[Led Astray and The Sphinx by Octave Feuillet]@TWC D-Link bookLed Astray and The Sphinx CHAPTER II 4/8
I followed with a smiling look the flying Amazon.
At the extremity of the avenue in which I had just failed to make her conquest, she turned abruptly to the left, to go and take a parallel road.
I only had to cross the adjoining thicket to see her overtake a cavalcade composed of ten or twelve persons, who seemed to be waiting for her, and to whom she shouted from a distance, in a broken voice: "Gentlemen! gentlemen! a wild man! there is a wild man in the forest!" My interest being highly excited by this beginning, I settle myself comfortably behind a thick bush, with eye and ear equally attentive.
They crowd around the lady; it is supposed at first that she is jesting, but her emotion is too serious to have been causeless.
She saw, distinctly saw, not exactly a savage, perhaps, but a man in rags, whose tattered blouse seemed covered with blood, whose face, hands, and whole person were repulsively filthy, whose beard was frightful, and whose eyes half protruded from their sockets; in short, an individual, by the side of whom the most atrocious of Salvator Rosa's brigands would be as one of Watteau's shepherds.
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