FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3232   3233   3234   3235   3236   3237   3238   3239   3240   3241   3242   3243   3244   3245   3246   3247   3248   3249   3250   3251   3252   3253   3254   3255   3256  
3257   3258   3259   3260   3261   3262   3263   3264   3265   3266   3267   3268   3269   3270   3271   3272   3273   3274   3275   3276   3277   3278   3279   3280   3281   >>   >|  
, Studdenham. It's a thunderbolt--young Dunning's case over again. STUDDENHAM. I don't rightly follow. She's--You've--! I must see my daughter. Have the goodness to send for her, m'lady. LADY CHESHIRE goes to the billiard-room, and calls: "FREDA, come here, please." STUDDENHAM. [TO SIR WILLIAM] YOU tell me that my daughter's in the position of that girl owing to your son? Men ha' been shot for less. BILL. If you like to have a pot at me, Studdenham you're welcome. STUDDENHAM. [Averting his eyes from BILL at the sheer idiocy of this sequel to his words] I've been in your service five and twenty years, Sir William; but this is man to man--this is! SIR WILLIAM. I don't deny that, Studdenham. STUDDENHAM. [With eyes shifting in sheer anger] No--'twouldn't be very easy. Did I understand him to say that he offers her marriage? SIR WILLIAM. You did. STUDDENHAM. [Into his beard] Well--that's something! [Moving his hands as if wringing the neck of a bird] I'm tryin' to see the rights o' this. SIR WILLIAM. [Bitterly] You've all your work cut out for you, Studdenham. Again STUDDENHAM makes the unconscious wringing movement with his hands. LADY CHESHIRE. [Turning from it with a sort of horror] Don't, Studdenham! Please! STUDDENHAM. What's that, m'lady? LADY CHESHIRE. [Under her breath] Your--your--hands. While STUDDENHAM is still staring at her, FREDA is seen standing in the doorway, like a black ghost. STUDDENHAM. Come here! You! [FREDA moves a few steps towards her father] When did you start this? FREDA. [Almost inaudibly] In the summer, father. LADY CHESHIRE. Don't be harsh to her! STUDDENHAM. Harsh! [His eyes again move from side to side as if pain and anger had bewildered them. Then looking sideways at FREDA, but in a gentler voice] And when did you tell him about--what's come to you? FREDA. Last night. STUDDENHAM. Oh! [With sudden menace] You young--! [He makes a convulsive movement of one hand; then, in the silence, seems to lose grip of his thoughts, and pits his hand up to his head] I want to clear me mind a bit--I don't see it plain at all. [Without looking at BILL] 'Tis said there's been an offer of marriage? BILL. I've made it, I stick to it. STUDDENHAM. Oh! [With slow, puzzled anger] I want time to get the pith o' this. You don't say anything, Sir William? SIR WILLIAM. The facts are all before yo
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3232   3233   3234   3235   3236   3237   3238   3239   3240   3241   3242   3243   3244   3245   3246   3247   3248   3249   3250   3251   3252   3253   3254   3255   3256  
3257   3258   3259   3260   3261   3262   3263   3264   3265   3266   3267   3268   3269   3270   3271   3272   3273   3274   3275   3276   3277   3278   3279   3280   3281   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

STUDDENHAM

 

Studdenham

 

WILLIAM

 
CHESHIRE
 

marriage

 

William

 

wringing

 
movement
 

father

 

daughter


sideways

 
doorway
 

standing

 

summer

 
gentler
 
inaudibly
 

bewildered

 

Almost

 
silence
 

Without


puzzled

 

sudden

 

menace

 

convulsive

 

thoughts

 

position

 
sequel
 
service
 

idiocy

 
Averting

rightly
 

follow

 

thunderbolt

 

Dunning

 

billiard

 

goodness

 

twenty

 

unconscious

 
Turning
 
rights

Bitterly

 

horror

 

breath

 

Please

 
twouldn
 
shifting
 

understand

 

Moving

 

offers

 

staring