When my excellent uncle Hâas, burgomaster of Lauterbach, died, I had a good situation as maître de chapelle, or precentor, under the Grand Duke Yeri Peter, with a salary of fifteen hundred florins, notwithstanding which I was a poor man still.
Uncle Christian knew exactly how I was , and yet had never sent me a kreutzer. So when I learned that he had left me owner of two hundred acres of rich land in and vineyards, a good bit of woodland, and his large house at Lauterbach, I could not help shedding tears of .
"My dear uncle," I cried, "now I can appreciate the depth of your wisdom, and I thank you most sincerely for your . Where would now the money be, supposing you had sent me anything? In the hands of the , no doubt; whereas by your delays you have saved the country, like another Fabius Cunctator—
"'Qui cunctando restituit rem—'
"I honour your memory, Uncle Christian! I do indeed!"
Having delivered myself of these deep feelings, and many more which I cannot enter into now, I got on horseback and rode off to Lauterbach.
Strange, is it not, how the Spirit of , hitherto quite a stranger to me, came to make my acquaintance?
"Caspar!" he whispered, "now you are a rich man! Hitherto vain shadows have filled your mind. A man must be a fool to follow glory. There is nothing solid but acres, and buildings, and crown-pieces, put out in safe mortgages. Fling aside all your vain ! Enlarge your boundaries, round off your estate, heap up money, and then you will be honoured and respected! You will be a burgomaster as your uncle was before you, and the country folks, when they see you coming a mile off, will pull off their hats, and say—'Here is Monsieur Caspar Hâas, the richest man and the biggest herr in the country.'"
These notions kept passing and repassing in my mind like the figures in a magic-lantern, with grave and measured step. The whole thing seemed to me reasonable.
It was the middle of July. The was warbling in the sky. The crops were waving in the plain, the gentle breezes carried on them the soft cry of the and the partridge amongst the wheat; the was glancing in the sunshine, and the Lauter ran its course beneath the ; but what was all that to me, the great burgomaster? I up my cheeks and rounded off my figure in of the portly appearance I was to present, and repeated to myself those observations—
"This is Monsieur Caspar Hâas; he is a very rich man! He is the first herr in the country! Get on, Blitz!"
And the forward.
I was anxious to try on my uncle's three-cornered hat and waistcoat. "If they fit me," I said, "what is the use of buying?"
About four in the afternoon the village of Lauterbach appeared at the end of the valley, and very proud I felt as I surveyed the tall and handsome house of the late Christian Hâas, my future , the centre of my property, real and . I admired its situation by the long dusty road, its vast roof of grey , the sheds and barns covering with their broad expanse the , the carts, and the crops; behind, the poultry-yard, then the little garden, the , the vineyards up the hill, the green meadows farther off.
I with delight over all these comforts and luxuries.
As I went down the principal street the old women with nose and chin nearly meeting at the , the bare-pated children with hair, the men in their otter-skin caps, and silver-chained pipes in their mouths, all gaze upon me, and respectfully me—
"Good day, Monsieur Caspar! How do you do, Monsieur Hâas?"
And all the small windows were filled with wondering faces. I am at home now; I seem as if I had always been a great landowner at Lauterbach, and a notable. My kapellmeister's life seems a dream, a thing of the past, my enthusiastic fondness for music a youthful ! How money does modify men's views of things!
And now I draw before the house of the village , Monsieur Becker. He has my title-deeds under his care, and is to hand them over to me. I fasten my horse to the ring at the door, I run up the steps, and the ancient scribe, with his bald head very respectfully uncovered, and his long spare figure clad in a green dressing-gown with full skirts, advances alone to receive me.
"Monsieur Caspar Hâas, I have the honour to salute you."
"Your servant, Monsieur Becker."
"Pray walk in, Monsieur Hâas."
"After you, sir, after you."
We cross the vestibule, and I find at the end of a small, neat, and well-aired room a table nicely and comfortably laid, and sitting by it a young and fresh-coloured, the very picture of and .
The venerable notary announced me—
"Monsieur Caspar Hâas!"
I bowed.
"My daughter Lothe!" added the good man.
And whilst I felt in myself a reviving taste for the beautiful, and was admiring Mademoiselle Lothe's pretty little nose, the rosy lips, and the large blue eyes, her dainty little figure, and her dimpled hands, Maître Becker invited me to sit down at the table, informing me that he had been expecting me, and that before entering on matters of business it would be well to take a little , a glass of Bordeaux, etc., an invitation of which I recognised the propriety, and which I accepted very willingly.
And so we sit down. We talk first of the beautiful country. And I form opinions about the old gentleman, and wonder what a notary is likely to make at Lauterbach!
"Mademoiselle, will you take a wing?"
"Monsieur, you are very kind; thank you, I will."
Lothe looks down bashfully. I fill her glass, in which she dips her rosy lips. Papa is in good spirits; he tells me about hunting and fishing.
"Of course Monsieur Hâas will live as we do in the country. We have excellent rabbit-warrens. The rivers in . The shooting in the forests is let out. People mostly spend their evenings at the inn. Monsieur the of woods and forests is a delightful young man. The juge-de-paìx is a capital whist-player," and so on, and so on.
I listen, and think all this quiet life must be delightful. Mademoiselle Lothe pleases me a good deal. She does not talk much, but she smiles and looks so agreeable! How loving and she must be!
At last the coffee came, then the kirschwasser. Mademoiselle Lothe retires, and the old lawyer gradually passes to business. He explains to me the nature of my uncle's property, and I listen . There was no part of the will in dispute; there were no , no mortgages. Everything is clear and . Happy Caspar! Happy man!
Then we went into the office to look over the deeds. The close air of this place of dry, hard business, those long rows of boxes, the files of bills—all these together put weak notions of love out of my head. I sat down in an arm-chair while Monsieur Becker, collecting his thoughts, puts his horn spectacles in their place upon his long, sharp nose.
"These deeds relate to your meadow-land at Eichmatt. There, Monsieur Hâas, you have a hundred acres of excellent land, the finest and best-watered in the commune; two and even three crops a year are got off that land. It brings in four thousand francs a year. Here are the deeds belonging to your vine-growing land at Sonnenthâl, thirty-five acres in all. One year with another you may get from this two hundred hectolitres (4,400 .) of light wine, sold on the ground at twelve or fifteen francs the hectolitre. Good years make up for the bad. This, Monsieur Hâas, is your title to the forest of Romelstein, containing fifty or sixty hectares (a hectare is 2-1/2 acres) of excellent timber. This is your property at Hacmatt; this your pasture-land at Tiefenthal. This is your farm at Grüneswald, and here is the deed belonging to your house at Lauterbach; it is the largest house in the place, and was built in the sixteenth century."
"Indeed, Monsieur Becker! but is that saying much in its favour?"
"Certainly, certainly. It was built by Jean Burckhardt, Count of Barth, for a hunting-box. Many generations have lived in it since then, but it has never been neglected, and it is now in excellent repair."
I thanked Monsieur Becker for the information he had given me, and having secured all my title-deeds in a large which he was good enough to lend me, I took my leave, more full than ever of my vast importance!
Arriving before my house, I enjoyed introducing the key into the lock of the door, and bringing down my foot firmly and proudly on the first step.
"This is all mine!" I cried enthusiastically.
I enter the hall—"Mine!" I open the wardrobes—"Mine!" Mine—all that piled up to the top! I pace up the broad staircase, repeating like a fool, "This is mine, and that is mine! Here I am, owner of all this! No more uneasiness about the future! Not an anxious thought for the morrow! Now I am going to make a figure in the world!—not on the weak ground of merit—not for anything that fashion can alter. I am a great man because I hold really and effectually that which the world .
"Ye poets and artists! what are you in comparison with the rich who has everything he wants, and who feeds your inspiration with the that fall from his table? What are you but portions of his feasts and banquets, just to fill up a weary ? You are no more than the sparrow that warbles in his hedges, or the statue that figures in his garden-walk. It is by him and for him that you exist. What need has he to envy you the of pride and vanity—he who possesses the only solid good this world has to offer?"
At that moment of if the poor Kapellmeister Hâas had appeared before me I might very likely have turned and looked at him over my shoulder and asked, "What fool is that? What business has he with me?"
I threw a window open; evening was closing in. The setting sun my orchards and my vines as far as I could see. On the of the hill a few white patches indicated the .
I turned round. A great Gothic hall, with rich mouldings decorating the ceiling, pleased my taste exceedingly. This was the Seigneur Burckhardt's hunting-saloon.
An old stood between two windows; I ran my fingers absently over the keys, and the loose with the disagreeable of a toothless old woman trying to sing like a young damsel.
At the end of this long apartment was an arched closed in by deep red curtains, and containing a lofty four-post bedstead with a kind of grand baldacchino covering it in. The sight of this reminded me that I had been six hours on horseback, and undressing with a self-satisfied on my face all the time—
"It is the first time," I said, "that I shall sleep in a bed of my own."
And laying myself comfortably down, with my eyes dreamily wandering over the distant plains on which the shadows of evening were settling down, I felt my gently yielding to the sweet influence of sleep. Not a leaf was stirring; the village noises ceased one by one, the last golden rays of the sun had disappeared, and I dropped into the unconsciousness of welcome sleep.
Dark night fell on the face of the earth, and then the moon was rising in all her splendour, when I awoke, I cannot tell why. The wandering of summer air reached me through the open window, with the sweet perfume of the new-mown hay............