Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about Stories by Foreign Authors.

Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about Stories by Foreign Authors.

The two friends walked on in silence side by side, but were impatient to part as soon as they could decorously.  When they had nearly reached the place where their homeward paths would separate, the professor repeated his invitation.

“Won’t you come and taste my muscat?”

“No, thank you; it is late, and I have an engagement.”

“With your cousin, perhaps?”

“Perhaps!” and the judge tried to smile.

“I hope you’re not vexed with me,” said his friend, in a conciliatory tone.

“Why should I be?”

“Perhaps what I said was uncalled for,—­particularly as you never meant to interfere with my liberty.”  The good man began to laugh, and then added:  “But it’s much better to have such things cleared up.”

“Certainly, quite so.”

The judge shook the fat hand that was cordially offered him, and hurried on, while his companion went slowly home.

III.

The professor’s house was on the hillside in the quarter where the Orphan Asylum now stands.  At that time there were very few dwellings in the neighborhood, which was rather far from the centre of the town, and the outlook was wide and varied.  It was not the view, however, that had attracted the professor, but the cheapness of the land.  He had built the house himself, and its walls were the fruit of many years of toil.  Small and modest as it was, it was his own; he was in debt to no man, and had no rent to pay.  This sweet feeling of independence quite made up for the tiring climb that the corpulent little owner had to take twice a day up the steep “River,” as the street was called.  The road bore this name (as everybody knows who has visited Syra), because it had been the bed of a stream that used to carry the winter rains from the mountain to the sea.  In fact, the water runs down the street to this day, and in the wet season it becomes a raging torrent.  Although the rocks and stones that once lined its sides have given place to houses, with their doors raised high above the flood, the origin of the street and the reason for its name are obvious enough even now.

Fortunately, rains are rare in Syra, but when they do fall, the “River” is often impassable; at such times the professor could reach his house only by zigzags through the side streets, and there were days when all communication was cut off, and he had to stay shut up at home.

The greatest pleasure that the house had brought him was that it had enabled him to give his old mother the happiness of passing her last days in comfort under her own roof, after the long privations and trials through which she had reared her son and had seen him overcome the difficulties of his professorial career.  She had died peacefully in this house, and although a year had passed, her room remained as she had left it.  The professor really needed it for his library, which grew from day to day, but he preferred to leave the room unused, as sacred to his mother’s memory.

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Stories by Foreign Authors: Polish, Greek, Belgian, Hungarian from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.