The Danes Sketched by Themselves - LightNovelsOnl.com
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'And I beg of you to come into the grove to-morrow morning, after breakfast; I wish very much to have a little private conversation with you,' whispered Jette, almost in tears, as I kissed her hand. She could hardly bring herself to p.r.o.nounce the words; I saw what a pang it cost her. A warm pressure of her hand was my only reply; she little knew how friendly my feelings were towards her.
'So my adventures are not finished even with this day,' said I to myself as I opened a little of the window in my room; 'shall I make up my mind to this delay, or shall I take myself off at once! What! leave poor Jette in the lurch? Yet how can I help her? What is the use of my remaining longer here?--I shall but entangle myself still more deeply in a net of untruth, which will bring me into disgrace. Have I not had warnings enough--the gallows scene, my Hamburg reputation, and the many uneasy moments I have pa.s.sed to-day? I am vexed and annoyed this evening; it will cost me less, therefore, perhaps, to recover my freedom tonight than to-morrow night; another day with Hanne will only make me feel the separation still more acutely. Then, in case of a discovery, how shall I excuse this prolonged mystification? By confessing my love for Hanne?--a pretty apology, to be sure! But am I _really_ in love with her? _I_ in love! and if I were, what would be the result? Is it at all likely that the Just.i.tsraad would give his daughter to an impertinent puppy, who had made her acquaintance first by such an unwarrantable trick--to a "sad scamp" who had only made himself remarkable by his wild pranks? Or--shall I climb up yon tree, perch myself like a singing-bird before Jette's window, make my confession to her, and then start on my pedestrian journey? Or--shall I go to bed, and let to-morrow take care of itself? I will consult my b.u.t.tons--I will try my fate by them. Let me see: I will ... I will not ... I will ... I will go to bed. ... Aha! I am to go to bed--chance has so decided it for me. But to go to bed in love! that such a catastrophe should happen to me! I had thought it was quite foreign to my nature; however, here I am, up to my ears in love. Ah! why was that little fairy, Hanne, so bewitching? why were the whole family so frank and pleasant? It was all their own fault; they forced the cousins.h.i.+p upon me. Heaven knows I came to them quite innocent of nefarious designs--fast asleep and snoring--perfectly honourable.... _Apropos_ of honour, let me close the window; what Gustav and Jette have to talk about is nothing to me--it would be very indelicate to play the listener--wounding to my better feelings. My better feelings! I can't help laughing at the idea of _my_ being inconvenienced by any symptoms of honourable, or delicate, or _better_ feelings. It is my cursed levity and folly that lead me astray; after all, there _are_ honesty and uprightness in me, _au fond_, and my heart is in its right place. I will no longer be the slave of caprice and impulse. I will be something better than a mere madcap; and here, even here, they shall learn to speak of me with respect.... Ah! it will be a confounded long time, however, before I can teach them that ... and ... in the meantime, I positively am in love.'
Having arrived at this conclusion, I betook myself to my couch, and closed my eyes, at the same time burying my ears in my pillows, not to overhear any portion of the discourse which was to be carried on about one o'clock in the morning, on the outside of my window, and also the sooner to dream of Hanne. I succeeded in both, for I heard or saw nothing whatsoever of the two unfortunate lovers, and I dreamed of Hanne the livelong night. The morning was far advanced, when Thomas thrust his head into my room, and rated me for being as heavy a slumberer as one of the seven sleepers;--the little wretch! I was at that moment swinging with Hanne, and would have given the wealth of the East India Company to have been permitted to end my dream undisturbed.
When I entered the breakfast-room they were all at table. Jette looked very pale, but she allowed that her headache was better, though she said she still felt far from well. Hanne and her father teased me unmercifully about the visitors of the day before, who had put me so much out of humour, and about my predictions of a thunderstorm wherewith I endeavoured to drive them away. 'But you are quite an ignoramus in regard to the weather, cousin; that I perceived,' said Hanne, 'I shall present you with a barometer on your birthday, so that you may not make such mistakes again as that of yesterday evening.
Which is the important day?'
'It is quite old-fas.h.i.+oned to keep birthdays, Hanne; that custom has been long since exploded,' said I, 'and therefore I am not going to tell you.'
'But we are very old-fas.h.i.+oned here, and you will be expected to do as we do in respect to keeping birthdays. First, let me refresh your memory. When is my birthday?'
'On the 12th of November you will be seventeen years of age.'
'Right. And Jette's? How old will she be her next birthday?'
It was a trying examination, but it was well deserved; why had I not taken myself off the night before, when I could so well have made my escape?
'Come, begin; tell us Jette's birthday, and my father's, and my mother's? Let us have them all at once. Now we shall see whether you are skilled in your almanac.'
'Are you seriously bent on this examination? Do you fancy I have forgotten one of them?' I asked, in an offended tone. 'I will not answer such questions.'
This was one way of escaping. When do people most easily take offence?
Answer: When they are in the wrong.
'I see how it is,' said Hanne; 'as it annoys you to be asked if you are betrothed, it probably annoys you to be expected to remember the birthday of her to whom you are engaged. Only think,' she added, addressing the rest of the party, 'he does not wear his betrothal-ring, because he does not like answering any question to which his having it on his finger might give rise. As if it were a question of conscience.'
'So it may be, sometimes,' I replied. 'But since questioning is the order of the day, I beg to ask why _you_ wear that little ring on your finger?'
'I never gratify impertinent curiosity,' said the little devil, colouring up to the very roots of her hair. She seemed very much vexed, and turned angrily away.
'Now--now--children! can you never agree?' said the Just.i.tsraad. 'You two will be getting into quarrels every moment, that I foresee; you resemble each other too much; it is from the absolute similarity between you that you cannot be in peace.'
'You flatter me very much, uncle,' said I; 'would that it were really so.'
'I say nothing of the kind,' cried Hanne; 'I beg to decline the compliment. Gentlemen full of whims are my aversion. But, happily for both of us, you are not engaged to me. Jette is much too good--she will put up with your bad habits.'
Jette smiled kindly to her, and that seemed immediately to appease her wrath. She ran to her sister, kissed her, and said, 'For your sake I will bear with him; but believe me, you will not make an endurable husband of him if you do not begin in time to drive his caprices out of him. He should be accustomed to do as he is bid, and answer the questions that are put to him.'
Both Jette and myself turned our faces away to conceal our confusion.
Hanne held out her hand to me. 'Do you repent of your sins?'
'With my whole heart.'
'Will you beg pardon, and promise henceforth to be better?'
'Yes. I confess that I am a great sinner, but I humbly beg pardon, and will try to do better for the future.' So saying, I pressed a long, long kiss on her hand; I could hardly get my lips away from it.
'So--that is enough. Now go and beg Jette's pardon, because you have been naughty in her presence; and,' she added, 'kiss her hand prettily.'
I did so.
'Very well. But I don't think you have ever kissed her as your betrothed yet. Let me see you go through that ceremony, properly too.'
Poor Jette became crimson at this challenge, which did not in the least embarra.s.s me.
I felt that it was going a little too far, but what could I do? Dear reader! I was compelled to kiss the young lady--do not judge of me too severely because I did it. But I obeyed the command in as formal a manner as possible; it was scarcely a kiss, yet it burned on my lips like fire; as to how it burned my conscience--well, I will say nothing of that.
'He is really quite timid,' exclaimed Hanne, who stood by with her hands folded, watching the performance of her command; 'I did not expect such an a.s.sured young gentleman to be so ceremonious; one would think it were his first essay!'
'And peace being now restored and sealed,' said the Just.i.tsraad, 'I hope it will be a Christian, a universal, and an eternal peace, both for the present and the future; that is to say, at least till you fall out again. And in order that such may not be the case for a few hours, we will leave the ladies, nephew, and pay a visit to the new horse I bought the other day. We shall see if you are as good a judge of horses as you are of the Hamburg theatricals.'
'You really should give poor Carl some peace,' said my considerate aunt; 'you will make him quite tired of us all. One insists upon catechizing him as to dates, another as to his veterinary knowledge--there is only wanting that I should attack him about culinary lore. You shall not be so plagued by them, Carl: as to the horse it was my husband's own choosing; and if you should not instantly discover, by looking at its teeth, that it is young and handsome, and has every possible good quality, you will be called an ignoramus.'
'Any how he may be called that,' said Hanne; 'but I forgot, peace has been proclaimed, so let my words be considered as unspoken.'
PART III.
About an hour before luncheon I stole away into the wood to wait for Jette, and it was with a beating heart I listened for any approaching footsteps; had I not kissed her, I should have felt easier in my own mind. Ought I now to confess to her the impositions of which I had been guilty? Perhaps it would be better to do so ... But the kiss ... would she forgive that?
I discerned her white dress a good way off, and I almost felt inclined to hide myself, and let her take the trouble of finding me; but again I bethought me that it was not the part of the cavalier to be shamefaced in a secret a.s.signation. I therefore went forward to meet her. As soon as she caught a glimpse of me, she stopped, and suddenly changed colour. The poor girl--how sorry I was for her! She could not utter one word. I led her to a rural seat near.
'Cousin,' at length she said, 'it must doubtless surprise you, and naturally so too, that I should in such a secret manner have requested an interview with you. If you could conceive how painful this moment is to me, I am sure you would compa.s.sionate me.'
'My dear young lady, I owe you an explanation, and I thank you for having given me an opportunity ...'
'Dear cousin, be not offended with me--do not speak to me in that distant and ceremonious manner--it makes the step more painful which I am about to take, and which cannot be longer delayed. It is I who owe you an explanation--alas! an explanation that will deprive me of your esteem and your friends.h.i.+p. I am very unhappy.'
'Do not weep so, dear cousin; you cannot imagine how it grieves me to see you so miserable. Believe me, I have your happiness sincerely at heart. You little know what delight it would give me if I were able to say to myself that I had contributed to it.'
The double signification which my words might bear drew forth more tears. Jette cried, without making any reply.
'There is comfort for every affliction,' I continued. 'G.o.d has mercifully placed the antidote alongside of the poisonous plant. Tell me, at least, what distresses you--let me at least endeavour to console you, even if I cannot a.s.sist you, and do not doubt my good will, though my power may be but limited.'
'For Heaven's sake, Carl, do not speak so kindly to me,' cried Jette, with some impetuosity. 'Do not speak thus--I have not deserved it. If you would be compa.s.sionate, say that you hate me--that you abhor me.'
'And if I said so, I should only deceive you. No, Jette, my complaisance cannot go so far.'
'You would hate me--you would despise me!' she exclaimed, sobbing, 'if you only knew ... oh! I shall never be able to tell ... if you only knew ... how unfortunate I am ... how I ...'
'Dear Jette,' said I, in some agitation, 'you have come to enter into an explanation with me; allow me to a.s.sist your confession, and help to lighten the burden which weighs so heavily on your heart. You have come, I know, to break off with me.'
'_You know!_' she exclaimed, in consternation. And she seemed as if she were going to faint. 'Take pity on me, Carl; leave me for a few minutes; I dare not look you in the face.'
She buried her own face in her pocket-handkerchief, and wept bitterly.
I kissed her hand, and left her.
Very much out of spirits myself, I wandered to and fro under the trees.