Frances Waldeaux by Rebecca Harding Davis
page 117 of 176 (66%)
page 117 of 176 (66%)
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appreciates me, and her dot is quite as large."
CHAPTER XIII George Waldeaux hummed a tune gayly as he climbed the winding maze of streets in Vannes, one cloudy afternoon, with Lisa. "It is impertinent to be modern Americans in this old town," he said. "We might play that we were jongleurs, and that it was still mediaeval times. I am sure the gray walls yonder and the fortress houses in this street have not changed in ages." "Neither have the smells, apparently," said Lisa grimly. "Wrap this scarf about your throat, George. You coughed last night." George tied up his throat. "Coughed, did I?" he said anxiously. He had had a cold last winter, and his wife with her poultices and fright had convinced him that he was a confirmed invalid. The coming of her baby had given to the woman a motherly feeling toward all of the world, even to her husband. "Look at these women," he said, going on with his fancy presently. "I am sure that they were here wearing these black gowns and huge red aprons in the twelfth century. What is this?" he said, stopping abruptly, to |
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