The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 618 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 618 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02.
refuse you what you seemed to think the one thing you cared for.  All the discomfort which you had ever experienced, at court, in the army, or in traveling, you were to recover from at my side; you would settle down and enjoy life; but only with me for your companion.  I settled my daughter at a school, where she could be more completely educated than would be possible in the retirement of the country; and I placed my niece Ottilie there with her as well, who, perhaps, would have grown up better at home with me, under my own care.  This was done with your consent, merely that we might have our own lives to ourselves—­merely that we might enjoy undisturbed our so-long-wished-for, so-long-delayed happiness.  We came here and settled ourselves.  I undertook the domestic part of the menage, you the out-of-doors and the general control.  My own principle has been to meet your wishes in everything, to live only for you.  At least, let us give ourselves a fair trial how far in this way we can be enough for each other.”

“Since the interdependence of things, as you call it, is your especial element,” replied Edward, “one should either never listen to any of your trains of reasoning, or make up one’s mind to allow you to be in the right; and, indeed, you have been in the right up to the present day.  The foundation which we have hitherto been laying for ourselves, is of the true, sound sort; only, are we to build nothing upon it? is nothing to be developed out of it?  All the work we have done—­I in the garden, you in the park—­is it all only for a pair of hermits?”

“Well, well,” replied Charlotte, “very well.  What we have to look to is, that we introduce no alien element, nothing which shall cross or obstruct us.  Remember, our plans, even those which only concern our amusements, depend mainly on our being together.  You were to read to me, in consecutive order, the journal which you made when you were abroad.  You were to take the opportunity of arranging it, putting all the loose matter connected with it in its place; and with me to work with you and help you, out of these invaluable but chaotic leaves and sheets to put together a complete thing, which should give pleasure to ourselves and to others.  I promised to assist you in transcribing; and we thought it would be so pleasant, so delightful, so charming, to travel over in recollection the world which we were unable to see together.  The beginning is already made.  Then, in the evenings, you have taken up your flute again, accompanying me on the piano, while of visits backwards and forwards among the neighborhood, there is abundance.  For my part, I have been promising myself out of all this the first really happy summer I have ever thought to spend in my life.”

“Only I cannot see,” replied Edward, rubbing his forehead, “how, through every bit of this which you have been so sweetly and so sensibly laying before me, the Captain’s presence can be any interruption; I should rather have thought it would give it all fresh zest and life.  He was my companion during a part of my travels.  He made many observations from a different point of view from mine.  We can put it all together, and so make a charmingly complete work of it.”

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.