The Song of Songs
her father, Kilian Czepanek, the m
asionally he had slipped into the dining-room to take a cognac or arrange his Windsor necktie. He had pulled Lilly's brown curls as she sat labouring over her F
mper and with his usual appetite. He remained in the front room, where this day he neither whistled nor whined nor played out his rage on
dsome father did or did not do, let her French text
From time to time he raised his left hand and pressed it as if in despair against his soft, silky,
oist red face with wild, eager eyes, and Lill
g accounts for his lost life and wasted love, his manner of charming back the great world,
ove, with small alcoholic puffs under h
ird of paradise, who by a lucky chance had been caught between the walls of a room, and w
hen her father was seized by the holy spirit of creativeness and forgot the time set aside for her practicing, she did not begin until nearly midnight. Then she sat at the piano frozen, with heavy eyes, striking ou
d to dally with some old forbidden book, and often drove her father to despair by a false pretence at cleverness in playing a
n, when she heard a click at the door from the kitchen. She bounded away from the keyhole with on
cord, which seemed to be tied in a knot at the abdomen by a protrusion, the result of abortive child-bearing. Dull marital sorrow had l
ek hoped to satisfy he
arlour opened, and papa's dark curly head, about which the e
e said, and his eyes wandered
the surprise in store for him playing about
ep breaths, and said with the air
t one of the straps of
want it?" a
eyes continuing to rove about the room. "Suppose I were suddenly to
e towns in eastern Germany and whose train had been snow-bound near Bromberg. The committee telegraphed to papa requesting him to play
right after supper," said mama, who took good
e the mother ran to the kitchen to do the final honours
he bag in his hand. It looked rather b
he score would go into the grip crosswise?
so that, should fire break out during papa's absence, anyone
the keys, but cou
ask mama,
ody, such as Lilly had often noticed when mother was mentio
her celebrated father should himsel
t for the handle of the bag. She w
warded
lighted up as they scanned her tall, virginal body, her hips and bosom,
ps the while in intense bitterness. Then suddenly he shook himself, and with a shy, con
nd never
ummer evening remained graven
nxious eyes kept glancing up and down the street. Whenever she heard
re h
elations since her confirmation. She had already passed many a dreamy, idle hour before his altar at St. Anne's-right front, second chapel-and secretly sent up many an abstract
the last vehicle
trians, too, gre
arose, smelling of sand and th
ght watchman was heard shuffling
very wagons began to ra
of coffee for her mother, and ate up all the cold supper
thdraw from the window they serenaded her. Fine, pure voices, Lilly had to admit despite her grief; rendition good and precise, without that
one when the mother
ggled agai
ght, now to the left, according to the direction from which a sound came; saw the nightgown fluttering like a white flag, and the lean legs incessantly rubbing a
her mother had dropped back in a swoon, and