icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Vixen

Chapter 5 Rorie makes a Speech

Word Count: 2168    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

in full dress just about ten minutes before the first of the guests was announced, Lady Jane received him with a calm affectionateness, and asked him no questions about his disposal of th

d; all the arrangements perfect; the menu commend

favourite nephew; Lady Mabel looking very fragile, flower-like, and graceful, in her pale blue gauze dinner-dress. Lad

treating him with a calm superiority

s they sat side by side on one of the amber

, of course,"

at impressed you most vividly? Your first view of Mont Bla

come to think of it. They're all blue, and they're all wet. And Swiss villages, now - don't you think they are rather disappointing? - such a cruel plagiarism of those plaster chalets the

disgusted look. "I don't think you ha

n't," replied

ur heart thrilled or your mind exalted - you can come home

ave hardly tune to feel the thrill when I came bump up against a party of tourists, English or American, all talking the same twaddle, and all patronising the scenery. That took the charm out of the landsc

Mabel, "but I confess my disappointment. I thought w

If it's so lovely that one can't live w

ly with a great fan of cloudy looking feathers, such as Titania might have used that midsummer night

y. He was no longer a beardless boy, to be patronised with that gracious elder-sister air of L

lock with my aunt, and found her quite anxious about you. If it hadn't been for y

hree o'clock," answered Rorie coolly; "my

uggage on before, and

fway between here and Lyndhu

d Mabel. "I should have thoug

t seven o'clock, to be speechified about and rendered generally ridiculous, after the mann

d Mabel, with her blue eyes sparkling. "I see.

st rode to hounds it was under his wing. There's my moth

he spot where his mother stood, with the Duke

ns upon this horse-shoe table made the finest floricultural show that had been seen for a long time. There were rare specimens from New Granada and the Philippine Islands; wondrous flowers lately discovered in the Sierra Madre; blossoms of every shape and colour from the Cordilleras; richest varieties of hue - golden yellow, glowing crimson, creamy white; rare eccentricities of form and colour beside which any other flower would have loo

ening," Rorie said afterwards. "It

d-by, when the monster double-crowned pines had been cut, and t

attain his majority, he, the Duke, could have hardly felt a deeper interest in the occasion than he felt to-day. He had - arra - arra - known this young

it implied that an English gentleman must ne

orthy thought and yet pass current, according to the loose mo

subdued gush of approval, and then an uncomfortable little pause, and

useful and to do good in this little spot of England which Providence had given him for his inheritance. How, if he should go into Parliament by-and-by, as he had some thoughts o

y I live and die and be buried here. I have just come back from seeing some of the finest scenery in Europe; yet, without blushing for my want of poetry, I will confess that the awful grandeur of those snow-clad mountains did not touch my heart so deeply as our beechen glades and primrose-carpeted bottoms close at home." There was a burst of applause af

in their native soil nowadays, as they used to be in the old stage-coach times, when it was a long day's journey to London. One might as well be a vegetable at once if one is to be pinned down to one particular spot of earth. Why, the Twelve Apostl

like one of those trees, than be a homeless nomad with a worl

you spend so li

. The Forest is my home, and Briarwood is

s the Abbey Ho

eases me better than this abode of straight lines a

welvemonth's legitimate usage would have done. People, looking at the pretty pair, smiled significantly, and concluded that it would be a match, and went home and told less privileged people about the evident att

ort of thing - nothing concrete, or that came to a focus; a succession of airy meanderings, a fairy dance in the treble, a goblin hunt in the bass. But the French chansons, the dainty little melodies with words of infantile innocenc

ype="

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
Vixen
Vixen
“The moon had newly risen, a late October moon, a pale almost imperceptible crescent, above the dark pine spires in the thicket through which Roderick Vawdrey came, gun in hand, after a long day’s rabbit-shooting. It was not his nearest way home, but he liked the broad clearing in the pine wood, which had a ghostly look at dusk, and was so still and lonely that the dart of a squirrel through the fallen leaves was a startling event.”
1 Volume i. Chapter 1 A Pretty Horsebreaker2 Chapter 2 Lady Jane Vawdrey3 Chapter 3 "I Want a Little Serious Talk with You."4 Chapter 4 Rorie comes of Age5 Chapter 5 Rorie makes a Speech6 Chapter 6 How she took the News7 Chapter 7 Rorie has Plans of his own8 Chapter 8 Glas ist der Erde Stolz und Glück9 Chapter 9 A House of Mourning10 Chapter 10 Captain Winstanley11 Chapter 11 "It shall be Measure for Measure."12 Chapter 12 "I have no Wrong, where I can claim no Right."13 Chapter 13 "He belongs to the Tame–Cat Species."14 Chapter 14 "He was worthy to be loved a Lifetime."15 Chapter 15 Lady Southminster's Ball16 Chapter 16 Rorie asks a Question17 Chapter 17 Where the Red King was slain18 Volume ii. Chapter 1 "Shall I tell you the Secret"19 Chapter 2 Wedding Garments20 Chapter 3 "I shall look like the wicked Fairy."21 Chapter 4 The Vow is vowed22 Chapter 5 War to the Knife23 Chapter 6 At the Kennels24 Chapter 7 A Bad Beginning25 Chapter 8 On Half Rations26 Chapter 9 The Owner of Bullfinch27 Chapter 10 Something like a Ride28 Chapter 11 Rorie objects to Duets29 Chapter 1230 Chapter 1331 Chapter 1432 Chapter 1533 Chapter 1634 Volume iii. Chapter 135 Chapter 2 Chiefly Financial36 Chapter 337 Chapter 438 Chapter 539 Chapter 640 Chapter 741 Chapter 842 Chapter 943 Chapter 1044 Chapter 1145 Epilogue