Results
On alighting next morning at the station
in Hamburg, Wilhelm found himself clasped in a pair
of strong arms and pressed to a magnificent fur coat.
Inside this warm garment there beat a still warmer
heart, that of Paul Haber, who had received a letter
from Wilhelm the day before, telling him of his dismissal
from Berlin, and that he was leaving for Hamburg by
the last train before midnight, and whom neither the
cold and darkness nor the extreme earliness of the
hour could restrain from meeting his friend at the
station.
Their greeting was short and affectionate.
“A hearty welcome to you!”
cried Paul. “We will do our best to make
a new home for you here.”
“You see, I thought of you at
once when I had to look about me for some resting-place
in the wide world.”
“I should have expected no less
of you. Keep your ears stiff, and don’t
let the horrid business worry you.”
Wilhelm’s bag was handed to
an attendant servant, and the two friends walked off
arm in arm toward an elegant brougham lined with light
blue, with a conspicuously handsome long-limbed chestnut
and a stout, bearded coachman, which stood waiting
for them.
Wilhelm mentioned the name of the
hotel where he intended to stay, but Paul cut him
short. “Not a bit of it! Home, Hans,
and look sharp about it!” And before Wilhelm
could offer any remonstrance, he found himself pushed
into the carriage, Paul at his side. The door
banged, the footman sprang on to the box, and off
they went as fast as the long legs of the chestnut
would carry them.
For the last two years Paul had owned
a villa on the Uhlenhorst, in the Carlstrasse, and
there the fast trotter drew up. Wilhelm had said
but little during the drive, and Paul had confined
the expression of his feeling of delight to clapping
his friend on the shoulder from time to time, and
pressing his hand. Rather less than half an hour’s
drive brought them to their destination. Paul
would not hear of Wilhelm making any alteration in
his dress, but drew him as he was into the smoking
room on the ground floor, where Malvine came to meet
him, and received him in her hearty but quiet and
uneffusive manner. She was the picture of health,
but had grown perhaps a little too stout for her age.
She wore a morning wrap of red velvet and gold lace,
and looked, in that costly attire, like a princess
or a banker’s wife.
“You must be very cold and tired,”
she said; “the coffee is ready, come at once
to breakfast that will put some warmth into
you you can dress afterward.”
She hurried before them into the next room, where they
found an amply spread table over which hovered the
fragrant smell of several steaming dishes. It
was a lavish breakfast in the English style; beside
tea and coffee there were eggs, soles, ham, cold turkey,
lobster salad, and several excellent wines. A
servant in the livery of a “Jager” waited
at table.
Wilhelm shook his head at the sight
of all this splendor. “But, my dear lady,
so much trouble on my behalf!”
“You are quite mistaken,”
Paul answered for Malvine, and not without a smile
of satisfied pride; “it is our usual breakfast we
have it so every day.”
Wilhelm looked at him surprised, and
then remarked after a short pause: “I would
never have written to you, if I had dreamed that you
would get up before daybreak, and upset your whole
household in order to fetch me from the station.”
“Why, what nonsense! We
are quite used to getting up early. At Friesenmoor
we have to be still earlier.”
“But that is in the summer.”
“So it is, but then our broken
rest is not made up to us by the sight of a friend.”
While they devoured the good things,
and Paul, who despised tea and coffee, sipped his
slightly warmed claret, he remarked, between two mouthfuls,
“I was struck all of a heap by your letter.
You turned out! the most harmless, law-abiding citizen
I ever heard of! What in the world did you do?
You need not mind telling me.”
“I cannot say that I am aware
of having committed any crime, Paul.”
“Come now, something must have
happened, for the police does not take a step of that
kind without some provocation it’s
only your beggarly Progressives who think that, but
nobody who knows the fundamental principles of our
government and its officials would believe it.”
“You seem to have become a warm
admirer of the government.”
“Always was! But, upon
my word, when I see the way the opposition parties
go on I am more so than ever positively
fanatical.”
“Then I have no doubt that you
will consider that I did commit a crime.”
“Ah! so there was something after all?”
“Yes, I contributed fifteen
hundred marks to a collection for the distressed families
of the Social Democrats who had been dismissed from
Berlin.”
“You did?” cried Paul,
dropping his knife and fork, and staring at Wilhelm
in amazement.
“And that seems so criminal to you?”
“Look here, Wilhelm, you know
I’m awfully fond of you, but I must say you
have only got what you deserve. How could you
take part in a revolutionary demonstration of the
kind?”
“I did not, nor do I now see
anything political in it. It was a question of
women and children deprived of their bread-winners,
and whom one cannot allow to starve or freeze to death.”
“Oh, go along with your Progressionist
phrases! Nobody need starve or freeze in Berlin.
The really poor are thoroughly well looked after by
the proper authorities. The supposed distress
of these women and children is a mere trumped-up story
on the part of the Revolutionists a means
of agitation, a weapon against the government.
The beggars simply speculate on the tears of sentimental
idiots. They get up a sort of penny-dreadful,
whereon the one side you have a picture of injured
innocence in the shape of pale despairing mothers
and clamoring children, and on the other, villainy
triumphant in the form of a police constable or a
government official. And to think that you should
have been taken in by such a swindle!”
“I suppose you do not see how
heartless it appears to speak so lightly of other
people’s hunger, sitting oneself at such a table
as this?”
“Bravo, Wilhelm! Now you
are throwing my prosperity in my teeth like any advocate
of division of property. I trust you have not
turned Socialist yourself? you who used not to have
a good word to say for the lot.”
“Never fear I am
not a Socialist. Their doctrines have not been
able to convince me yet. But for years I have
seen the distress of the working people with my own
eyes, and I know that every human being with a heart
in his body is in duty bound to help them.”
“And who says anything against
that? Don’t we all do our duty? Poverty
has always existed and always will to the end of time.
But, on the other hand, that is what charity is there
for. We have hospitals for the sick, workhouses
and parish relief for the aged and incapable, for
lazy vagabonds who won’t work, it is true, only
the treadmill.”
“That is all very fine, but
what are you going to do with the honest men who want
to work but can find none?”
“Wilhelm, I have always had
the highest respect for you, your wisdom, your intellect,
but forgive me if I say that, in this case, you are
talking of things you do not understand. Everybody
who wants work finds it. I hope you will be at
my place next summer. Then you’ll see how
I positively sweat blood in harvest-time trying to
get the necessary number of laborers together, and
what I have to put up with from the rascals only to
keep them in good humor. Don’t try on any
of these windy arguments with a landowner people
that want work and can’t find it indeed!
Let me tell you, my son, neither I nor any one of my
country neighbors can scrape together as many people
as we need.”
“But everybody cannot work in the fields.”
“There, at last, you have hit
the bull’s eye that is where the shoe
pinches. Agriculture offers a certain means of
livelihood to all who can and will work properly.
But that does not suit the lazy beggars. The
work is too hard, and, more particularly, the discipline
on an estate is too strict for their fancy. They
would rather be in the town, rather starve in a workshop,
or ruin their lungs in a factory, because there they
have more freedom that is, they can go on
the spree all night and shirk their work all day,
if they like they can play the gentleman,
and think themselves as good as any general or minister.
Under these circumstances, it is no wonder that they
soon come to want, and instead of admitting that it
is entirely the fault of their own pigheadedness and
perversity, they go and turn unruly against the government.
They should be turned out neck and crop, the whole
pack of them.”
“Don’t excite yourself
so, Paul,” warned Malvine gently, as her husband
grew crimson in the face and ceased to eat.
Wilhelm remained unruffled. “So
you think the Socialist Act was quite justified?”
“Justified! Why, my only
objection to it is that it is much too mild. A
State has a right to use every means it can even
the sharpest to defend itself against its
deadly enemies. To deal mildly with the enemies
of society is to be unjust to us, the orderly and industrious
members of the community, who work hard to get on,
and who don’t want to be for ever trembling
for their well-earned possessions, because thieves
and vagabonds as is the way of all robbers would
like to enjoy the good things of this life without
working for them.”
“My good Paul, that is the language
of fanaticism, and, of course, it is useless to try
to reason against that. Only let me tell you this.
I do not believe that the Socialists want to rob anybody;
I do not believe that they are enemies to the State
and to society. They too desire a State and a
society, but different from the existing ones; they
too have an ideal of justice, but it is not the one
that has become traditional with us. Under the
new order of things, as they have arranged it in their
minds, there should be room for every individual,
every opinion, all sorts and conditions of men.
What the ruling classes say against them to-day has
been said against the adherents of all new ideas since
the beginning of time. Whoever tried to make the
slightest alteration in the existing order of things
was always considered, by those who derived advantages
therefrom, to be a foe to the State and to society
in general-a robber and a revolutionist. The early
Christians enjoyed exactly the same reputation as
the Socialists to-day. They were looked upon
as enemies of the whole human race, and were torn to
pieces by wild beasts, though doubtless
to your regret it has not come to that
with, the Socialists. And nevertheless, though
lions and tigers are a good deal worse than police
officers, the principles of Christianity have triumphed,
and there is nothing to prove that the principles
of Socialism will not triumph in their turn.”
“Prophet of evil omen!” cried Paul.
“Not necessarily so. Where
would be the misfortune? I am firmly persuaded
that a Socialist State would not differ in any important
point from the accepted forms of government of the
day. The administrative power would merely be
transferred from the hands of the military and the
landed aristocracy to another class. To those
who do not want a share in the governing power, it
is all the same who wields it. You see, human
nature remains the same, and its organization alters
only very gradually, almost imperceptibly, though it
sometimes changes its name. Christianity promised
to be the beginning of the thousand years’ reign,
but in the main, everything has gone on just as it
was before. A Socialist State would not be able
to make the sun rise in the west, or do away with
death any more than we can. They would have ministers,
custom-house officers, policemen, virtue, vice and
ambition, self-interest, oppression and brotherly
love just as we do, and if the Socialists come into
power, they will soon pass special acts and prosecute
the followers of other opinions just as they are being
prosecuted to-day. That is all upon the surface,
and does not touch the root of things. Why excite
yourself about a mere shadowplay?”
“In practical matters,”
answered Paul, laughing, “I consider I am the
better man, but you certainly beat me at metaphysics.
Prophecy decidedly comes under the heading of metaphysics,
so I strike my colors before you.”
“The sooner the better,”
said Malvine; “especially as it is quite unpardonable
of you to start off on a long discussion when our poor
friend must be so tired and sleepy.”
It was eight o’clock by this
time, and Wilhelm really felt the want of rest.
But before going to his room he asked after his godson,
little Willy. Malvine was evidently expecting
this, she ran to the door and called into the next
room: “Come here, Willy come
quick Uncle Eynhardt is here and wants
to see you.” Whereupon the boy came bounding
in, and threw himself with a shout of delight upon
Wilhelm’s neck. Willy was still his mother’s
only child. He was nearly six years old, not
very tall for his age, but a fine, handsome, thoroughly
healthy child, with firm legs, a blooming complexion,
the dark eyes of his grandmother, and long fair curls.
He was charmingly dressed in a sailor suit with a
broad turned-back collar over a blue-and-white striped
jersey, long black stockings, and pretty little patent
leather shoes with silk ties. Wilhelm lifted
up this young prince, kissing him, and asked, “Well,
Willy, do you remember me?” He had not seen,
him for eighteen months.
“Of course, I do, uncle, we
talk about you every day,” cried the child in
his clear voice. “Are you going to stay
with us now?”
“Yes, that he is!” his father answered
for the friend.
“How jolly! how jolly!”
cried Willy, clapping his hands with glee. “And
you will teach me to ride, won’t you, uncle?
Papa has no time.”
“But I don’t know how
to ride myself,” returned Wilhelm with a smile.
Willy looked up disappointed. “What can
you do then?”
“Be a good boy now,” Malvine
broke in, “and leave uncle in peace and go back
to the nursery. You shall have him again later
on.”
After more kisses and caresses Willy
ran off, and Paul led his guest to the room prepared
for him, where at last he left him to himself.
Wilhelm had visited Paul on his estate
during the preceeding summer, but since then had only
seen him in Berlin. The house on the Uhlenhorst
was new to him, and he marveled at the solid sumptuousness
that met the eye at every turn. The visitor’s
room was not less splendidly furnished than the smoking
and breakfast rooms he had already seen, and when he
looked about him at the great carved bedstead with
its ample draperies, the silk damask-covered chairs,
the thick rugs, the marble washstand, and the toilet
table with its array of bottles and dishes of china,
cut glass, and silver, he could not help feeling almost
abashed. His friend Paul had become a very great
gentleman apparently!
And so in point of fact he had.
The Friesenmoor had proved itself a very gold mine,
and in the district round about they calculated that
it yielded a clear return of a hundred or a hundred
and twenty thousand marks a year. Paul had long
ago been in a position to make use of his right of
purchase on the estate, and had acquired about two
thousand acres of adjoining marsh lands beside, though
at a considerably higher price, and was now the owner
of a well-rounded estate of twelve thousand acres,
the admiration and pride of the whole neighborhood.
He had converted the cultivation of the marshland,
which six years ago had been but a bold theory, into
an established scientific fact, and his methods, the
excellence of which was amply proved by his almost
tropically luxuriant harvests and uninterruptedly increasing
wealth, were assiduously imitated on all sides.
Paul Haber was acknowledged far and wide to be the
first authority on the management of marsh land.
The government had long since taken note of his success
and kept an eye upon his doings, and was furnished
by the Landrath with regular accounts of his agricultural
progress. Young men of the best county families
contended for the privilege of being under him for
a year’s practical farming. Foreign governments
sent professors, lecturers, and practical agriculturists
to him, partly to inspect his arrangements, partly
to study his methods under his personal supervision,
in order to adopt them in their own countries.
Paul was more than a landed proprietor, he was a kind
of professor holding his unpretentious lecture in
the open air or in the appropriately decorated smoking-room
of the Priesenmoor house, always surrounded by a troop
of eager and admiring listeners of various nationalities,
and mostly of high rank.
Of course, under these circumstances
there was no lack of outward marks of distinction.
Two years before he had been promoted to a first lieutenancy
of the Landwehr. A row of foreign decorations
adorned his breast, and last year, when he was visited
by the Minister for Agriculture, accompanied by the
Landrath, the Krönen Order of the fourth
class was added to the rest. Paul was on the District
Committee and County Council, and if he was not deputy
of the Landtag and member of the Reichstag, it was
only because he considered all parliamentary work
a barren expenditure of time and strength. He
stood in high repute in the county, which was proved
by his election to be the president of the Society
for the Cultivation of Moors and Marshes, a society
founded by his followers and admirers, and which counted
among its members some of the most important landowners
of the whole of Northern Germany.
These circumstances could not fail
to react on Paul’s character. He no longer
tried to look as much as possible like a smart officer,
but rather like a country gentleman of ancient lineage.
The thick fair mustache had abandoned its enterprising
upward curl, and now hung down straight and long.
The model parting of the hair was in any case out of
the question, a distinguished baldness having taken
the place of the old luxuriance, and his figure had
fulfilled all the promises of his youth. In his
dress Paul still cultivated extreme elegance, only
that it partook more of the bucolic now in style than
of the drawing-room as in former days. He wore
high patent leather boots with small silver spurs,
well-fitting riding breeches, a gray coat with green
facings and large buckhorn buttons, a blue-and-white
spotted silk necktie tied in a loose knot with fluttering
ends, an artistically crushed soft felt hat, and in
his dog-skin gloved hand a small riding-whip with a
chased gold head. With all its dandyism it was
a model of good taste, and in no single detail smacked
of the parvenu, and that for the very good reason
that Paul was no parvenu, but a man who was conscious
of having attained to a position which was his by
nature and by right. He had never suffered from
undue diffidence, and his success had naturally increased
his sense of his own value, which, however, he did
not display in any bumptious or aggressive manner
as one who would force reluctant acknowledgment of
his merits, but quietly and naturally, seeing that
he received full and voluntary recognition from all
sides. He believed in himself, and was quite
right to do so, for everybody else believed in him
too. He spoke with authority, for there was no
one about him who did not hang upon his lips with
respect, and mostly with admiration. He made
assertions and gave his opinion with the assurance
of superior knowledge, but he had a right to do so,
for it always referred only to matters about which
he knew, or was fully persuaded that he knew, more
than most people. Even his wealth did not go to
his head, but acted on him like a moderate amount
of drink upon a man who can stand a great deal.
He enjoyed to the full the comforts and amenities
of life which his large income enabled him to procure,
but he did it for his own pleasure, not for the sake
of what others would think; for his own comfort, and
not for show. He liked to keep good horses and
dogs, an admirably appointed table and cellar, and
a large staff of well-drilled servants. On the
other hand, he avoided anything approaching to display,
was never seen at races, went to no fashionable baths,
gave no grand entertainments, nor had a box at either
theatre or operahouse, belonged to no club, and never
played high. His wife wore perhaps rather more
jewelry and followed the newest Paris fashions a trifle
more closely than was absolutely necessary at Friesenmoor
or even the Uhlenhorst, but as she remained as simple
and unaffected as before, nobody could think any the
worse of her for this small inherited weakness.
Toward his own family Paul had behaved
in a most exemplary manner, affording thereby the
strongest proof that though he had risen he was no
upstart. The numerous members of his family and
the men who had married into it nearly all had to
thank him for their advancement or actual support.
Some were employed on his estate, others he had trained
in his particular branch of agriculture, after which,
and with his recommendation, they had found no difficulty
in obtaining brilliant positions as stewards or lease-holders
of estates, and two of his brothers had appointments
on royal domains. He had, therefore, every right
to self-congratulation, as having fulfilled all the
duties of a model man and citizen far beyond what
necessity demanded.
For Wilhelm, Paul still retained the
affection and friendship of his early days, only that,
unconsciously to himself, it had taken on a certain
fatherly tone; although there was a difference of but
one year between them, there was a touch of protecting
consideration and pity about it, such as strong men
feel toward a weaker and less perfectly developed
creature.
The first day Paul left his friend
to have a thorough rest, but the next morning early
he knocked at his door and asked if he might come in.
“Certainly,” was the answer,
and opening the door at the same moment, Wilhelm appeared
fully dressed and ready for inspection.
“You have kept up your old habit
of early rising that is right,” said
Paul, and clapped him on the shoulder.
“So have you,” returned Wilhelm with a
smile.
“I oh, that’s
different. I am a farmer, and you know the proverb ’The
master’s eye makes the cattle fat.’
But your books don’t require to be fed and watered
at break of day. As you are ready, come down now,
and we can have a chat over breakfast.”
Malvine met him downstairs with a
friendly smile and shake of the hand. This morning
she wore a long blue morning gown with gay colored
embroidery at the throat and wrists and a little lace
cap with blue ribbons. The breakfast was as elaborate
as on the day before.
“I want to take you over to
my place to-day, Wilhelm. We have a shooting
party, the weather is lovely, and it will be a nice
change for you.”
“Thanks, Paul, but I would much
rather you left me here. I am no sportsman, as
you know very well.”
“We’ll soon make you into
one. Nobody is born a sportsman, or rather we
are all born sportsmen, but forget it in our wretched
town life, and afterward have to set to work and learn
laboriously the art that came so naturally to our
forefathers. Not, however, that you need fire
a single shot, it is more for the healthy out-of-door
exercise, and to show you Friesenmoor in its winter
dress, and for the society which will interest you.
They are neighbors of mine nearly every
one of them a character old Baron Huning,
who fought in the Crimea as an English officer, Count
Chamberlain von Swerte, crammed with curious court
stories, Graf Olderode, who, in spite of his gout,
will jump for joy when I introduce you as the best
friend I have in the world, and add that you have
just been banished from Berlin under the Socialist
Act. And then there are my pupils I’ve
got a Russian prince among them, and a very near neighbor,
a young nobleman from the Marches, an officer in the
Red Hussars. Now don’t be a slow coach,
come along.”
“You are very kind, but I should
be very sorry to make your gouty Graf jump, even for
joy.”
“Dr. Enyhardt is quite right,”
Malvine now joined in. “What an idea too
to carry him off from me before he has had time to
settle comfortably. You stay with me. Herr
Doctor; this is my day, and you shall make the acquaintance
of some charmingly pretty girls this afternoon.
That will interest you more than Paul’s old
Chamberlains.”
“All right,” laughed Paul;
“but you had better look out, Wilhelm, I smell
a rat. Malvine has designs upon you, she wants
to get you married. If you came with me you would
be the hunter, but if you stay here you will find
yourself in the position of the game.”
“And if he is,” retorted
Malvine, “it is surely the better part to let
yourself be caught by a pretty girl than to go and
shoot poor hares and wild ducks.”
Paul did not press his invitation,
and drove off a minute or two later, not to return
till the following day. Malvine, however, put
her threat into practice, and persuaded Wilhelm with
gentle insistence to join her afternoon coffee party,
and be introduced to all her lady visitors and take
part in the conversations. The introduction caused
Malvine a little embarrassment. Only now did
she fully realize the fact that her guest was nobody
in particular. She was painfully conscious of
the baldness of his name and his simple title of Dr.,
and the absence of any sort of distinguishing mark
by the addition of which she might recommend him to
the special notice of her circle of friends. He
was not a landed proprietor, nor a professor, not
even a master. Nor could she conscientiously
say, “the celebrated Dr. Eynhardt.”
He had no military title, and to introduce him as
“the handsome Dr. Eynhardt” would hardly
do. Fortunately she had no need to mention the
latter adjective. The ladies observed without
further assistance how remarkably handsome this gentleman
was with his girlish complexion, silky, raven-black
hair and beard, and lustrous dark eyes. Charming
lips drew him constantly into the conversation, which,
cultivated and many-sided, ranged from the weather
to the recently-closed Paris Exhibition, from Sarasate
to Vischer’s last novel. Wilhelm had not
a word to say on these important subjects, and so
spoke in monosyllables, or not at all, till the ladies,
who were most of them very animated, came to the conclusion
that he was as stupid as he was handsome, “as
is usually the case, my dear.”
At supper Malvine was indefatigable
in asking Wilhelm how he liked this dark girl, and
what he had said to that fair one, and what impression
the piquante little one with the boyish curly
head had made upon him? When he frankly confessed
that he had paid very little attention to any of the
young ladies, and could scarcely remember one from
another, she was very much discouraged. It was
decidedly no easy task to help this clumsy person
along. All three girls of whom she had spoken
were heiresses, and beautiful and well-educated beside what
more did he want?
Alas! he did not want anything at
all, but to be left in peace, and that was the aggravating
part of it. Malvine had set her heart on marrying
him, and marrying him well. Her sentiment for
him had long since given place to other and less agitating
feelings, as beseemed a model wife, mother, and landed
proprietress. She was grateful to him for having
recognized and set right the mistaken impression of
her girlish heart. She was seized with discomfort
at the thought of what might have been. Where
would she be now if she had become Frau Dr. Eynhardt?
A woman without fortune, of no position or importance,
and at the present moment even homeless and a wanderer.
As things had turned out she was wealthy and distinguished,
the best people in Hamburg and the whole of Lüneburg
came to her house, and she ruled like a small queen
over a large settlement of dependents. And all
this she owed to her dear Paul, who, during the seven
years of their married life, had never given her one
moment’s pain, never cost her eyes a single tear.
Out of her grateful acknowledgment that Wilhelm had
materially assisted in the founding of her agreeable
destiny, and the unconscious lingering remains of
her former attachment, there had sprung up a very tender
friendship for him, the unusual warmth of which would
have at once betrayed its hidden origin to the experienced
analyst of the heart. She wanted to see him happy,
she considered earnestly what was lacking to him to
make him so, and was sure that it could only be a rich
and pretty wife. This happiness then she determined
to procure for him, an easy enough task, as her set
contained a large selection of “goldfish.”
If he would only meet them halfway!
The young ladies, obviously very well disposed toward
him, could not make the first advances. And yet
on the following Thursday he sat there in the midst
of the gay chatter just as quiet and wooden as on
the first occasion, made no advances to any of the
girls, singled out no one from the rest. After
that Malvine was obliged to make a pause in her well-intentioned
maneuvres, for the third Thursday was Christmas Eve,
and her time was taken up in preparations for the
Christmas-tree.
For this festive occasion Frau Brohl
and Frau Marker came over from Berlin, as had been
their custom ever since Paul had taken the house on
the Uhlenhorst. Frau Marker had grown very stout,
and her hair showed the first silvery threads, otherwise
she was blooming and as silent as ever. Old Frau
Brohl was simply astounding. She had not changed
in the smallest degree, time had no power over her,
she was just as doubled up and colorless, and her
movements just as slow as ever, her brown eyes had
the same tired droop, and her low, complaining voice
the old tone of suffering. But her appetite had
grown, if anything, rather larger, and, apart from
one or two colds in the winter, she had not known an
hour’s illness during the whole time.
Needless to say, the grandmother did
not come empty-handed. She brought two cases
with her, one of which contained a large quantity of
excellent bottled fruit, which Malvine still preferred
to any her own highly-paid cook could prepare, while
the other was filled with a choice collection of fancy
work. On these treasures being unpacked, it was
discovered that the inventive genius of the old lady
of seventy was still undiminished. For the master
of the house there was a game-bag made of interwoven
strips of blue and red leather, somewhat in the Indian
manner, very curious, and of course, impracticable
Malvine received a silklace veil, the pattern in large
marsh-mallows a graceful play upon her
name.
Frau Brohl had worked at this masterpiece
for a year and a half. For little Willy, in consideration
of the aristocratic propensities one might expect,
or at any late encourage, in the heir to a large estate,
there was a Flobert rifle, the strap of which was ornamented
after an entirely new method by cutting out thin layers
of the leather and inserting gilt arabesques
and figures. For the house in general there were
some ingenious arrangements in fir cones and small
shells.
The Christmas-tree was set up in the
great drawing-room on the ground floor and reached
almost to the ceiling. It was a beautiful young
fir, so fresh and fragrant of pine that the breath
of the woods seemed to cling to it still. A large
party had gathered for the lighting-up. Beside
the relatives of the aristocratic pupils, who had come
over from the estate, there were some neighbors from
the Uhlenhorst, with five or six little children,
and the Chamberlain von Swerte with his high-born
wife. The couple were childless, and not wishing
to spend their Christmas alone, had accepted Paul’s
invitation, and come all the way from their little
castle near Ronneburg to the Ulhenhorst.
The chamberlain was the lion of the
evening. Paul took an opportunity of whispering
to Wilhelm, “Herr von Swerte is of the House
of Hellebrand one of the first families
in the county tremendously ancient lot!”
Old Frau Brohl had observed the little gold tab on
his coat tail the chamberlain’s sign
of office, and manuevered skillfully in order that
she might frequently obtain a back view, and so gaze
upon the proud badge in silent awe and admiration.
The children had no eye for such matters, but rushed
shrieking with delight round the tree, whose branches
shed such gorgeous presents on them. Willy got
a hussar uniform, with sword, knot, boots and spurs
all complete, and would not rest till he had been
taken to his room and dressed in it, and then appeared
before the company in this martial attire. His
mother’s eye grew dim with pride and joy when
Herr von Swerte lifted up the little warrior to kiss
him, and said heartily: “Well, my dear Herr
Haber, he will make a smart cavalry officer some day!”
At dinner Wilhelm found himself beside
Frau Brohl. The old lady was still fond of him,
and never forgot how well he had behaved at a critical
moment, and with what modest self-perception he had
acknowledged that he was not the husband for her granddaughter.
Searching about for something agreeable
to say to him, or for a subject that would be sure
to interest him, she suddenly remembered one, and
said, between the fish and the roast, “Have you
heard the story about your old flame, Frau Von Pechlar?”
Wilhelm started and changed color.
Frau Brohl never noticed, and continued
in her soft complaining voice: “Your guardian
angel saved you there, Herr Doctor. You would
have come off nicely if you had married Fräulein
Ellrich. There have been all sorts of rumors
for years, but now it has come to an open scandal.
She has left Herr von Pechlar and gone off with a
count, who has been hanging about her for some time.
They say she has gone to Italy with him.”
Wilhelm made no reply, but he was
surprised himself to feel how deeply the information
affected him, so that he could not breathe freely all
the evening, and although it was late before he got
to bed, he could not sleep for hours, thinking of
the girl he had once loved, who was now rushing blindly
down the path of dishonor. Why should the thought
pain him so much? Do heart wounds heal so slowly
and imperfectly that a rough touch can make the scar
burn and throb after long years? Or was it regret
at the besmirching of a picture which till now had
shone so purely and been so sweetly framed in his
memory? He did not know, but for days it depressed
him to the verge of melancholy.
In return for the hospitality he had
received New Year’s Eve was spent at Herr von
Swerte’s. The whole Haber family, with Frau
Brohl and Frau Marker the white grandmamma
and the brown grandmamma, as Willy called them, to
distinguish them from one another drove
over in the afternoon to Ronneburg by way of Harburg,
but Wilhelm could not be prevailed upon to accompany
them. Paul took him severely to task; Malvine
represented to him, with an eloquence unusual to her,
the horrors of a lonely New-Year’s Eve; Frau
Brohl pointed out the advantages of celebrating the
festive occasion in a company composed entirely of
rich people; and even Willy entreated, “Do come,
Onkelchen, you can take care of me on the road.”
All their persuasion proving fruitless, they finally
left him to his fate, and he remained behind alone.
Night found him at the writing-table
in Paul’s study, his head in his hand, lost
in thought. At last he shook himself out of his
deep brooding and wrote the following letter to Schrotter:
“My Revered Friend, I will not
now break the habit of eight years, but will spend
my New Years’ Eve with you, the person who stands
nearest to me in all the world. I am alone in
this grand villa, the servants seem to be enjoying
themselves downstairs over their roast goose and punch,
Paul has taken his family and gone into the country
to the castle of a neighboring estate owner by whom
he is evidently very much impressed, and I can chat
with you undisturbed.
“I wish you could live for a
time in close contact with Paul, as I am doing, you
would be surprised and pleased. His development
has been wonderfully logical, and he now affords the
spectacle, so intensely interesting to the observant
eye, of a person whose every capacity, under the influence
of the most favorable combination of circumstances
imaginable, has attained to the utmost limit of growth
which is possible to it. Paul has become the
ideal type of our North German landed proprietor.
He is ultra conservative, and considers the Socialist
Act too mild. He loathes parliamentarianism, but
would wish that the Landrath had not the power to
appoint even a police constable without the consent
of the estate owners of the district, and raves about
local police prerogative. His only newspaper,
beside the little local one, is the Kreuzzentung,
he is learned in the Army List, and the writing-table
at which I am sitting is strewed with volumes of the
Almanac de Gotha. He looks after his subjects for
I think he calls his workmen his subjects in
a truly fatherly or feudal manner, but I do not doubt
that he would drive the best of them off the estate
with dogs, if, even in the depth of winter, they did
not stand hat in hand the whole time they were talking
to him. The sole problem of the universe which
has any sort of interest for him is the outlook of
the weather for the harvest. The course of human
or superhuman events arouses his wonder, his doubts,
or his anxiety only in proportion as it affects the
price of corn. He cannot grasp that one should
have any other aim in life than to become a successful
agriculturist. He finds full satisfaction in
his work, and what between a charming wife and an
adored child he would afford an example of what the
fables and proverbs tell us does not exist a
perfectly happy man, if one thing were not lacking,
the little word ‘von’ in front of his name.
I trust he may not die without obtaining it, and then
the world will have contained one mortal who has known
absolutely boundless happiness.
“But in writing to you in this
strain my conscience pricks me. Is it not unkind
toward Paul, whose attachment to me is positively touching?
Is it not churlish to exercise such cold crticism upon
a friend whose faithful affection has never for one
moment wavered? He surrounds me with endless
proofs of his affection, and is always on the lookout
for something which may give me pleasure. He
is a passionate sportsman his only passion
as far as I can see and worries me twice
a week to join him on his shooting expeditions.
He is a masterly ’skat player, and is most anxious
to enrich my existence by the joys which, according
to him, this intellectual game affords to its adepts.
When I venture timidly to propose that I should leave
him and live by myself, he looks so honestly hurt
and grieved that I have not the courage to insist
further. And Frau Haber, kind soul, who is so
set upon getting me married and thereby insuring my
happiness! I and marrying! What have I to
offer a woman? Love? I am too poor in illusions.
Amusements society the theater?
All that is a horror to me. And moreover, I question
if I have a right to bring a being into the world,
over whose destiny I have no control, and whose existence
would most certainly be richer in pain, and misery
than in happiness; and I know unquestionably that
I have no right to teach a light-hearted girl to think,
and force her to exchange the artless gayety of a playful
little animal for my own fruitless speculations and
never-to-be-satisfied yearnings.
“In face of all this, serious
doubts arise in my mind. Is it for me to speak
with superciliousness and superiority of Paul, or to
look down upon him? I ask you, as I have been
asking myself every day these three weeks is
he not the wise man and I the fool? He the useful
member of society, and I the mere hanger-on?
His life the real, mine the shadow? That he is
happy I have already said; that I am not, I know.
His system therefore leads to peace and contentment,
mine does not. He has set a child into the world,
and though, of course, he does not know what its ultimate
fate will be, he sees for the present, as do I and
everybody else who is not blind, that it fills his
home with sunshine and warmth. He provides hundreds
with their daily bread. That is, I know, of no
moment to the universe; it is of very little importance
whether a few more obstruse human creatures walk the
face of the earth or not. But meanwhile, the
creatures in question enjoy more agreeable sensations,
if, thanks to Paul’s exertions, they have a comfortably
spread table every day. I cannot boast of any
such achievements. The only good I ever did my
fellow-men did not proceed from me but from our friend
Dorfling, who simply used my hand as an instrument
for carrying out his charitable designs. My personal
compassion, my love for my companions in ignorance
and suffering bears no fruit, benefits no one, and
it frequently seems to me that, if the truth were
known, I am an egoist of the deepest dye.
“If I could at least act consistently
with the philosophy which directs nay views of life!
But I am not even capable of that. Systematically,
I concede no importance to outward forms. Majá
does not count me among her devotees. What are
houses? What are the phantoms who inhabit them?
A transient semblance, a delusion of the senses!
And yet, I am conscious that I miss just those houses
which happen to stand, in Berlin and that I feel an
unspeakable longing for the phantom called Dr. Schrotter.
Once again it has been proved to me that I am an unconscious
plaything in the hands of unknown powers, for again,
as more than once in my life, and always at decisive
moments, some outside agency has interfered in my
fate, and disposed of me contrary to my own intentions,
by sending me out of Berlin and away from you.
But, nevertheless, my appreciation of this fact does
not give me the strength to accept the inevitable
in silence and without repining.
“Enough I will not
pain you. Only this much I should like to add
that life is really harder to bear than I had thought
for.
“Farewell, dear and honored
friend; remember me affectionately to Bhani, who,
I trust, does not suffer too severely from this hard
winter, and always believe in the faithful friendship
and devotion of your
“Wilhelm Eynhardt.”
Three days later Wilhelm received the following answer
from Schrotter:
“Dearest friend:
Your long and welcome New Year’s letter troubled
me much on account of the state of mind I see revealed
in it. I think, however, that it is explained
by the fact of your being rooted up out of your accustomed
surroundings that you are oppressed by Haber’s
hospitality, and that you have as yet made no plans
for the future, and I trust that your spirits will
improve when these three circumstances are altered.
“I have always considered Haber,
with all his good qualities of heart and character,
a thoroughly commonplace man, and your observations
verify my opinion to the full. And yet I quite
understand that the sight of his prosperity and self-satisfaction
should give you food for thought, and raise the question
in your mind whether his philosophy if
I may use the word or yours, is the right
one. That is a great question, and I do not presume
to answer it, either in general or for your particular
case; and all the more, for the very good reason that
your life is only really beginning now. You are
not yet thirty-four, you may yet do something great,
something pre-eminent, and who knows if those very
qualities which have made your life unproductive hitherto,
may not enable you later on to do things beside which
the achievements of a Paul Haber shrink into insignificance?
On the other hand, I am persuaded quite
apart from your respective ways of life that
you have chosen the better and higher part.
“Human nature is like a tower
with many stories; some people inhabit the lower,
others the higher ones. The inhabitants of the
cellars and ground floor may, in their way, be good,
decent, praiseworthy people, but they can never enjoy
the same amount of light, the same pure air and wide
view as those who live on the upper stories. Now
you, my dear young friend, live several floors higher
up than our good Paul Haber, whom, however, I value
and am very fond of. But there are people living
over our heads too. I have known Indian sages
who looked down upon all we strive after and with
which we occupy ourselves with the same pitying wonder
as you do on Haber’s passion for sport and ‘skat,’
and his longing for a title; who have difficulty in
understanding that we should earn money, be ambitious,
entertain passions, conform to outward rules of custom,
and, under the pretext of education, laboriously study
rows of empty phrases. These Brahmíns have
still higher interests and a yet wider view than the
noblest-minded and wisest of us, and the knowledge
that such pure and all-embracing spirits do exist ought
to teach us to be humble, and not despise those who
may still cling to some vain show that we have overcome,
and attach importance to matters which no longer possess
any in our eyes.
“One thing I have in my heart
to wish for you, my dear friend that you
could take life with a little of the unreflecting simplicity
of those who accept what the moment offers
without troubling themselves as to the why and the
wherefore. You bow to those high powers who, for
instance, have caused you to be banished from Berlin;
then submit yourself to those still higher ones, who
let you live and feel and think. Do not fight
against the natural instincts which lead you to cling
to life and love. Your fears that you have nothing
to offer a wife are groundless. There are women
who do not seek their happiness in the vanities which
you very properly detest. Do all you can to find
such a woman. Bestow life as you have received
it, and leave your offspring cheerfully to the care
of those powers who rule over your own life and destiny.
For my part, I should be very sorry to see your race
die out.
“And why reproach yourself that
you provide no one with daily bread? Man does
not live by bread alone; and by simply being what you
are, you supply many people myself for
instance with a pleasure in life and a
belief in your future career that is worth more than
daily bread.
“Bhani thanks you for your kind
message. She incloses two verses for you, of
her own composition. Here you have them in prose
translation ’My beloved master and
his humble handmaid miss the dear friend with the
soft eyes and gentle voice. We live as in a bungalow
in the season of rains clouds and ever
clouds, and no sun. When will the sky be blue,
and the sunshine come again? and when wilt thou eat
rice once more at the table of my lord?’ In
the original it certainly sounds much prettier.
“Let me know soon what you think
of doing, and be assured of the hearty affection of
your old
“Schrotter
“Postscript: Just
read the enclosed extract from my to-day’s Times.
That man’s development was as logical as Haber’s.”
In the letter Wilhelm found, beside
Bhani’s poem, written in delicate Sanscrit characters
on yellow paper, a cutting from an English newspaper,
in which he read that a Nihilist of the name of Barinskoi,
in St. Petersburg, had for some time excited the suspicions
of his confederates by his luxurious and showy style
of living. In order to discover the source from
which he drew the money for it, they appointed one
of their female members to be his mistress. She
had shared in his extravagances, and soon obtained
proofs that he was in the service of the police, and
sold his fellow Nihilists. A secret court condemned
him to death, and a few days ago he had been found
dead in his rooms, his throat cut, and his body literally
hacked to pieces.
In January Wilhelm received an unusual
visitor. It was a leader of the workingmen of
Altona, who told him, without further circumlocution,
that the Socialists had kept their eye upon him, had
found out where he was living, and now sent him, the
Altona man, to see if anything could be made of him.
“What do you mean by that?”
asked Wilhelm in astonishment.
“I mean,” returned the
visitor, who had introduced himself as Stonemason
Hessel, “whether you could not be persuaded to
join us openly.”
As Wilhelm did not answer at once,
Hessel resumed “Our party needs men
like you, who are independent and bold, have a university
education, and speak well. You are all that,
as we know. By banishing you from Berlin they
have, in point of fact, made you one of us. So
go a step further, Herr Doctor; defend yourself, take
up the fight the government has forced upon you.
You have a million of determined workmen at your back,
who will gladly accept you as their leader.”
“Excuse my frankness,”
said Wilhelm at last, “but I really cannot think
you are serious in your proposal.”
“It is a very serious matter
to us,” cried Hessel. “I speak in
the name of the heads of the party, and have means
of convincing you of the reality of my proposal if
you have any doubts about it.”
“But how do you come to know about me?”
“That is very simple. You
are not, perhaps, aware how well organized we are,
and how we follow up everything that may be of use
to us afterward. We know what you did for our
party in Berlin, and that you are suffering for it
now. We know your circumstances, and that you
have a considerable sum of money at your disposal,
and, I repeat, we want educated men. Most of
us have not had the means to get much schooling.
The struggle for our daily bread uses up all our time,
and all the brains we have. Look at me, Herr
Doctor, for years I never had more than five hours’
sleep, and always used half the night to learn the
little I know. There are plenty of people among
us who more’s the pity are
distrustful of the better educated call
them upstarts, and won’t have anything to do
with them. Their idea is that the proletariat
should be led by proletariars. But that is nonsense.
No oppressed class has ever yet been emancipated by
its own members. It was always by high-minded
men of wider views out of the upper classes. Catilina
was an aristocrat, and put himself at the head of
the populace. Mirabeau belonged to the Court,
and overthrew the monarchy. Wilberforce, the
defender of the negro, was not black himself.”
Wilhelm now for the first time looked
more attentively at this stonemason, who talked so
glibly of Catalina, Mirabeau and Wilberforce, and
the thought passed through his mind that, at any rate,
there was one good thing about Social Democracy it
brought education into circles to which it otherwise
would never have penetrated.
“And so,” Hessel wound
up, “we workmen too must be led to victory by
educated men.”
“You overlook one point, however,”
remarked Wilhelm. “To be your leader, one
must before all things share your convictions.”
“It is quite impossible that
an educated and thoughtful man should not see the
injustice of the present social system. The government,
which oppresses us, sees it as clearly as we do ourselves.
It is not fighting for a conviction, but for the supremacy
of a certain class.”
“‘It is impossible,’
is no argument. In point of fact, I do not hold
with your doctrines. I know that the working-classes
suffer, but I do not know why, and I do not believe
your theorists when they say it is all because the
workingman is ground down by the capitalist.
Furthermore, you speak of leading where
am I to lead you to?”
“To victory against the plundering
feudalism of the State.”
“That is a mere phrase.
I know of no plan which will sweep poverty and distress
from the face of the earth. Even if you raise
a revolution and it succeeds, even if you destroy
the feudal State and build up a workingman’s
State upon the ruins, you will thereby only have improved
the condition of a select few, not of the whole not
even of the many. I would not like to be in the
shoes of your present leaders, preachers and prophets,
when you have conquered, and your followers demand
to see the results of your victory. How little
they will then be able to fulfill of the promises
they have made to-day.”
“So it is your opinion that
there is nothing to be done for us, and that we ought
calmly to be left in want, and slavery, and ignorance?”
Hessel asked angrily.
“I think,” returned Wilhelm,
“that it is the bounden duty of every man to
love his neighbor, and help him where and when he can.”
“Oh yes,” said Hessel
with a sneer, “that is the standpoint of the
Church the standpoint of the Middle Ages.
You would give us alms. No, thank you, we accept
no presents. We demand our rights, not charity.”
Wilhelm thought to himself that he
had not always found the Socialists so proud, but
kept the thought to himself, not wishing to hurt Hessel’s
feelings, who seemed to be an honest fanatic.
“Do not let that be your last
word,” Hessel went on. “You are probably
but slightly acquainted with our doctrines and writings.
Come nearer to us. Come to our meetings talk
to our workmen. You will find that many of us
have very clear heads, and know exactly what we want,
although the majority do still cling a good deal to
phrases. You will assuredly soon begin to interest
yourself in the emancipation of the proletariat.
And what a future to look forward to! You might
be another Lassalle, famous powerful, adored by thousands,
received as a savior wherever you show yourself make
a triumphal progress through all Germany, perhaps
through the world. And over and above, the consciousness
of having rendered such mighty service to your fellow-men.”
Wilhelm rose.
“I seem to myself to be playing
a rather ridiculous part in this scene,” he
said; “it is a parody of the Gospel story of
the Temptation. Unfortunately, I have not the
smallest particle of ambition, and have no desire
to be either famous or mighty, or to make triumphal
progresses. If I could really do anything for
you, believe me, I would do it gladly. But I
assure you I possess neither the philosopher’s
stone, nor a prescription for a universal panacea.
I do not believe either that the remedies they recommend
so highly to you are very effectual, so I am much
obliged to you for your confidence in me, and beg
you to leave me in my obscurity.”
Hessel gave him a dark look, stood
up, turned slowly away, and left him without one word,
or even offering him his hand.
Wilhelm had sent to Berlin for a box
of books, and tried to go on with his work, but found
no real pleasure in it. A deep despondency had
come upon him, and the idea that his life was wholly
purposeless took more and more hold upon him.
Often, after studying earnestly for a day or two,
and making extracts for his book, he would ask himself,
“Why take all this trouble? Who is going
to be made wiser or happier by this rigmarole?”
and his pleasure in the work was gone again for days.
The consciousness of exile, instead of being blunted
by time, weighed ever more heavily upon him.
He never realized till now what an absolute necessity
it was to his nature to lean upon a kindred spirit,
for he had never before been without one. Since
the death of his father he had first had Paul, and
then Dr. Schrotter, whom he had seen daily, and thus
had always had some one to share his mental life.
Now he was separated from Schrotter by distance, and
from Paul by the great change in their views, and
found no sufficient support when left to himself.
If at times the sight of Paul’s perfect self-content
and happiness roused in him the wish to follow his
example, it was quickly overruled by the conviction
that neither Paul’s commonplace, practical occupations,
nor his worldly success, would afford him, Wilhelm,
the smallest satisfaction.
He passed his days and weeks in self-communings
and spiritual loneliness, in spite of Paul’s
and Malvine’s endeavors to interest him in men
and things. He allowed himself to be drawn into
Malvine’s afternoon receptions, and the two
or three parties they gave during the winter; but
refused to accompany them to other people’s balls
and dinners. He was happiest of all with Willy,
who was very fond of Uncle Eynhardt. He took
him for walks, told him stories, was never tired of
answering his endless questions, amused him with little
chemical experiments, and in default of the riding
lessons let him ride upon his knee. And as he
passed his fingers through the child’s long curls,
he often thought, in spite of all his philosophic
doubts, how wonderfully pleasant it must be after
all, to bring forth some such sweet golden-haired
mystery that would cling to its parent and break away
from him a continuation and yet a wholly
new departure that had its roots in the past, and
yet struck out boldly into the future, and whose bright
gaze would be trying to penetrate the riddle of the
universe when he himself had long since sunk into
oblivion. Had Malvine been something more than
good-natured and commonplace, had she possessed a
little more tact and insight into the human heart,
she would have seen that in Wilhelm were now combined
all the conditions necessary for predisposing him
for marriage the sense of a spiritual void,
the longing for love and companionship, a consciousness
of being alone in the midst of a cheerful, peaceful
family circle, and the desire to see his own life
renewed in that of a child. What he needed was
that some one should frankly make the first advances,
and overcome his natural shyness and diffidence by
a bold and saucy attack. With a little tact and
diplomacy, a clever woman would have had no difficulty
in putting up a bright girl to attempt so easy a fight
and victory. But Malvine never thought of such
a thing. Social etiquette withheld the various
young ladies on whom the Hábers’ quiet guest
had made no small impression from taking those first
steps, which are considered unwomanly and humiliating,
although in most cases they invariably bring about
the desired results, and so Wilhelm continued to sit
in his corner, and the group of pretty heiresses in
theirs; the winter passed, and Malvine’s darling
wish was still unfulfilled.
Easter came round, and with it the
migration of the family to Friesenmoor House.
Wilhelm would have liked to seize this opportunity
for withdrawing himself from a hospitality which weighed
heavily on him, but Paul put down his timid revolt
with a high hand.
“None of that now. You
are coming with us, and can see what country life
is like for a whole summer,” he declared, and
there the matter rested.
The estate and its surroundings possessed
no picturesque charms. The land stretched in
uniform flatness from the sluggish Suderelbe to the
equally sleepy Seeve, and the Fuchsberg at Ronneburg,
with its height of two hundred feet, was a giant of
the Alps or Cordilleras, compared to the floor-like
evenness of the country round about. From the
platform of the tower which Paul had built on to his
house, giving it quite a baronial appearance, one
could see for miles across country, almost to Hamburg,
the spires of which were plainly visible on a clear
day. But far and near one saw nothing but cornfields
and meadows, that had the regularity of a carpet pattern,
intersected by clay-colored dikes, straight ditches
full of stagnant brown water, here and there a busy
windmill, and in the distance the smooth-flowing watercourses
which bounded the landscape. The picture was laid
on from a meager palette; a few browns and greens,
slightly relieved and enlivened by the vigorous tones
of the whitewashed walls of the laborers’ cottages,
some standing apart, some collected together like a
little village.
And yet, though the view from the
tower might not seem very attractive, a walk through
the country revealed many a peculiar charm to the
observant and divining eye. Here one stood upon
ground where man had wrestled with Nature and subdued
her. At every step one encountered the marks
of that struggle and victory, reminding one of Jacob’s
mysterious encounter with the angel. The waters
of the marsh were now forced within the prescribed
limits of a system of drains and canals. Luxuriant
crops triumphed over reeds and rushes, which were now
only permitted to fringe the edges of the ditches.
Sleek, mild-eyed cows grazed and ruminated where formerly
the wildfowl built her nest. Chaos was vanquished,
and had to own man for her lord and master.
Here, upon the scene of his labors,
Paul’s figure assumed a certain epic dignity.
As a stern lord with a handful of armed followers keeps
down a subjugated people, so Paul, at the head of a
few hundred workmen, held sway over the unruly forces
of Nature always more or less ready to revolt.
There were always dikes to be repaired, ditches to
be deepened, drain-pipes to be laid or improved, or
artificial manure to be carted, and Paul was active
from break of day till nightfall, either on foot or
on horseback, hurrying from one end of the estate to
the other, everywhere ordering or giving a helping
hand, and always leading his troops himself to fresh
onslaughts against the resisting elements. He
did it all quietly, without any fuss or attempt to
reflect credit on himself, and left it to others to
strangers, poetically inclined pupils or students
on their travels to say that his conquest
of the Friesenmoor was a Faust-like achievement.
He had built a whole village for his
laborers, to right and left of the highroad leading
to Friesenmoor House. The cheerful, clean, whitewashed
cottages, with their green-painted window-frames, were
thatched with rushes and surrounded by gardens in
which young fruit trees, not yet sufficiently strong
to forego the support of poles, already gave promise
of their first harvest of apples and pears. The
village hall and the school-house were distinguished
by superior size and green-glazed tile roofs; nor
was a church, with a pointed belfry and weathercock,
missing. For Paul was a model landowner, who took
ample thought for the welfare of his dependents, and
as soon as his means permitted it, had hastened to
build a church and appoint a pastor, providing thereby,
at the same time, for one of his numerous relatives.
In his ardent loyalty to his king, he had expressed
the wish to call his village Kaiser-Wilhelm’s
Dorf, and had received the desired permission.
In Kaiser-Wilhelm’s Dorf, it
was evident, content and comparative prosperity reigned
supreme. Behind every house was a pigsty, behind
nearly every one a cowshed. The men looked strong
and hearty; the women, carrying dinner to their husbands
in the fields, or sitting knitting on the benches
in front of their doors, all presented bright and
cheerful faces, and the school would hardly contain
the crowd of flaxen-haired, blue-eyed children, whose
rounded cheeks gave evidence of a never-failing and
amply spread dinner-table.
In the beginning, all this made a
vast impression on Wilhelm. As the struggle with
nature is man’s real and normal task, he instinctively
feels an emotion almost amounting to joy wherever he
comes upon evidences of victory. But, as usual
with Wilhelm, this first instinctive emotion was followed
by the usual fatal speculations, and he said to himself,
“Paul has converted swamps into cornfields, has
enriched himself thereby, and supports some hundreds
of families. Good! but what further? This
great achievement has as its primary result, that
people are fed who otherwise perhaps would not eat
so much or so well, or merely would not feed on this
spot at all. But is the filling of one’s
own and other people’s stomachs the first and
highest aim of life?”
Paul tried hard to interest him in
the details of farming. He took him about, showed
and explained everything to him, and finally brought
out his pet scheme that he should sell
the house in Berlin, and buy instead some marshland
near by, which was to be had for a moderate sum; he
would give him a helping hand at first, and as property
of that kind could very well afford a steward, he
could easily get him a first-rate one. They would
be neighbors, Wilhelm would have a larger income and
fewer wants, and live in peace and comfort. Wilhelm
was profoundly touched by the affection which was
manifest in Paul’s every word and thought, but
the prospects he opened up before him offered him no
attractions.
In July, when the harvest was ripening
for the sickle, and man had nothing to do but leave
the sun to its work of brooding on the fields, Paul
went one day to a committee meeting in the town.
When he came home he remarked to Wilhelm at supper:
“What do you think? They
have discovered that I am harboring a dangerous Social
Democrat. The Landrath actually remonstrated with
me on the subject in a discreet and well-meaning way.
I can’t tell you how the man amused me,”
and he laughed again as he recalled the conversation.
But all his amusement vanished when Wilhelm answered:
“The Landrath was quite right.
A political outlaw is very doubtful company for a
man in your position, and I cannot think how I came
to overlook the fact myself.”
In vain did Paul endeavor to turn
the matter into a joke; in vain that he showed himself
inconsolable at his stupidity in having told the story.
Wilhelm declared firmly that he must leave his friend,
and bringing his whole force of will to bear upon
it, carried his intention through.
The next day Paul’s carriage
took him to Harburg. The parting was trying to
all of them. Paul’s leave-taking was prolonged,
and he made his friend promise he would return next
year for some weeks at least to Friesenmoor House.
Malvine had tears in her eyes as she said, “No
one will care for you so much as we do.”
Even little Willy was downcast, and gazed with a reproachful
look at the friend who could find it in his heart
to desert him. As the train moved off he called
out to Wilhelm, in his ringing, childish voice, “Come
back soon, Onkelchen, and bring me something nice.”