Madame Flirt - A Romance of 'The Beggar's Opera' by Charles Edward Pearce
page 91 of 307 (29%)
page 91 of 307 (29%)
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was, caused him to look up. He saw a slight girlish figure, her cloak
pulled tightly about her, a pair of bright eyes peering from beneath the hood. The old man gave a grunt of dissatisfaction. Many of his customers were women but he liked them none the more because of their sex. They generally came to sell, not to buy, and most of them knew how to drive a hard bargain. He shuffled into the shop with a scowl on his lined yellow face. "What d'ye want?" he growled. Most girls would have been nervous at such a reception. Not so this one. "I want to sell this brooch. How much will you give me for it?" said she, undauntedly. "Don't want to buy it. Go somewhere else." "I shan't. Too much trouble. Besides, you're going to buy it, dear Dr. Mountchance." The imploring eyes, the beseeching voice, soft and musical, the modest yet assured manner, were too much for the old man. Unconscious of the destiny awaiting her, Lavinia was employing the same tenderness of look, the same captivating pathos of tone as when two years later she, as Polly Peachum, sang "Oh ponder well," and won the heart of the Duke of Bolton. "H'm, h'm," grunted Mountchance, "you pretty witch. Must I humour ye?" |
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