FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3357   3358   3359   3360   3361   3362   3363   3364   3365   3366   3367   3368   3369   3370   3371   3372   3373   3374   3375   3376   3377   3378   3379   3380   3381  
3382   3383   3384   3385   3386   3387   3388   3389   3390   3391   3392   3393   3394   3395   3396   3397   3398   3399   3400   3401   3402   3403   3404   3405   3406   >>   >|  
o the house, and after stealthy listening, steps through. The Girl, like a cat, steals back to the warmth of the fire. WELLWYN returns with a candle, a canary-coloured bath gown, and two blankets.] WELLWYN. Now then! [He precedes her towards the door of the model's room.] Hsssh! [He opens the door and holds up the candle to show her the room.] Will it do? There's a couch. You'll find some washing things. Make yourself quite at home. See! [The Girl, perfectly dumb, passes through with her basket--and her shoes and stockings. WELLWYN hands her the candle, blankets, and bath gown.] WELLWYN. Have a good sleep, child! Forget that you're alive! [He closes the door, mournfully.] Done it again! [He goes to the table, cuts a large slice of cake, knocks on the door, and hands it in.] Chow-chow! [Then, as he walks away, he sights the opposite door.] Well--damn it, what could I have done? Not a farthing on me! [He goes to the street door to shut it, but first opens it wide to confirm himself in his hospitality.] Night like this! [A sputter of snow is blown in his face. A voice says: "Monsieur, pardon!" WELLWYN recoils spasmodically. A figure moves from the lamp-post to the doorway. He is seen to be young and to have ragged clothes. He speaks again: "You do not remember me, Monsieur? My name is Ferrand--it was in Paris, in the Champs-Elysees--by the fountain . . . . When you came to the door, Monsieur--I am not made of iron . . . . Tenez, here is your card I have never lost it." He holds out to WELLWYN an old and dirty wing card. As inch by inch he has advanced into the doorway, the light from within falls on him, a tall gaunt young pagan with fair hair and reddish golden stubble of beard, a long ironical nose a little to one side, and large, grey, rather prominent eyes. There is a certain grace in his figure and movements; his clothes are nearly dropping off him.] WELLWYN. [Yielding to a pleasant memory.] Ah! yes. By the fountain. I was sitting there, and you came and ate a roll, and drank the water. FERRAND. [With faint eagerness.] My breakfast. I was in poverty-- veree bad off. You gave me ten francs. I thought I had a little the right [WELLWYN makes a movement of disconcertion] seeing you said that if I came to England---- WELLWYN. Um! And so you've come? FERRAND
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3357   3358   3359   3360   3361   3362   3363   3364   3365   3366   3367   3368   3369   3370   3371   3372   3373   3374   3375   3376   3377   3378   3379   3380   3381  
3382   3383   3384   3385   3386   3387   3388   3389   3390   3391   3392   3393   3394   3395   3396   3397   3398   3399   3400   3401   3402   3403   3404   3405   3406   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
WELLWYN
 
Monsieur
 
candle
 

doorway

 

clothes

 

FERRAND

 

figure

 
fountain
 

blankets

 
advanced

England

 

Elysees

 

Champs

 

Ferrand

 
sitting
 

Yielding

 

pleasant

 

memory

 

francs

 

poverty


eagerness

 

breakfast

 

disconcertion

 

ironical

 
golden
 
stubble
 
thought
 

prominent

 
movements
 

dropping


movement

 
reddish
 
basket
 

stockings

 
passes
 

perfectly

 

mournfully

 

closes

 

Forget

 

steals


returns

 

precedes

 

coloured

 
washing
 

things

 
warmth
 

knocks

 

stealthy

 

sputter

 

listening