reiterating, they passed round the corner of the
Castle buildings, and were lost to Maria Dolores' view.
III
That afternoon, seated on the moss, under a tall eucalyptus tree near to
Frau Brandt's pavilion, Maria Dolores received a visit from Annunziata.
Annunziata's pale little face was paler, her big grave eyes were graver,
even than their wont. She nodded her head, slowly, portentously; and her
glance was heavy with significance.
Maria Dolores smiled. "What is the matter?" she cheerfully inquired.
"Ah," sighed Annunziata, deeply, with another portentous head-shake, "I
wish I knew."
Maria Dolores laughed. "Sit down," she suggested, making room beside her
on the moss, "and try to think."
Annunziata sat down, curled herself up. "Something has happened to
Prospero," she said, _de profundis_.
"Oh?" asked Maria Dolores. "What?" She seemed heartlessly cheerful, and
even rather amused.
"Ah," sighed Annunziata, "that is what I wish I knew. He has had a
friend to pass the day with him."
"Yes?" said Maria Dolores. "I expect I saw his friend walking with him
this morning?"
"_Gia_," said Annunziata. "They have been walking about all day. _His_
friend Prospero he calls him. But he doesn't look very prosperous. He
looks like a slate-pencil. He is long and thin, and dark and cold, and
hard, just like a slate-pencil. He would not stay the night, though we
had a bed prepared for him. He is going to Rome, and Prospero has driven
him to the railway station at Cortello. I hate him," wound up
Annunziata, simply.
"Mercy!" exclaimed Maria Dolores, opening her eyes. "Why do you hate
him?"
"Because he must have said or done something very unkind to Prospero,"
answered Annunziata. "Oh, you should see him. He is so sad--so sad and
so angry. He keeps scowling, and shaking his head, and saying things in
English, which I cannot understand, but I am sure they are sad things
and angry things. And he would not eat any dinner,--no, not that much,"
(Annunziata measured off an in
Notka biograficzna
Helen Fraser (born Oldham, Lancashire 1942) is an English actress, a familiar face in many television comedies and dramas from the 1960s to the present. She is best known to television viewers for her long-running role in the ITV womens prison drama Bad Girls as unpleasant warder Sylvia Bodybag Hollamby from the very first episode in 1999 to the very last in 2006. She played the same role in the West End production of Bad Girls: The Musical in 2007.
recenzje filmów Duze czy małe domy wybór nalezy do ciebie. Kisling wesela Henryk Siemiradzki
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