A Great Success by Mrs. Humphry Ward
page 73 of 125 (58%)
page 73 of 125 (58%)
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yet!--a touch of Southern magnificence, even of Southern grace, amid the
cockney squalor and finery. Doris coolly recognised it, as she stood, herself invisible, behind her uncle's large easel. Thence she perceived also the other persons in the studio:--Bentley sitting in front of the poetess, hiding his eyes with one hand, and nervously tapping the arm of his chair with the other; to the right of him--seen sideways--the lanky form, flushed face, and open mouth of young Dunstable; and in the far distance, Miss Wigram. Then--a surprising thing! The awkward pause following the recitation was suddenly broken by a loud and uncontrollable laugh. Doris, startled, turned to look at young Dunstable. For it was he who had laughed. Madame also shook off her stage trance to look--a thunderous frown upon her handsome face. The young man laughed on--laughed hysterically--burying his face in his hands. Madame Vavasour--all attitudes thrown aside--ran up to him in a fury. "Why are you laughing? You insult me!--you have done it before. And now before strangers--it is too much! I insist that you explain!" She stood over him, her eyes blazing. The youth, still convulsed, did his best to quiet the paroxysm which had seized him, and at last said, gasping: "I was--I was thinking--of your reciting that at Crosby Ledgers--to my mother--and--and what she would say." Even under her rouge it could be seen that the poetess turned a grey white. |
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