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.
wall to her maiden past; yet was there an opening day when nothing of us moustached her.  She was a clear-faced girl and mother of young blushes before the years were at their work of transformation upon her countenance and behind her bosom.  The years were rough artists:  perhaps she was combative, and fought them for touching her ungallantly; and that perhaps was her first manly step.  Baroness Lucie was of high birth, a wife openly maltreated, a woman of breeding, but with a man’s head, capable of inspiring man-like friendships, and of entertaining them.  She was radically-minded, strongly of the Radical profession of faith, and a correspondent of revolutionary chiefs; both the trusted adviser and devoted slave of him whose future glorious career she measured by his abilities.  Rumour blew out a candle and left the wick to smoke in relation to their former intercourse.  The Philistines revenged themselves on an old aristocratic Radical and a Jew demagogue with the weapon that scandal hands to virtue.  They are virtuous or nothing, and they must show that they are so when they can; and best do they show it by publicly dishonouring the friendship of a man and a woman; for to be in error in malice does not hurt them, but they profoundly feel that they are fools if they are duped.

She was aware of the recent course of events; she had as she protested, nothing to accuse herself of, and she could hardly part her lips without a self-exculpation.

‘It will fall on me!’ she said to Tresten, in her emphatic tone.  ’He will have his interview with the girl.  He will subdue the girl.  He will manacle himself in the chains he makes her wear.  She will not miss her chance!  I am the object of her detestation.  I am the price paid for their reconcilement.  She will seize her opportunity to vilipend me, and I shall be condemned by the kind of court-martial which hurries over the forms of a brial to sign the execution-warrant that makes it feel like justice.  You will see.  She cannot forgive me for not pretending to enter into her enthusiasm.  She will make him believe I conspired against her.  Men in love are children with their mistresses—­the greatest of them; their heads are under the woman’s feet.  What have I not done to aid him!  At his instance, I went to the archbishop, to implore one of the princes of the Church for succour.  I knelt to an ecclesiastic.  I did a ludicrous and a shameful thing, knowing it in advance to be a barren farce.  I obeyed his wish.  The tale will be laughable.  I obeyed him.  I would not have it on my conscience that the commission of any deed ennomic, however unwonted, was refused by me to serve Alvan.  You are my witness, Tresten, that for a young woman of common honesty I was ready to pack and march.  Qualities of mind-mind!  They were out of the question.  He had a taste for a wife.  If he had hit on a girl commonly honest, she might not have harmed him—­the contrary; cut his talons.  What is this girl? 

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