[Undine by Friedrich de la Motte Fouque]@TWC D-Link book
Undine

CHAPTER 1
10/16

My wife had remained at home as she was wont to do; and at this time for a reason of more than common interest, for although we were beginning to feel the advances of age, God had bestowed upon us an infant of wonderful beauty.

It was a little girl; and we already began to ask ourselves the question, whether we ought not, for the advantage of the new-comer, to quit our solitude, and, the better to bring up this precious gift of Heaven, to remove to some more inhabited place.

Poor people, to be sure, cannot in these cases do all you may think they ought, sir knight; but we must all do what we can.
"Well, I went on my way, and this affair would keep running in my head.
This slip of land was most dear to me, and I trembled when, amidst the bustle and broils of the city, I thought to myself, 'In a scene of tumult like this, or at least in one not much more quiet, I must soon take up my abode.' But I did not for this murmur against our good God; on the contrary, I praised Him in silence for the new-born babe.

I should also speak an untruth, were I to say that anything befell me, either on my passage through the forest to the city, or on my returning homeward, that gave me more alarm than usual, as at that time I had never seen any appearance there which could terrify or annoy me.

The Lord was ever with me in those awful shades." Thus speaking he took his cap reverently from his bald head, and continued to sit for a considerable time in devout thought.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books