The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 618 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 618 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02.

The three speedily found themselves in the saloon together.  Luncheon was brought in, and Mittler told them what that day he had done, and was going to do.  This eccentric person had in early life been a clergyman, and had distinguished himself in his office by the never-resting activity with which he contrived to make up and put an end to quarrels:  quarrels in families, and quarrels between neighbors; first among the individuals immediately about him, and afterward among whole congregations, and among the country gentlemen round.  While he was in the ministry, no married couple was allowed to separate; and the district courts were untroubled with either cause or process.  A knowledge of the law, he was well aware, was necessary to him.  He gave himself with all his might to the study of it, and very soon felt himself a match for the best trained advocate.  His circle of activity extended wonderfully, and people were on the point of inducing him to move to the Residence, where he would find opportunities of exercising in the higher circles what he had begun in the lowest, when he won a considerable sum of money in a lottery.  With this, he bought himself a small property.  He let the ground to a tenant, and made it the centre of his operations, with the fixed determination, or rather in accordance with his old customs and inclinations, never to enter a house when there was no dispute to make up, and no help to be given.  People who were superstitious about names, and about what they imported, maintained that it was his being called Mittler which drove him to take upon himself this strange employment.

Luncheon was laid on the table, and the stranger then solemnly pressed his host not to wait any longer with the disclosure which he had to make.  Immediately after refreshing himself he would be obliged to leave them.

Husband and wife made a circumstantial confession; but scarcely had he caught the substance of the matter, when he started angrily up from the table, rushed out of the saloon, and ordered his horse to be saddled instantly.

“Either you do not know me, you do not understand me,” he cried, “or you are sorely mischievous.  Do you call this a quarrel?  Is there any want of help here?  Do you suppose that I am in the world to give advice?  Of all occupations which man can pursue, that is the most foolish.  Every man must be his own counsellor, and do what he cannot let alone.  If all go well, let him be happy, let him enjoy his wisdom and his fortune; if it go ill, I am at hand to do what I can for him.  The man who desires to be rid of an evil knows what he wants; but the man who desires something better than he has got is stone blind.  Yes, yes, laugh as you will, he is playing blindman’s-buff; perhaps he gets hold of something, but the question is what he has got hold of.  Do as you will, it is all one.  Invite your friends to you, or let them be, it is all the same.  The most prudent plans I have seen miscarry, and the most foolish succeed.  Don’t split your brains about it; and if, one way or the other, evil comes of what you settle, don’t fret; send for me, and you shall be helped.  Till which time, I am your humble servant.”

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.