FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   >>  
the same, and I would like to be hearing about them night and day." "And I just as much," said the landlady, "because I never have a quiet moment in my house except when you are listening to some one reading; for then you are so taken up that for the time being you forget to scold." "That is true," said Maritornes; "and, faith, I relish hearing these things greatly too, for they are very pretty; especially when they describe some lady or another in the arms of her knight under the orange trees, and the duenna who is keeping watch for them half dead with envy and fright; all this I say is as good as honey." "And you, what do you think, young lady?" said the curate turning to the landlord's daughter. "I don't know indeed, senor," said she; "I listen too, and to tell the truth, though I do not understand it, I like hearing it; but it is not the blows that my father likes that I like, but the laments the knights utter when they are separated from their ladies; and indeed they sometimes make me weep with the pity I feel for them." "Then you would console them if it was for you they wept, young lady?" said Dorothea. "I don't know what I should do," said the girl; "I only know that there are some of those ladies so cruel that they call their knights tigers and lions and a thousand other foul names: and Jesus! I don't know what sort of folk they can be, so unfeeling and heartless, that rather than bestow a glance upon a worthy man they leave him to die or go mad. I don't know what is the good of such prudery; if it is for honour's sake, why not marry them? That's all they want." "Hush, child," said the landlady; "it seems to me thou knowest a great deal about these things, and it is not fit for girls to know or talk so much." "As the gentleman asked me, I could not help answering him," said the girl. "Well then," said the curate, "bring me these books, senor landlord, for I should like to see them." "With all my heart," said he, and going into his own room he brought out an old valise secured with a little chain, on opening which the curate found in it three large books and some manuscripts written in a very good hand. The first that he opened he found to be "Don Cirongilio of Thrace," and the second "Don Felixmarte of Hircania," and the other the "History of the Great Captain Gonzalo Hernandez de Cordova, with the Life of Diego Garcia de Paredes." When the curate read the two first titles he looked ove
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   >>  



Top keywords:

curate

 

hearing

 

things

 
ladies
 

knights

 

landlady

 

landlord

 
gentleman
 

answering

 

prudery


honour

 

glance

 

bestow

 

worthy

 

knowest

 

secured

 

History

 

Captain

 
Gonzalo
 

Hircania


Felixmarte

 
opened
 

Cirongilio

 
Thrace
 

Hernandez

 

Cordova

 
titles
 
looked
 

Garcia

 

Paredes


brought
 
valise
 

manuscripts

 

written

 
opening
 

knight

 

describe

 
relish
 

greatly

 

pretty


orange

 

fright

 

keeping

 
duenna
 

Maritornes

 

moment

 
forget
 
listening
 
reading
 

Dorothea