Garman and Worse eBook

Alexander Kielland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 275 pages of information about Garman and Worse.

Garman and Worse eBook

Alexander Kielland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 275 pages of information about Garman and Worse.

The young Consul, as he was generally called from the time when his father, the old Consul, was alive, was not so tall as his younger brother, and while the latter had grown stouter in the course of years, the former seemed to have got thinner and smaller.  His hair was smooth, thin, and slightly grey, carefully brushed so as to make the most of it.  His eyes were keen, and of a light blue colour; and his lower jaw was somewhat prominent.  Smoothly shaved and well brushed, with stiff white neckcloth, shining boots, and silver-headed cane, there was something about his whole appearance which told of prosperity.  Every word, every movement, even the peculiarly characteristic one with which he adjusted his chin in his stiff neckcloth, was the picture of propriety and precision.  Precision was, in fact, a word which seemed made for the young Consul; both his appearance and his career reflected it to the uttermost fibre.

With his extensive business and large fortune, Consul Garman had also inherited a boundless admiration and respect for his father, Morten W. Garman, the old Consul, who had come into the property of Sandsgaard at a time when it was of little value, and considerably encumbered by debts, and when the business itself was in rather a confused condition.  In order to keep the business afloat during the disastrous years of the war, Morten W. Garman took into partnership a rich old skipper, by name Jacob Worse, from whence sprang the name of the firm.  Thanks to old Worse’s money, life came again into the tottering business, and Garman’s great ability made the firm, in a few years, one of the most important on the west coast.  But when old Worse died, and his son took his place in the firm, it was soon evident that Morten Garman and young Worse would not be able to work together.  Under a friendly arrangement, therefore, Worse retired with a considerable fortune, while Garman retained the business and the old family property of Sandsgaard.

It was from that time that the great wealth of the Garmans really dated, while Worse in a few years squandered his money and died insolvent.

It was whispered that Worse had left the business rather hastily, just as the good times were beginning, but that was the usual luck of the Garmans.

At first it looked as if Worse’s widow and son, who carried on a small business in the town, would work themselves up again, and this was especially the case in recent years.  Whatever might be the opinion as to the arrangement between Garman and Worse, no one could ever accuse Morten Garman of any want of straightforwardness in his business arrangements; and his son Christian Frederick followed closely in his steps, observing always the maxim, “What would father have done under the circumstances?”

All went on thus prosperously and uniformly, until the young Consul began to get old, and his elder son Morten came home from abroad and became a partner in the firm.  From that time many changes showed themselves.  The son had his head full of new foreign ideas; he was all for rushing about, writing and telegraphing, ordering and counter-ordering—­a course of action that was quite foreign to Garman and Worse’s mode of procedure.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Garman and Worse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.