FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2732   2733   2734   2735   2736   2737   2738   2739   2740   2741   2742   2743   2744   2745   2746   2747   2748   2749   2750   2751   2752   2753   2754   2755   2756  
2757   2758   2759   2760   2761   2762   2763   2764   2765   2766   2767   2768   2769   2770   2771   2772   2773   2774   2775   2776   2777   2778   2779   2780   2781   >>   >|  
looking these people have,' said Renee, whose vivacity was fascinated to a steady sparkle by the girl. 'Tell me, is she glancing round at us?' Nevil turned and reported that she was not. She had exhausted them while they were in transit; she had no minor curiosity. 'Let us fancy she is looking for her lover,' he said. Renee added: 'Let us hope she will not escape being seen.' 'I give her my benediction,' said Nevil. 'And I,' said Renee; 'and adieu to her, if you please. Look for Roland.' 'You remind me; I have but a few instants.' 'M. Nevil, you are a preux of the times of my brother's patronymic. And there is my Roland awaiting us. Is he not handsome?' 'How glad you are to have him to relieve guard!' Renee bent on Nevil one of her singular looks of raillery. She had hitherto been fencing at a serious disadvantage. 'Not so very glad,' she said, 'if that deprived me of the presence of his friend.' Roland was her tower. But Roland was not yet on board. She had peeped from her citadel too rashly. Nevil had time to spring the flood of crimson in her cheeks, bright as the awning she reclined under. 'Would you have me with you always?' 'Assuredly,' said she, feeling the hawk in him, and trying to baffle him by fluttering. 'Always? forever? and--listen-give me a title?' Renee sang out to Roland like a bird in distress, and had some trouble not to appear too providentially rescued. Roland on board, she resumed the attack. 'M. Nevil vows he is a better brother to me than you, who dart away on an impulse and leave us threading all Venice till we do not know where we are, naughty brother!' 'My little sister, the spot where you are,' rejoined Roland, 'is precisely the spot where I left you, and I defy you to say you have gone on without me. This is the identical riva I stepped out on to buy you a packet of Venetian ballads.' They recognized the spot, and for a confirmation of the surprising statement, Roland unrolled several sheets of printed blotting-paper, and rapidly read part of a Canzonetta concerning Una Giovine who reproved her lover for his extreme addiction to wine: 'Ma se, ma se, Cotanto beve, Mi no, mi no, No ve sposero.' 'This astounding vagabond preferred Nostrani to his heart's mistress. I tasted some of their Nostrani to see if it could be possible for a Frenchman to exonerate him.' Roland's wry face at the mention o
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2732   2733   2734   2735   2736   2737   2738   2739   2740   2741   2742   2743   2744   2745   2746   2747   2748   2749   2750   2751   2752   2753   2754   2755   2756  
2757   2758   2759   2760   2761   2762   2763   2764   2765   2766   2767   2768   2769   2770   2771   2772   2773   2774   2775   2776   2777   2778   2779   2780   2781   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Roland

 

brother

 

Nostrani

 

stepped

 

precisely

 

rejoined

 

identical

 
ballads
 
Venetian
 
packet

attack

 

resumed

 

trouble

 

providentially

 

rescued

 

impulse

 

naughty

 

threading

 
Venice
 

sister


preferred

 

vagabond

 

mistress

 
tasted
 

astounding

 

sposero

 

mention

 

exonerate

 
Frenchman
 

Cotanto


printed

 

blotting

 

rapidly

 

sheets

 
confirmation
 
surprising
 

statement

 

unrolled

 

addiction

 

extreme


reproved

 

Canzonetta

 

distress

 

Giovine

 
recognized
 

remind

 

benediction

 

escape

 
instants
 

handsome