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, talkative, and amusing. It is to be hoped that he will marry soon, and escape from the leading-strings. If he marries Teresa Ottolini--and it is said such a result is certain--no palace in Lucca would be big enough to hold Teresa and the countess-mother at one time. Group after group enters, bows to the countess, and passes on among the flowers: the Countess Navascoes (with her lord), pale, statuesque, dark-eyed, raven-haired--a type of Italian womanhood; Marchesa Manzi--born of the noble house of Buoncampagni--looking as if she had walked out of a picture by Titian; the Da Gia, separated from her husband--a little habit, this, of Italian ladies, consequent upon intimacy with the _jeunesse doree_, who prefer the wives of their best friends to all other women--it saves trouble, and a "golden youth" is essentially idle. This little habit, moreover, of separation from husbands does not damage the lady in the least; no one inquires what has happened, or who is in the wrong. Society receives and pets her just the same, and, quite impartial, receives and pets the husband also.--Luisa Bernardini, a glowing little countess, as plump as an ortolan, dimpling with smiles, an ugly old husband at her side--comes next. It is whispered, unless the ugly old husband is blind as well as deaf, they will be separated, too, very shortly. Young Civilla, a "golden youth," is so very pressing. He could live with Luisa at Naples--a cheap place. They might have gone on for years as a triangular household--but for Civilla's carelessness. Civilla would always put out old Bernardini about the dinner. (Civilla dined at Bernardini's house every day, as he would at a _cafe_.) Now, old Bernardini did not care a button that his little wife had a lover; it would not have been _en regle_ if she had not--nor did he care that his wife's lover should dine with him every day--not a bit--but old Bernardini is a gourmand, and he does care to be kept waiting for his dinner. He has lately confided to a friend, that he should be sorry to cause a scandal, but that he must separate from his wife if Civilla will not reform in the matter of the dinner-hour. "He is getting old," Bernardini says, "and his digestion suffers." No man keeps a French cook to be kept waiting for his dinner. Luisa, who looks the picture of innocence, wears an unexceptionable pink dress, with a train that bodes ill-luck, and many apologies, to her partners. A long train is Luisa's little
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