Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.

Tragic Comedians, the — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 224 pages of information about Tragic Comedians, the — Complete.
with happiness.  For she had seen how suffering ate him up; he required no teaching in the Spartan virtue of suffering, wolf-gnawed, silently.  But he was a flower in sunshine to happiness, and he looked to her for it.  Why should she withhold from him a thing so easily given?  The convalescent is receptive and undesiring, or but very faintly desiring:  the new blood coming into the frame like first dawn of light has not stirred the old passions; it is infant nature, with a tinge of superadded knowledge that is not cloud across it and lends it only a tender wistfulness.

Her physician sentenced her to the Alps, whither a friend, a daughter of our island, whose acquaintance she had made in Italy, was going, and at an invitation Clotilde accompanied her, and she breathed Alpine air.  Marko sank into the category of dreams during sickness.  There came a letter from the professor mentioning that Alvan was on one of the kingly Alpine heights in view, and the new blood running through her veins became a torrent.  He there!  So near!  Could he not be reached?

He had a saying:  Two wishes make a will.

The wishes of two lovers, he meant.  A prettier sentence for lovers, and one more intoxicating to them, was never devised.  It chirrups of the dear silly couple.  Well, this was her wish.  Was it his?  Young health on the flow of her leaping blood cried out that it could not be other than Alvan’s wish; she believed in his wishing it.  Then as he wished and she wished, she had the will immediately, and it was all the more her own for being his as well.  She hurried her friend and her friend’s friends on horseback off to the heights where the wounded eagle lodged overlooking mountain and lake.  The professor reported him outwearied with excess of work.  Alvan lived the lives of three; the sins of thirty were laid to his charge.  Do you judge of heroes as of lesser men?  Her reckless defence of him, half spoken, half in her mind, helped her to comprehend his dealings with her, and how it was that he stormed her and consented to be beaten.  He had a thousand occupations, an ambition out of the world of love, chains to break, temptations, leanings . . . tut, tut!  She had not lived in her circle of society, and listened to the tales of his friends and enemies, and been the correspondent of flattering and flattered men of learning, without understanding how a man like Alvan found diversions when forbidden to act in a given direction:  and now that her healthful new blood inspired the courage to turn two wishes to a will, she saw both herself and him very clearly, enough at least to pardon the man more than she did herself.  She had perforce of her radiant new healthfulness arrived at an exact understanding of him.  Where she was deluded was in supposing that she would no longer dread his impetuous disposition to turn rosy visions into facts.  But she had the revived convalescent’s ardour to embrace things positive while they were not knocking at the door; dreams were abhorrent to her, tasteless and innutritious; she cast herself on the flood, relying on his towering strength and mastery of men and events to bring her to some safe landing—­the dream of hearts athirst for facts.

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Tragic Comedians, the — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.