FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   770   771   772   773   774   775   776   777   778   779   780   781   782   783   784   785   786   787   788   789   790   791   792   793   794  
795   796   797   798   799   800   801   802   803   804   805   806   807   808   809   810   811   812   813   814   815   816   817   818   819   >>   >|  
e my children happy, married and settled, and comfortable!" Emilia stole up to him, and dropped on one knee: "You love them?" "I do. I love my girls and my boy. And my brandy-and-water, do you mean to say, you rogue?" "And me?" Emilia looked up at him beseechingly. "Yes, and you. I do. I haven't known you long, my dear, but I shall be glad to do what I can for you. You shall make my house your home as long as you live; and if I say, make haste and get married, it's only just this: girls ought to marry young, and not be in an uncertain position." "Am I worth having?" "To be sure you are! I should think so. You haven't got a penny; but, then, you're not for spending one. And"--Mr. Pole nodded to right and left like a man who silenced a host of invisible logicians, urging this and that--"you're a pleasant companion, thrifty, pretty, musical: by Jingo! what more do they want? They'll have their song and chop at home." "Yes; but suppose it depends upon their fathers?" "Well, if their fathers will be fools, my dear, I can't help 'em. We needn't take 'em in a lump: how about the doctor? I'll see him to-morrow morning, and hear what he has to say. Shall I?" Mr. Pole winked shrewdly. "You will not make my heart break?" Emilia's voice sounded one low chord as she neared the thing she had to say. "Bless her soul!" the old merchant patted her; "I'm not the sort of man for that." "Nor his?" "His?" Mr. Pole's nerves became uneasy in a minute, at the scent of a mystification. He dashed his handkerchief over his forehead, repeating: "His? Break a man's heart! I? What's the meaning of that? For God's sake, don't bother me!" Emilia was still kneeling before him, eyeing him with a shadowed steadfast air. "I say his, because his heart is in mine. He has any pain that hurts me." "He may be tremendously in love," observed Mr. Pole; "but he seems a deuced soft sort of a doctor! What's his name?" "I love Wilfrid." The merchant appeared to be giving ear to her, long after the words had been uttered, while there was silence in the room. "Wilfrid? my son?" he cried with a start. "He is my lover." "Damned rascal!" Mr. Pole jumped from his chair. "Going and playing with an unprotected girl. I can pardon a young man's folly, but this is infamous. My dear child," he turned to Emilia, "if you've got any notion about my son Wilfrid, you must root it up as quick as you can. If he's been behaving like a vil
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   770   771   772   773   774   775   776   777   778   779   780   781   782   783   784   785   786   787   788   789   790   791   792   793   794  
795   796   797   798   799   800   801   802   803   804   805   806   807   808   809   810   811   812   813   814   815   816   817   818   819   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Emilia

 

Wilfrid

 

merchant

 

fathers

 

doctor

 

married

 
eyeing
 

tremendously

 
kneeling
 

comfortable


shadowed

 
settled
 
bother
 
steadfast
 

minute

 
mystification
 

uneasy

 
nerves
 

dashed

 

handkerchief


meaning
 

dropped

 

forehead

 

repeating

 

observed

 

deuced

 

pardon

 

infamous

 
unprotected
 

playing


behaving

 

turned

 

notion

 

jumped

 

rascal

 

giving

 

appeared

 

children

 
uttered
 
Damned

silence
 

invisible

 
logicians
 
urging
 

pleasant

 
silenced
 

companion

 

thrifty

 

pretty

 
musical