that Ann was placed next to the foreman, who was that
very one who had betrayed Gotz Waldstromer to his
master because he had himself cast an eye on Gertrude.
The young fellow had ere long set his light heart on
Ann; and being a fine lad, and the sole son of a well-to-do
master in Augsburg, he was likewise a famous wooer
and breaker of maiden hearts, and could boast of many
a triumphant love affair among the daughters of the
simpler class. He was, in his own rank of life,
cock of the walk, as such folks say; and I remembered
well having seen him at an apprentices’ dance
at the May merrymakings, whither he had come apparelled
in a rose-colored jerkin and light-hued hose, bedecked
with flowers and greenery in his cap and belt; he
had fooled with the daughters of the master of his
guild like the coxcomb he was, and whirled them off
to dance as though he did them high honor by paying
court to them. It might, to be sure, have given
him a lesson to find that his master’s fair
daughter scorned his suit; yet that sank not deep,
inasmuch as it was for the sake of a Junker of high
degree. With Ann he might hope for better luck;
for although from the first she gave him to wit that
he pleased her not, he did not therefore leave her
in peace, and this very morning, finding her alone
in the hall, he had made so bold as to put forth his
hand to clasp her. Albeit she had forthwith set
him in his place, and right sharply, it seemed that
to protect herself against his advances there was
no remedy but a complaint to his master, which would
disturb the peace of the household. She was indeed
able enough to take care of herself and to ward off
any unseemly boldness on his part; but she felt her
noble purity soiled by contact with that taint of
commonness of which she was conscious in this young
fellow’s ways, and in many other daily experiences.
Every meal, with the great dish into which the apprentice
dipped his spoon next to hers, was a misery to her;
and when the master’s old mother marked this,
and noted also how uneasily she submitted to her new
place and part in life, seeing likewise Ann’s
tear-stained eyes and sorrowful countenance, she conceived
that all this was by reason that Ann’s pride
could hardly bend to endure life in a craftsman’s
dwelling. And her heart was turned from her son’s
step-daughter, whom at first she had welcomed right
kindly; she overlooked her as a rule, or if she spoke
to her, it was in harsh and ungracious tones.
This, as Ann saw its purpose, hurt her all the more,
as she saw more clearly that the new grandmother was
a warm-hearted and worthy and right-minded woman,
from whose lips fell many a wise word, while she was
as kind to the younger children as though they had
been her own grandchildren. Nay, one had but to
look at her to see that she was made of sound stuff,
and had head and heart both in the right place.