The Dramatic Works of Gerhart Hauptmann - Volume I by Gerhart Hauptmann
page 48 of 756 (06%)
page 48 of 756 (06%)
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Perhaps it is an essential concomitant of a physician's genius.
HOFFMANN Maybe so. Anyhow, our doctor _has_ a conscience. He's a bit of an idealist--more or less our kind. His success among the miners and the peasants is simply phenomenal! Sometimes, I must say, he isn't an easy man to bear, he's got a mixture of hardness and sentimentality. But, as I said before, I know how to value conscientiousness; no doubt about that. But before I forget ... I do attach some importance to it ... a man ought to know what he has to look out for ... Listen!... Tell me ... I see it in your face. Those gentlemen at the next table had nothing good to say of me? Tell me, please, what they did say. LOTH I really ought not to do that, for I was going to beg one hundred crowns of you, literally beg, for there is hardly any chance of my ever being able to return them. HOFFMANN [_Draws a cheque-book from his inner pocket, makes out a cheque and hands it to LOTH._] Any branch of the Imperial Bank will cash it ... It's simply a pleasure.... LOTH Your promptness surpasses all expectation. Well, I accept it with, gratitude, and you know--it could be worse spent. |
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