Dark days
Dorfling’s suicide made a profound
impression on Wilhelm, and for months he was haunted
by the vision of that motionless form with its white
face and blood-stained breast. It had a weird
fascination for him, causing him to revert constantly
to that tragical May night that had begun with a cheerful
dinner, and ended in a fatal pistol shot. Paul’s
comment on the occurrence was short and concise.
“The poor chap was mad,” he said, and
there the matter ended as far as he was concerned.
Mayboom revered his friend’s memory as he would
a saint, and erected a kind of chapel to him in his
house, in which Dorfling’s portrait, his book,
and various objects belonging to him, thrown up in
relief against draperies and surrounded by a variety
of symbolical accessories, were set forth for the
pious delectation of the master of the house and his
visitors. Schrotter held aloof from this cult.
He appreciated Dorfling’s character, his consistency,
his strength of will and highmindedness as they deserved,
but he was never tired of preaching and demonstrating
to Wilhelm that all these admirable qualities had
been turned out of their proper course by a disturbing
morbid influence. It was monstrous, he contended,
that a system of philosophy should arm you for suicide.
What if the premises should prove false? Then
your voluntary death would be a frightful mistake
which nothing could retrieve. One has no right
to risk making such a mistake. He believed in
development, in the progress of the organic world
from a lower to a higher stage. Progress and development,
however, were conditional upon life, and he who has
recourse to self-destruction sets an example of unseemly
revolt against one of the most beautiful and comforting
of all the laws of nature. Moreover, suicide
was a waste of force on which it was simply heartrending
to have to look. There were so many great deeds
to be done which called for the laying down of life.
In a thousand different ways one might benefit mankind
by Winkelried-like actions. If one was determined
to die, one should at least render thereby to those
left behind one of those sublime services which demand
the sacrifice of a life.
In their frequent conversations upon
this subject, he was so earnest, so eloquent, so markedly
intentional, that Wilhelm finally gave him the smiling
assurance that he was preaching to a convert.
It was true, he had the highest respect for a man
who did not hesitate to cast life from him when his
whole mind and thought led him to the conviction that
death was preferable to life; and unprincipled as suicide
might be from an objective point of view, subjectively
considered, there surely was an ideal fitness in making
one’s actions agree to the uttermost point with
one’s opinions? Nevertheless, he himself
did not approve of Dorfling’s deed, and would
certainly never imitate it, for one could never know
what intentions the unknown powers might not have with
regard to the individual; by committing suicide he
maybe threw up some possible mission, or by his premature
departure disturbed the action of the great machine
in which he as some small screw or wheel doubtless
had his modest place and function.
As if to prove to Schrotter that he
was no disciple of the “Philosophy of Deliverance,”
he turned his attention, more than he had ever done
before, to the realities of life. Dorfling left
a remarkable will. He bequeathed his fortune most
advantageously invested in a house in Dusseldorf and
in public funds yielding a yearly income
of about thirty-five thousand marks, to his two friends,
Dr Schrotter and Dr Eynhardt, with the sole charge
that out of it they should provide a sufficient competency
for his old servant, dating from his father’s
time, who had attended him literally from the cradle
to the grave. The fortune was to be theirs conjointly
and indivisibly, and should one of them die, to devolve
to the survivor, who in his turn was to make such
arrangements as he thought best to insure its being
applied, after his death, in accordance with the testator’s
views. He expressed the hope that his two heirs
would use the income derived from the property in
alleviating the misery inseparable from human existence,
of which throughout life they must be witnesses.
Dorfling’s only near relative was herself very
wealthy and generous-minded, and did not dispute the
will, it was accordingly proved.
Wilhelm declared from the first that
he understood nothing of the management of a fortune,
of business papers, and so forth, and wanted to hand
over the administration of the whole to Schrotter.
Schrotter, however, would not hear of it, and after
vying with one another in generous self-disparagement
and mutual confidence, they finally agreed that Schrotter,
being a practical man, and conversant with the ways
of business and the world, should take the management
of the fortune upon himself, but that Wilhelm should
receive a monthly sum of fifteen hundred marks out
of the income to apply as he thought best to the relief
of the needy. The other half of the income was
at Schrotter’s disposal, who put it, of course,
to the same use. In his capacity as member of
the deputation for the poor, and also as parish doctor,
he came in contact with much poverty and misery, and
was able to direct Wilhelm’s charity into the
right channels. It became Wilhelm’s regular
afternoon employment to visit the homes of those mentioned
to him as in need of relief, that he might the better
judge for himself of the true state of the case, make
personal inquiries about the people, and step in where
help was necessary and deserved.
Only now did he learn what life really
was, and what he saw neither increased his pleasure
in being alive nor made him proud to be a man among
men. Needless to say, it was not long before the
news reached the circles of the professional beggars
that there was a gentleman in the Dorotheenstrasse
who had a considerable yearly sum of money to give
away. The result was that his modest apartment
was so besieged by petitioners that his old landlady,
Frau Muller, the widow of a post-office official,
with whom he had boarded and lodged for seven years,
was goaded to desperation, and declared that if the
disgraceful rabble was encouraged she would be obliged
to part from Wilhelm, though it would be her death,
she being so fond of him and so used to his ways.
Wilhelm was wise enough to admit the justice of her
complaint, and empowered Frau Muller to turn away
ruthlessly all such visitors whose names were unknown
to her, or who came without recommendation, which
orders she carried out with such virulence and relentlessness,
that the worshipful company of professional beggars
rapidly came to the conclusion that it was useless
trying to gain admittance to Dr. Eynhardt as long
as he was guarded by the tall, bony old lady who opened
the door but would not leave hold of it. So the
unceasing tramp of dirty boots on the echoing stair
was hushed, and Wilhelm saw no more of the crape-clad
widows of eminent officials who required a sewing
machine or a piano to save them from starvation; the
gentlemen who would be forced to put a bullet through
their brains if they did not procure the money to
pay a debt of honor; or the unemployed clerks who
had eaten nothing for days, and who all had a sick
wife and from six to twelve children (all small) at
home crying for bread; or the foreigners who could
find no work in Berlin, and would return to their native
countries if he would give them a few thalers
to pay their fourth-class railway fare; and similar
interesting persons, the endless diversity of whose
life-histories had kept him in a chronic state of surprise
for months. In place of the visitors he now received
letters, as many as if he had been a cabinet minister.
It was the same old story, only less affecting, because
generally deficient in style, and faulty as to spelling,
and no longer illustrated by tearful, vigorously mopped
eyes, abysmal sighs, and hands wrung till they cracked.
For a time Wilhelm went to every address given in
these letters, in order to see and hear for himself,
but after awhile his powers of discrimination were
sharpened, and he learned to distinguish between the
impositions of swindlers and professional beggars,
and the real distress which has a claim to sympathy.
By degrees, it is true, he became
convinced, even in the chill dwellings of real poverty,
that this was hardly ever entirely unmerited.
Where it had not been brought about by laziness, frivolity,
or drink, its source was to be found in ignorance or
incapacity, in other words, in an inefficient equipment
for the battle of life. He judged all these circumstances,
however, to be the outward and visible signs of obscure
natural laws, and that to interfere with rash and
ignorant hands in their workings was as useless as
it was unreasonable. He therefore pondered seriously
whether, by denying to a portion of mankind the qualities
indispensable to success in the struggle for existence,
Nature herself did not predestine them to misery and
destruction; whether the irredeemable poor those
who after each help upward invariably fell back in
the former state were not the offscourings
of humanity, the preservation of whom was a fruitless
task, and altogether against the design of Nature?
Fortunately, he did not allow his
deeds of brotherly love to be darkened by the shadow
of these and kindred thoughts. He brought forward
reasons which always ended by triumphing over his cold
doubts. Misery was possibly the outcome of inexorable
natural laws, but then was not compassion the same?
The poor were poor under the pressure of some irresistible
force, but did not the charitable act under the same
pressure? Moreover, was Wilhelm so sure that he
himself was better equipped for the race of life than
those unfortunates who went under because they chose
a trade for which they were neither mentally nor physically
competent, or because, from laziness or obstinacy,
they insisted on remaining in Berlin, where nobody
wanted them, when a few miles off they might have
found all the conditions conducive to their prosperity?
How could he know whether he would have been capable
of earning his living if his father had not left him
a plentifully-spread table? In the rooms that
contained so little furniture and so many emaciated
human beings, into which his charitable zeal led him
every day, he pictured himself, pale and thin, without
food, without books; and although he had the harmless
vanity to believe that privation and penury would
affect him less deeply than the poor devils he visited,
the idea that he saw his own face before him, as it
might have been had he not had the good luck to be
his father’s heir opened his hand still wider,
and added to the money words of sympathy and comfort,
which afforded the recipients unless they
were utterly hardened as much pleasure
as the donation itself.
Beside his almsgiving, he now had
another occupation which took up all his surplus time.
Schrotter had not let the suggestion drop which he
made at Dorfling’s dinner-party, and had persuaded
Wilhelm so long that he finally rouse himself to attempt
an account of the ways and means by which the human
mind has freed itself of its grossest errors.
It was to be entitled “A History of Human Ignorance,”
and promised to be a most original work. He would
endeavor to show what idea people had had of the universe
at various periods, how they explained the phenomena
of nature, their connection, their causes and effects.
He would begin with the childish superstitions of
the savages, and continuing through the so-called
learned systems of the ancients and of the Middle Ages,
would bring his history up to the theories of contemporary
scientists. He would demonstrate the psychological
causes of the fact that man, at a certain stage of
intellectual development, must necessarily fall into
certain errors, and by the aid of what experiments,
experiences, and conclusions he had come gradually
to recognize them as such. How the fresh interpretation
of a single phenomenon would overturn, at one blow,
a number of other phenomena hitherto considered entirely
satisfactory, how prevailing scientific theories, instead
of assisting the fearless observer or discoverer,
invariably hindered him and turned him from the right
path, in proof of which assertion he brought forward
such striking examples as Aristotle’s convulsive
endeavors to make each of the senses correspond to
one of the four elements in which they believed in
his day, and Kepler with his fantastic efforts to prove
the supremacy of the Pythagorean seven in the solar
system. The object of the book was to show that
the history of human knowledge is a history of false
inferences and the erroneous interpretations of correctly
observed phenomena, that the increase of knowledge
always means the destruction of existing opinions,
that of all the scientific systems up to the present
day, only those retained their position which proved
the futility of earlier theories never
those which built up new structures on the foundations
of the old house of cards that had been blown down.
In a word, that progress means not the acquisition
of fresh knowledge, but an ever-extended consciousness
of the futility of the knowledge we thought to possess.
Wilhem spared himself no pains with
this work. He brought all the thoroughness and
industry of his honest nature to bear upon it, would
accept no statement at second-hand, but went for every
information to the fountain head. It would cost
an immense amount of time, but after all he had that
at his disposal. There was no need for him to
hurry, seeing that he did not write from ambition
or for any material advantage, but simply for his
own gratification. He began by rubbing up his
school Greek sufficiently to enable him to read the
ancient philosophers with ease, which he achieved
in a few months, and then set to work to learn Arabic,
that being the chief language of science in the Middle
Ages. Schrotter was seriously alarmed at these
extensive preparations, and hastened to procure, through
his pandit friends, some English extracts from the
scientific literature of India, lest Wilhelm might
think fit to study Sanscrit, and decades would pass
before he came to write the first word of his book.
Thus four years went by, years full
of work, though they left no visible traces.
Meanwhile the aspect of things in the new Empire had
become very different. Men breathed the oppressive
air with laboring breasts; the bright dawn which promised
so glorious a day had, been followed by sullen mists,
and the blue sky had disappeared behind heavy, leaden-gray
clouds, through which no comforting ray of sunshine
pierced. Where was all the glowing enthusiasm,
the rapture of hope and joy that, in the first years
after the great war, had flushed every German cheek
and lit up every eye? Throughout the length and
breath of the land the opposing factions confronted
one another like armed antagonists preparing for a
duel to the death. Town and village rang with
execration and satire, with howls of rage or satisfied
revenge vented by German against German. The
Roman Catholic shook his clinched fist at the Protestant,
the liberal at the conservative, the protectionist
at the free-trader, the partisan of absolute government
at the defender of the people’s rights.
Everywhere hatred and malice, everywhere a mad desire
to gag, to maltreat, to tear limb from limb; this
unfettering of the basest human passions giving meanwhile
such an impetus to bribery, corruption, and unprincipled
advancement for party purposes as to resemble the
loathsome luxuriant growth of mildew in the damp corners
of some neglected storeroom.
The high tide of the foreign millions
had ebbed away, showing itself to have been no fructifying
Nile but a destructive lava stream, leaving the country
charred and desolate after its passage. The gold
that only yesterday had poured through greedy fingers,
had turned to-day to ashes and withered leaves like
the goblin gold of a fairy tales. Diminished
inclination for work, an insanely increased demand
for the luxuries of life, the accepted ideas of morality
shaken to their foundations by scandalous examples
of triumphant vice and villainy these were
the blessings that remained after the so-called impetus
following on the “Downfall.” Work
was scarcer, wages lower, but the flood of country
people seeking work continued to roll toward the capital,
overcoming with irresistible force the backward wave
of unfortunates who could find no employment in the
building yards, the factories or the workshops, trampling
blindly over the bodies of the fallen, like a herd
of buffaloes which marches ever straight ahead, which
nothing can turn out of its course, and when it arrives
at a precipice over which the leaders fall, presses
onward till the last one is swallowed up in the depths.
The misery and privation became heartrending to witness.
Each morning you might see in the working quarters
of the town and suburbs hundreds of strong men, their
hands perforce idle buried in
their torn and empty pockets, going from factory to
factory asking for work, while the overseers would
wave them off from afar to avoid a useless interchange
of words. If, in the years of the French milliards,
the workingman had turned socialist out of sheer envy
and wantonness, he became so now under the sting of
adversity, and in all the length and breadth of Berlin
there was hardly one of the proletariat who was not
a fanatical disciple of the new doctrine, with its
slashing denunciations against all that was, and its
intoxicating promises of all that was to be.
Wilhelm had many opportunities of intercourse with
the unemployed. He gave help as far as his fifty
marks a day would reach, and kept the wolf from many
a door. But the miraculous loaves and fishes of
the gospel would have been necessary to successfully
alleviate even the distress which he saw with his
own eyes, and although much of the preaching of the
social democrats still seemed to him mere phrase-making
and altogether mistaken, he yet came gradually to the
conclusion that somewhere he did not precisely
know where in the construction of the social
machine there must be a flaw, seeing that there were
so many people who could and would work, and yet were
doomed to despair and ruin for lack of employment.
The spring of 1878 came round, and brought with it
two attempts on the life of the emperor within three
weeks. Scarcely had the people recovered from
the horror caused by Hodel’s crime when it was
shaken to its depths by Nobiling’s murderous
shot.
On that terrible Sunday, June the
2d, Wilhelm had dined with Schrotter, and about three
o’clock they started for a walk. In the
few steps that separate the Mittelstrasse from the
Linden they saw what was going on in the town.
In Unter den Linden, however, they were received by
the yells of the newspaper men calling out the first
special editions, and found themselves in the stream
of people pouring toward the Palace or to N,
where they pointed out the window on the second floor
from which the too-well-aimed shot had fallen.
From the special editions, from the
confused remarks and exclamations of the crowd in
which the two friends found themselves, and the information
they obtained from the grim-looking policemen, rougher
and less communicative than ever, they learned all
that was necessary of the bloody deed which had taken
place an hour ago. Wilhelm could scarcely control
his horror, and even Schrotter, though calmer, was
deeply moved and downcast. All pleasure in their
walk was gone, and they decided to return to Schrotter’s
house.
“It is simply hideous,”
said Wilhelm, as they turned into the Friedrichstrasse,
“that we have such brutes living among us!
We know, of course, that there is a great deal of
distress, but a man who can revenge his own trouble
on the person of the emperor must be lower than the
beasts of the field. And men who at this time
of day have such ideas on State organization are electors!”
“Good heavens!” cried
Schrotter, with unconscious vehemence, “you are
surely not going to make the popular mistake of drawing
sweeping conclusions from these outrages? Such
occurrences have no outside importance. They
are the acts of madmen. Their following so closely
upon one another is the very surest proof of that.
There are in Germany thousands perhaps
tens of thousands of unhappy creatures whose
minds are more or less unhinged, though their inexperienced
surroundings do not know it. Some exceptional
event will suddenly put the entire population in a
state of ferment, the imagination of the already morbidly
inclined will be particularly strongly affected thereby;
they picture the occurrence to themselves till it
takes hold of them, and drives out every other thought
from their minds, becomes a nightmare, a possession,
and finally an irresistible impulse to do the same.
After every event of the kind, you hear that a whole
number of people have gone mad, and that their insanity
is somehow connected with it. No such thing.
They were mad before, and the insanity which had lain
dormant in them only waited for a chance shock to
give it definite form and character.”
They had reached Schrotter’s
door by this time, and were on the point of entering,
when a policeman stepped up to them, and touching
Wilhelm’s arm, said:
“Gentlemen, you will have to come with me.”
“Why, what do you mean?” they exclaimed,
very much taken aback.
“Better make no fuss, but come
quietly with me,” answered the policeman, “This
gentleman accuses you of making insulting remarks
against his majesty.”
Only now did they become aware of
a man standing behind the policeman and glaring at
them in fury.
“Are you mad?” Schrotter
burst out angrily. “That is for the magistrate
to decide,” exclaimed the man, in a voice trembling
with rage; “and you, policeman, do your duty.”
Passers-by began to gather round the
group, so, to bring a disagreeable scene to a close,
Schrotter said to Wilhelm:
“We had better go with the policeman;
I suppose we shall be enlightened presently.”
A short walk brought them to the police
office in the Neue Wilhelms Straße, where
they were taken before the lieutenant of police.
The policeman deposed in a few words that he had been
standing at the corner of the Friedrich and Mittelstrasse,
the two gentlemen passed him in loud conversation;
the third gentleman, who was following them, then
came up to him, and told him to arrest them because
they had spoken insultingly of his majesty, and here
they were. He had neither seen nor heard anything
further.
The lieutenant of police began by
asking their names. When they told him “Dr.
Schrotter, M. D. one of the members for Berlin and
Professor Emeritus,” and “Dr. Eynhardt,
Doctor of Philosophy, householder,” he offered
them chairs. The informer introduced himself as
“non-commissioned officer Patke, retired, member
of a military association, and candidate for the private
constabulary.”
“What have you to bring forward against the
gentlemen?”
“I walked behind the two gentlemen
from the Linden to the Mittelstrasse. They were
conversing loudly about the attempted assassination,
and I naturally listened.”
“It does not appear to me so
very natural,” commented the lieutenant dryly.
The informer was a trifle disconcerted,
but he soon recovered himself, and proceeded in a
declamatory manner:
“The younger gentleman the
dark one expressed himself in very unbecoming
terms with regard to his majesty the emperor, and said
among other things, that the outrage was of no real
importance. I am a patriot, I have served his
august majesty; if his majesty ”
“That will do,” the lieutenant
broke in, ruthlessly interrupting the retired non-commissioned
officer’s flow of language, which he accompanied
with a dramatic waving of the right arm. “Can
you repeat the ‘unbecoming terms’ of which,
according to your account, this gentleman made use?”
“I cannot remember the exact
words. I was too excited. So much, however,
I remember distinctly he declared the attempt
upon his majesty’s life to be an occurrence
of no importance.”
Wilhelm now broke in.
“Not a word of that is true,”
he said quietly. “Neither of us said one
word which could justify this inconceivable charge.”
“The remark which this informer
seems to have taken hold of,” Schrotter observed,
“was not made by my friend, Dr. Eynhardt, but
by me. I did not say either that the occurrence
was unimportant, but that it had no general significance that
it was not a proof of the prevailing feeling at large.”
“It comes to the same thing
whether you say it has no importance or no significance,”
interrupted the informer. “That gentleman
may have made the remark, but I certainly heard it,
and as a loyal servant of his majesty ”
“That is quite enough,”
said the lieutenant of police authoritatively.
Then turning to the two friends “I
am very sorry, but as things stand at present, I must
let the law take its course. Do you persist in
your charge?” he asked the informer.
“Yes, Herr Lieutenant; my duty to my sovereign ”
“Silence. Gentlemen, I
shall be obliged to notify the matter to the proper
authorities. I expect you will be called upon
to clear yourselves before the magistrate, which I
have no doubt you will be able to do successfully.
I need not detain you any longer.”
Wilhelm and Schrotter bowed courteously
and withdrew, without vouchsafing a glance at the
informer. The latter lingered, as if he would
have liked to continue the conversation with the lieutenant
of police, but an emphatic “You may go!”
sent him rapidly over the threshold of the office.
Five days afterward, on a Friday,
Schrotter and Wilhelm were summoned to appear in the
Stadtvogtei
before the magistrate, a disagreeable person with a
bilious complexion, venomous eyes behind his spectacles,
and the unpleasing habit of continually scooping out
his ear with the little finger of his left hand.
The two friends, the informer, and the policeman were
present. The magistrate could not have received
them differently if they had been accused of robbing
and murdering their parents. To be sure, he behaved
no better to the informer. His expression of unmitigated
disgust was perhaps a freak of nature, and no indication
of the true state of his feelings.
He had a bundle of papers before him,
in which he searched for some time before opening
his mouth.
“You are accused of having made
use of offensive expressions regarding his majesty,”
he said to Schrotter.
“On a preposterously unfounded charge,”
he retorted.
“And you too,” he turned to Wilhelm.
“I can only repeat Dr. Schrotter’s answer.”
“Give your evidence,” he ordered the policeman.
The man did so.
“Could you understand what the gentleman said?”
“No.”
“How far was Patke behind them?”
“A few steps.”
“You must be more exact.”
“I can’t say more exactly
than that, for I paid no attention to the gentlemen
till I was told to arrest them.”
“Is it your opinion that Herr
Patke could have heard distinctly what the gentlemen
were saying to one another?”
“I dare say he might have understood
if they spoke very loud, but I can’t say for
certain.”
“Herr Patke, what have you to say?”
The former non-commissioned officer,
who had donned his 1870 medal for the occasion, hereupon
assumed a strictly military bearing, fixed his eye
firmly on the magistrate, and began in a sing-song
voice:
“I happened to be in the street
last Sunday when the infamous wretch lifted his murderous
hand against the sacred person of our august monarch.
My heart bled; I was beside myself; I could have torn
everybody and everything to pieces. As I walked
along I noticed these two gentlemen, who looked to
me suspicious from the first ”
“Why?” asked the magistrate.
“Well the one with
his black hair, and the other with his hooked nose I
said to myself, ‘Those are Jews!’”
The magistrate suddenly bent over
his papers, and gave a kind of grunt. Even the
policeman, in spite of his wooden official air, could
not repress a smile. Patke continued:
“Then I heard the younger gentleman
say, ’It serves his majesty the emperor quite
right.’”
“Did he actually say, his majesty
the emperor?” interrupted the magistrate.
“No,” answered Patke eagerly, “I
say that.”
“You are only to repeat the gentleman’s
actual words.”
“He actually did say that it served the emperor
right.”
“This is beyond a joke,”
Schrotter burst out. “Why, man, I wonder
the lie does not stick in your throat and choke you!”
“I must beg you not to address
the witness,” said the magistrate brusquely.
Then to Patke severely “That is not
what you said in your first charge.”
“I was confused then; I did
not recollect distinctly. But later on it came
back to me.”
“That is very improbable.
What have you to answer, Dr. Eynhardt?”
“Simply, that the man’s
statement is absolutely untrue. I never uttered
or thought words bearing the remotest resemblance to
those he quotes.”
“What my friend does not say
is,” broke in Schrotter, “that, on the
contrary, he expressed the deepest and most painful
emotion at the crime.”
The magistrate shot a venomous glance
from under his spectacles at Schrotter, but quailed
before those flaming half-closed blue eyes fixed so
sternly upon him.
“Well, and what have you to
bring forward against the other gentleman?”
“That gentleman said the outrage
was of no great importance.”
“In your first account you said
the outrage had no real significance, and that Dr.
Eynhardt made the remark.”
“Whether he said ‘no importance’
or ‘no significance,’ it is all the same
thing, and one cannot so easily distinguish the speaker
when one is walking behind. I may have been mistaken
on that point.”
“You do not repudiate the remark?”
asked the magistrate of Schrotter in his most biting
tones.
“Your expression is not very
happily chosen. By repudiating I understand the
declaring of a fact to be false when we know it to
be true. I am not in the habit of doing that,
nor should I suppose it of you, Herr Staatsanwalt.”
“I need no instruction from
you,” the other returned angrily.
“It would seem so, however” Schrotter
calmly rejoined.
The magistrate grunted several times
and then asked, after a pause, during which he was
particularly busy with his ear:
“You admit the statement, then?”
“Not altogether. It is
true that I said the attempt on the emperor’s
life had no general significance, but I meant by that
and the rest of what I said, that if the political
parties should make this isolated crime (committed
by an undoubtedly insane person) the excuse for adopting
measures inimical to the liberty of the public in general,
they would be doing something both unjustifiable and
reprehensible.”
“Can he have said that?”
asked the magistrate, turning to Patke.
“I don’t know. I only know what I
said just now.”
Renewed grunting, renewed digging
in the ear and turning over of papers. “Hm hm,”
he muttered to himself testily, “that is not
enough. It is too indefinite, in spite of strong
grounds for suspicion.” Then he looked
up, and in a tone which was meant to convey as much
scorn as possible, he asked Schrotter “You
played a part in the political events of 1848?”
“Yes, and the recollection of
it is the pride of my life.”
“I did not ask you about that.
And you are at present the chairman of a district
society of progressive opinions?”
“I have that honor.”
“There is nothing further against
you. And you, Dr. Eynhardt, you refused the Iron
Cross in the late campaign?”
“Yes.”
“You were discharged from the army without comment?”
“Yes.”
“For declining a duel,” observed Schrotter.
“Dr. Eynhardt is of age, and
can answer for himself. You have attended
Socialist meetings?”
“Only once.”
“And made speeches?”
“One speech?”
“And that was directed against Socialism,”
said Schrotter again.
The magistrate grew lobster-red in the face.
“It is really scandalous,”
he cried, quivering with rage, “that I am repeatedly
obliged to remind a man of your position that he is
only to answer when spoken to. Why didn’t
you say yourself, Dr. Eynhardt, that you had spoken
against the Socialists?”
“Because you did not ask me,” answered
Wilhelm, with a gentle smile.
After a slight pause the magistrate
resumed “You are on friendly terms
with a Russian named Dr. Barinskoi?”
“You can hardly call it that.
I did know him, though not exactly in a friendly way,
but for two years I have quite lost sight of him.”
“Did you know that Dr. Barinskoi was a Nihilist?”
“Yes.”
“And you did not let that make any difference
to you?”
“I was not afraid of infection,” said
Wilhelm, and smiled again.
“Perhaps not, but of being compromised,”
growled the magistrate.
“That idea has not troubled me as yet.”
“You inherited from a friend
who committed suicide a large fortune, which you use
chiefly for the benefit of Socialist workmen?”
“I use it for the benefit of
the poor, and those I certainly find more frequently
among the Socialist workmen than among factory owners
and householders.”
“I’ll thank you to remember
that this is not the place for making bad jokes!”
roared the magistrate.
“You are quite right,”
Wilhelm answered serenely. “I know nothing
more unpleasant than bad jokes.”
Schrotter looked as if he were going
to embrace his friend. He had never seen him
from this side.
“Did it never occur to you to
put yourself in communication with the clergymen of
your district, these gentlemen having far greater
facilities for finding out deserving objects of charity
than a private person?”
“I will answer that question
when you have had the goodness to explain to me what
connection it has with this man’s denunciation.”
The magistrate glared at him in a
manner calculated to wither him on the spot, but only
met a quiet, smiling face which he was incapable of
intimidating.
“May I request you now,”
said Schrotter in his turn, “to ask the witness
Patke if for the last few weeks he has not been a candidate
for a post as detective on the political police staff?”
Schrotter too had made a variety of inquiries since
last Sunday, and had learned this fact.
“That is so,” stammered
Patke, turning very red. “In these terrible
times, when the Socialists and the enemies of the country ”
“Silence, Herr Patke,”
interrupted the magistrate angrily; “that has
nothing to do with the business on hand.”
He reflected for awhile, and then said with the most
deeply grudging manner “The statement
of the one witness seeing too that it is
indefinite in some important points is
not sufficient to warrant me in passing a sentence,
in spite of many good grounds for suspicion afforded
by your past history and known opinions. I will
therefore dismiss the charge, if only to avoid the
public scandal of a Member being accused of lèse
majesté.”
Schrotter was boiling with rage, and
had the greatest difficulty in restraining his naturally
passionate temper. “Many thanks for your
kindness,” he said in a choking voice, “and
for this scoundrel you have no reprimand?”
“Sir,” screamed the magistrate,
springing out of his chair with fury, “leave
this room instantly; and you, Herr Patke, if you wish
to bring an action for libel against the gentleman
you may call upon me as a witness.”
Patke was too modest to avail himself
of this friendly offer. Wilhelm dragged Schrotter
out of the office as fast as he could, and even outside
they still heard the magistrate’s grunts of wrath.
Dark days followed, in which Schrotter
seemed to live over again the worst horns of the “wild
year.” A moral pestilence the
craze for denunciation spread itself over
the whole of Germany, sparing neither the palace nor
the hut. No one was safe, either in the bosom
of the family, at the club table, in the lecture room,
or in the street, from the low spy who, from fanaticism
or stupidity, from personal spite or desire to make
himself conspicuous, took hold of some hasty or imprudent
word, turned it round, mangled it, and brought it redhot
to the magistrates, who seldom had the courage to
kick the informer downstairs. Such unspeakable
depths of human baseness came to light, so full of
corruption and pestilence, that the eye turned in horror
from the incredible spectacle. The newspapers
brought daily reports of denunciations for “lèse
majesté,” and when Schrotter read them he
clasped his hands in horrified dismay and exclaimed,
“Are we in Germany? are these my fellow-countrymen?”
He became at last so disgusted that he gave up reading
the German papers, and derived his knowledge of what
was going on in the world from the two London papers
which, from the habit of a quarter of a century, he
still took in. He wished to hear no more about
denunciations by which, with the aid of police and
magistrates, every kind of cowardice and vileness,
social envy and religious hatred, rivalry, spite,
and inborn malevolence, sought a riskless gratification,
and usually found it in full measure. But it
took away all pleasure in social intercourse.
One learned to be cautious and suspicious. One
grew accustomed to see an enemy in every stranger,
and to be upon one’s guard before a neighbor
as before some lurking traitor. Hypocrisy became
an instinct of self-preservation; every one carefully
avoided speaking of those things of which the heart
was full, and Berlin afforded an insight into the mental
condition of the people of Spain during the most flourishing
period of the Inquisition, or of Venice in the days
when anonymous denunciations poured into the yawning
jaws of the Lions of St. Mark’s square.
The Reichstag was dissolved, the people
of Germany must choose new representatives, and the
chief, if not the sole question to be decided by the
election was, Are the Socialists to be dealt with under
a special act, or to come under the common law?
Schrotter now felt it justifiable, nay, that it was
his duty, to throw off the reserve he had maintained
since his return to the Fatherland, and come forward
as a candidate for the Reichstag, though for a suburban
district, as the city district to whose poor he had
been an untiring benefactor as physician and friend,
with help, counsel, and money, was not available.
At a meeting of his constituents he
laid down his confession of faith. A special
act, he explained, was in no way justified, would indeed
be ineffectual, and lead away from the object they
had in view. The government would be guilty of
libel if it made the Socialists answerable for a crime
committed by two half or wholly insane persons; it
was the duty of the government to prove that these
attacks were the work of the Socialists: that
proof, however, it had been unable to discover.
Moreover, no special act in the world could hinder
people of unsound mind from committing insane deeds the
crimes of a Hodel or a Nobiling could not be predicted,
but neither could they be prevented by any kind of
precautionary measure. The sole result of a special
act would be to make the Socialists practically outlaws
in their own country. That would constitute not
only a terrible severity against a large class of
their fellow-citizens, but a frightful danger to the
State. In hundreds and thousands of hearts it
would destroy the sense of fellowship with the community
in which they lived; they would look upon themselves
as outcasts, and become the enemies of their pursuers.
It would be exactly as if some thousands of Frenchmen
were set down in the midst of the German population in
the army, in the cities, the factories, the arsenals
and railways, where they would only wait for a favorable
opportunity to revenge themselves on their conquerors.
That would be the inevitable result if the Socialists
were deprived of the security of the common law.
He considered the Socialist doctrines false and mischievous,
and their aims senseless and fortunately unattainable,
and for that very reason he did not fear them.
But deprive the Socialists of the possibility of expressing
themselves freely in word and print, and their grievances,
which now found vent in harmless speechifying, would
assume the form of practical violence.
His speech made an impression, but
that of a rival candidate a still greater, for he
succeeded in rousing the deepest and most powerful
emotions of his hearers, by the plain statement that
whoever refused the government the right of adopting
such measures as it thought necessary for the safety
of the public, simply delivered the life of their
aged and beloved sovereign into the hands of assassins.
At the election, Schrotter had on his side only a
small number of independent-minded voters, who were
able to remain unmoved by sentimental arguments.
The workingmen would not vote for him, knowing him
to be an opponent of Socialism. The rival candidate
was returned by a large majority.
The Reichstag assembled, the Socialist
Act was passed, Berlin declared to be in a state of
semi-siege, and a great number of workmen dismissed
from the city. It was November, and winter had
set in with unusual severity. On a dark and bitterly
cold afternoon, old Stubbe, who had been agent in
the Eynhardts’ house for twenty years, entered
Wilhelm’s room.
“What is the news, Father Stubbe?”
cried Wilhelm, as he came in.
“No good news, Herr Doctor.
Wander the locksmith you know the man who
rents the second floor of the house in our court has
been turned out by the police. It seems he’s
a very dangerous customer; I must say I have never
noticed it. He was always very decent; the children
were a bother, certainly always running
about the court and getting between your feet.
Well, we all have our faults; and then, too, he didn’t
pay his rent in October.”
Wilhelm, who was well acquainted with
Father Stubbe’s flow of language, and did not
greatly admire it, interrupted him at this point.
“Well, and what is the matter?”
“What’s the matter, Herr
Doctor? Why, the wife is there now with the five
children, and there’s no earning anything, and
yesterday she took away a cupboard to turn it into
money somewhere not that she can have got
much for it, it was all tumbling to pieces. The
rest of the furniture will take legs to itself soon,
I dare say, for six mouths must be fed, and where
is food to come from? There will be no removal
expenses anyhow, for there will soon be nothing but
the bare walls. There’s no question of
paying the rent, and never will be, as far as I can
see; so I thought I had better ask what was to be done
with the poor things.”
“What can we do?”
“We could seize the bits of
sticks they still have, though that would not cover
the rent that is owing. The best thing, perhaps,
would be to tell Frau Wander just to take her things
and clear out; then at least we could relet the rooms.”
“Frau Wander does not work?”
“How can she? five children, and
the youngest still at the breast.”
“I will see to it myself, and let you know what
is to be done.”
“Very good, Herr Doctor,”
said Stubbe, much relieved. He had a kind heart
and it was only his strict sense of duty that led him
to mention the case of the Wanders, and particularly
the unpermissible selling of the furniture, to the
owner of the house.
Stubbe had barely reached home before
Wilhelm appeared in the Kochstrasse. His house
lay between the Charlotten and Markgrafenstrasse,
and was an old and unpretentious structure, looking,
among the stately houses of a later period which surrounded
it on all sides, like a poor relation at a rich and
distinguished family gathering. During the “milliard
years,” building speculators had offered him
considerable sums for the ground, but he was not to
be prevailed upon to sell the house left him by his
father. It was only seven windows wide, and had
consisted originally of one story only, but a low
second story had been added, recognizable instantly
as a piece of patchwork. A great key hanging
over the entrance announced the fact that there was
a locksmith’s workshop inside. The courtyard
was very low and narrow, and roughly paved with cobblestones,
between which the grass sprouted luxuriantly.
At the further end of this court stood the “Hinterhaus,”
likewise two-storied, on the ground floor of which
the locksmith carried on his resounding trade.
Accompanied by Stubbe, Wilhelm mounted
the worn wooden staircase leading to the second floor.
The flat consisted of a kitchen and a room with one
window. Even when the sun was most lavish of his
rays, it was none too light there; now, in the early-falling
dusk of a dull late autumn day, Wilhelm found himself
in a dim half-light as he opened the door. There
was no fire in the stove, no lamp upon the table.
In the cold and darkness he could just distinguish
among the sparse furniture a slim, wretched-looking
woman sitting on a chair by the table, nursing a baby
wrapped in an old blanket; a tall, large-boned man
in workman’s clothes, with a bushy beard and
gloomy eyes, leaning against the wall beside the window,
and some fair-haired children, unnaturally silent
and motionless for their age, crouching side by side
on the bed, only swinging their legs a little from
time to time.
At Wilhelm’s entrance with a
friendly “Good-evening,” the woman rose
from her seat and gazed at the intruder with hostile
eyes, the children ceased swinging their legs, and
the workman shrank away from the window into the deeper
shadow of the corner.
“The landlord,” Stubbe announced solemnly.
Frau Wander threw up her head.
“Now then, what do you want now?” she
said hurriedly, her bitter tone beginning on the ordinary
pitch, but rising rapidly to a shrewish scream.
“It’s the rent, I suppose; and I suppose
we’re to have notice to quit? It’s
all one to me. I’ve got no money and so
I tell you; but what’s here you can keep, and
you can have the skin off my back too, and I’ll
throw in the children beside. They can drag a
milk-cart as well as dogs. Why don’t you
cut my throat at once and have done with it?”
“But, my good woman,”
cried Stubbe, horror-stricken, “what are you
thinking of? The Herr Doctor only means well by
you.”
Wilhelm had come quite close to the
poor thing, who had worked herself up into such a
state of excitement that she was trembling from head
to foot, and said in that gentle voice of his that
always found its way to the heart:
“You are worrying yourself unnecessarily,
Frau Wander. I have not come about the rent,
and nobody is going to turn you out of your home.
Herr Stubbe here has been telling me about your troubles,
and I came to see if we could not give you a little
assistance.”
She stared at him speechless, with
wide-open eyes. The children on the bed began
to whisper to one another. Wilhelm took advantage
of the pause to say a few words in Father Stubbe’s
ear, whereupon the old man vanished.
“Why don’t you offer the
gentleman a chair?” said the workman, coming
out of his dark corner.
The woman slowly drew forward a chair,
round the torn seat of which the straw stood up raggedly
on all sides. Wilhelm thanked her with a wave
of the hand.
“Do not be afraid of me, dear
Frau Wander,” he went on. “Tell me
something of your circumstances.”
“What was there to tell?”
answered the woman, still somewhat ruffled. He
could see for himself how things stood with her.
Her husband had been turned out of Berlin; but much
the police cared if she and her five children starved
or froze to death. It would have come to that
already if some of her husband’s fellow-workmen
had not given them a little help in their distress,
like her present visitor, the iron-worker, Groll.
But what could they do? They had not anything
themselves, and the police were always after them like
the devil after a poor soul. What did they want
of them after all? Her husband had held with
the Socialists certainly, but he had done nobody any
harm by that. Ever since Wander had gone over
to the Socialists he had left off drinking not
a drop only coffee, and sometimes a little
beer; and he was always good to his wife and children,
and he had no debts as long as he had been able to
earn anything. The locksmith downstairs had discharged
him after the second attack on the emperor, although
he was a clever workman; but the master was afraid
of the police, and none of the others would risk taking
him on. That was bad enough, but it was not so
hard to bear in the summer, and the Socialists held
faithfully together, and now and then there was a
penny to be earned. But now now that
he had to go away, and winter was at the door
She could keep up no longer, and burst into tears.
Wilhelm seated himself cautiously
on the broken chair, and asked, “Where is your
husband now? and what does he think of doing?”
“He is trying to get through
to the Rhine, and get work at Dortmund, or somewhere
in that neighborhood,” she answered, while the
tight sobs caught her breath, and she wiped away the
tears with the back of her hand. “If he
can’t get any work he will go to France, or Belgium,
or even America, if he must. But that takes a
lot of money, and where is one to get it without stealing?
We are to come to him when he has found work, and
can send us the money for the journey. Till then ”
With the free arm that was not holding
the child she made a hopeless gesture.
At that moment the door opened and
Father Stubbe came in, carrying in one hand a lighted
candle, and in the other a great, fresh-smelling loaf
of bread. He placed both upon the bare table,
and then discreetly withdrew.
“Bread! bread!” cried
the children, awakened to sudden life, and jumping
off the bed they gathered round the table with greedy
eyes, clapping their hands. There were four of
them the youngest a mite of two or three,
who only babbled with the others; the eldest, a pale
little girl of seven or eight years.
“Children! Just let me
catch you!” scolded the mother; but her voice
shook with nervous excitement.
“Please, Frau Wander, won’t
you cut the children some bread first? We can
talk afterward.”
In a twinkling the eldest girl had
fetched a knife from the kitchen, the children continuing
to clap their hands delightedly, and Frau Wander cut
them large slices, and while she was so engaged, “We
have never had anything given us, Herr Doctor,”
she said; “we have always earned our living
with honest work. It is hard to have to come to
this; but what can you do when the police put a rope
round your neck?”
“You must not worry any longer,
dear Frau Wander,” said Wilhelm, “but
you must not speak like that of the police. You
do yourself no good by it, and perhaps a great deal
of harm. We will do what we can for you.
Never mind about the rent. You will stay on quietly
here, and allow me to assist you with this trifle.”
He pressed two twenty-mark pieces into the half-reluctant
hand so unused to accepting alms. “And Herr
Stubbe will give you the same sum every month till
you are able to join your husband.”
He held out his hand, which she grasped
in silence, incapable of finding suitable words to
thank him, and he hurried to the door. The mechanic
hastily snatched up the candle from the table, ran
after him and lighted him downstairs, murmuring with
real emotion:
“Thank you a thousand times,
Herr Doctor, and may God bless you!”
And all the way downstairs Wilhelm
was followed by the children’s jubilant song
of “Bread! bread!”
One morning a few days later it
was December the 2d as Wilhelm was sitting
at his writing-table engaged in making notes from a
thick English book of travels on the Australian savage’s
ideas on nature, he heard a sound of quarreling going
on in the hall. He could distinguish Frau Muller’s
irate tones, and then a man’s voice mentioning
his name. He gave no further heed to the dispute,
thinking it was doubtless some importune person in
whom worthy Frau Muller had detected the professional
beggar, and was therefore driving away. But it
did not leave off, and grew louder and louder, Frau
Muller’s voice rising at last to an exasperated
scream there even seemed to be something
like a hand-to-hand fight going on till
Wilhelm thought it behooved him to see what was happening,
and, if need be, come to the rescue of his faithful
house-dragon. He opened the door quickly and received
Frau Muller in his arms. If he had not caught
her, she would have fallen backward into the room,
for she had leaned a living bulwark against
the door, defending the entrance with her body against
two men, one of whom was trying to push her away,
while the other, standing further back, was restraining
his companion from grasping Frau Muller all too roughly.
In the daring man who did not shrink from laying sacrilegious
hands upon the furious and snorting landlady, Wilhelm
instantly recognized the mechanic whom he had seen
at Frau Wander’s. At sight of him the man
raised his hat politely, and before the gasping Frau
Muller, who was simply choking with excitement, could
find her tongue, he said:
“Beg pardon, I am sure, Herr
Doctor, for disturbing you; but we really must speak
to you. I knew from Herr Stubbe that you are always
at home at this hour, so I would not let the lady
send us away.”
“The lady indeed!” Frau
Muller managed at last to exclaim. “Now
he talks about ladies, and a minute ago he had the
impudence ”
“You must excuse us, madam,”
said the workman with the utmost civility; “we
meant no harm, and we simply must speak to the Herr
Doctor.”
“Come in,” said Wilhelm
curtly, and not overwarmly, while he pressed the still
angrily glaring Frau Muller’s hand gratefully.
The second visitor now mentioned his
name it was that of one of the most prominent
leaders of the Social Democrats in Germany. Wilhelm
signed to the two men to be seated, and asked what
he could do for them.
“I heard through the mechanic
Groll here,” answered the stranger, pointing
to the other man, “what you did for Frau Wander.
That encouraged us to come to you with a request.”
At a sign from Wilhelm he continued:
“You have seen one of our cases
for yourself, and that not by any means the worst.
We have dozens of such cases, and there will probably
be hundreds more. Our union does what it can.
Every member gives up part of his week’s wages
for the unfortunate victims, and thereby we perhaps
save the government from the crime of having condemned
innocent women and children to death by starvation.
But our people are poor, and have to fight against
want themselves. We cannot expect any great sacrifice
from them. What we want is a considerable lump
sum to enable us to send on the families of the exiled
workmen to join their respective bread-winners.
So we go round knocking at the doors of our wealthy
associates, who, though in consideration of the times
they do not care to declare themselves openly for
us, nevertheless have a feeling heart for the workingman’s
distress.”
All the time he was speaking he looked
Wilhelm straight in the eyes. Wilhelm bore his
gaze quietly, and answered:
“If you think I share your opinions
you are much mistaken. I consider that you are
pursuing a false course, that you make assertions to
the workingman which you cannot prove, and promise
him things you cannot fulfill, and I frankly confess
that I do not envy you the responsibility you have
taken upon your own shoulders.”
The leader stroked his short beard
with a nervous movement, and the mechanic twisted
his hat awkwardly between his hands. Wilhelm went
on after a short pause:
“But that does not prevent me
from sympathizing with the distress of women and children,
and I shall be very glad to do what I can if you will
give me a detailed account of the state of affairs.”
In a few plain words the visitor gave
a sketch of the circumstances, all the more heartbreaking
for its very unpretentiousness. So many men dismissed,
so many wives, so many children, so many parents and
near relatives unable to support themselves.
Of these so many were sick, so many women lately confined,
so many cripples. So many had prospects of better
circumstances if they could get away from Berlin.
For that purpose such and such a sum was necessary.
So much was already in hand. He stated the amount
of certain large donations, and added “I
will not mention the names of the subscribers, as
it might happen that it would be to your advantage
not to know them.”
Wilhelm had listened in silence.
He now opened a drawer of his writing-table, took
out a yellow envelope in which Schrotter was in the
habit of giving him, on the first of every month, fifteen
hundred marks out of the Dorfling bequest, and handed
the sum which he had received the day before, and
was still unbroken, to the workingmen’s leader.
The man turned over the three five-hundred-mark notes,
and then looked up startled. Wilhelm only nodded
his head slightly.
The leader rose. “It would
be inadvisable to give you a receipt. You have
no doubt, I think, that your noble gift will be used
for its proper object. Thank you a thousand times,
and if you should ever stand in need of faithful and
determined men, then think of us.”
A week later, to the very day, early
in the morning a police officer brought Wilhelm an
official document summoning him to appear that afternoon
before the head police authorities in the Stadtvogtei.
He presented himself at the appointed hour in the
office, and handed the document to an official, who,
after glancing at it, asked:
“You are Dr. Wilhelm Eynhardt?
“Yes.”
He took up a paper lying ready at
hand, and said dryly: “I have to inform
you that, in accordance with the Socialist Act, you
are ordered out of Berlin and its purlieus, and must
be out of the city by to-morrow at midnight at the
latest.”
“Ordered out of Berlin!”
cried Wilhelm, utterly taken, aback. “And
may I ask what I have done?”
“You must know that better than
I,” answered the official sternly. “However,
I have no further information to give you, and can
only advise you to address yourself to the Committee
of Police, in case you require a day or two more to
regulate your affairs.”
At the same time he handed him the
paper, which proved to be the written order of banishment,
and dismissed him with a slight bend of the head.
Wilhelm went without a word.
Naturally he turned his steps almost unconsciously
to Schrotter, to whom he held out the police paper
in silence. Schrotter read it, and struck his
hands together.
“Is it possible?” he murmured.
“Is it possible?” He paced the room with
long strides, then suddenly stood still before his
friend, and laying his hands on Wilhelm’s shoulder,
he said in tones of profound emotion: “I
never thought I should live to see such things in my
own country. I am nearly sixty, and it is late
in the day for me to begin a new life. But really
I find it difficult to breathe this air any longer.
Where shall you go?”
“I do not know yet myself.
I must collect my thoughts a little first.”
“Whatever you decide upon, I
have a very good mind to go with you. There is
nothing left for me to do in my old age but emigrate
again.”
“You will not do that!”
answered Wilhelm hurriedly. “Men like you
are more badly needed here than ever. You must
stay. I implore you to do so. Remember how
you reproached yourself for twenty years, because you
were not there when the people were struggling against
the Manteuffel reaction. And then your
patients, your poor, the hundreds who have need of
you.”
Schrotter did not answer, and seated
himself on the divan. His massive face was gloomy
as midnight, and the fiery blue eyes almost closed.
After awhile he growled: “But why why?”
“Oh, I suppose because of the
fifteen hundred marks for the families of the dismissed
workmen.”
“Of course!” cried Schrotter,
clapping his hand to his forehead.
“Dorfling’s gold does
not come from the Rhine for nothing,” Wilhelm
smiled sadly. “Like the Nibleungen treasure,
it is doomed to bring disaster on all who possess
it.”
As Schrotter did not answer, Wilhelm
resumed: “And as we are on the subject,
we may as well settle that matter at once. Of
course you will use the whole income now for your
poor?”
“Not at all!” cried Schrotter.
“Why should things not remain as they are?
Wherever you may take up your abode, the poor you have
always with you.”
Wilhelm shook his head. “I
may possibly go abroad, and you see, Herr Doctor,
I am prejudiced in favor of my own country. I
think we shall carry our Dorfling’s intentions
best by using his money for the relief of German necessity.”
Schrotter made no further objection.
That Wilhelm would not, under any circumstances, use
a penny of the money for himself he knew perfectly
well, and in the end it was all the same whether the
poor received it from his hand or Wilhelm’s.
He merely wrote down some addresses which Wilhelm
gave him of people to whom he gave regular assistance,
and whom he recommended to Schrotter to that end.
When toward evening Wilhelm returned
home, and, as was inevitable, told Frau Muller the
news, she nearly fainted, and had to sit down.
She was struck dumb for some time, and then only found
strength to utter low groans. Her lodger turned
out of Berlin like a vagrant. A householder too!
Such a respectable, fine young gentleman, whom she
had watched over like the apple of her eye for seven
years dreadful dreadful.
But it was all the fault of the low wretches who had
forced their way in last week. She had thought
as much at the time. If she had only called in
the police at once! The police oh yes,
she had all due respect for the police, she was the
widow of a government official, and she loved her
good old king certainly but that they should
have banished the Herr Doctor that was
not right that could not possibly be right!
Frau Muller could not reconcile herself to the thought
of parting. She would go to her friend and patron
the “Geheimer Oberpostrath,” and he would
use his influence in the matter; and at last, seeing
that Wilhem only smiled or spoke a few soothing words
to her, she burst into tears and sobbed out:
“I am so used to you, Herr Doctor, I don’t
know how I am going to live without you.”
She only composed herself a little when Wilhelm told
her that, for the present at any rate, he was going
to leave his books and other goods and chattels where
they were, for he might perhaps be allowed to return
after a time, and meanwhile a young man, whom she
knew, and who was studying at Wilhelm’s at Schrotter’s
expense, should board and lodge with her, and she would
receive the same sum as Wilhelm had always paid.
With night came counsel. Wilhelm
decided to go first to Hamburg, where Paul lived during
the winter, wait there till the spring, and then arrange
further plans. He visited the grave of his father
and mother, gave Stubbe orders as to the management
of the house, took leave of a few friends, visited
one or two poor people whom he was in the habit of
looking after, and then had nothing further to keep
him in Berlin. The rest of the day he passed
with Schrotter, who found the parting very hard to
bear. Bhani, whom they had acquainted with the
matter, had tears in her beautiful dark eyes the
last remnant of youth in the withered face. And
as he left the dear familiar house in the Mittelstrasse
she begged him translating the Indian words
plainly enough by looks and gestures to
accept an amulet of cold green jade as a remembrance
of her.
That night at eleven o’clock
a slow train bore Wilhelm away from Berlin.
At the station he caught sight of
the face of his old friend Patke, whom he had come
across more than once during that day. The former
non-commissioned officer had apparently reached the
goal of his ambitions and become a private detective.
Schrotter had stood on the step of
the carriage till the very last moment, holding his
friend’s hand. Now Wilhelm leaned back in
his corner and closed his eyes, and while the train
rattled along over the snow-covered plain, he asked
himself for the first time whether after all Dorfling
had been quite such a fool as most of them considered
him to have been?