[A Siren by Thomas Adolphus Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
A Siren

CHAPTER IV
10/16

I shall never travel it again." "From Venice, father?
Did you come from Venice ?" asked Paolina, eagerly.
"From La bella Venezia I came, daughter--fourteen years ago.

And once in every month I indulge myself by going to the top of our tower--you can't see it from this window, it is on the northern side of the church--and looking out over the north Pineta as far as I can see towards it.

May God and St.Mark grant that no tempter ever offer me the sight of Venice again at the price of my soul's salvation! I shall never, never see Venice more!" "You must be a Venetian, father, surely, to love it so well ?" said Paolina, after a minute or two of silence.
"A Venetian I am--or was, daughter; as I well knew you were when you first spoke.

Might I ask your name ?" "Paolina Foscarelli, father.

I am an orphan," said she, softly.
"No!" said the monk, shaking his head, with a deep sigh, and looking earnestly into the girl's face, but without any appearance of surprise,--"No; you are not Paolina Foscarelli." "Indeed, father, that is my name," said Paolina, again recurring to her doubt whether the monk was altogether of sound mind, and speaking very quietly and gently; "my father's name was Foscarelli, and the baptismal name of my mother was the same as mine--Paolina." "Jacopo and Paolina Foscarelli, who lived in the little house at the corner of the Campo di San Pietro and Paolo," rejoined the monk, speaking in a dreamy far-away kind of manner.
"I have truly heard that they lived there," said she; "but I was only four years old when they died, one very soon after the other, and since that I have lived with a friend of my mother's, Signora Steno." "The child of Jacopo and Paolina Foscarelli," said the monk, in the same dreamy tone, and pressing his thin emaciated hands before his eyes as he spoke; "and you have come here to find me ?" "Nay, father, not to find you.


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