[The Malady of the Century by Max Nordau]@TWC D-Link bookThe Malady of the Century CHAPTER VIII 21/51
Then to Patke severely--"That is not what you said in your first charge." "I was confused then; I did not recollect distinctly.
But later on it came back to me." "That is very improbable.
What have you to answer, Dr.Eynhardt ?" "Simply, that the man's statement is absolutely untrue.
I never uttered or thought words bearing the remotest resemblance to those he quotes." "What my friend does not say is," broke in Schrotter, "that, on the contrary, he expressed the deepest and most painful emotion at the crime." The magistrate shot a venomous glance from under his spectacles at Schrotter, but quailed before those flaming half-closed blue eyes fixed so sternly upon him. "Well, and what have you to bring forward against the other gentleman ?" "That gentleman said the outrage was of no great importance." "In your first account you said the outrage had no real significance, and that Dr.Eynhardt made the remark." "Whether he said 'no importance' or 'no significance,' it is all the same thing, and one cannot so easily distinguish the speaker when one is walking behind.
I may have been mistaken on that point." "You do not repudiate the remark ?" asked the magistrate of Schrotter in his most biting tones. "Your expression is not very happily chosen.
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