The First Violin
en, und vom R
Beeth
was sure that she would befriend me. True, she did not say so. When I told her about Sir Peter Le Marchant's proposal to me, about Adelaide's behavior; when, in halting and stammering tones, and interrupted by tears, I confessed that I h
used Sir Peter Le Marchant, but you do not feel at all s
I adm
k from the idea of a rep
if it wou
is highly unfit that you should be subjected to a recurrence of it. I will
ut not daring to make any observation upon it, I took the b
e. "Now, will you read
er into my han
asanter. My house is a large one in the Alléestrasse. Dr. Mittendorf, the oculist, lives not far from here, and the St?dtische Augenklinik-that is, the eye hospital-is quite near. The rooms you would
l highes
r de
a Stei
all, I suppose?" said s
N
hal. You have heard of Elbert
d to be a fine picture-gallery th
n eye hospital there, and a celebrated oculist-Mittendorf. I am going there. I don't suppose it will be of t
t very well, b
ust go to the piano and let me hear a spec
as well as I could, an Englis
ith silence, which Miss Hall
have not had
cely
d, even if not in Skernford.
any things that I am no
th regard to those things-music and singing, and s
ve Skernford, Sir Peter, all that had grown so weary to me; see new places, live with new people; l
e yourself useful to me in man
reality I began t
really true? Do you th
't answere
ould do anything you lik
h is bad-so is my temper very often. I am what people who never had any trouble are fond of calling peculiar. Still
strust me; but if I had to go to Siberia to get out of Sir Peter's way, I would go gladly and stay
u clumsy at h
n I, and can do everything so much better
hat you come with me. I will see your father about it to-morrow.
nd gladness struggled hard within me. The idea of getting away from Skernfor