[Debit and Credit by Gustav Freytag]@TWC D-Link bookDebit and Credit CHAPTER X 11/19
What I have said is a secret, however, of which my friend knows nothing.
One thing is certain, that the late emperor, on the occasion of his last journey through the province, stopped at Ostrau, and had a long conversation with the pastor there." Now this last circumstance was true, and Anton had chanced to mention it to Fink among other of his childish recollections.
He had also stated that the pastor in question had been an army-chaplain in the last war, and that the emperor had asked him in what corps he had served. Fink, however, did not think it necessary to descend to such minutiae. Frau von Baldereck declared herself ready to receive Mr.Wohlfart. "One word more," said Fink, rising; "what I have confided to you, good fairy"-- the fairy weighed upward of ten stone--"must remain a secret between us.
I am sure I may trust to your delicacy what, were it to be spoken of by others, I should resent as a liberty taken with me and my friend, Mr.Wohlfart." He pronounced the name so ironically that the lady felt convinced that this gentleman, now under the disguise of a clerk, would soon burst upon the world as a prince. "But," said she, as they parted, "how shall I introduce him to my acquaintance ?" "Only as my best friend; for whom I will answer, in every respect, as a great addition to our circle." When Fink found himself in the street, he muttered irreverently enough, "How the old lady swallowed all my inventions, to be sure! As the son of plain honest parents, they would have given the poor lad the cold shoulder; now, however, they will all behave with a courtesy that will charm my young friend.
I never thought that old sand-hole and its tumble-down hut would turn out so useful." The seed that Fink had sown fell on fruitful soil.
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