<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
<h3>FRIEDHELM’S STORY.</h3>
<p><span style="margin-left: 21em;"><span class="smcap">Joachim, Raff</span>. <i>Op.</i> 177.</span></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i147.jpg" width-obs="354" height-obs="350" alt="Music" title="" /></div>
<p>“Make yourself quite easy, Herr Concertmeister. No child that was left
to my charge was ever known to come to harm.”</p>
<p>Thus Frau Schmidt to Eugen, as she stood with dubious smile and folded
arms in our parlor, and harangued him, while he and I stood,
violin-cases in our hands, in a great hurry, and anxious to be off.</p>
<p>“You are very kind, Frau Schmidt, I hope he will not trouble you.”</p>
<p>“He is a well-behaved child, and not nearly so disagreeable <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></SPAN></span>and bad to
do with as most. And at what time will you be back?”</p>
<p>“That is uncertain. It just depends upon the length of the probe.”</p>
<p>“Ha! It is all the same. I am going out for a little excursion this
afternoon, to the Grafenberg, and I shall take the boy with me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, thank you,” said Eugen; “that will be very kind. He wants some
fresh air, and I’ve had no time to take him out. You are very kind.”</p>
<p>“Trust to me, Herr Concertmeister—trust to me,” said she, with the
usual imperial wave of her hand, as she at last moved aside from the
door-way which she had blocked up and allowed us to pass out. A last
wave of the hand from Eugen to Sigmund, and then we hurried away to the
station. We were bound for Cologne, where that year the Lower Rhine
Musikfest was to be held. It was then somewhat past the middle of April,
and the fest came off at Whitsuntide, in the middle of May. We, among
others, were engaged to strengthen the Cologne orchestra for the
occasion, and we were bidden this morning to the first probe.</p>
<p>We just caught our train, seeing one or two faces of comrades we knew,
and in an hour were in Köln.</p>
<p>“The Tower of Babel,” and Raff’s Fifth Symphonie, that called “Lenore,”
were the subjects we had been summoned to practice. They, together with
Beethoven’s “Choral Fantasia” and some solos were to come off on the
third evening of the fest.</p>
<p>The probe lasted a long time; it was three o’clock when we left the
concert-hall, after five hours’ hard work.</p>
<p>“Come along, Eugen,” cried I, “we have just time to catch the three-ten,
but only just.”</p>
<p>“Don’t wait for me,” he answered, with an absent look. “I don’t think I
shall come by it. Look after yourself, Friedel, and <i>auf wiedersehen</i>!”</p>
<p>I was scarcely surprised, for I had seen that the music had deeply moved
him, and I can understand the wish of any man to be alone with the
remembrance or continuance of such emotions. Accordingly I took my way
to the station, and there met one or two of my Elberthal comrades, who
had been on the same errand as myself, and, like me, were returning
home.</p>
<p>Lively remarks upon the probable features of the coming <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></SPAN></span>fest, and the
circulation of any amount of loose and hazy gossip respecting composers
and soloists followed, and we all went to our usual restauration and
dined together. There was an opera that night to which we had probe that
afternoon, and I scarcely had time to rush home and give a look at
Sigmund before it was time to go again to the theater.</p>
<p>Eugen’s place remained empty. For the first time since he had come into
the orchestra he was absent from his post, and I wondered what could
have kept him.</p>
<p>Taking my way home, very tired, with fragments of airs from “Czar und
Zimmermann,” in which I had just been playing, the “March” from
“Lenore,” and scraps of choruses and airs from the “Thurm zu Babel,” all
ringing in my head in a confused jumble, I sprung up the stairs (up
which I used to plod so wearily and so spiritlessly), and went into the
sitting-room. Darkness! After I had stood still and gazed about for a
time, my eyes grew accustomed to the obscurity. I perceived that a dim
gray light still stole in at the open window, and that some one reposing
in an easy-chair was faintly shadowed out against it.</p>
<p>“Is that you, Friedhelm?” asked Eugen’s voice.</p>
<p>“<i>Lieber Himmel!</i> Are you there? What are you doing in the dark?”</p>
<p>“Light the lamp, my Friedel! Dreams belong to darkness, and facts to
light. Sometimes I wish light and facts had never been invented.”</p>
<p>I found the lamp and lighted it, carried it up to him, and stood before
him, contemplating him curiously. He lay back in our one easy-chair, his
hands clasped behind his head, his legs outstretched. He had been idle
for the first time, I think, since I had known him. He had been sitting
in the dark, not even pretending to do anything.</p>
<p>“There are things new under the sun,” said I, in mingled amusement and
amaze. “Absent from your post, to the alarm and surprise of all who know
you, here I find you mooning in the darkness, and when I illuminate you,
you smile up at me in a somewhat imbecile manner, and say nothing. What
may it portend?”</p>
<p>He roused himself, sat up, and looked at me with an ambiguous half
smile.</p>
<p>“Most punctual of men! most worthy, honest, fidgety old friend,” said
he, with still the same suppressed smile, <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></SPAN></span>“how I honor you! How I wish
I could emulate you! How I wish I were like you! and yet, Friedel, old
boy, you have missed something this afternoon.”</p>
<p>“So! I should like to know what you have been doing. Give an account of
yourself.”</p>
<p>“I have erred and gone astray, and have found it pleasant. I have done
that which I ought not to have done, and am sorry, for the sake of
morality and propriety, to have to say that it was delightful; far more
delightful than to go on doing just what one ought to do. Say, good
Mentor, does it matter? For this occasion only. Never again, as I am a
living man.”</p>
<p>“I wish you would speak plainly,” said I, first putting the lamp and
then myself upon the table. I swung my legs about and looked at him.</p>
<p>“And not go on telling you stories like that of Munchausen, in Arabesks,
eh? I will be explicit; I will use the indicative mood, present tense.
Now then. I like Cologne; I like the cathedral of that town; I like the
Hotel du Nord; and, above all, I love the railway station.”</p>
<p>“Are you raving?”</p>
<p>“Did you ever examine the Cologne railway station?” he went on, lighting
a cigar. “There is a great big waiting-room, which they lock up; there
is a delightful place in which you may get lost, and find yourself
suddenly alone in a deserted wing of the building, with an impertinent
porter, who doesn’t understand one word of Eng—of your native tongue—”</p>
<p>“Are you mad?” was my varied comment.</p>
<p>“And while you are in the greatest distress, separated from your
friends, who have gone on to Elberthal (like mine), and struggling to
make this porter understand you, you may be encountered by a mooning
individual—a native of the land—and you may address him. He drives the
fumes of music from his brain, and looks at you, and finds you
charming—more than charming. My dear Friedhelm, the look in your eyes
is quite painful to see. By the exercise of a little diplomacy, which,
as you are charmingly naïve, you do not see through, he manages to seal
an alliance by which you and he agree to pass three or four hours in
each other’s society, for mutual instruction and entertainment. The
entertainment consists of cutlets, potatoes—the kind called kartoffeln
frittes, which they <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></SPAN></span>give you very good at the Nord—and the wine known
to us as Doctorberger. The instruction is varied, and is carried on
chiefly in the aisle of the Kölner Dom, to the sound of music. And when
he is quite spell-bound, in a magic circle, a kind of golden net or
cloud, he pulls out an earthly watch, made of dust and dross (‘More fool
he,’ your eye says, and you are quite right), and sees that time is
advancing. A whole army of horned things with stings, called feelings of
propriety, honor, correctness, the right thing, etc., come in thick
battalions in <i>sturmschritt</i> upon him, and with a hasty word he hurries
her—he gets off to the station. There is still an hour, for both are
coming to Elberthal—an hour of unalloyed delight; then”—he snapped his
fingers—“a drosky, an address, a crack of the whip, and <i>ade</i>!”</p>
<p>I sat and stared at him while he wound up this rhodomontade by singing:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i14">“Ade, ade, ade!<br/></span>
<span class="i10">Ja, Scheiden und Meiden thut Weh!”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>“You are too young and fair,” he presently resumed, “too slight and
sober for apoplexy; but a painful fear seizes me that your mental
faculties are under some slight cloud. There is a vacant look in your
usually radiant eyes; a want of intelligence in the curve of your rosy
lips—”</p>
<p>“Eugen! Stop that string of fantastic rubbish! Where have you been, and
what have you been doing?”</p>
<p>“I have not deserved that from you. Haven’t I been telling you all this
time where I have been and what I have been doing? There is a brutality
in your behavior which is to a refined mind most lamentable.”</p>
<p>“But where have you been, and what have you done?”</p>
<p>“Another time, <i>mein lieber</i>—another time!”</p>
<p>With this misty promise I had to content myself. I speculated upon the
subject for that evening, and came to the conclusion that he had
invented the whole story, to see whether I would believe it (for we had
all a reprehensible habit of that kind), and very soon the whole
circumstance dropped from my memory.</p>
<p>On the following morning I had occasion to go to the public eye
hospital. Eugen and I had interested ourselves to procure a ticket for
free, or almost free, treatment <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></SPAN></span>as an out-patient for a youth whom we
knew—one of the second violins—whose sight was threatened, and who,
poor boy, could not afford to pay for proper treatment. Eugen being
busy, I went to receive the ticket.</p>
<p>It was the first time I had been in the place. I was shown into a room
with the light somewhat obscured, and there had to wait some few
minutes. Every one had something the matter with his or her eyes—at
least so I thought, until my own fell upon a girl who leaned, looking a
little tired and a little disappointed, against a tall desk at one side
of the room.</p>
<p>She struck me on the instant as no feminine appearance had ever struck
me before. She, like myself, seemed to be waiting for some one or
something. She was tall and supple in figure, and her face was girlish
and very innocent-looking; and yet, both in her attitude and countenance
there was a little pride, some hauteur. It was evidently natural to her,
and sat well upon her. A slight but exquisitely molded figure, different
from those of our stalwart Elberthaler <i>Mädchen</i>—finer, more refined
and distinguished, and a face to dream of. I thought it then, and I say
it now. Masses, almost too thick and heavy, of dark auburn hair, with
here and there a glint of warmer hue, framed that beautiful face—half
woman’s, half child’s. Dark-gray eyes, with long dark lashes and brows;
cheeks naturally very pale, but sensitive, like some delicate alabaster,
showing the red at every wave of emotion; something racy, piquant,
unique, enveloped the whole appearance of this young girl. I had never
seen anything at all like her before.</p>
<p>She looked wearily round the room, and sighed a little. Then her eyes
met mine; and seeing the earnestness with which I looked at her, she
turned away, and a slight, very slight, flush appeared in her cheek.</p>
<p>I had time to notice (for everything about her interested me) that her
dress was of the very plainest and simplest kind, so plain as to be
almost poor, and in its fashion not of the newest, even in Elberthal.</p>
<p>Then my name was called out. I received my ticket, and went to the probe
at the theater.</p>
<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153"></SPAN></span></p>
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