The Fortieth Door by Mary Hastings Bradley
page 16 of 324 (04%)
page 16 of 324 (04%)
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"No? And I thought it such a virtuous record!" "I mean," Jinny laughed, "that you really ought to be seeing more of life--like to-night--" "To-night? Do you imagine this is a place for seeing life?" "Why not?" she retorted to the irony in his voice. "It's real people--not just dead and gone things in cases with their lives all lived. I don't care if you are going to be a very famous person, Jack, you ought to see more of the world. You have just been buried out here for two years, ever since you left college--" Beneath his mask the young man was smiling. A quaint feminine notion, that life was to be encountered at a masquerade! This motley of hot, over-dressed, wrought up idiots a human contact! Life? Living?... Thank you, he preferred the sane young English officials ... the comradeship of his chief ... the glamor of his desert tombs. Of course there was a loneliness in the desert. That was part of the big feeling of it, the still, stealing sense of immensity reaching out its shadowy hands for you.... Loneliness and restlessness.... These tropic nights, when the stars burned low and bright, and the hot sands seemed breathing.... Loneliness and restlessness--but they gave a man dreams.... And were those dreams to be realized here? The music stopped and the ever-watchful Pantalon bore down upon |
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