The Cardinal's Snuff-Box by Henry Harland
page 21 of 258 (08%)
page 21 of 258 (08%)
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will be doubled. I shall put her to the test directly I get
home." "Sprinkle her with holy water?" laughed the Duchessa. "Have a care. If she should turn into a black cat, and fly away on a broomstick, you'd never forgive yourself." Wherewith she swept on to her carriage, followed by her young companion. The sprightly French bays tossed their heads, making the harness tinkle. The footman mounted the box. The carriage rolled away. But Peter remained for quite a minute motionless on the door-step, gazing, bemused, down the long, straight, improbable village street, with its poplars, its bridge, its ancient stone cross, its irregular pink and yellow houses--as improbable as a street in opera-bouffe. A thin cloud of dust floated after the carriage, a thin screen of white dust, which, in the sun, looked like a fume of silver. "I think I could put my finger on a witch worth two of Marietta," he said, in the end." And thus we see," he added, struck by something perhaps not altogether novel in his own reflection, "how the primary emotions, being perennial, tend to express themselves in perennial formulae." |
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