I'll choke him! Only let
me have him a minute--let me have him! then kill me!"
Adams caught hold of Sonnenkamp's hand from behind, and clutched it as
if he would crush it.
Sonnenkamp struggled with all his might to throw off the powerful hold,
wrestling with the negro clinging fast to him; and his anguish was
doubled, for he was not only wrestling, but, as he thought, he could
see in the mirror opposite two beings, one was himself--was it really
he?--the other a devil, a demon.
Is it all only a fever-fancy, or is it reality?
The Prince's finger constantly plied the telegraphic bell on his table;
servants began to pour in, in great numbers.
The Prince cried:--
"Take Adams out. See that he keeps quiet; and the rest of you show this
man out of the palace."
Adams was torn away from Sonnenkamp; he roared like a bull that has
received the fatal stroke, and foamed at the mouth.
The Prince took the parchment with the red seal up from the table, and
turned away with it.
Then Sonnenkamp rose up; he glanced at the Prince, his eyes almost
starting from their sockets, and shrieked out:--
"What would you have? and what then are you? Your ancestors, or
connections, or whatever else they were, sold their subjects away into
America, and got a fixed price for a shot-off arm, for a lucky corpse.
You have trafficked in white men, and sent them across the sea. And
what are you now? Secret proprietors of gambling hells at home. Pah! I
bought my slaves from a prince, bought them honorably, but what did you
do? You sold off your subjects, and on Sundays those who were left
behind had to say amen in the church, when the Lord of lords was
supplicated for your welfare. Are you ashamed of this kinship? But I
tell you he was a man, and deserved better to reign than----"
He was not sure whether the Prince still heard what he was saying; the
servants seized him and gave him to understand that he must be quiet,
that such loud talking was not permitted there.
Sonnenkamp had fallen; he was raised again, and led down the staircase.
He looked about him often, as if he wanted to say, I shall never tread
these halls more.
Below, the carriage was waiting. Sonnenkamp leaned on Joseph and
said:--
"Joseph, sit beside me in the carriage."
That was all he said.
When they had reached the hotel, and got out, the little fellow was in
the midst of the hackmen; they all had courage enough now, and cried
out:--
"Long live the Ba
|