The equipage made a wide turn; the ladies and gentlemen upon the Jaquelin

porch fluttered fans and handkerchiefs; the Colonel, leaning from the

coach window, waved his hand; and the horseman lifted his hat the second

time. The very especial guests were gone; and though the remainder of the

afternoon was as merry as heart could wish, yet a bouquet, a flavor, a

tang of the Court and the great world, a breath of air that was not

colonial, had gone with them. For a moment the women stood in a brown

study, revolving in their minds Mistress Evelyn's gypsy hat and the

exceeding thinness and fineness of her tucker; while to each of the

younger men came, linked to the memory of a charming face, a vision of

many-acred Westover.

But the trumpet blew, summoning them to the sport of the afternoon, and

work stopped upon castles in Spain. When a horse-race was on, a meadow in

Virginia sufficed.




readonlinefreebook.com Copyright 2016 - 2024