The Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 621 pages of information about The Whirlpool.

The Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 621 pages of information about The Whirlpool.
And really, if the worst come to the worst —­ but it’s dangerous to joke about such things.’  She touched lightly on the facts of her position.  ’I’m afraid I have not been doing very much.  Perhaps this is a fallow time with me; I may be gaining strength for great achievements.  Unfortunately, I have a lazy companion.  Miss Steinfeld (you know her from my last letter, if you got it) only pretends to work.  I like her for her thorough goodness and her intelligence; but she is just a little melancholisch, and so not exactly the companion I need.  Her idea just now is that we both need “change” and she wants me to go with her to Bregenz, on the Bodensee.  Perhaps I shall when the weather gets hot.’

It had surprised her to be told by Felix Dymes that he obtained her address at Munich from Miss Leach, for the only person in England to whom she had yet made known her departure from Leipzig was her step-mother.  Speak of her how they might, her acquaintances in London still took trouble to inform themselves of her movements.  Perhaps the very completeness of the catastrophe in which she was involved told in her favour; possibly she excited much more interest than could ever have attached to her whilst her name was respected.  There was new life in the thought.  She wrote briefly to Dora Leach, giving an account of herself, which, though essentially misleading, was not composed in a spirit of conscious falsehood.  For all her vanity, Alma had never aimed at effect by practice of deliberate insincerities.  Miss Leach was informed that her friend could not find much time for correspondence.  ’I am living in the atmosphere of art, and striving patiently.  Some day you shall hear of me.’  And when the letter was posted, Alma mused long on the effect it would produce.

With the distinguished violinist; the friend of Herr Wilenski, spoken of to Mrs. Frothingham, she had as yet held no communication, and through the days of early summer she continued to neglect her music.  Indolence grew upon her; sometimes she spent the whole day in a dressing-gown, seated or reclining, with a book in her hand, or totally unoccupied.  Sometimes the military bands in the public gardens tempted her to walk a little, or she strolled with Miss Steinfeld through the picture galleries; occasionally they made short excursions into the country.  The art student had acquaintances in Munich, but did not see much of them, and they were not the kind of people with whom Alma cared to associate.

In July it was decided that they should go for a few weeks to Bregenz; their health called for the change, which, as Miss Steinfeld knew of a homely pension, could he had at small expense.  Before their departure the art student was away for a few days, and, to relieve the dreariness of an existence which was becoming burdensome, Alma went out alone one afternoon, purposing a trip by steam-tram to the gardens at Nymphenburg.  She walked to the Stiglmeyerplatz, where the tram starts,

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Whirlpool from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.