Christine by Alice Cholmondeley
page 20 of 172 (11%)
page 20 of 172 (11%)
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persistence as these German boarders have when it comes to praising
what is theirs, and also when it comes to criticizing what isn't theirs. They're so funny and personal. They say, for instance, London is too hideous for words, and then they look at me defiantly, as though they had been insulting some personal defect of mine and meant to brazen it out. They point out the horrors of the slums to me as though the slums were on my face. They tell me pityingly what they look like, what terrible blots and deformities they are, and how I--they say England, but no one could dream from their manner that it wasn't me--can never hope to be regarded as fit for self-respecting European society while these spots and sore places are not purged away. The other day they assured me that England as a nation is really unfit for any decent other nation to know politically, but they added, with stiff bows in my direction, that sometimes the individual inhabitant of that low-minded and materialistic country is not without amiability, especially if he or she is by some miracle without the lofty, high-nosed manner that as a rule so regrettably characterizes the unfortunate people. "_Sie sind so hochnasig_," the bank clerk who sits opposite me had shouted out, pointing an accusing finger at me; and for a moment I was so startled that I thought something disastrous had happened to my nose, and my anxious hand flew up to it. Then they laughed; and it was after that that they made the speech conceding individual amiability here and there. I sit neatly in my chair while this sort of talk goes on--and it goes on at every meal now that they have got over the preliminary stage of icy coldness towards me--and I try to be sprightly, and bandy my six German words about whenever they seem appropriate. Imagine your poor Chris trying to be sprightly with eleven Germans--no, ten Germans, for |
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