Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.

Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.
on her, almost to the making it planetary.  And a glance at the professor revealed how picturesque it was.  Alvan and he murmured aside.  They spoke of it:  What wonder that Alvan, though he saw Prince Marko whirl her in the dance, and keep her to the measure—­dancing like a song of the limbs in his desperate poor lover’s little flitting eternity of the possession of her—­should say, after she had been led back to her friends:  ’That is he, then! one of the dragons guarding my apple of the Hesperides, whom I must brush away.’

‘He?’ replied Clotilde, sincerely feeling Marko to be of as fractional a weight as her tone declared him.  ’Oh, he is my mute, harmless, he does not count among the dragons.’

But there had been, notwithstanding the high presumption of his remark, a manful thickness of voice in Alvan’s ‘That is he!’ The rivals had fastened a look on one another, wary, strong, and summary as the wrestlers’ first grapple.  In fire of gaze, Marko was not outdone.

‘He does not count?  With those eyes of his?’ Alvan exclaimed.  He knew something of the sex, and spied from that point of knowledge into the character of Clotilde; not too venturesomely, with the assistance of rumour, hazarding the suspicion which he put forth as a certainty, and made sharply bitter to himself in proportion to the belief in it that his vehemence engendered:  ’I know all—­without exception; all, everything; all!  I repeat.  But what of it, if I win you? as I shall—­only aid me a little.’

She slightly surprised the man by not striving to attenuate the import of the big and surcharged All:  but her silence bore witness to his penetrative knowledge.  Dozens of amorous gentlemen, lovers, of excellent substance, have before now prepared this peculiar dose for themselves—­the dose of the lady silent under a sort of pardoning grand accusation; and they have had to drink it, and they have blinked over the tonic draught with such power of taking a bracing as their constitutions could summon.  At no moment of their quaint mutual history are the sexes to be seen standing more acutely divided.  Well may the lady be silent; her little sins are magnified to herself to the proportion of the greatness of heart forgiving her; and that, with his mysterious penetration and a throb of her conscience, holds her tongue-tied.  She does not imagine the effect of her silence upon the magnanimous wretch.  Some of these lovers, it has to be stated in sadness for the good name of man, have not preserved an attitude that said so nobly, ’Child, thou art human—­thou art woman!’ They have undone it and gone to pieces with an injured lover’s babble of persecuting inquiries for confessions.  Some, on the contrary, retaining the attitude, have been unable to digest the tonic; they did not prepare their systems as they did their dose, possibly thinking the latter a supererogatory heavy thump on a trifle, the which was performed by them artfully for a means of swallowing and getting that obnoxious trifle well down.  These are ever after love’s dyspeptics.  Very few indeed continue at heart in harmony with their opening note to the silent fair, because in truth the general anticipation is of her proclaiming, if not angelical innocence, a softly reddened or blush-rose of it, where the little guiltiness lies pathetic on its bed of white.

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Tragic Comedians, the — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.