You are here

قراءة كتاب Clementina

تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"

‏اللغة: English
Clementina

Clementina

تقييمك:
0
No votes yet
دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 1


Clementina

By A.E.W. Mason
Author of "The Courtship of Morrice Buckler" "Parson Kelly" etc.
Illustrated by Bernard Partridge

New York
Frederick A. Stokes Company Publishers

[pg iii]

1901
THIRD EDITION
UNIVERSITY PRESS JOHN WILSON AND SON, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.

[pg iv]

THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED
TO
ANDREW LANG, ESQ.
AS A TOKEN OF MUCH
FRIENDSHIP

[pg v]

CONTENTS

Chapter
I. A Chance Meeting
II. Bad News
III. Wogan Makes A Proposal
IV. Shows That There Are Better Hiding-Places Than A Window-Curtain
V. Shows That A Dishonest Landlord Should Avoid White Paint
VI. Wogan Continues His Journey
VII. Wogan Is Mistaken For A More Notable Man
VIII. At Schlestadt
IX. Gaydon Minds His Own Business
X. A Month Of Waiting
XI. The Prince Of Baden Visits Clementina
XII. The Night Of The 27th. In The Streets Of Innspruck
XIII. The Night Of The 27th. In Clementina's Apartments
XIV. The Escape
XV. The Flight To Italy: Wogan's City Of Dreams
XVI. The Flight To Italy: The Potent Effects Of A Water-Jug
XVII. The Flight To Italy: A Growing Cloud
XVIII. Wogan And Clementina Continue Their Journey Alone
XIX. The Attack At Peri
XX. The God Of The Machine Does Not Appear
XXI. Complications At Bologna
XXII. Clementina Takes Mr. Wogan To Visit The Caprara Palace
XXIII. Wogan Learns That He Has Meddled
XXIV. Maria Vittoria Reappears
XXV. The Last
The Epilogue

[pg 1]

CLEMENTINA

CHAPTER I

The landlord, the lady, and Mr. Charles Wogan were all three, it seemed, in luck's way that September morning of the year 1719. Wogan was not surprised, his luck for the moment was altogether in, so that even when his horse stumbled and went lame at a desolate part of the road from Florence to Bologna, he had no doubt but that somehow fortune would serve him. His horse stepped gingerly on for a few yards, stopped, and looked round at his master. Wogan and his horse were on the best of terms. "Is it so bad as that?" said he, and dismounting he gently felt the strained leg. Then he took the bridle in his hand and walked forward, whistling as he walked.

Yet the place and the hour were most unlikely to give him succour. It was early morning, and he walked across an empty basin of the hills. The sun was not visible, though the upper air was golden and the green peaks of the hills rosy. The basin itself was filled with a broad uncoloured light, and lay naked to it and extraordinarily still. There were as yet no shadows; the road rose and dipped across low [pg 2] ridges of turf, a ribbon of dead and unillumined white; and the grass at any distance from the road had the darkness of peat. He led his horse forward for perhaps a mile, and then turning a corner by a knot of trees came unexpectedly upon a wayside inn. In front of the inn stood a travelling carriage with its team of horses. The backs of the horses

Pages