<hr class="large" /><h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<div class="centerbox bbox">
<p><span style="margin-left: 1em;">“He looks his angel in the face<br/></span>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Without a blush: nor heeds disgrace,<br/></span>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whom naught disgraceful done<br/></span>
<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Disgraces. Who knows nothing base<br/></span>
<span style="margin-left: 5em;">Fears nothing known.”<br/></span></p>
</div>
<p>It was noon. The probe to “Tannhauser” was over, and we, the members of
the kapelle, turned out, and stood in a knot around the orchestra
entrance to the Elberthal Theater.</p>
<p>It was a raw October noontide. The last traces of the by-gone summer
were being swept away by equinoctial gales, which whirled the remaining
yellowing leaves from the trees, and strewed with them the walks of the
deserted Hofgarten; a stormy gray sky promised rain at the earliest
opportunity; our Rhine went gliding by like a stream of ruffled lead.</p>
<p>“Proper theater weather,” observed one of my fellow-musicians; “but it
doesn’t seem to suit you, Friedhelm. What makes you look so down?”</p>
<p>I shrugged my shoulders. Existence was not at that time very pleasant to
me; my life’s hues were somewhat of the color of the autumn skies and of
the dull river. I scarcely knew why I stood with the others now; it was
more a mechanical pause before I took my spiritless way home, than
because I felt any interest in what was going on.</p>
<p>“I should say he will be younger by a long way than old Kohler,”
observed Karl Linders, one of the violoncellists, a young man with an
unfailing flow of good nature, good spirits, and eagerness to enjoy
every pleasure which came in his way, which qualities were the objects
of my deep wonder and mild envy. “And they say,” he continued, “that
he’s coming to-night; so Friedhelm, my boy, you may look out. Your
master’s on the way.”</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“So!” said I, lending but an indifferent attention; “what is his name?”</p>
<p>“That’s his way of gently intimating that he hasn’t got no master,” said
Karl, jocosely, but the general answer to my question was, “I don’t
know.”</p>
<p>“But they say,” said a tall man who wore spectacles and sat behind me in
the first violins—“they say that von Francius doesn’t like the
appointment. He wanted some one else, but Die Direktion managed to beat
him. He dislikes the new fellow beforehand, whatever he may be.”</p>
<p>“So! Then he will have a roughish time of it!” agreed one or two others.</p>
<p>The “he” of whom they spoke was the coming man who should take the place
of the leader of the first violins—it followed that he would be at
least an excellent performer—possibly a clever man in many other ways,
for the post was in many ways a good one. Our kapelle was no mean
one—in our own estimation at any rate. Our late first violinist, who
had recently died, had been on visiting terms with persons of the
highest respectability, had given lessons to the very best families, and
might have been seen bowing to young ladies and important dowagers
almost any day. No wonder his successor was speculated about with some
curiosity.</p>
<p>“<i>Alle Wetter!</i>” cried Karl Linders, impatiently—that young man was
much given to impatience—“what does von Francius want? He can’t have
everything. I suppose this new fellow plays a little too well for his
taste. He will have to give him a solo now and then instead of keeping
them all for himself.”</p>
<p>“<i>Weiss</i> ’<i>s nit</i>,” said another, shrugging his shoulders, “I’ve only
heard that von Francius had a row with the Direction, and was outvoted.”</p>
<p>“What a sweet temper he will be in at the probe to-morrow!” laughed
Karl. “Won’t he give it to the <i>Mädchen</i> right and left!”</p>
<p>“What time is he coming?” proceeded one of the oboists.</p>
<p>“Don’t know; know nothing about it; perhaps he’ll appear in ‘Tannhauser’
to-night. Look out, Friedhelm.”</p>
<p>“Here comes little Luischen,” said Karl, with a winning smile, a
straightening of his collar, and a general arming-for-conquest
expression, as some of the “ladies of <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></SPAN></span>the chorus and ballet,” appeared
from the side door. “Isn’t she pretty?” he went on, in an audible aside
to me. “I’ve a crow to pluck with her too. <i>Tag</i>, Fräulein!” he added,
advancing to the young lady who had so struck him.</p>
<p>He was “struck” on an average once a week, every time with the most
beautiful and charming of her sex. The others, with one or two
exceptions, also turned. I said good-morning to Linders, who wished,
with a noble generosity, to make me a partaker in his cheerful
conversation with Fräulein Luise of the first soprans, slipped from his
grasp and took my way homeward. Fräulein Luischen was no doubt very
pretty, and in her way a companionable person. Unfortunately I never
could appreciate that way. With every wish to accommodate myself to the
only society with which fortune supplied me, it was but ill that I
succeeded.</p>
<p>I, Friedhelm Helfen, was at that time a lonely, soured misanthrope of
two-and-twenty. Let the announcement sound as absurd as it may, it is
simply and absolutely true, I was literally alone in the world. My last
relative had died and left me entirely without any one who could have
even a theoretical reason for taking any interest in me. Gradually,
during the last few months, I had fallen into evil places of thought and
imagination. There had been a time before, as there has been a time
since—as it is with me now—when I worshiped my art with all my
strength as the most beautiful thing on earth; the art of arts—the most
beautiful and perfect development of beauty which mankind has yet
succeeded in attaining to, and when the very fact of its being so and of
my being gifted with some poor power of expressing and interpreting that
beauty was enough for me—gave me a place in the world with which I was
satisfied, and made life understandable to me. At that time this
belief—my natural and normal state—was clouded over; between me and
the goddess of my idolatry had fallen a veil; I wasted my brain tissue
in trying to philosophize—cracked my head, and almost my reason over
the endless, unanswerable question, <i>Cui bono?</i> that question which may
so easily become the destruction of the fool who once allows himself to
be drawn into dallying with it. <i>Cui bono?</i> is a mental Delilah who will
shear the locks of the most arrogant Samson. And into the arms and to
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN></span>the tender mercies of this Delilah I had given myself. I was in a fair
way of being lost forever in her snares, which she sets for the feet of
men. To what use all this toil? To what use—music? After by dint of
hard twisting my thoughts and coping desperately with problems that I
did not understand, having managed to extract a conviction that there
was use in music—a use to beautify, gladden, and elevate—I began to
ask myself further, “What is it to me whether mankind is elevated or
not? made better or worse? higher or lower?”</p>
<p>Only one who has asked himself that question, as I did, in bitter
earnest, and fairly faced the answer, can know the horror, the
blackness, the emptiness of the abyss into which it gives one a glimpse.
Blackness of darkness—no standpoint, no vantage-ground—it is a horror
of horrors; it haunted me then day and night, and constituted itself not
only my companion but my tyrant.</p>
<p>I was in bad health too. At night, when the joyless day was over, the
work done, the play played out, the smell of the foot-lights and gas and
the dust of the stage dispersed, a deadly weariness used to overcome me;
an utter, tired, miserable apathy; and alone, surrounded by loneliness,
I let my morbid thoughts carry me whither they would. It had gone so far
that I had even begun to say to myself lately:</p>
<p>“Friedhelm Helfen, you are not wanted. On the other side this life is a
nothingness so large that you will be as nothing in it. Launch yourself
into it. The story that suicide is wrong and immoral is, like other
things, to be taken with reservation. There is no absolute right and
wrong. Suicide is sometimes the highest form of right and reason.”</p>
<p>This mood was strong upon me on that particular day, and as I paced
along the Schadowstrasse toward the Wehrhahn, where my lodging was, the
very stones seemed to cry out, “The world is weary, and you are not
wanted in it.”</p>
<p>A heavy, cold, beating rain began to fall. I entered the room which
served me as living- and sleeping-room. From habit I ate and drank at
the same restauration as that frequented by my <i>confrères</i> of the
orchestra. I leaned my elbows upon the table, and listened drearily to
the beat of the rain upon the pane. Scattered sheets of music
containing, some great, others little thoughts, lay around me. <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></SPAN></span>Lately
it seemed as if the flavor was gone from them. The other night Beethoven
himself had failed to move me, and I accepted it as a sign that all was
over with me. In an hour it would be time to go out and seek dinner, if
I made up my mind to have any dinner. Then there would be the
afternoon—the dreary, wet afternoon, the tramp through the soaking
streets, with the lamp-light shining into the pools of water, to the
theater; the lights, the people, the weary round of painted
ballet-girls, and accustomed voices and faces of audience and
performers. The same number of bars to play, the same to leave unplayed;
the whole dreary story, gone through so often before, to be gone through
so often again.</p>
<p>The restauration did not see me that day; I remained in the house. There
was to be a great concert in the course of a week or two; the “Tower of
Babel” was to be given at it. I had the music. I practiced my part, and
I remember being a little touched with the exquisite loveliness of one
of the choruses, that sung by the “Children of Japhet” as they wander
sadly away with their punishment upon them into the <i>Waldeinsamkeit</i>
(that lovely and untranslatable word) one of the purest and most
pathetic melodies ever composed.</p>
<p>It was dark that afternoon. I had not stirred from my hole since coming
in from the probe—had neither eaten nor drunk, and was in full
possession of the uninterrupted solitude coveted by busy men. Once I
thought that it would have been pleasant if some one had known and cared
for me well enough to run up the stairs, put his head into the room, and
talk to me about his affairs.</p>
<p>To the sound of gustily blowing wind and rain beating on the pane, the
afternoon hours dragged slowly by, and the world went on outside and
around me until about five o’clock. Then there came a knock at my door,
an occurrence so unprecedented that I sat and stared at the said door
instead of speaking, as if Edgar Poe’s raven had put in a sudden
appearance and begun to croak its “never-more” at me.</p>
<p>The door was opened. A dreadful, dirty-looking young woman, a servant of
the house, stood in the door-way.</p>
<p>“What do you want?” I inquired.</p>
<p>A gentleman wished to speak to me.</p>
<p>“Bring him in then,” said I, somewhat testily.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She turned and requested some one to come forward. There entered a tall
and stately man, with one of those rare faces, beautiful in feature,
bright in expression, which one meets sometimes, and, having once seen,
never forgets. He carried what I took at first for a bundle done up in a
dark-green plaid, but as I stood up and looked at him I perceived that
the plaid was wrapped round a child. Lost in astonishment, I gazed at
him in silence.</p>
<p>“I beg you will excuse my intruding upon you thus,” said he, bowing, and
I involuntarily returned his bow, wondering more and more what he could
be. His accent was none of the Elberthal one; it was fine, refined,
polished.</p>
<p>“How can I serve you?” I asked, impressed by his voice, manner, and
appearance; agreeably impressed. A little masterful he looked—a little
imperious, but not unapproachable, with nothing ungenial in his pride.</p>
<p>“You could serve me very much by giving me one or two pieces of
information. In the first place let me introduce myself; you, I think,
are Herr Helfen?” I bowed. “My name is Eugen Courvoisier. I am the new
member of your <i>städtisches Orchester</i>.”</p>
<p>“<i>O, was!</i>” said I, within myself. “That our new first violin!”</p>
<p>“And this is my son,” he added, looking down at the plaid bundle, which
he held very carefully and tenderly. “If you will tell me at what time
the opera begins, what it is to-night, and finally, if there is a room
to be had, perhaps in this house, even for one night. I must find a nest
for this <i>Vögelein</i> as soon as I possibly can.”</p>
<p>“I believe the opera begins at seven,” said I, still gazing at him in
astonishment, with open mouth and incredulous eyes. Our orchestra
contained among its sufficiently varied specimens of nationality and
appearance nothing in the very least like this man, beside whom I felt
myself blundering, clumsy, and unpolished. It was not mere natural grace
of manner. He had that, but it had been cultivated somewhere, and
cultivated highly.</p>
<p>“Yes?” he said.</p>
<p>“At seven—yes. It is ‘Tannhauser’ to-night. And the rooms—I believe
they have rooms in the house.”</p>
<p>“Ah, then I will inquire about it,” said he, with an exceedingly <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN></span>open
and delightful smile. “I thank you for telling me. Adieu, <i>mein Herr</i>.”</p>
<p>“Is he asleep?” I asked, abruptly, and pointing to the bundle.</p>
<p>“Yes; <i>armes Kerlchen</i>! just now he is,” said the young man.</p>
<p>He was quite young, I saw. In that half light I supposed him even
younger than he really was. He looked down at the bundle again and
smiled.</p>
<p>“I should like to see him,” said I, politely and gracefully, seized by
an impulse of which I felt ashamed, but which I yet could not resist.</p>
<p>With that I stepped forward and came to examine the bundle. He moved the
plaid a little aside and showed me a child—a very young, small,
helpless child, with closed eyes, immensely long, black, curving lashes,
and fine, delicate black brows. The small face was flushed, but even in
sleep this child looked melancholy. Yet he was a lovely child—most
beautiful and most pathetic to see.</p>
<p>I looked at the small face in silence, and a great desire came upon me
to look at it oftener—to see it again, then up at that of the father.
How unlike the two faces! Now that I fairly looked at the man I found he
was different from what I had thought; older, sparer, with more sharply
cut features. I could not tell what the child’s eyes might be—those of
the father were piercing as an eagle’s; clear, open, strange. There was
sorrow in the face, I saw, as I looked so earnestly into it; and it was
worn as if with a keen inner life. This glance was one of those which
penetrate deep, not the glance of a moment, but a revelation for life.</p>
<p>“He is very beautiful,” said I.</p>
<p>“<i>Nicht wahr?</i>” said the other, softly.</p>
<p>“Look here,” I added, going to a sofa which was strewn with papers,
books, and other paraphernalia; “couldn’t we put him here, and then go
and see about the rooms? Such a young, tender child must not be carried
about the passages, and the house is full of draughts.”</p>
<p>I do not know what had so suddenly supplied me with this wisdom as to
what was good for a “young, tender child,” nor can I account for the
sudden deep interest which possessed me. I dashed the things off the
sofa, beat the dust from it, desired him to wait one moment <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN></span>while I
rushed to my bed to ravish it of its pillow. Then with the sight of the
bed (I was buying my experience) I knew that that, and not the sofa, was
the place for the child, and said so.</p>
<p>“Put him here, do put him here!” I besought, earnestly. “He will sleep
for a time here, won’t he?”</p>
<p>“You are very good,” said my visitor, hesitating a moment.</p>
<p>“Put him there!” said I, flushed with excitement, and with the hitherto
unknown joy of being able to offer hospitality.</p>
<p>Courvoisier looked meditatively at me for a short time then laid the
child upon the bed, and arranged the plaid around it as skillfully and
as quickly as a woman would have done it.</p>
<p>“How clever he must be,” I thought, looking at him with awe, and with
little less awe contemplating the motionless child.</p>
<p>“Wouldn’t you like something to put over him?” I asked, looking
excitedly about. “I have an overcoat. I’ll lend it you.” And I was
rushing off to fetch it, but he laughingly laid his hand upon my arm.</p>
<p>“Let him alone,” said he; “he’s all right.”</p>
<p>“He won’t fall off, will he?” I asked, anxiously.</p>
<p>“No; don’t be alarmed. Now, if you will be so good, we will see about
the rooms.”</p>
<p>“Dare you leave him?” I asked, still with anxiety, and looking back as
we went toward the door.</p>
<p>“I dare because I must,” replied he.</p>
<p>He closed the door, and we went down-stairs to seek the persons in
authority. Courvoisier related his business and condition, and asked to
see rooms. The woman hesitated when she heard there was a child.</p>
<p>“The child will never trouble you, madame,” said he, quietly, but rather
as if the patience of his look were forced.</p>
<p>“No, never!” I added, fervently. “I will answer for that, Frau Schmidt.”</p>
<p>A quick glance, half gratitude, half amusement, shot from his eyes as
the woman went on to say that she only took gentlemen lodgers, and could
not do with ladies, children, and nurse-maids. They wanted so much
attending to, and she did not profess to open her house to them.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“You will not be troubled with either lady or nurse-maid,” said he. “I
take charge of the child myself. You will not know that he is in the
house.”</p>
<p>“But your wife—” she began.</p>
<p>“There will be no one but myself and my little boy,” he replied, ever
politely, but ever, as it seemed, to me, with repressed pain or
irritation.</p>
<p>“So!” said the woman, treating him to a long, curious, unsparing look of
wonder and inquiry, which made me feel hot all over. He returned the
glance quietly and unsmilingly. After a pause she said:</p>
<p>“Well, I suppose I must see about it, but it will be the first child I
ever took into the house, in that way, and only as a favor to Herr
Helfen.”</p>
<p>I was greatly astonished, not having known before that I stood in such
high esteem. Courvoisier threw me a smiling glance as we followed the
woman up the stairs, up to the top of the house, where I lived. Throwing
open a door, she said there were two rooms which must go together.
Courvoisier shook his head.</p>
<p>“I do not want two rooms,” said he, “or rather, I don’t think I can
afford them. What do you charge?”</p>
<p>She told him.</p>
<p>“If it were so much,” said he, naming a smaller sum, “I could do it.”</p>
<p>“<i>Nie!</i>” said the woman, curtly, “for that I can’t do it. <i>Um
Gotteswillen!</i> One must live.”</p>
<p>She paused, reflecting, and I watched anxiously. She was going to
refuse. My heart sunk. Rapidly reviewing my own circumstances and
finances, and making a hasty calculation in my mind, I said:</p>
<p>“Why can’t we arrange it? Here is a big room and a little room. Make the
little room into a bedroom, and use the big room for a sitting-room. I
will join at it, and so it will come within the price you wish to pay.”</p>
<p>The woman’s face cleared a little. She had listened with a clouded
expression and her head on one side. Now she straightened herself, drew
herself up, smoothed down her apron, and said:</p>
<p>“Yes, that lets itself be heard. If Herr Helfen agreed to that, she
would like it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but I can’t think of putting you to the extra expense,” said
Courvoisier.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I should like it,” said I. “I have often wished I had a little more
room, but, like you, I couldn’t afford the whole expense. We can have a
piano, and the child can play there. Don’t you see?” I added, with great
earnestness and touching his arm. “It is a large airy room; he can run
about there, and make as much noise as he likes.”</p>
<p>He still seemed to hesitate.</p>
<p>“I can afford it,” said I. “I’ve no one but myself, unluckily. If you
don’t object to my company, let us try it. We shall be neighbors in the
orchestra.”</p>
<p>“So!”</p>
<p>“Why not at home too? I think it an excellent plan. Let us decide it
so.”</p>
<p>I was very urgent about it. An hour ago I could not have conceived
anything which could make me so urgent and set my heart beating so.</p>
<p>“If I did not think it would inconvenience you,” he began.</p>
<p>“Then it is settled?” said I. “Now let us go and see what kind of
furniture there is in that big room.”</p>
<p>Without allowing him to utter any further objection, I dragged him to
the large room, and we surveyed it. The woman, who for some
unaccountable reason appeared to have recovered her good-temper in a
marvelous manner, said quite cheerfully that she would send the maid to
make the smaller room ready as a bedroom for two. “One of us won’t take
much room,” said Courvoisier with a laugh, to which she assented with a
smile, and then left us. The big room was long, low, and rather dark.
Beams were across the ceiling, and two not very large windows looked
upon the street below, across to two similar windows of another
lodging-house, a little to the left of which was the Tonhalle. The floor
was carpetless, but clean; there was a big square table, and some
chairs.</p>
<p>“There,” said I, drawing Courvoisier to the window, and pointing across:
“there is one scene of your future exertions, the Städtische Tonhalle.”</p>
<p>“So!” said he, turning away again from the window—it was as dark as
ever outside—and looking round the room again. “This is a dull-looking
place,” he added, gazing around it.</p>
<p>“We’ll soon make it different,” said I, rubbing my hands and gazing
round the room with avidity. “I have <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN></span>long wished to be able to inhabit
this room. We must make it more cheerful, though, before the child comes
to it. We’ll have the stove lighted, and we’ll knock up some shelves, and
we’ll have a piano in, and the sofa from my room, <i>nicht wahr?</i> Oh,
we’ll make a place of it, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>He looked at me as if struck with my enthusiasm, and I bustled about. We
set to work to make the room habitable. He was out for a short time at
the station and returned with the luggage which he had left there. While
he was away I stole into my room and took a good look at my new
treasure; he still slept peacefully and calmly on. We were deep in
impromptu carpentering and contrivances for use and comfort, when it
occurred to me to look at my watch.</p>
<p>“Five minutes to seven!” I almost yelled, dashing wildly into my room to
wash my hands and get my violin. Courvoisier followed me. The child was
awake. I felt a horrible sense of guilt as I saw it looking at me with
great, soft, solemn, brown eyes, not in the least those of its father,
but it did not move. I said apologetically that I feared I had awakened
it.</p>
<p>“Oh, no! He’s been awake for some time,” said Courvoisier. The child saw
him, and stretched out its arms toward him.</p>
<p>“<i>Na! junger Taugenichts!</i>” he said, taking it up and kissing it. “Thou
must stay here till I come back. Wilt be happy till I come?”</p>
<p>The answer made by the mournful-looking child was a singular one. It put
both tiny arms around the big man’s neck, laid its face for a moment
against his, and loosed him again. Neither word nor sound did it emit
during the process. A feeling altogether new and astonishing overcame
me. I turned hastily away, and as I picked up my violin-case, was amazed
to find my eyes dim. My visitors were something unprecedented to me.</p>
<p>“You are not compelled to go to the theater to-night, you know, unless
you like,” I suggested, as we went down-stairs.</p>
<p>“Thanks, it is as well to begin at once.”</p>
<p>On the lowest landing we met Frau Schmidt.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, <i>mein Herren</i>?” she demanded.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“To work, madame,” he replied, lifting his cap with a courtesy which
seemed to disarm her.</p>
<p>“But the child?” she demanded.</p>
<p>“Do not trouble yourself about him.”</p>
<p>“Is he asleep?”</p>
<p>“Not just now. He is all right, though.”</p>
<p>She gave us a look which meant volumes. I pulled Courvoisier out.</p>
<p>“Come along, do!” cried I. “She will keep you there for half an hour,
and it is time now.”</p>
<p>We rushed along the streets too rapidly to have time or breath to speak,
and it was five minutes after the time when we scrambled into the
orchestra, and found that the overture was already begun.</p>
<p>Though there is certainly not much time for observing one’s fellows when
one is helping in the overture to “Tannhauser,” yet I saw the many
curious and astonished glances which were cast toward our new member,
glances of which he took no notice, simply because he apparently did not
see them. He had the finest absence of self-consciousness that I ever
saw.</p>
<p>The first act of the opera was over, and it fell to my share to make
Courvoisier known to his fellow-musicians. I introduced him to the
director, who was not von Francius, nor any friend of his. Then we
retired to one of the small rooms on one side of the orchestra.</p>
<p>“<i>Hundewetter!</i>” said one of the men, shivering. “Have you traveled far
to-day?” he inquired of Courvoisier, by way of opening the conversation.</p>
<p>“From Köln only.”</p>
<p>“Live there?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>The man continued his catechism, but in another direction.</p>
<p>“Are you a friend of Helfen’s?”</p>
<p>“I rather think Helfen has been a friend to me,” said Courvoisier,
smiling.</p>
<p>“Have you found lodgings already?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“So!” said his interlocutor, rather puzzled with the new arrival. I
remember the scene well. Half a dozen of the men were standing in one
corner of the room, smoking, drinking beer, and laughing over some not
very brilliant <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span>joke; we three were a little apart. Courvoisier, stately
and imposing-looking, and with that fine manner of his, politely
answering his interrogator, a small, sharp-featured man, who looked up
to him and rattled complacently away, while I sat upon the table among
the fiddle-cases and beer-glasses, my foot on a chair, my chin in my
hand, feeling my cheeks glow, and a strange sense of dizziness and
weakness all over me, a lightness in my head which I could not
understand. It had quite escaped me that I had neither eaten nor drunk
since my breakfast at eight o’clock, on a cup of coffee and dry
<i>Brödchen</i>, and it was now twelve hours later.</p>
<p>The pause was not a long one, and we returned to our places. But
“Tannhauser” is not a short opera. As time went on my sensations of
illness and faintness increased. During the second pause I remained in
my place. Courvoisier presently came and sat beside me.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid you feel ill,” said he.</p>
<p>I denied it. But though I struggled on to the end, yet at last a deadly
faintness overcame me. As the curtain went down amid the applause,
everything reeled around me. I heard the bustle of the others—of the
audience going away. I myself could not move.</p>
<p>“<i>Was ist denn mit ihm?</i>” I heard Courvoisier say as he stooped over me.</p>
<p>“Is that Friedhelm Helfen?” asked Karl Linders, surveying me. “<i>Potz
blitz!</i> he looks like a corpse! he’s been at his old tricks again,
starving himself. I expect he has touched nothing the whole day.”</p>
<p>“Let’s get him out and give him some brandy,” said Courvoisier. “Lend
him an arm, and I’ll give him one on this side.”</p>
<p>Together they hauled me down to the retiring-room.</p>
<p>“<i>Ei!</i> he wants a schnapps, or something of the kind,” said Karl, who
seemed to think the whole affair an excellent joke. “Look here, <i>alter
Narr!</i>” he added; “you’ve been going without anything to eat, <i>nicht</i>?”</p>
<p>“I believe I have,” I assented, feebly. “But I’m all right; I’ll go
home.”</p>
<p>Rejecting Karl’s pressing entreaties to join him at supper at his
favorite Wirthschaft, we went home, purchasing our supper on the way.
Courvoisier’s first step was toward the place where he had left the
child. He was gone.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“<i>Verschwunden!</i>” cried he, striding off to the sleeping-room, whither I
followed him. The little lad had been undressed and put to bed in a
small crib, and was sleeping serenely.</p>
<p>“That’s Frau Schmidt, who can’t do with children and nurse-maids,” said
I, laughing.</p>
<p>“It’s very kind of her,” said he, as he touched the child’s cheek
slightly with his little finger, and then, without another word,
returned to the other room, and we sat down to our long-delayed supper.</p>
<p>“What on earth made you spend more than twelve hours without food?” he
asked me, laying down his knife and fork, and looking at me.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you some time perhaps, not now,” said I, for there had begun
to dawn upon my mind, like a sun-ray, the idea that life held an
interest for me—two interests—a friend and a child. To a miserable,
lonely wretch like me, the idea was divine.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />