sold, and that it is simply idyllic for the victim to rejoice when he is made over into pledge. What more have I to tell? Well, thisâ âthat matters bear just as hardly upon the eldest son. Perhaps he has his Gretchen to whom his heart is bound; but he cannot marry her, for the reason that he has not yet amassed sufficient gĂźlden. So, the pair wait on in a mood of sincere and virtuous expectation, and smilingly deposit themselves in pawn the while. Gretchenâs cheeks grow sunken, and she begins to wither; until at last, after some twenty years, their substance has multiplied, and sufficient gĂźlden have been honourably and virtuously accumulated. Then the â Vater â blesses his forty-year-old heir and the thirty-five-year-old Gretchen with the sunken bosom and the scarlet nose; after which he bursts, into tears, reads the pair a lesson on morality, and dies. In turn the eldest son becomes a virtuous â Vater ,â and the old story begins again. In fifty or sixty yearsâ time the grandson of the original â Vater