The Translation of a Savage, Volume 3 by Gilbert Parker
page 25 of 67 (37%)
page 25 of 67 (37%)
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"As you sing it, it would be beautiful and acceptable anywhere, Lali." "Thank you again," she answered, closing and unclosing her fan, her eyes wandering to where Mrs. Armour was. She wished she could escape, for she did not feel like talking, and yet though the man was her husband she could not say that she was too tired to talk; she must be polite. Then, with a little dainty malice: "It is more interesting, though, in the vernacular--and costume!" "Not unless you sang it so," he answered gallantly, and with a kind of earnestness. "You have not forgotten the way of London men," she rejoined. "Perhaps that is well, for I do not know the way of women," he said, with a faint bitterness. "Yet, I don't speak unadvisedly in this,"--here he meant to be a little bold and bring the talk to the past,--"for I heard you sing that song once before." She turned on him half puzzled, a little nervous. "Where did you hear me sing it?" He had made up his mind, wisely enough, to speak with much openness and some tact also, if possible. "It was on the Glow Worm River at the Clip Claw Hills. I came into your father's camp one evening in the autumn, hungry and tired and knocked about. I was given the next tent to yours. It was night, and just before I turned in I heard your voice singing. I couldn't understand much of the language, but I had the sense of it, and I know it when I hear it again." |
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