FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   >>  
dear child,' he replied, 'it will soon be over; only a temporary embarrassment; some unlucky speculations.' Then he gave me a kiss, smiled as he used to do, and said I was a baby. "'Ah, John, your words buoy me up and make me feel almost happy again.' "'Let us speak of it no more, and when I have my business all in shape again, I will never leave you, but remain here, where, if you cannot see me every moment, you can hear me.' "'Oh, that will be such joy for me. But do you know, John, that while I have waited, and waited, to hear the splash of the oars as you crossed from the shore, I have conjured up all sorts of things? Sometimes I have thought that perhaps--' "'Perhaps what?' "'That the chains of Cupid had been woven around you during your first absence, and that you might have returned to her who--' "'Just what a foolish woman always supposes. Why I have been as true to you as the waters of the glorious river, which sweeps past our island home, have been constant in their tendency toward the sea.' "'I believe it, and now you will pardon me, will you, not?' "'Of course I do,' he continued; 'and, had I been as faithful to myself as I have been loyal to you, I would not now be suffering the woe you have so plainly seen on my face.' "'Tell me, dear, for I can guide you out of it--I know I can.' "'No, not now,' he answered; then he kissed me and walked away. "Something terrible was coming--I knew it. The curses which had been heaped upon us for disobedience were about to bear fruit. Now, strange, rough-looking men came to see my husband--persons whom I had not seen before. They seemed familiar with him; it was evident, however, that their presence was distasteful to him; he tried to keep them at a distance, he shrank from them. I said I did not like these acquaintances; he replied that they were commercial friends, and must be treated with respect. They had long and mysterious conversations together. They would go to the other shore and return, bringing other companions equally ill-looking. "One dark night the dip of oars was heard, and as the boat was run upon the pebbly shore, four men stepped briskly out, and laboriously lifted and carried a large, heavy, oblong box, and placed it in the cellar. John said it was merchandise, and must be stored; it was unsalable now, and it was best to keep it until there was a market for it. "'But, John, why can it not be stored in the city, where it would
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   >>  



Top keywords:

waited

 

replied

 
stored
 

evident

 

familiar

 
presence
 

distasteful

 

Something

 

terrible

 

coming


walked
 

kissed

 
answered
 

curses

 

husband

 

persons

 

strange

 
heaped
 

disobedience

 

laboriously


briskly

 
lifted
 

carried

 

stepped

 

pebbly

 
oblong
 

market

 
unsalable
 
cellar
 

merchandise


commercial
 

friends

 

treated

 

respect

 

acquaintances

 

distance

 
shrank
 

mysterious

 

equally

 

companions


bringing

 

conversations

 

return

 
island
 
remain
 

business

 

crossed

 

conjured

 

things

 

splash