FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4201   4202   4203   4204   4205   4206   4207   4208   4209   4210   4211   4212   4213   4214   4215   4216   4217   4218   4219   4220   4221   4222   4223   4224   4225  
4226   4227   4228   4229   4230   4231   4232   4233   4234   4235   4236   4237   4238   4239   4240   4241   4242   4243   4244   4245   4246   4247   4248   4249   4250   >>   >|  
tter by the former), rolled off his muzzles. Now, if you are not for insisting that a magnificent simile shall be composed of exactly the like notes in another octave, you will catch the fine flavour of analogy and be wafted in a beat of wings across the scene of the application of the Rev. Septimus Barmby to Mr. Victor Radnor, that he might enter the house in the guise of suitor for the hand of Nesta Victoria. It is the excelling merit of similes and metaphors to spring us to vault over gaps and thickets and dreary places. But, as with the visits of Immortals, we must be ready to receive them. Beware, moreover, of examining them too scrupulously: they have a trick of wearing to vapour if closely scanned. Let it be gratefully for their aid. So far the comparison is absolute, that Mr. Barmby passed: he was at liberty to pursue his quest. Victor could not explain how he had been brought to grant it. He was at pains to conceal the bewilderment Mr. Barmby had cast on him, and make Nataly see the smallness of the grant:--both of them were unwilling to lose Barmby; there was not the slightest fear about Fredi, he said; and why should not poor Barmby have his chance with the others in the race!--and his Nataly knew that he hated to speak unkindly: he could cry the negative like a crack of thunder in the City. But such matters as these! and a man pleading merely for the right to see the girl!--and pleading in a tone . . . 'I assure you, my love, he touched chords.' 'Did he allude to advantages in the alliance with him?' Nataly asked smoothly. 'His passion--nothing else. Candid enough. And he had a tone--he has a tone, you know. It 's not what he said. Some allusion to belief in a favourable opinion of him . . . encouragement . . . on the part of the mama. She would have him travelling with us! I foresaw it.' 'You were astonished when it came.' 'We always are.' Victor taunted her softly with having encouraged Mr. Barmby. She had thought in her heart--not seriously; on a sigh of despondency--that Mr. Barmby espousing the girl would smooth a troubled prospect: and a present resentment at her weakness rendered her shrewd to detect Victor's cunning to cover his own: a thing imaginable of him previously in sentimental matters, yet never accurately and so legibly printed on her mind. It did not draw her to read him with a novel familiarity; it drew her to be more sensible of foregone intimations of the man he was--i
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   4201   4202   4203   4204   4205   4206   4207   4208   4209   4210   4211   4212   4213   4214   4215   4216   4217   4218   4219   4220   4221   4222   4223   4224   4225  
4226   4227   4228   4229   4230   4231   4232   4233   4234   4235   4236   4237   4238   4239   4240   4241   4242   4243   4244   4245   4246   4247   4248   4249   4250   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Barmby

 

Victor

 

Nataly

 

matters

 

pleading

 
favourable
 

passion

 
belief
 

allusion

 

Candid


touched

 

thunder

 

unkindly

 

negative

 

assure

 
allude
 
advantages
 

alliance

 
chords
 

opinion


smoothly
 

sentimental

 

previously

 
accurately
 

imaginable

 

detect

 

shrewd

 

cunning

 

legibly

 

printed


foregone

 

intimations

 
familiarity
 
rendered
 

weakness

 

taunted

 

astonished

 

travelling

 

foresaw

 

softly


troubled

 

smooth

 

prospect

 
present
 

resentment

 

espousing

 

despondency

 
thought
 
encouraged
 
encouragement