One afternoon in the late autumn a
well-dressed old man was walking slowly down the street.
He appeared to be returning home from a walk, for
his buckle-shoes, which followed a fashion long since
out of date, were covered with dust.
Under his arm he carried a long, gold-headed
cane; his dark eyes, in which the whole of his long-lost
youth seemed to have centred, and which contrasted
strangely with his snow-white hair, gazed calmly on
the sights around him or peered into the town below
as it lay before him, bathed in the haze of sunset.
He appeared to be almost a stranger, for of the passers-by
only a few greeted him, although many a one involuntarily
was compelled to gaze into those grave eyes.
At last he halted before a high, gabled
house, cast one more glance out toward the town, and
then passed into the hall. At the sound of the
door-bell some one in the room within drew aside the
green curtain from a small window that looked out
on to the hall, and the face of an old woman was seen
behind it. The man made a sign to her with his
cane.
“No light yet!” he said
in a slightly southern accent, and the housekeeper
let the curtain fall again.
The old man now passed through the
broad hall, through an inner hall, wherein against
the walls stood huge oaken chests bearing porcelain
vases; then through the door opposite he entered a
small lobby, from which a narrow staircase led to
the upper rooms at the back of the house. He
climbed the stairs slowly, unlocked a door at the top,
and landed in a room of medium size.
It was a comfortable, quiet retreat.
One of the walls was lined with cupboards and bookcases;
on the other hung pictures of men and places; on a
table with a green cover lay a number of open books,
and before the table stood a massive arm-chair with
a red velvet cushion.
After the old man had placed his hat
and stick in a corner, he sat down in the arm-chair
and, folding his hands, seemed to be taking his rest
after his walk. While he sat thus, it was growing
gradually darker; and before long a moonbeam came
streaming through the window-panes and upon the pictures
on the wall; and as the bright band of light passed
slowly onward the old man followed it involuntarily
with his eyes.
Now it reached a little picture in
a simple black frame. “Elisabeth!”
said the old man softly; and as he uttered the word,
time had changed: he was young again.