Nearly two years later Reinhard was
sitting by lamplight with his books and papers around
him, expecting a friend with whom he used to study
in common. Some one came upstairs. “Come
in.” It was the landlady. “A
letter for you, Herr Werner,” and she went away.
Reinhard had never written to Elisabeth
since his visit home, and he had received no letter
from her. Nor was this one from her; it was in
his mother’s handwriting.
Reinhard broke the seal and read,
and ere long he came to this paragraph:
“At your time of life, my dear
boy, nearly every year still brings its own peculiar
experience; for youth is apt to turn everything to
the best account. At home, too, things have changed
very much, and all this will, I fear, cause you much
pain at first, if my understanding of you is at all
correct.
“Yesterday Eric was at last
accepted by Elisabeth, after having twice proposed
in vain during the last three months. She had
never been able to make up her mind to it, but now
in the end she has done so. To my mind she is
still far too young. The wedding is to take place
soon, and her mother means to go away with them.”