Tales for Young and Old eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Tales for Young and Old.

Tales for Young and Old eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Tales for Young and Old.

‘Calm yourself, calm yourself,’ she said; ’go and take some repose; you have need of it.’

‘Countess,’ replied Sophia, then wept anew.  ’Shame, shame and desperation!  Oh, wretch that I am!  Oh, my poor heart!’

‘Go, go to bed, Sophia; to-morrow we will talk.  Here is the light.’  Saying this, she reached her the lamp with one hand and led her by the other, using a little affectionate violence to conduct her out of the room, and prevent her from speaking another word.

The next day Sophia was so overwhelmed with grief and shame, that she took to her bed, struck down by a violent fever, which was the commencement of a dangerous illness.  The countess was her nurse.

Edoardo, having lost the source whence he derived all his supplies, through the illness of Sophia, could no longer prevent his father from coming to the knowledge of his irregularities.  He was immediately recalled to Venice, and shut up in a house of correction.  Disgraced in the eyes of the companions of his debaucheries, and forced in his solitary confinement to make painful reflections on the consequences of his conduct, he seemed to be cured of his fatal passion, and when released, he returned no more to Padua; but, giving up the study of the law, he devoted himself to commerce, to which the contagious mania of making money, of becoming rich, made him steadily apply himself.  His old inclination had changed its name; it was ‘mercantile speculation;’ but the substance remained the same.  He had written to Sophia that his father would not consent to his marriage, unless it were with a lady of large fortune:  unfortunately, she was not rich enough; however, that he would wed none but her, and that they must be resigned, and trust to time; and Sophia, living on the few letters that Edoardo continued to write her, and grieving that she was not as rich as Valperghi would have wished, waited and hoped.  Her illness had been long and dangerous; her youth, and the care bestowed on her, had alone been able to save her life.  She had long been oppressed by remorse:  it was long ere she dared to lift her eyes to the countess, or address one word to her.

The latter had sought to evade every allusion to the past; and the poor girl, beginning to overcome her fears, ended at length in making her her friend, her confidante.  She told her everything, and was fully forgiven everything.

After a time, Sophia recovered.  They had lived together for four years, during which Sophia had opened her whole heart to that lady, made her the repository of all her everyday thoughts, her hopes; but the countess had always answered her with vague, uncertain words, or with silence.  Alas!  Sophia was fated to lose every object on which she had set her affection.  After having closed the eyes of her mother and sister, adverse fortune obliged her to witness the death of the Countess Galeazzi.

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Tales for Young and Old from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.