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'Come now, said Herr Pauer, shifting his seat on the table and turning to face the lad, 'you shall not take that tone. I tell you you shall not take it, because it is a wrong and dangerous tone. You have done things that you are ashamed of. You shall have the goodness to be ashamed of them like a man, and not like a fool. Now, what are you going to do? 'I can earn a living, Paul answered.

The Breitkopf and Hartel edition, which includes only one of these two mazurkas, comprises further a mazurka in G major and one in B flat major of 1825, one in D major of 1829-30, a remodelling of the same of 1832 these have already been discussed and a somewhat more interesting one in C major of 1833. E. Pauer has shown to belong to Charles Mayer.

He was deliciously warm, and he had a feeling of being lifted and gently balanced to and fro as if he were in a hammock. After this he forgot everything until he felt Pauer's hand on his shoulder, and started broad awake, with a clear sense that the spaces close at hand which had been so crammed with life a little while ago were all dark and deserted. 'Time to go, said Pauer.

The fat man seemed to wake, and, with a hand on Paul's shoulder, pushed him back amongst the props and stays until they reached the canvas room again. Somebody had placed a ragged cane-seated chair near the table, and Herr Pauer, who was already waiting, motioned his visitor into it. He seated himself on the table, with one trim leg swinging to and fro, and lit a cigar.

Ernst Pauer, who is never appealed to in vain, I am indebted for the following data as well as for the subject matter of my notice on Werner: "Eduard Pirkhert, born at Graz in 1817, was a pupil of Anton Halm and Carl Czerny. He was a shy and enormously diligent artist, who, however, on account of his nervousness, played, like Henselt, rarely in public.

'I take one between turns, said Herr Pauer 'never more One is a pick-me-up. Anything more than one is wrong. He poured a stiff dose of rum into either glass, and looking towards Paul, water-jug in hand, said, 'Say when. 'None for me, Paul answered. 'I never touched the cursed stuff till Saturday. I'll never touch it again.

They were both in the best of good humours, and Darco stood on tiptoe to take Paul by the shoulders. 'Ve have done id! he cried in a voice of triumph. 'Ve have done id this time, ant no mistake! 'What have you done? asked Paul. 'Vot have we done, Pauer eh? Vot haf we done? cried Darco. 'Tell him and have done with it, said Pauer.

If you can give us a satisfactory account of how you came into your present condition, he will find you employment. Paul looked from one to the other, and both men regarded him seriously. He blushed furiously, and his eyes fell. 'I suppose, said Pauer, 'that you don't remember much of what you said to me on Saturday night? 'I don't know, Paul answered.

There was a table at one side, on which lay a small circular shaving mirror, a comb, a stick of cosmetic, and two open pots of porcelain, the larger one containing chalk, and the smaller half-filled with rouge. 'Three minutes, said the fat man, thrusting his head round the canvas partition; 'and short at that. 'All right, returned Herr Pauer.

'No, never mind the coat. Paul was struggling out of it. 'I have another. He held his arms abroad to show that he was already provided, and the lad rose to his feet 'Take this, said Pauer, fixing a rough unlined cap upon his head with both hands.