Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories. Anthony Trollope

Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories - Anthony Trollope


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       Anthony Trollope

      Lotta Schmidt, and Other Stories

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066247836

       LOTTA SCHMIDT AND OTHER STORIES.

       LOTTA SCHMIDT.

       LOTTA SCHMIDT.

       THE ADVENTURES OF FRED PICKERING.

       THE TWO GENERALS.

       FATHER GILES OF BALLYMOY.

       MALACHI’S COVE.

       THE WIDOW’S MITE.

       THE LAST AUSTRIAN WHO LEFT VENICE.

       MISS OPHELIA GLEDD.

       THE JOURNEY TO PANAMA.

       AND

       OTHER STORIES.

       Table of Contents

      BY

       ANTHONY TROLLOPE,

       AUTHOR OF

       “TALES OF ALL COUNTRIES,”

       “DOCTOR THORNE,”

       “PHINEAS FINN,”

       “ORLEY FARM,”

       ETC. ETC.

       FOURTH EDITION.

       LONDON:

       CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193 PICCADILLY.

       1876.

       (The right of translation is reserved.)

       Table of Contents

LOTTA SCHMIDT.

       Table of Contents

      

S all the world knows, the old fortifications of Vienna have been pulled down—the fortifications which used to surround the centre or kernel of the city; and the vast spaces thus thrown open and forming a broad ring in the middle of the town have not as yet been completely filled up with those new buildings and gardens which are to be there, and which, when there, will join the outside city and the inside city together, so as to make them into one homogeneous whole.

      The work, however, is going on, and if the war which has come and passed has not swallowed everything appertaining to Austria into its maw, the ugly remnants of destruction will be soon carted away, and the old glacis will be made bright with broad pavements, and gilded railings, and well-built lofty mansions, and gardens beautiful with shrubs, and beautiful with turf also, if Austrian patience can make turf to grow beneath an Austrian sky.

      On an evening of September, when there was still something left of daylight, at eight o’clock, two girls were walking together in the Burgplatz, or large open space which lies between the city palace of the emperor and the gate which passes thence from the old town out to the new town. Here at present stand two bronze equestrian statues, one of the Archduke Charles, and the other of Prince Eugene. And they were standing there also, both of them, when these two girls were walking round them; but that of the prince had not as yet been uncovered for the public.

      There was coming a great gala day in the city, Emperors and empresses, archdukes and grand-dukes, with their archduchesses and grand-duchesses, and princes and ministers, were to be there, and the new statue of Prince Eugene was to be submitted to the art-critics of the world. There was very much thought at Vienna of the statue in those days. Well; since that, the statue has been submitted to the art-critics, and henceforward it will be thought of as little as any other huge bronze figure of a prince on horseback. A very ponderous prince is poised in an impossible position, on an enormous dray horse. But yet the thing is grand, and Vienna is so far a finer city in that it possesses the new equestrian statue of Prince Eugene.

      “There will be such a crowd, Lotta,” said the elder of the two girls, “that I will not attempt it. Besides, we shall have plenty of time for seeing it afterwards.”

      “Oh, yes,” said the younger girl, whose name was Lotta Schmidt; “of course we shall all have enough of the old prince for the rest of our lives; but I should like to see the grand people sitting up there on the benches; and there will be something nice in seeing the canopy drawn up. I think I will come. Herr Crippel has said that he would bring me, and get me a place.”

      “I thought, Lotta, you had determined to have nothing more to say to Herr Crippel.”

      “I don’t know what you mean by that. I like Herr Crippel very much, and he plays beautifully. Surely a girl may know a man old enough to be her father without having him thrown in her teeth as her lover.”

      “Not when the man old enough to be her father has asked her to be his wife twenty times, as Herr Crippel has asked you. Herr Crippel would not give up his holiday afternoon to you if he thought it was to be for nothing.”

      “There I think you are wrong, Marie. I believe Herr Crippel likes to have me with him simply because every gentleman likes to have a lady on such a day as that. Of course it is better than being alone. I don’t suppose he will say a word to me except to tell me who the people are, and to give me a glass of beer when it is over.”

      It may be as well to explain at once, before we go any further, that Herr Crippel was a player on the violin, and that he led the musicians in the orchestra of the great beer-hall in the Volksgarten. Let it not be thought that because Herr Crippel exercised his art in a beer-hall therefore he was a musician of no account. No one will think so who has once gone to a Vienna beer-hall, and listened to such music as is there provided for the visitors.

      The two girls, Marie Weber and Lotta Schmidt, belonged to an establishment in which gloves were sold in the Graben, and now, having completed their work for the day—and indeed their work for the week, for it was Saturday evening—had come out for such recreation as the evening might afford them. And on behalf of these two girls, as to one of whom at least I am much interested, I must beg my English readers to remember that manners and customs


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