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Updated: May 10, 2025


"Ugh, no; you make me feel ashamed.... We have not got very far now"; and she walked on a little faster. We turned up University Street, and could already see the lights in St. Olav's Place. Then she commenced to walk slowly again. "I have no wish to be indiscreet," I say; "but won't you tell me your name before we part? and won't you, just for one second, lift up your veil so that I can see you?

I was in the merriest humour, and lazied about the whole afternoon through the most frequented streets and looked at the people. Even before seven o'clock I took a turn up St. Olav's Place and took a furtive look up at the window of No. 2. In an hour I would see her. I went about the whole time in a state of tremulous, delicious dread. What would happen?

I? If there was anything in the world I hated it was to go to bed before twelve o'clock at night. Ah, there, you see! She, too, was just the same; she took this little tour in the evenings when she had nothing to lose by doing so. She lived up in St. Olav's Place. "Ylajali," I cried. "I beg pardon?" "I only said 'Ylajali' ... it's all right. Continue...." She lived up in St.

The ladies before me had each a blue bird's wing in their hats, and a plaid silk ribbon round their necks. It struck me that they were sisters. They turned, stopped at Cisler's music-shop, and spoke together. I stopped also. Thereupon they both came back, went the same road as they had come, passed me again, and turned the corner of University Street and up towards St. Olav's place.

What should I say when she came down the stairs? Good-evening? or only smile? I concluded to let it rest with the smile. Of course I would bow profoundly to her. I stole away, a little ashamed to be there so early, wandered up Carl Johann for a while, and kept my eyes on University Street. When the clocks struck eight I walked once more towards St. Olav's Place.

Olav's Place, lonely enough, together with her mother, to whom one couldn't talk because she was so deaf. Was there anything odd in her liking to get out for a little? "No, not at all," I replied. "No? well, what then?" I could hear by her voice that she was smiling. Hadn't she a sister? Yes; an older sister. But, by-the-way, how did I know that? She had gone to Hamburg. "Lately?"

Olav's Place. There was a fountain, some lamp-posts, a few trees; he remembered all of it. "What number do you live in?" Desirous to put an end to this, I got up. But my notion about the newspaper had driven me to my wit's end; I resolved to clear the thing up, at no matter what cost. "When you cannot read the paper, why "

It did not need much; he could hear so well. At night, when every one slept, he could hear people in the next room breathing.... "What I was going to say was, 'where do you live?" On the spur of the moment a lie stood, ready-made, in my head. I lied involuntarily, without any object, without any arriere pensee, and I answered "St. Olav's Place, No. 2." "Really?" He knew every stone in St.

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