FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   >>  
ls I have been, and will be, guided--whom I honour--whom I"--she paused. I was irritated at her manner, and filled up the blank in my own way-- "Whom she _loves_, Miss Vernon would say." "And if I do say so," she replied haughtily, "by whom shall my affection be called to account?" [Illustration: Die Vernon and Frank in Library--234] "Not by me, Miss Vernon, assuredly--I entreat you to hold me acquitted of such presumption.--_But,_" I continued, with some emphasis, for I was now piqued in return, "I hope Miss Vernon will pardon a friend, from whom she seems disposed to withdraw the title, for observing"-- "Observe nothing, sir," she interrupted with some vehemence, except that I will neither be doubted nor questioned. There does not exist one by whom I will be either interrogated or judged; and if you sought this unusual time of presenting yourself in order to spy upon my privacy, the friendship or interest with which you pretend to regard me, is a poor excuse for your uncivil curiosity." "I relieve you of my presence," said I, with pride equal to her own; for my temper has ever been a stranger to stooping, even in cases where my feelings were most deeply interested--"I relieve you of my presence. I awake from a pleasant, but a most delusive dream; and--but we understand each other." I had reached the door of the apartment, when Miss Vernon, whose movements were sometimes so rapid as to seem almost instinctive, overtook me, and, catching hold of my arm, stopped me with that air of authority which she could so whimsically assume, and which, from the _naivete_ and simplicity of her manner, had an effect so peculiarly interesting. "Stop, Mr. Frank," she said, "you are not to leave me in that way neither; I am not so amply provided with friends, that I can afford to throw away even the ungrateful and the selfish. Mark what I say, Mr. Francis Osbaldistone. You shall know nothing of this mysterious glove," and she held it up as she spoke--"nothing--no, not a single iota more than you know already; and yet I will not permit it to be a gauntlet of strife and defiance betwixt us. My time here," she said, sinking into a tone somewhat softer, "must necessarily be very short; yours must be still shorter: we are soon to part never to meet again; do not let us quarrel, or make any mysterious miseries the pretext for farther embittering the few hours we shall ever pass together on this side of eternity." I do n
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   221   222   223   224   225   226   227   228   229   230   231   232   233   >>  



Top keywords:

Vernon

 

mysterious

 

relieve

 

presence

 
manner
 

naivete

 

ungrateful

 

afford

 
friends
 

selfish


movements
 
assume
 

authority

 

peculiarly

 

interesting

 

overtook

 

catching

 

stopped

 

instinctive

 

effect


simplicity
 

whimsically

 

provided

 

strife

 

quarrel

 

shorter

 
miseries
 
eternity
 

pretext

 
farther

embittering

 

necessarily

 
single
 

Osbaldistone

 

permit

 
sinking
 
softer
 

gauntlet

 

defiance

 

betwixt


Francis

 

emphasis

 

piqued

 
return
 

continued

 
entreat
 

acquitted

 

presumption

 

pardon

 
friend