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Delphi Collected Works of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Illustrated) ( PDFDrive )

CHAPTER VIII.

WHO IS THE TRAITOR?

NO, no!” he exclaimed, as he burst violently and hurriedly into the bedroom

assigned to him, and put down the light; “no, it is not possible! But whither shall

I turn myself! For the first time I think differently — for the first time I feel and

wish  otherwise.  Oh,  my  father!  if  you  could  be  present  invisibly,  and  look  me

through and through, you would convince yourself that I am still the same, ever

the  faithful,  obedient  and  loving  son.  To  say  no  —  to  oppose  the  dearest  and

long-cherished wish of my father! How shall I reveal it? — how shall I express

it? No, I cannot marry Julia. Whilst uttering it, I am frightened. And how shall I

present myself to him — reveal it to him, my kind, dear father? He looks at me

astounded and silent; he shakes his head; the clearheaded, wise and learned man

cannot  find  a  single  word.  Woe  is  me!  Oh,  I  know  well  to  whom  I  should

confide this pain, this embarrassment, whom I should choose as my intercessor:

of all people, you, Lucinda! And to you I should like to tell first, how I love you,

how I abandon myself to you, and implore you piteously, Be my representative;

and if you can love me, if you will be mine, then represent both of us.”

To explain this short, heartfelt, passionate soliloquy, a great many words will

be required.

Professor N — , of N — , had an only son of wonderful beauty, whom, until

his eighth year, he left under the care of his wife, a very worthy lady. She guided

the  hours  and  days  of  the  child  to  life,  to  learning,  and  all  good  conduct.  She

died,  and  at  the  moment  the  father  felt  that  he  would  be  unable,  personally,  to

further  continue  this  tutorship.  Hitherto  all  had  been  harmony  between  the

parents; they worked with one object, together determined what was to be done

in  the  time  immediately  at  hand,  and  the  mother  knew  how  to  carry  out

everything  wisely.  Double  and  threefold  was  now  the  anxiety  of  the  widower,

who  saw  daily  before  his  eyes  that  for  sons  of  professors  at  the  universities

themselves, only by a mere chance could a successful education be hoped for. In

this perplexity he turned to his friend the highbailiff at R — , with whom he had

already  discussed  earlier  plans  of  a  closer  family  connection.  He  was  able  to

advise and to help, so that the son was received in one of the good educational

institutes which then flourished in Germany, and in which all possible care was

taken of the whole man — body, soul, and spirit.

The  son  had  now  been  provided  for,  yet  his  father  felt  himself  far  too  much

alone: deprived of his wife, and strange to the lovely presence of the boy, whom,



without any trouble on his own part, he had seen brought up so satisfactorily. At

this  point  also  the  friendship  of  the  highbailiff  stood  him  in  good  stead;  the

distance  between  their  residences  disappeared  before  the  inclination  to  bestir

themselves and to seek distraction. Here the widowed scholar found in a family

circle,  also  deprived  of  a  mother,  two  beautiful,  and  in  different  ways  lovable,

daughters,  just  grown  up.  And  so  the  two  fathers  more  and  more  strengthened

themselves  in  the  belief,  in  the  prospect,  of  seeing  at  some  future  day  their

houses connected in the pleasantest manner.

They  lived  in  the  prosperous  dominions  of  a  sovereign  prince;  the  able  man

was  certain  of  his  position  for  the  length  of  his  life,  and  so  probably  was  a

successor of his own nomination.

In  accordance  with  a  prudent  family  and  official  arrangement,  Lucidor  was

now to prepare himself for the important place of his future father-in-law. In this

he succeeded step by step. Nothing was neglected to impart to him every kind of

knowledge, to develop in him all those capabilities of which the State at all times

stood in need: the study of the strict judicial law; of the more discretionary one,

where wisdom and ability lend their assistance to the functionary; calculation for

daily  wants  —  without  excluding  higher  views,  but  everything  pertaining

immediately to life as it would surely and unfailingly be required for use.

To this intent Lucidor had completed his school years, and was now prepared

by his father and well-wisher for the university. He displayed the finest talent for

everything, and owed to nature also the rare good fortune of being willing, from

love  to  his  father,  and  respect  for  his  friend,  to  guide  his  faculties  just  in  that

direction  which  was  indicated  to  him,  first  from  obedience  and  then  from

conviction. He was sent to a foreign university, and there, according both to his

own  epistolary  accounts  and  to  the  testimonials  of  his  teachers  and  tutors,  he

pursued  the  path  which  ought  to  lead  him  to  his  goal.  They  could  only

disapprove of his having in a few instances been too impetuously courageous. At

this the father shook his head, and the highbailiff nodded. Who would not have

wished for himself such a son!

Meantime the daughters, Julia and Lucinda, grew up — the former, who was

the younger, capricious, amiable, restless, and very amusing; the latter, difficult

to  describe,  because  in  rectitude  and  purity  she  represented  just  that  which  we

consider  as  most  desirable  in  all  women.  They  interchanged  visits,  and  Julia

found the most inexhaustible entertainment in the professor’s house.

His specialty was geography, which he knew how to enliven by topographical

descriptions; and as soon as Julia had noticed but a single volume, a whole series

of  similar  ones  from  the  Homann  publications  were  ready  at  hand.  Then  the

towns in a body were passed in review, judged, preferred or rejected: all seaports



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