FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   >>  
became a Spanish grandee. He received us with a politeness which was almost French, and when my niece would have kissed his hand, according to custom, he affectionately drew it back, and gave her a magnificent cross of amethysts and brilliants to kiss. She kissed it with devotion, saying,-- "This is what I love." She looked at me as she said it, and the jest (which referred to her lover La Croix or Croce) surprised me. We sat down to dinner, and I found the bishop to be a pleasant and a learned man. We were nine in all; four priests, and two young gentlemen of the town, who behaved to my niece with great politeness, which she received with all the manner of good society. I noticed that the bishop, though he often spoke to her, never once looked at her face. My lord knew what danger lurked in those bright eyes, and like a prudent greybeard he took care not to fall into the snare. After coffee had been served, we took leave, and in four hours we left Tortona, intending to lie at Novi. In the course of the afternoon my fair niece amused me with the wit and wisdom of her conversation. While we were supping I led the conversation up to the bishop, and then to religion, that I might see what her principles were. Finding her to be a good Christian, I asked her how she could allow herself to make a jest when she kissed the prelate's cross. "It was a mere chance," she said. "The equivocation was innocent because it was not premeditated, for if I had thought it over I should never have said such a thing." I pretended to believe her; she might possibly be sincere. She was extremely clever, and my love for her was becoming more and more ardent, but my vanity kept my passion in check. When she went to bed I did not kiss her, but as her bed had no screen as at Tortona, she waited until she thought I was asleep to undress herself. We got to Genoa by noon the next day. Pogomas had got me some rooms and had forwarded me the address. I visited it, and found the apartment to consist of four well-furnished rooms, thoroughly comfortable, as the English, who understand how to take their ease, call it. I ordered a good dinner, and sent to tell Pogomas of my arrival. End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Adventures In The South: Milan by Jacques Casanova de Seingalt *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADVENTURES IN THE SOUTH: MILAN *** ***** This file should be named 2970.txt or 2970.zip ***** This and all as
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   >>  



Top keywords:

bishop

 
kissed
 

dinner

 

Pogomas

 

conversation

 

thought

 

Tortona

 

looked

 

received

 

politeness


screen

 

waited

 

asleep

 

undress

 

innocent

 

equivocation

 

grandee

 

Spanish

 

pretended

 

possibly


French

 

sincere

 

extremely

 

forwarded

 

vanity

 

ardent

 

premeditated

 

clever

 

passion

 

consist


PROJECT

 

GUTENBERG

 
Seingalt
 
Jacques
 

Casanova

 

ADVENTURES

 

Adventures

 

comfortable

 

English

 

understand


furnished

 

visited

 

apartment

 

Project

 

Gutenberg

 

arrival

 

ordered

 

address

 

society

 
noticed