[The Romany Rye by George Borrow]@TWC D-Link book
The Romany Rye

CHAPTER XXVII
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." "Surely," said I, "you are not hankering after dog-fighting again, a sport which none but the gross and unrefined care anything for?
No, one's thoughts should be occupied by something higher and more rational than dog-fighting; and what better than love--divine love?
Oh, there's nothing like it!" "Pray, don't talk nonsense," said Francis Ardry.
"Nonsense," said I; "why, I was repeating, to the best of my recollection, what I heard you say on a former occasion." "If ever I talked such stuff," said Francis Ardry, "I was a fool; and indeed I cannot deny that I have been one: no, there is no denying that I have been a fool.

What do you think?
that false Annette has cruelly abandoned me." "Well," said I, "perhaps you have yourself to thank for her having done so; did you never treat her with coldness, and repay her marks of affectionate interest with strange fits of eccentric humour ?" "Lord! how little you know of women," said Francis Ardry; "had I done as you suppose, I should probably have possessed her at the present moment.
I treated her in a manner diametrically opposite to that.

I loaded her with presents, was always most assiduous to her, always at her feet, as I may say, yet she nevertheless abandoned me--and for whom?
I am almost ashamed to say--for a fiddler." I took a glass of wine, Francis Ardry followed my example, and then proceeded to detail to me the treatment which he had experienced from Annette, and from what he said, it appeared that her conduct to him had been in the highest degree reprehensible; notwithstanding he had indulged her in everything, she was never civil to him, but loaded him continually with taunts and insults, and had finally, on his being unable to supply her with a sum of money which she had demanded, decamped from the lodgings which he had taken for her, carrying with her all the presents which at various times he had bestowed upon her, and had put herself under the protection of a gentleman who played the bassoon at the Italian Opera, at which place it appeared that her sister had lately been engaged as a danseuse.

My friend informed me that at first he had experienced great agony at the ingratitude of Annette, but at last had made up his mind to forget her, and in order more effectually to do so, had left London with the intention of witnessing a fight, which was shortly coming off at a town in these parts, between some dogs and a lion; which combat, he informed me, had for some time past been looked forward to with intense eagerness by the gentlemen of the sporting world.
I commended him for his resolution, at the same time advising him not to give up his mind entirely to dog-fighting, as he had formerly done, but, when the present combat should be over, to return to his rhetorical studies, and above all to marry some rich and handsome lady on the first opportunity, as, with his person and expectations, he had only to sue for the hand of the daughter of a marquis to be successful, telling him with a sigh, that all women were not Annettes, and that upon the whole there was nothing like them.

To which advice he answered, that he intended to return to rhetoric as soon as the lion-fight should be over, but that he never intended to marry, having had enough of women; adding, that he was glad he had no sister, as, with the feelings which he entertained with respect to her sex, he should be unable to treat her with common affection, and concluded by repeating a proverb which he had learned from an Arab whom he had met at Venice, to the effect that "one who has been stung by a snake, shivers at the sight of a string." After a little more conversation, we strolled to the stable, where my horse was standing; my friend, who was a Connoisseur in horse-flesh, surveyed the animal with attention, and after inquiring where and how I had obtained him, asked what I intended to do with him; on my telling him that I was undetermined, and that I was afraid the horse was likely to prove a burden to me, he said, "It is a noble animal, and if you mind what you are about, you may make a small fortune by him.


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