Broken Cup, by Johann Heinrich 
Daniel Zschokke 
 
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Title: The Broken Cup 1891 
Author: Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke 
Translator: P. G. 
Release Date: October 17, 2007 [EBook #23062] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
BROKEN CUP *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
THE BROKEN CUP 
By Johann Heinrich Daniel Zschokke
Translated by P. G. 
Copyright, 1891, by The Current Literature Publishing Company 
Author's Note.--There is extant under this name a short piece by the 
author of "Little Kate of Heilbronn." That and the tale which here 
follows originated in an incident which took place at Bern in the year 
1802. Henry von Kleist and Ludwig Wieland, the son of the poet, were 
both friends of the writer, in whose chamber hung an engraving called 
La Cruche Cassée, the persons and contents of which resembled the 
scene set forth below, under the head of The Tribunal. The drawing, 
which was full of expression, gave great delight to those who saw it, 
and led to many conjectures as to its meaning. The three friends agreed, 
in sport, that they would each one day commit to writing his peculiar 
interpretation of its design. Wieland promised a satire; Von Kleist 
threw off a comedy; and the author of the following tale what is here 
given. 
Transcriber's Note.--Two pages in the middle of this work are missing. 
THAT Napoule is only a very little place on the bay of Cannes is true; 
yet it is pretty well known through all Provence. It lies in the shade of 
lofty evergreen palms, and darker orange trees; but that alone would 
not make it renowned. Still they say that there are grown the most 
luscious grapes, the sweetest roses, and the handsomest girls. I don't 
know but it is so; in the mean time I believe it most readily. Pity that 
Napoule is so small, and can not produce more luscious grapes, fragrant 
roses, and handsome maidens; especially, as we might then have some 
of them transplanted to our own country. 
As, ever since the foundation of Napoule, all the Napoulese women 
have been beauties, so the little Marietta was a wonder of wonders, as 
the chronicles of the place declare. She was called the little Marietta; 
yet she was not smaller than a girl of seventeen or thereabout ought to 
be, seeing that her forehead just reached up to the lips of a grown man. 
The chronicles aforesaid had very good ground for speaking of 
Marietta. I, had I stood in the shoes of the chronicler, would have done
the same. For Marietta, who until lately had lived with her mother 
Manon at Avignon, when she came back to her birthplace, quite upset 
the whole village. Verily, not the houses, but the people and their heads; 
and not the heads of all the people, but of those particularly whose 
heads and hearts are always in danger when in the neighborhood of two 
bright eyes. I know very well that such a position is no joke. 
Mother Manon would have done much better if she had remained at 
Avignon. But she had been left a small inheritance, by which she 
received at Napoule an estate consisting of some vine-hills, and a house 
that lay in the shadow of a rock, between certain olive trees and African 
acacias. This is a kind of thing which no unprovided widow ever rejects; 
and, accordingly, in her own estimation, she was as rich and happy as 
though she were the Countess of Provence or something like it. 
So much the worse was it for the good people of Napoule. They never 
suspected their misfortune, not having read in Homer how a single 
pretty woman had filled all Greece and Lesser Asia with discord and 
war. 
Marietta had scarcely been fourteen days in the house, between the 
olive trees and the African acacias, before every young man of Napoule 
knew that she lived there, and that there lived not, in all Provence, a 
more charming girl than the one in that house. 
Went she through the village, sweeping lightly along like a dressed-up 
angel, her frock, with its pale-green bodice, and orange leaves and 
rosebuds upon the bosom of it, fluttering in the breeze, and flowers and 
ribbons waving about the straw bonnet, which shaded her beautiful 
features--yes, then the grave old men spake out, and the young ones 
were struck dumb. And everywhere, to the right and left, little windows 
and    
    
		
	
	
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