The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 605 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 05.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 605 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 05.

When I had done speaking I fetched out gold, such a load that I was scarcely able to carry it, and added thereto precious stones and jewels of a far greater value.  “Bendel,” said I, “these level many ways, and make easy many things which appeared quite impossible; don’t be stingy with it, as I am not, but go and rejoice thy master with the intelligence on which his only hope depends.”

He went.  He returned late and sorrowful.  None of the people of Mr. John, none of his guests, and he had spoken with all, were able, in the remotest degree, to recollect the man in the gray coat.  The new telescope was there, and no one knew whence it had come; the carpet, the tent were still there spread and pitched on the selfsame hill; the servants boasted of the affluence of their master, and no one knew whence these new valuables had come to him.  He himself took his pleasure in them, and did not trouble himself because he did not know whence he had them.  The young gentlemen had the horses, which they had ridden, in their stables, and they praised the liberality of Mr. John who on that day made them a present of them.  Thus much was clear from the circumstantial relation of Bendel, whose active zeal and able proceeding, although with such fruitless result, received from me their merited commendation.  I gloomily motioned him to leave me alone.

“I have,” began he again, “given my master an account of the matter which was most important to him.  I have yet a message to deliver which a person gave me whom I met at the door as I went out on the business in which I have been so unfortunate.  The very words of the man were these:  ’Tell Mr. Peter Schlemihl he will not see me here again, as I am going over sea, and a favorable wind calls me at this moment to the harbor.  But in a year and a day I will have the honor to seek him myself, and then to propose to him another and probably to him agreeable transaction.  Present my most humble compliments to him, and assure him of my thanks.’  I asked him who he was, but he replied that your honor knew him already.”

“What was the man’s appearance?” cried I, filled with foreboding, and Bendel sketched me the man in the gray coat, trait by trait, word for word, as he had accurately described in his former relation the man after whom he had inquired.

“Unhappy one!” I exclaimed, wringing my hands—­“that was the very man!” and there fell, as it were, scales from his eyes.

“Yes! it was he, it was, positively!” cried he in horror, “and I, blind and imbecile wretch, have not recognized him, have not recognized him, and have betrayed my master!”

He broke out into violent weeping; heaped the bitterest reproaches on himself, and the despair in which he was inspired even me with compassion.  I spoke comfort to him, assured him repeatedly that I entertained not the slightest doubt of his fidelity, and sent him instantly to the port, if possible to follow the traces of this singular man.  But in the morning a great number of ships which the contrary winds had detained in the harbor, had run out, bound to different climes and different shores, and the gray man had vanished as tracelessly as a dream.

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.