FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   >>  
-opened the door--and found Miss Vernon alone. Diana appeared surprised,--whether at my sudden entrance, or from some other cause, I could not guess; but there was in her appearance a degree of flutter, which I had never before remarked, and which I knew could only be produced by unusual emotion. Yet she was calm in a moment; and such is the force of conscience, that I, who studied to surprise her, seemed myself the surprised, and was certainly the embarrassed person. "Has anything happened?" said Miss Vernon--"has any one arrived at the Hall?" "No one that I know of," I answered, in some confusion; "I only sought the Orlando." "It lies there," said Miss Vernon, pointing to the table. In removing one or two books to get at that which I pretended to seek, I was, in truth, meditating to make a handsome retreat from an investigation to which I felt my assurance inadequate, when I perceived a man's glove lying upon the table. My eyes encountered those of Miss Vernon, who blushed deeply. "It is one of my relics," she said with hesitation, replying not to my words but to my looks; "it is one of the gloves of my grandfather, the original of the superb Vandyke which you admire." As if she thought something more than her bare assertion was necessary to prove her statement true, she opened a drawer of the large oaken table, and taking out another glove, threw it towards me.--When a temper naturally ingenuous stoops to equivocate, or to dissemble, the anxious pain with which the unwonted task is laboured, often induces the hearer to doubt the authenticity of the tale. I cast a hasty glance on both gloves, and then replied gravely--"The gloves resemble each other, doubtless, in form and embroidery; but they cannot form a pair, since they both belong to the right hand." She bit her lip with anger, and again coloured deeply. "You do right to expose me," she replied, with bitterness: "some friends would have only judged from what I said, that I chose to give no particular explanation of a circumstance which calls for none--at least to a stranger. You have judged better, and have made me feel, not only the meanness of duplicity, but my own inadequacy to sustain the task of a dissembler. I now tell you distinctly, that that glove is not the fellow, as you have acutely discerned, to the one which I just now produced;--it belongs to a friend yet dearer to me than the original of Vandyke's picture--a friend by whose counse
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   220   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   >>  



Top keywords:

Vernon

 

gloves

 

judged

 

opened

 
deeply
 

Vandyke

 

original

 

replied

 
friend
 

produced


surprised
 
gravely
 

hearer

 

induces

 

counse

 

authenticity

 

distinctly

 

dissembler

 

glance

 

laboured


temper
 

naturally

 

taking

 

ingenuous

 

stoops

 

belongs

 
resemble
 
unwonted
 

anxious

 
equivocate

acutely

 

dissemble

 
fellow
 

doubtless

 

explanation

 
circumstance
 
duplicity
 

meanness

 

dearer

 

stranger


picture

 

friends

 

belong

 
inadequacy
 

sustain

 
embroidery
 

coloured

 

expose

 

bitterness

 
discerned