Autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about Autobiography.

Autobiography eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 534 pages of information about Autobiography.
walk between the outer and inner gate of Saint Gallus.  We had scarcely returned greetings when he said to me, “I hold to the same opinion as ever about your verses.  Those which you recently communicated to me, I read aloud to some pleasant companions; and not one of them will believe that you have made them.”—­“Let it pass,” I answered:  “we will make and enjoy them, and the others may think and say of them what they please.”

“There comes the unbeliever now,” added my friend.  “We will not speak of it,” I replied:  “what is the use of it? one cannot convert them.”—­“By no means,” said my friend:  “I cannot let the affair pass off in this way.”

After a short, insignificant conversation, my young comrade, who was but too well disposed towards me, could not suffer the matter to drop, without saying to the other, with some resentment, “Here is my friend who made those pretty verses, for which you will not give him credit!”—­ “He will certainly not take it amiss,” answered the other; “for we do him an honor when we suppose that more learning is required to make such verses than one of his years can possess.”  I replied with something indifferent; but my friend continued, “It will not cost much labor to convince you.  Give him any theme, and he will make you a poem on the spot.”  I assented; we were agreed; and the other asked me whether I would venture to compose a pretty love-letter in rhyme, which a modest young woman might be supposed to write to a young man, to declare her inclination.  “Nothing is easier than that,” I answered, “if I only had writing materials.”  He pulled out his pocket almanac, in which there were a great many blank leaves; and I sat down upon a bench to write.  They walked about in the mean while, but always kept me in sight.  I immediately brought the required situation before my mind, and thought how agreeable it must be if some pretty girl were really attached to me, and would reveal her sentiments to me, either in prose or verse.  I therefore began my declaration with delight, and in a little while executed it in a flowing measure, between doggerel and madrigal, with the greatest possible naivete, and in such a way that the sceptic was overcome with admiration, and my friend with delight.  The request of the former to possess the poem I could the less refuse, as it was written in his almanac; and I liked to see the documentary evidence of my capabilities in his hands.  He departed with many assurances of admiration and respect, and wished for nothing more than that we should often meet; so we settled soon to go together into the country.

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Autobiography from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.