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Trauben received them. Here, wurst reeking with garlic, eggs, black bread, and sour wine, was all they could procure. Farina refused to eat, and maintained his resolution, in spite of Guy's sarcastic chiding. 'Rub down the beasts, then, and water them,' said the latter. 'Made a vow, I suppose,' muttered Guy. 'That's the way of those fellows. No upright manly take-the-thing-as-it-comes; but fly-sky-high whenever there's a dash on their heaven. What has his belly done to offend him? It will be crying out just when we want all quiet. I wouldn't pay Werner such a compliment as go without a breakfast for him. Not I! Would you, Schwartz Thier?' 'Henker! not I!' growled the Thier. 'He'll lose one sooner.' 'First snatch his prey, or he'll be making, God save us! a meal for a Kaiser, the brute.' Guy called in the landlady, clapped down the score, and abused the wine. 'Sir,' said the landlady, 'ours is but a poor inn, and we do our best.' 'So you do,' replied the Goshawk, softened; 'and I say that a civil tongue and rosy smiles sweeten even sour wine.' The landlady, a summer widow, blushed, and as he was stepping from the room, called him aside. 'I thought you were one of that dreadful Werner's band, and I hate him.' Guy undeceived her. 'He took my sister,' she went on, 'and his cruelty killed her. He persecuted me even in the lifetime of my good man. Last night he came here in the middle of the storm with a young creature bright as an angel, and sorrowful--' 'He's gone, you're sure?' broke in Guy. 'Gone! Oh, yes! Soon as the storm abated he dragged her on. Oh! the way that young thing looked at me, and I able to do nothing for her.' 'Now, the Lord bless you for a rosy Christian!' cried Guy, and, in his admiration, he flung his arm round her and sealed a ringing kiss on each cheek. 'No good man defrauded by that! and let me see the fellow that thinks evil of it. If I ever told a woman a secret, I 'd tell you one now, trust me. But I never do, so farewell! Not another?' Hasty times keep the feelings in a ferment, and the landlady was extremely angry with Guy and heartily forgave him, all within a minute. 'No more,' said she, laughing: 'but wait; I have something for you.' The Goshawk lingered on a fretting heel. She was quickly under his elbow again with two flasks leaning from her bosom to her arms. 'There! I seldom meet a man like you; and, when I do, I like to be remembered. This is a t
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