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.
Paris, and his affection led him to apprehend that I might have been involved in the calamity.  He inquired of any parents and other persons to whom I was accustomed to write, whether any letters had arrived; and, as it was just at the time when my journey kept me from sending any, they were altogether wanting.  He went about in the greatest uneasiness, and at last told the matter in confidence to our nearest friends, who were now in equal anxiety.  Fortunately this conjecture did not reach my parents until a letter had arrived announcing my return to Strasburg.  My young friends were satisfied to learn that I was alive, but remained firmly convinced that I had been at Paris in the interim.  The affectionate intelligence of the solicitude they had felt on my account affected me so much that I vowed to leave off such tricks forever; but, unfortunately, I have often since allowed myself to be guilty of something similar.  Real life frequently loses its brilliancy to such a degree, that one is many a time forced to polish it up again with the varnish of fiction.

This mighty stream of courtly magnificence had now flowed by, and had left in me no other longing than after those tapestries of Raffaelle, which I would willingly have gazed at, revered, nay, adored, every day and every hour.  Fortunately, my passionate endeavors succeeded in interesting several persons of consequence in them, so that they were taken down and packed up as late as possible.  We now gave ourselves up again to our quiet, easy routine of the university and society; and in the latter the Actuary Salzmann, president of our table, continued to be the general pedagogue.  His intelligence, complaisance, and dignity, which he always contrived to maintain amid all the jests, and often even in the little extravagances, which he allowed us, made him beloved and respected by the whole company; and I could mention but few instances where he showed his serious displeasure, or interposed with authority in little quarrels and disputes.  Yet among them all I was the one who most attached myself to him; and he was not less inclined to converse with me, as he found me more variously accomplished than the others, and not so one-sided in judgment.  I also followed his directions in external matters; so that he could, without hesitation, publicly acknowledge me as his companion and comrade:  for, although he only filled an office which seems to be of little influence, he administered it in a manner which redounded to his highest honor.  He was actuary to the Court of Wards (Pupillen-Collegium); and there, indeed, like the perpetual secretary of a university, he had, properly speaking, the management of affairs in his own hands.  Now, as he had performed the duties of this office with the greatest exactness for many years, there was no family, from the first to the last, which did not owe him its gratitude; as indeed scarcely any one in the whole administration of government can earn more blessings or more curses than one who takes charge of the orphans, or, on the contrary, squanders or suffers to be squandered their property and goods.

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Autobiography from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.