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The Life and Adventures of Remus
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The Life and Adventures of Remus : ウィキペディア英語版
The Life and Adventures of Remus
''Life and Adventures of Remus - the Kashubian Mirror'' (Kashubian title ''Żëce i przigodë Remusa - Zvjercadło kaszubskji'') is a novel written in the Kashubian language by Dr. Aleksander Majkowski (1876–1938). The linguist Gerald Green regards ''Life and Adventures of Remus'' as the Kashubian language's only novel;〔Gerald Green, "The Cassubians" in Comrie, B. and Corbett, G. (eds,) ''The Slavonic Language'' (Routledge, 2002), p. 761.〕 while theirs is more a scholarly judgement than an objective truth, the preeminence of ''Life And Adventures'' to Kashubian literature is undeniable.〔For a discussion of ''Life and Adventures'' and its importance by two leading Kashubian scholars, see Jerzy Treder and Cezary Obracht-Prondzyński's chapter "Kashubian Literature: The Phenomenon, its History and its Social Dimension," in Cezary Obracht-Prondzyński and Tomasz Wicherkiewicz (eds), The Kashubs: Past and Present (Bern: Peter Lang, 2011), p. 117.〕 Although Dr. Majkowski was a prolific author and wrote on a wide range of Kashubian topics, ''Life and Adventures'' is considered his master work. Dr. Majkowski worked on ''Life and Adventures'' from his college days on, and the novel was only published in its three-book entirety shortly after his 1938 death.〔("ALEKSANDER MAJKOWSKI" ) (English-language biography at literat.ug.edu.pl)〕
==Plot summary==
Book 1 "At the Pustkowie" (chapters 1-15) Chapter 1 consists of an introduction delivered by an unknown narrator, who stumbles upon Remus's memoirs. From the second chapter on, Remus himself is the narrator. As a young orphan growing up in the ''pustkowie'' (a forest clearing), Remus is cheerful and fulfilled despite all the hard work and a speech impediment which makes him practically incomprehensible. He is troubled, as he grows up, by visions of a young queen and a ruined castle. On the threshold of maturity, he assumes that he will marry his loving and beloved Marta and spend a happy life working in the pustkowie. However, he is summoned to the deathbed of the pustkowie's master, old Pan Jozef Zoblocczi. Pan Jozef informs Remus that his own time as defender of Kashubian culture is over, and that he, Remus, must take up the task. Remus pleads his inability and unworthiness, but when Pan Jozef invokes the young queen and the ruined castle, Remus must accept. In Chapter 15, turning his back on the pustkowie and his beloved Marta, Remus begins his long life of service to Kashubia.
Book 2 "In Freedom and In Captivity" (chapters 16-30) Remus acquires a single-wheeled wheelbarrow, which he fills with Kashubian books and Catholic devotional items. These he sells for a nominal price as he wanders to and from various village and county fairs. Now grown tall and gawky, he cuts a strange and sometimes frightening figure; with his comical sidekick Trąba he gets into various adventures. The most important of these adventures concerns The King of the Lake, another Kashubian patriot who comes to a bad end. At the end of this book, Remus is put into jail by the Germans.
Book 3 "Smętek" (chapters 31-45) Freed from prison and reunited with Trąba, Remus has further adventures. In Chapters 32-33, they meet the patriotic Kashubian priest Father Krause and laugh when the Germans arrest Lutheran pastor Krauze by mistake. In Chapter 36, subtitled "Remus and Trąba in Hell," they visit a Kashubian nobleman's castle, where a learned but roguish house guest named "Derda" scares poor Trąba into thinking the nobleman is actually the Devil. The struggle with the real Devil's emissary, a lawyer named Smętek, takes up the rest of the book. Even when Remus is granted a short time of happiness, it is followed by grief and shame. He dies alone, believing that Smętek has triumphed. But the narrator from Chapter 1 returns, to report that Remus's grave bears a cross inscribed "Remus - Kashubian Knight" and that a mysterious lady and her son come to visit and tend to the grave. Thus the novel ends on a note of hope, however muted.

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