It was a crazy idea of the honest wine-merchant.
ADELAIDE.
You took so much trouble to put your friend in, why did you not work
for yourself? The young man I used to know had lofty aims, and nothing
seemed beyond the range of his soaring ambition. Have you changed, or
is the fire still burning?
BOLZ (_smiling_).
I have become a journalist, Miss Adelaide.
ADELAIDE.
Your friend is one, too.
BOLZ.
Only as a side issue. But I belong to the guild. He who has joined it
may have the ambition to write wittily or well. All that goes beyond
that is not for us.
ADELAIDE.
Not for you?
BOLZ.
For that we are too flighty, too restless and scatter-brained.
ADELAIDE.
Are you in earnest about that, Conrad?
BOLZ.
Perfectly in earnest. Why should I wish to seem to you different from
what I am? We journalists feed our minds on the daily news; we must
taste the dishes Satan cooks for men down to the smallest morsel; so
you really should make allowances for us. The daily vexation over
failure and wrong doing, the perpetual little excitements over all
sorts of things--that has an effect upon a man. At first one clenches
one's fist, then one learns to laugh at it. If you work only for the
day you come to live for the day.
ADELAIDE (_perturbed_).
But that is sad, I think.
BOLZ.
On the contrary, it is quite amusing. We buzz like bees, in spirit we
fly through the whole world, suck honey when we find it, and sting
when something displeases us.
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