[Trumps by George William Curtis]@TWC D-Link bookTrumps CHAPTER LV 2/7
The study for his great picture was simply an unfinished portrait of Hope Wayne. Aunt Winnifred, who sometimes came into her nephew's studio, saw the study one day, and exclaimed, sorrowfully, "Oh, Arthur! Arthur!" The young man, who was busily mixing colors upon his pallet, and humming, as he smoked, "'Tis my delight of a shiny night," turned in dismay, thinking his aunt was suddenly ill. "My dear aunt!" and he laid down his pallet and ran toward her. She was sitting in an armchair holding the study.
Arthur stopped. "My dear Arthur, now I understand all." Arthur Merlin was confused.
He, perhaps, suspected that his picture of Diana resembled a certain young lady.
But how should Aunt Winnifred know it, who, as he supposed, had never seen her? Besides, he felt it was a disagreeable thing, when he was and had been in love with a young lady for a long time, to have his aunt say that she understood all about it. How could she understand all about it? What right has any body to say that she understands all about it? He asked himself the petulant question because he was very sure that he himself did not by any means understand all about it. "What do you understand, Aunt Winnifred ?" demanded Arthur, in a resolute and defiant tone, as if he were fully prepared to deny every thing he was about to hear. "Yes, yes," continued Aunt Winnifred, musingly, and in a tone of profound sadness, as she still held and contemplated the picture--"yes; yes! I see, I see!" Arthur was quite vexed. "Now really my dear aunt," said he, remonstratingly, "you must be aware that it is not becoming in a woman like you to go on in this way.
You ought to explain what you mean," he added, decidedly. "Well, my poor boy, the hotter you get the surer I am.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|