The Princess Passes eBook

Alice Muriel Williamson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about The Princess Passes.

The Princess Passes eBook

Alice Muriel Williamson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about The Princess Passes.
especially if that person has studied cheapness in all ways during his visit.  Perhaps the patron spoke somewhat irritably, for he did not care whether the monsieur ever came back to his house or not.  Then the monsieur paid the bill, without another word, and was going away, when a German gentleman, who had been sitting here in the garden, said to the patron:  ‘Do you know who that is?’ No,’ replied our patron, ’I do not know, nor do I care.’  ‘It is Baedeker,’ said the gentleman.  This was terrible; and the patron flew to correct the little mistake about the wine, with a thousand apologies; but the monsieur would not have his money back, and you saw him drive away.  Now, it is possible that our hotel will no longer keep its star, and that would be no less than a catastrophe.”

Evidently, what his cherished peacock-feather is to a Chinese mandarin, that is a Baedeker star to a hotel-keeper; and the Boy and I were so tickled at the little tragi-comedy that we forgot, as we walked on side by side, that we had been upon official terms only.

Again we were struck by the extraordinary individuality which differentiates one valley or mountain-pass from another.  We had seen nothing like this; nothing, perhaps, so purely beautiful.  One could not imagine that winter snow and ice could still the pulse of summer here.  It was as if we wandered from one green glade to another in fairyland, where all the little people who owned the magic land had turned themselves hurriedly into strangely delicate ferns and bluebells to watch us, laughing, as we went by.

The village of Trient lay in deep shadow when we reached it, and found the others waiting for us in the carriage in front of the chief hotel; but there was no gloom in the shadow; it was only a deeper shade of green, with a hint of transparent blue streaked across it.  Another remote, dream-village on the long list of places where I really must stay for a lazy summer month—­when I have time!  The list was growing long now, almost worryingly long, and the Boy felt it so, too, for he also had a list, and strange to say, it was much the same as mine.

We had tea, and were vaguely surprised to see a number of people of our own kind, most of them English and American, engaged in the same occupation, and evidently at home in the place.  Trient was on their list as well as ours, and now, if they liked, they could cross it off, and begin with the next place.

The Contessa thought the Boy looked tired, and urged him to drive again, but though his manner was still flirtatious he found an excuse to keep to his feet.  He was not really tired, not a bit; how could one be tired in so much beauty?  The poor horses were fagged though, for the carriage was heavy; he would not add to its weight.

“You are getting rather white about the gills,” I said to him when the driving party had once more left us behind.  “Why didn’t you take up your flirtation where you left it off, like a serial story to be ‘continued in your next’?  Your weight is nothing.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Princess Passes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.