FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3423   3424   3425   3426   3427   3428   3429   3430   3431   3432   3433   3434   3435   3436   3437   3438   3439   3440   3441   3442   3443   3444   3445   3446   3447  
3448   3449   3450   3451   3452   3453   3454   3455   3456   3457   3458   3459   3460   3461   3462   3463   3464   3465   3466   3467   3468   3469   3470   3471   3472   >>   >|  
ng. Sir Willoughby came on a step or two. He stopped to watch Laetitia's figure swimming to the house. So, as, for instance, beside a stream, when a flower on the surface extends its petals drowning to subside in the clear still water, we exercise our privilege to be absent in the charmed contemplation of a beautiful natural incident. A smile of pleased abstraction melted on his features. CHAPTER XXXIV MRS. MOUNTSTUART AND SIR WILLOUGHBY "Good morning, my dear Mrs. Mountstuart," Sir Willoughby wakened himself to address the great lady. "Why has she fled?" "Has any one fled?" "Laetitia Dale." "Letty Dale? Oh, if you call that flying. Possibly to renew a close conversation with Vernon Whitford, that I cut short. You frightened me with your 'Shepherds-tell-me' air and tone. Lead me to one of your garden-seats: out of hearing to Dr. Middleton, I beg. He mesmerizes me, he makes me talk Latin. I was curiously susceptible last night. I know I shall everlastingly associate him with an abortive entertainment and solos on big instruments. We were flat." "Horace was in good vein." "You were not." "And Laetitia--Miss Dale talked well, I thought." "She talked with you, and no doubt she talked well. We did not mix. The yeast was bad. You shot darts at Colonel De Craye: you tried to sting. You brought Dr. Middleton down on you. Dear me, that man is a reverberation in my head. Where is your lady and love?" "Who?" "Am I to name her?" "Clara? I have not seen her for the last hour. Wandering, I suppose." "A very pretty summer bower," said Mrs. Mountstuart, seating herself "Well, my dear Sir Willoughby, preferences, preferences are not to be accounted for, and one never knows whether to pity or congratulate, whatever may occur. I want to see Miss Middleton." "Your 'dainty rogue in porcelain' will be at your beck--you lunch with us?--before you leave." "So now you have taken to quoting me, have you?" "But 'a romantic tale on her eyelashes' is hardly descriptive any longer." "Descriptive of whom? Now you are upon Laetitia Dale!" "I quote you generally. She has now a graver look." "And well may have!" "Not that the romance has entirely disappeared." "No; it looks as if it were in print." "You have hit it perfectly, as usual, ma'am." Sir Willoughby mused. Like one resuming his instrument to take up the melody in a concerted piece, he said: "I thought Laetitia Dale had a sin
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3423   3424   3425   3426   3427   3428   3429   3430   3431   3432   3433   3434   3435   3436   3437   3438   3439   3440   3441   3442   3443   3444   3445   3446   3447  
3448   3449   3450   3451   3452   3453   3454   3455   3456   3457   3458   3459   3460   3461   3462   3463   3464   3465   3466   3467   3468   3469   3470   3471   3472   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Laetitia

 
Willoughby
 

Middleton

 
talked
 
Mountstuart
 

thought

 
preferences
 

pretty

 

instrument

 

seating


resuming

 
summer
 

Wandering

 

suppose

 

Colonel

 

brought

 

melody

 

concerted

 
reverberation
 
descriptive

longer

 
Descriptive
 

eyelashes

 

quoting

 

romantic

 
romance
 

disappeared

 

graver

 
generally
 

congratulate


accounted
 
perfectly
 

porcelain

 
dainty
 
incident
 

natural

 

pleased

 

abstraction

 

beautiful

 

contemplation


privilege

 

absent

 

charmed

 

melted

 
features
 

WILLOUGHBY

 

morning

 

wakened

 

CHAPTER

 

MOUNTSTUART