cavalry Officer froJ? h; ,,nB Baron vGyllankrone, captured twice by a Stockholm girl, but four times a qulck-feoted'viu . lage belle reacW hi side before her' i think 'I? shall - never forget he flaahta g eyes and ftushedAces"? . those Swedish i girls f as they broke irom tba rinr "ilk. Kum0m.trn.vn.ftfU,,rn '"val. thlyrl. o?e oj - At 1.10, ; however,. w ,'were" interrupted '' by ' the shout: "To the mountain to welcome the sunrise. t The violins moved up the hillside, the dancers follow ing. . - it Among the giant bouWers of a nelghborlnr height . he multitude of merrymakers reaesembled to witch tho early sunrise over distant hills and . wood"the fVnJ,wi,,cl1 ii.4 'cely. left us. Bonfires hadaen kindled on the crags and beacons gleamed also from surrounding -hills. The bonfires on Midsummer ava are the survival of another heathen .custom. Thev "HI" supposed to be miniature suns and to act as ch.rrnZ for the crops during the following summer" 1 From booths on the mountain aid ,)umi.." .... and biscuits were dispensed, and the scene amonsr tbl .rocks suggested the sermon on the mount and. thl' miracle. of the loaves and Sibil,-is-'J When we i hid paid our proper adoration to the sun we descended,-to danoe again until late In the mornlnV) pavilion on the hillside, fn a. sweet-smelllnx foreat 5 I.irr-h ajid snruce.. A . , ; . ir . i, , . . T , "T. " At S.iO in the morning ".the church; bells of leksand . summoned us once; more from heathen to Christian ritual. Midsummer aay usairia a holiday-in Dau carlia. in the church calendar it is called tha "Dav Is . St. John the:Baptlst,"--: .,: t-:t,K :.yv . On the way to church we saw approachlno: across the lake a long "church boat," propelled by twentv oars. The occupants of the boat seemed more xavlv X clad than Is vusual even in Dalecarlia. One of the women wore a crown. She Was a bride. ; . , , Soon the bridal -party had landed and filed into . the church. June Is a month of weddings In Sweden as in America, and what day more appropriate than Midsummer-dav? --., .-::,... r. ' - .,,- .:.-. " luMj . Aa I .looked over the congregation during the Mid- - summer , service, I fancied that I -saw other happy couples who would also, another year, be Joined at the altar. How many glad young Dalecarllan hearts had yielded to tha spell of Midsummer eve? To the native' Dalecarllan girl and to her rustic lover tha night -bad-been more than a gay show; the maypole, the' ring aong, the beacon fires,1 had been intense realties. - Not so for Miss Ingra, of Stockholm, Today the city girl must throw off the spell of the night together . with her peasant costume ancVput on the conventional frock dictated by. the modes of Paris. To her as to me, -the American, -Midsummer eve had been an unreality, a fairy dream. ' And yet, to me, not altogether unreal! For I shall-never i forget that glimpse, into the dim1 barbarlo past of our ancestors, nor those merrymakers ' in their multicolored dress,, dancing and singing by Lako SJlJan in th purple light of a midnight dawn. ' 1 1 .-. -- 1 - 1 .