Stories by English Authors: Germany (Selected by Scribners) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 148 pages of information about Stories by English Authors.

Stories by English Authors: Germany (Selected by Scribners) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 148 pages of information about Stories by English Authors.
to work.  Oftentimes it has occurred to one dispassionate spectator of her ways that this same Tita resembled the small object which, thrown into a dish of some liquid chemical substance, suddenly produces a mass of crystals.  The constituents of those beautiful combinations, you see, were there; but they wanted some little shock to hasten the slow process of crystallisation.  Now in our social circle we have continually observed groups of young people floating about in an amorphous and chaotic fashion—­good for nothing but dawdling through dances, and flirting, and carelessly separating again; but when you dropped Tita among them, then you would see how rapidly this jellyfish sort of existence was abolished—­how the groups got broken up, and how the sharp, businesslike relations of marriage were precipitated and made permanent.  But would she own to it?  Never!  She once went and married her dearest friend to a Prussian officer; and now she declares he was a selfish fellow to carry off the girl in that way, and rates him soundly because he won’t bring her to stay with us more than three months out of the twelve.  There are some of us get quite enough of this Prussian occupation of our territory.

“Well,” says Tita to this long English lad, who is lying sprawling on the grass, “I can safely tell you this, that Franziska likes you very well.”

He suddenly jumps up, and there is a great blush on his face.

“Has she said so?” he asks, eagerly.

“Oh yes! in a way.  She thinks you are good-natured.  She likes the English generally.  She asked me if that ring you wear was an engaged ring.”

These disconnected sentences were dropped with a tantalising slowness into Charlie’s eager ears.

“I must go and tell her directly that it is not,” said he; and he might probably have gone off at once had not Tita restrained him.

“You must be a great deal more cautious than that if you wish to carry off Franziska some day or other.  If you were to ask her to marry you now she would flatly refuse you, and very properly; for how could a girl believe you were in earnest?  But if you like, Charlie, I will say something to her that will give her a hint; and if she cares for you at all before you go away she won’t forget you.  I wish I was as sure of you as I am of her.”

“Oh I can answer for myself,” says the young man, with a becoming bashfulness.

Tita was very happy and pleased all that day.  There was an air of mystery and importance about her.  I knew what it meant; I had seen it before.

Alas! poor Charlie!

V—­“GAB MIR EIN’ RING DABEI”

Under the friendly instructions of Dr. Krumm, whom he no longer regarded as a possible rival, Charlie became a mighty hunter; and you may be sure that he returned of an evening with sprigs of fir in his cap for the bucks he had slain, Franziska was not the last to come forward and shake hands with him and congratulate him, as is the custom in these primitive parts.  And then she was quite made one of the family when we sat down to dinner in the long, low-roofed room; and nearly every evening, indeed, Tita would have her to dine with us and play cards with us.

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Stories by English Authors: Germany (Selected by Scribners) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.