Our Little Austrian Cousin

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Our Little Austrian Cousin by Florence E. Mendel, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Florence E. Mendel ISBN: 9781465602862
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Florence E. Mendel
ISBN: 9781465602862
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
Friday morning Frau Müller and Ferdinand jumped into a fiaker and drove to the railroad station to meet Teresa Runkel. She was a fine-looking child, with round, rosy cheeks; quite tall, with the fair complexion, sunny hair, and soft, Austrian blue eyes that makes the women of that land famed for their beauty. She was overjoyed at this unexpected pleasure of spending a day or two in the city of Vienna, which she had never seen, although she had passed through several times on her way to and from the convent. She enjoyed the brisk drive to the tall apartment house in the Schwanengasse, and she fairly bubbled with chatter. "After luncheon, my dear," observed Frau Müller, "we shall have Herr Müller take you about our city; for Vienna is vastly different from Linz." Herr Müller joined the party at luncheon at eleven o'clock, which was really the breakfast hour, because Austrian families take only coffee and cakes or rolls in the early morning, eating their hearty breakfast toward the middle of the day, after which they rest for an hour or two, before beginning their afternoon duties. At two o'clock the three were ready for the walk, for Frau Müller was not to accompany them. Joseph, the portier, an important personage in Viennese life, nodded "A-b-e-n-d" to them, as they passed out the front door of the building, over which he presided as a sort of turnkey. No one may pass in or out without encountering the wary eye of Joseph, who must answer to the police for the inmates of the building, as also for the visitors. And this is a curious custom, not only in Vienna, but other European cities, that immediately upon one's arrival at an hotel, or even a private home, the police are notified, unawares to the visitor, of his movements and his object in being in the city, which reduces chances of crime to a minimum; burglary being almost unknown, picking pockets on the open streets taking its place in most part.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Friday morning Frau Müller and Ferdinand jumped into a fiaker and drove to the railroad station to meet Teresa Runkel. She was a fine-looking child, with round, rosy cheeks; quite tall, with the fair complexion, sunny hair, and soft, Austrian blue eyes that makes the women of that land famed for their beauty. She was overjoyed at this unexpected pleasure of spending a day or two in the city of Vienna, which she had never seen, although she had passed through several times on her way to and from the convent. She enjoyed the brisk drive to the tall apartment house in the Schwanengasse, and she fairly bubbled with chatter. "After luncheon, my dear," observed Frau Müller, "we shall have Herr Müller take you about our city; for Vienna is vastly different from Linz." Herr Müller joined the party at luncheon at eleven o'clock, which was really the breakfast hour, because Austrian families take only coffee and cakes or rolls in the early morning, eating their hearty breakfast toward the middle of the day, after which they rest for an hour or two, before beginning their afternoon duties. At two o'clock the three were ready for the walk, for Frau Müller was not to accompany them. Joseph, the portier, an important personage in Viennese life, nodded "A-b-e-n-d" to them, as they passed out the front door of the building, over which he presided as a sort of turnkey. No one may pass in or out without encountering the wary eye of Joseph, who must answer to the police for the inmates of the building, as also for the visitors. And this is a curious custom, not only in Vienna, but other European cities, that immediately upon one's arrival at an hotel, or even a private home, the police are notified, unawares to the visitor, of his movements and his object in being in the city, which reduces chances of crime to a minimum; burglary being almost unknown, picking pockets on the open streets taking its place in most part.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Devil's Confession by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Nan Sherwood at Pine Camp, Or, the Old Lumberman's Secret by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The King Country: Explorations in New Zealand A Narrative of 600 Miles of Travel Through MaorilandThe King Country: Explorations in New Zealand A Narrative of 600 Miles of Travel Through Maoriland by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The Sufi Message of Hazrat Murshid Inayat Khan: Sufi Mysticism by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Superstition in Medicine by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Helen of Troy by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The Cross of Berny by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Traces of a Hidden Tradition in Masonry and Medieval Mysticism by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The Death of Olivier Becaille by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Caesar or Nothing by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book Nile Gleanings Concerning the Ethnology; History and Art of Ancient Egypt as Revealed by Egyptian Paintings and Bas-Reliefs With Descriptions of Nubia and its Great Rock Temples to the Second Cataract by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The Byzantine Empire by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book American Indian Fairy Tales by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book A Good-For-Nothing by Florence E. Mendel
Cover of the book The Nihon Shoki (Nihongi): The Chronicles of Japan by Florence E. Mendel
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy