[Simon the Jester by William J. Locke]@TWC D-Link book
Simon the Jester

CHAPTER XI
2/24

I can just keep my head, that is all, and note down what happens more or less day by day, so that when the doings of dwarfs and captains, and horse-tamers and youthful Members of Parliament concern me no more, Dale Kynnersley can have a bald but veracious statement of fact.

And as I have before mentioned, he loves facts, just as a bear loves honey.
I passed a quiet day or two in my hotel garden, among the sweet-peas, and the roses, and the geraniums.

There were little shady summer-houses where one could sit and dream, and watch the blue sky and the palms and the feathery pepper trees drooping with their coral berries, and the golden orange-trees and the wisteria and the great gorgeous splash of purple bougainvillea above the Moorish arches of the hotel.

There were mild little walks in the eucalyptus woods behind, where one went through acanthus and wild absinthe, and here and there as the path wound, the great blue bay came into view, and far away the snow-capped peaks of the Atlas.

There were warmth and sunshine, and the unexciting prattle of the retired Colonels and maiden ladies.


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