Their Silver Wedding Journey — Complete by William Dean Howells
page 96 of 522 (18%)
page 96 of 522 (18%)
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Burnamy laughed at the notion. "It's only eight lines."
"Oh!" said the girl. "What is it about?" He yielded to the temptation with a weakness which he found incredible in a person of his make. "I can repeat it if you won't give me away to Mrs. March." "Oh, no indeed!" He said the lines over to her very simply and well." They are beautiful--beautiful!" "Do you think so?" he gasped, in his joy at her praise. "Yes, lovely. Do you know, you are the first literary man--the only literary man--I ever talked with. They must go out--somewhere! Papa must meet them at his clubs. But I never do; and so I'm making the most of you." "You can't make too much of me, Miss Triscoe," said Burnamy. She would not mind his mocking. "That day you spoke about 'The Maiden Knight', don't you know, I had never heard any talk about books in that way. I didn't know you were an author then." "Well, I'm not much of an author now," he said, cynically, to retrieve his folly in repeating his poem to her. "Oh, that will do for you to say. But I know what Mrs. March thinks." He wished very much to know what Mrs. March thought, too; 'Every Other |
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