FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   >>  
ime, by the marble balustrade that guarded this particular terrace of the garden, they stood in silence. The western gold burned to red, and more sombre red; the cloud-promontories gloomed purpler; the pale moon kindled, and shone like ice afire, with its intense cold brilliancy; the olive woods against the sky lay black; a score of nightingales, near and far, were calling and sobbing and exulting; and two human spirits yearned with the mystery of love. "My income," said John, all at once, brusquely coming to earth, "is exactly six hundred pounds a year. I suppose two people _could_ live on that, though I'm dashed if I see how. Of course we couldn't live in England, where that infernal future peerage would put us under a thousand obligations; but I dare say we might find a garret here in Italy. The question is, would she be willing, or have I any right to ask her, to marry me, on the condition of leaving her own money untouched, and living with me on mine? "Apropos of future peerages and things," said Maria Dolores, "do you happen to know whether she has any rank of her own to keep up?" "I don't care twopence about her rank," said John. "Do you happen to know her name?" she asked. "I know what I wish her name was," John promptly answered. "I wish to Heaven it was Blanchemain." Maria Dolores gazed, pensive, at the moon. "He does not even know her name," she remarked, on a key of meditation, "though he fears," she sadly shook her head, "he fears it may be Smitti." "Oh, I say!" cried John, wincing, with a kind of sorry giggle; and I don't know whether he looked or felt the more sheepish. His face showed every signal of humiliation, he tugged nervously at his beard, but his eyes, in spite of him, his very blue blue eyes were full of vexed amusement. The bell in the clock-tower struck eight. "There--it is your hour for going to Annunziata," said Maria Dolores. "You have not answered my question?" said John. "I will think about it," said she. IV Annunziata's delirium had passed, but in spite of all their efforts to persuade her not to talk, talk she would. "This is the month of May, isn't it?" she asked, next morning. "Yes, dear one," said Maria Dolores, whose watch it was. "And that is the month of Mary. San Luca ought to hurry up and make me well, so that I can keep flowers on the Lady Altar." "Then if you wish to get well quickly," said Maria Dolores, "you must try not to talk
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   >>  



Top keywords:

Dolores

 

answered

 

happen

 

question

 

future

 

Annunziata

 

remarked

 

meditation

 

Smitti

 

morning


pensive

 

flowers

 

promptly

 
quickly
 

Heaven

 

Blanchemain

 
wincing
 
amusement
 

struck

 

delirium


sheepish

 

looked

 
giggle
 

persuade

 

tugged

 

nervously

 

passed

 

humiliation

 

signal

 

showed


efforts

 

leaving

 

intense

 

brilliancy

 

nightingales

 

mystery

 

yearned

 

income

 

spirits

 

calling


sobbing

 

exulting

 

terrace

 
garden
 

guarded

 

marble

 

balustrade

 

silence

 
western
 
purpler