"To the day is the evil thereof."

"Ah, one must be happy with nothing to do."

"Then you have the ambition common to all; to sit around and let others

wait upon you?"

"No, that is not my ambition. I wish only to wait upon my own desires

and not those of the--the others."

"It is all the same," said I. "Some must serve, others must be served."

When I went upstairs to my room it was my belief that a week or so at

the inn would not hang heavy on my hands. I had forgotten for the

moment the Princess, or that I was hunting for Hillars. It is strange

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how a face may upset one's plans. Gretchen's likeness to Phyllis, whom

I loved, upset mine for many days to come.

As I gazed from my window the next morning I beheld the old innkeeper

and Gretchen engaged in earnest conversation. He appeared to be

pleading, nay, entreating, while she merely shook her head and laughed.

Finally the old man lifted his hands to heaven and disappeared around

the wing. When I came down Gretchen was in the gardens culling roses.

She said they were for the table.

"Very well," said I; "give me one now."

"You may have them all at the table."

"But I shall not want them then."

She gave me an enigmatical glance, then cut a rose for me which was

withered and worm-eaten.

"Gretchen is unkind," I observed.

"What matters it whether the rose be fresh or withered? It dies sooner

or later. Nothing lasts, not even the world itself. You wish a rose,

not because it is a rose, fresh and fragrant, but because I give it to

you."

"You wrong me, Gretchen; I love a rose better than I love a woman. It

never smiles falsely, the rose, nor plays with the hearts of men. I

love a rose because it is sweet, and because it was made for man's

pleasure and not for his pain."

"That sounds like a copy-book," laughed Gretchen. "The withered rose

should teach you a lesson."

"What lesson?"

"That whatever a woman gives to man withers in the exchange; a rose, a

woman's love."

Said I reproachfully: "You are spoiling a very pretty picture. What do

you know about philosophy?"

"What does Herr know about roses?" defiantly.

"Much; one cannot pick too many fresh ones. And let me tell you a

lesson which you should have learned among these roses. Nature teaches

us to love all things fresh and beautiful; a rose, a face, a woman's

love."




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