Part 9 (2/2)
”Yes, and she availed herself of this virtuous ramble to save the life of a despairing girl, who very opportunely attempted to commit suicide, just at the time the countess was pa.s.sing to rescue this precious prize. Now she is sitting yonder remodeling one of her charming tailor costumes for this last toy of her caprice. She declares that she loves the wench most tenderly, will never be separated from her; in short, she is playing the novel character of Lady Bountiful, and does not want to be disturbed.”
”Did you see the fair orphan?”
”No; she protested that it would be unpleasant for the girl to expose herself to curious glances, so she conceals this very sensitive young lady from profane eyes in her sleeping room. What do you say to all this, Prince?”
”I say,” replied Prince Hohenheim, an elderly gentleman with a clearly cut, sarcastic face, a bald forehead, and a low, but distinct enunciation, ”that a vivacious, imaginative woman is always influenced by the environment in which she happens to find herself. When the countess is in the society of scholarly people, she becomes extremely learned, if she is in a somewhat frivolous circle, like ours, she grows--not exactly frivolous, but full of sparkling wit, and here, among these devout enthusiasts, Her Highness wishes to play the part of a Stylite. Let us indulge her, it won't last long, a lady's whim must never be thwarted. _Ce que femme veut, Dieu le veut!_”
”Has the countess also made a vow to fast?” asked Count Cossigny of the Austrian Emba.s.sy, and therefore briefly called 'Austria,' ”could we not dine together?”
”No, she told me that she would not leave the beloved suicide alone a moment at present, and therefore she intended to dine at home.
Yesterday she shuddered at the bare thought of drinking a cup of tea made in that witch's kitchen, and only the fact that my valet prepared it and I drank it first in her presence finally induced her, at ten o'clock last evening, to accept the refreshment. And to-day she will eat a dinner prepared by the ladies of the house. There must really be something dangerous in the air of Ammergau!”
”To persons of the countess' temperament, yes!” replied Prince Hohenheim in his calm manner, then slipping his arm through the prince's a moment, whispered confidentially, as they walked on: ”I advise you, Prince Emil, to get her away as soon as possible.”
”Certainly, all the arrangements are made. We shall start directly after the performance.”
”That is fortunate. To-morrow, then! You have tickets?”
”Oh yes, and what is still better, whole bones.”
”That's true,” cried Austria, ”what a crowd! One might think Sarah Bernhardt was going to play the Virgin Mary.”
”It's ridiculous! I haven't seen such a spectacle since the Paris Exposition!” remarked St. Genois.
”It's worse than Baden-Baden at the time of the races,” muttered Wengenrode, angrily. ”Absurd, what brings the people here?”
”Why, _we_ are here, too,” said Hohenheim, smiling.
”_Mon Dieu_, it must be seen once, if people are in the neighborhood,”
observed Cossigny.
”Are you going directly after the performance, too?” asked Prince Emil.
”Of course, what is there to do here? No gaming--no ladies' society, and just think, the burgomaster of Ammergau will allow neither a circus nor any other ordinary performance. He was offered _forty thousand marks_ by the proprietor of the Circus Rouannet, if he would permit him to give performances during the Pa.s.sion Play! Mademoiselle Rouannet told me so herself. Do you suppose that obstinate, stiff-necked Philistine could be persuaded? No, it was not in harmony with the dignity of the Pa.s.sion Play. He preferred to refuse the 40,000 marks.
The Salon Kluber wanted to put up an elegant merry-go-round and offered 12,000 marks for the privilege. Heaven forbid!”
”I believe these people have the mania of ambition,” said Wengenrode.
”Say rather of _saints.h.i.+p_,' corrected Prince Hohenheim.
”Aye, they all consider themselves the holy personages whom they represent. We need only look at this arrogant burgomaster, and the gentleman who personates Christ, to understand what these people imagine themselves.”
All joined in the laugh which followed.
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