The Last of the Foresters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 411 pages of information about The Last of the Foresters.

The Last of the Foresters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 411 pages of information about The Last of the Foresters.

This was the simplicity of our friend Verty; and he unconsciously commenced the overturning operation by saying: 

“Redbud, did you find the flowers you wanted?”

The young girl replied: 

“Oh, yes!”

“‘Beauties of nature,’ Miss Sallianna would call ’em, would’nt she?” continued Verty, with a smile.

“Now, Verty!” said Redbud, reproachfully.

“I can’t help it,” returned Verty; “I don’t like Miss Sallianna.”

“Not like that paragon!” cried Fanny.

“No.”

“Why not, sir?”

“She told me a story.”

“A story, sir!”

“Yes.”

“You ought to be ashamed of yourself to speak so disrespectfully of such a divine creature—­with so much maiden innocence and intrinsic simplicity,” observed Miss Fanny, inclining her head upon one shoulder, and rolling her eyes toward the sky.

Ralph began to laugh.

“I would’nt say it if it was’nt true,” Verty said; “but it is.”

“What story did she tell you, sir?” Fanny went on.

“She said that Redbud was in love with him—­Ralph Ashley.”

And Verty smiled.

Fanny burst into a roar of laughter; Redbud blushed; Ralph looked with astonishment at the plain-spoken Verty.

“You know that was a story,” said he, simply.

Everybody remained silent for a moment, and then the silence was broken by Ralph, who cried, laughing: 

“I’ll back you, friend Verty! every word of it!”

“You, sir!” cried Fanny.

“Yes!  I wonder if your divine creature—­Sallianna by name—­did not tell me, ten minutes since, that you—­yes, you, Miss Fanny!—­were desperately enamored of Mr. Verty!”

The whole party were so overcome by this ludicrous expose of Miss Sallianna’s schemes, that a laugh much louder than the first rang through the garden; and when Miss Sallianna was descried sailing in dignified meditation up and down the portico, her fan gently waving, her head inclined to one side, her eyes fixed upon the sky, Mr. Ralph Ashley entered into a neighboring mass of shrubbery, from which came numerous choking sounds, and explosive evidences of overwhelming laughter.

Thus was it that our honest Verty at once cleared up all misunderstanding—­and made the horizon cloudless once again.  If everybody would only speak as plainly, when misconceptions and mistakes arise, the world would have far more of sunshine in it!

“Just to think!” cried Fanny, “how that odious old tatterdemalion has been going on!  Did anybody ever?”

“Anan?” said Verty.

“Sir?” said Fanny.

“What’s a tatterdemalion?” asked the young man, smilingly.

“I don’t exactly know, sir,” said Fanny; “but I suppose it’s a conceited old maid; who talks about the beauties of nature, and tries to make people, who are friends, hate each other.”

With which definition Miss Fanny clenched her handsome little hand, and made a gesture therewith, in the direction of Miss Sallianna, indicative of hostility, and a desire to engage in instant combat.

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The Last of the Foresters from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.