Elsie at the World's Fair by Martha Finley
page 65 of 207 (31%)
page 65 of 207 (31%)
|
Austins again at the Peristyle, and took them on board in the first boat
load. The guests were numerous, including all the cousins from Pleasant Plains, and the three young gentlemen friends--Chester and Frank Dinsmore and Will Croly. The meal to which they presently sat down, though Captain Raymond had called it supper, was an excellent dinner of several courses, and enlivened by pleasant chat, proved most enjoyable to the entire company. At its conclusion they adjourned to the deck. A pleasant air was stirring, the sun drawing near his setting, the western sky glowing with brilliant hues, while the sounds of life on water and land came softly to the ear. The young people formed one group, the older ones another, conversing among themselves, mostly in rather subdued tones. "You have hardly been in America ever since I saw you last?" Lucilla said enquiringly, addressing Albert Austin. "Oh, no; we went home shortly upon bidding you good-by after our brief acquaintance in Minersville," he replied; adding, "And I presume you had very nearly forgotten us?" "No," she said; "we have spoken of you occasionally,--papa, Max, and I,--and I recognized your father the moment I saw him to-day; you also, though I am not sure that I should have done so had you been alone; for of course you have changed much more than he has." "Not more than you have, Miss Raymond," he returned with a look of undisguised admiration; "yet I knew you instantly, though I saw you before |
|