The Sowers by Henry Seton Merriman
page 74 of 461 (16%)
page 74 of 461 (16%)
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beautiful woman beautifully dressed. A thousand times too wise to scorn
her womanhood, as learned fools are prone to do in print and on platform in these wordy days, but wielding the strongest power on earth, to wit, that same womanhood, with daring and with skill. A learned woman is not of much account in the world. A clever woman moves as much of it as lies in her neighborhood--that is to say, as much as she cares to rule. For women love power, but they do not care to wield it at a distance. Paul was asked to take Mrs. Sydney Bamborough down to dinner by the lady herself. "Mon ami," she said in a quiet aside to De Chauxville, before making her request, "it is the first time the prince dines here." She spoke in French. Maggie and Paul were talking together at the other end of the room. De Chauxville bowed in silence. At dinner the conversation was necessarily general, and, as such, is not worth reporting. No general conversation, one finds, is of much value when set down in black and white. It is not even grammatical nowadays. To be more correct, let us note that the talk lay between Etta and M. de Chauxville, who had a famous supply of epigrams and bright nothings delivered in such a way that they really sounded like wisdom. Etta was equal to him, sometimes capping his sharp wit, sometimes contenting herself with silvery laughter. Maggie Delafield was rather distraite, as De Chauxville noted. The girl's dislike for him was an iron that entered the quick of his vanity anew every time he saw her. There was no petulance in the aversion, such as he had perceived with other maidens who were only resenting a passing negligence or seeking to pique his curiosity. This was a steady and, if you will, unmaidenly aversion, |
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