[The Beautiful Lady by Booth Tarkington]@TWC D-Link book
The Beautiful Lady

CHAPTER Six
4/14

Gallery after gallery swam before me, and the morning brought only more! What a ride it was to Venice that day! What magical airs we rode through, and what a thieving old trickster was time, as he always becomes when one wishes hours to be long! I think Poor Jr.

had made himself forget everything except that he was with her and that he must be a friend.

He committed a thousand ridiculousnesses at the stations; he filled one side of the compartment with the pretty chianti-bottles, with terrible cakes, and with fruits and flowers; he never ceased his joking, which had no tiresomeness in it, and he made the little journey one of continuing, happy laughter.
And that evening another of my foolish dreams came true! I sat in a gondola with the lady of the grey pongee to hear the singing on the Grand Canal;--not, it is true, at her feet, but upon a little chair beside her mother.

It was my place--to be, as I had been all day, escort to the mother, and guide and courier for that small party.

Contented enough was I to accept it! How could I have hoped that the Most Blessed Mother would grant me so much nearness as that?
It was not happiness that I felt, but something so much more precious, as though my heart-strings were the strings of a harp, and sad, beautiful arpeggios ran over them.
I could not speak much that evening, nor could Poor Jr.


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