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Tuesday, September 22, 2009 - 5:44 PM
Mother says I didn’t write you a letter last time, only a mere
scrawl which was not worth answering, and since you have not replied to
it, I am almost forced to believe, to my very great sorrow, that you
agree with her. Still, I must tell you that I am very hurt, not to say
insulted, by such treatment and I am writing to you tonight only
because I am in a good mood and have no wish to start quarrelling with
you, for you certainly don’t deserve a letter. Apart from which I am
doing Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Mother a favour, so now you know whom you have to thank for these
lines. I have now been here about six weeks, have smoked a great deal
of tobacco and have studied hard although there are some in the higher
regions who maintain that I have been doing nothing. However, I shall
be leaving for Berlin in a week or a fortnight to do my duty as a
citizen, i. e., to do what I can to evade conscription [243] if possible and then come back to Barmen. We shall have to wait and see how this turns out.
We had arranged a trip to Altenberg for Saturday and Sunday but
nothing will come of it because Blank and Roth cannot manage it. I must
see whether we can organise something else. It has just occurred to me
that I might go to the Beienburg again, as I have not been there for a
long time.
Mother went to August’s [Engels’ uncle] for coffee yesterday and
noticed that Fräulein Julie Engels was very quiet but Fräulein Mathilde
Wemhöner was very talkative. You can draw your own conclusions from
this.
Apart from this I have found Anna very jolly, Emil making progress
as a humorist, Hedwig becoming very cheeky and Rudolf going the same
awkward way as Hermann’ did at his age, and, for the rest, that Elise
gives herself airs.
The letter you wrote to Father in English, which I have read today, is good on the whole, with only a few serious mistakes.
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