My Friend Prospero eBook

Henry Harland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 202 pages of information about My Friend Prospero.

My Friend Prospero eBook

Henry Harland
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 202 pages of information about My Friend Prospero.

Now, as he paused, John, with a glance of gay astonishment, halted, and turned so as to face him.  John’s lips moved, and it was perfectly plain that he was exclaiming, delightedly, “Really? Really?”

Winthorpe joyously nodded:  whereupon John held out both hands, got hold of his friend’s, and, his pink face jubilant, shook them with tremendous heartiness.

“The priest has received advancement—­he is probably to be made a bishop,” inferred Maria Dolores; “and Signor Prospero is congratulating him.”

The men resumed their walk; but for quite a minute John kept his hand on Winthorpe’s shoulder, and again and again gently patted it, murmuring, “I am so glad, so immensely glad.”  Maria Dolores was quite sure that this was what he murmured, for, though no word could reach her, John’s beaming face spoke louder than his voice.

At last John let his hand drop, and, eyebrows raised a little, asked a question.

“But how did it happen?  But tell me all about it,” was what he seemed to say.

And Winthorpe (always with something of that ecstatic light in his eyes) proceeded to answer.  But it was a longish story, and lasted through half a dozen of their forward and backward ambulations.  Apparently, furthermore, it was a story which, as it developed, became less and less agreeable to the mind of John; for his face, at first all awake with interest, all aglow with pleasure, gradually sobered, gradually darkened, took on a frown, expressed dissent, expressed disapprobation, till, finally, with an impatient movement, he interrupted, and began—­speaking rapidly, heatedly—­to protest, to remonstrate.

“Ah,” thought Maria Dolores, “the priest is to be made a bishop, sure enough,—­but a missionary bishop.  It isn’t for nothing that he looks like an early Christian martyr.  He is going to some outlandish, savage part of the world, where he will be murdered by the natives, or die of fever or loneliness.  He is a man who has listened to the Counsels of Perfection.  But his unascetic friend Prospero (one would say June remonstrating with December) can’t bring himself to like it.”

John remonstrated, protested, argued.  Winthorpe, calmly, smilingly, restated his purpose and his motives.  John pleaded, implored, appealed (so the watcher read his gesture) to earth, to heaven.  Winthorpe took his arm, and calmly, smilingly, tried to soothe, tried to convince him.  John drew his arm free, and, employing it to add force and persuasiveness to his speech, renewed his arguments, pointed out how unnecessary, inhuman, impossible the whole thing was.  “It’s monstrous.  It’s against all nature.  There’s no reason in it.  What does it rhyme with?  It’s wilfully going out of your way to seek, to create, wretchedness.  My mind simply refuses to accept it.”  It was as if Maria Dolores could hear the words.  But Winthorpe, calm and smiling, would not be moved.  John shook his head, muttered, shrugged his shoulders, threw up his hands, muttered again.  “Was ever such pig-headed obstinacy!  Was ever such arbitrary, voluntary blindness!  I give you up, for a perverse, a triple-pated madman!” And so, John muttering and frowning, Winthorpe serenely smiling, reiterating, they passed round the corner of the Castle buildings, and were lost to Maria Dolores’ view.

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Project Gutenberg
My Friend Prospero from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.