Page:The Novels of Ivan Turgenev (volume XI).djvu/152

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THE TORRENTS OF SPRING

all her inquiries circumstantially, exactly, with alacrity. When she had satisfied herself that he was a real nobleman by birth, and had even expressed some surprise that he was not a prince, Frau Lenore assumed a serious air and 'warned him betimes' that she should be quite unceremoniously frank with him, as she was forced to be so by her sacred duty as a mother! To which Sanin replied that he expected nothing else from her, and that he earnestly begged her not to spare him!

Then Frau Lenore observed that Herr Klüber—as she uttered the name, she sighed faintly, tightened her lips, and hesitated—Herr Klüber, Gemma's former betrothed, already possessed an income of eight thousand guldens, and that with every year this sum would rapidly be increased; and what was his, Herr Sanin's income? 'Eight thousand guldens,' Sanin repeated deliberately.. . . 'That's in our money . . . about fifteen thousand roubles.. . . My income is much smaller. I have a small estate in the. province of Tula. . . . With good management, it might yield—and, in fact, it could not fail to yield—five or six thousand . . . and if I go into the government service, I can easily get a salary of two thousand a year.'

'Into the service in Russia?' cried Frau Lenore. 'Then I must part with Gemma!'

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