Love, the Fiddler by Lloyd Osbourne
page 89 of 162 (54%)
page 89 of 162 (54%)
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contagious laugh. She had arrived at obviously the turn of the
Grossensteck fortunes, and might, in refinement and everything else, have belonged to another clay. How often one sees that in America, the land above others of social contrast, where, in the same family, there are often three separate degrees of caste. Well, to get along with my visit. I liked them and they liked me, and I returned later the same evening to dine and meet papa. I found him as impassionedly grateful as before, and with a tale that trespassed even further on the incredible, and after dinner we all sat around a log fire and talked ourselves into a sort of intimacy. They were wonderfully good people, and though we hadn't a word in common, nor an idea, we somehow managed to hit it off, as one often can with those who are unaffectedly frank and simple. I had to cry over the death of little Hermann in the steerage (when they had first come to America twenty years ago), and how Grossensteck had sneaked gingersnaps from the slop-baskets of the saloon. "The little teffil never knew where they come from," said Grossensteck, "and so what matters it?" "That's Papa's name in the slums," said Teresa. "Uncle Gingersnaps, because at all his stores they give away so many for nothing." "By Jove!" I said, "there are some nick-names that are patents of nobility." What impressed me as much as anything with these people was their |
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