The Man Who Laughs


google search for The Man Who Laughs

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
763 764 765 766 767

Quick Jump
1 236 472 708 944

grandeur. I enjoy that triumph. To be in love with Apollo--a fine  
effort, forsooth! Glory is to be measured by the astonishment it  
creates. I love you. I have dreamt of you night after night. This is my  
palace. You shall see my gardens. There are fresh springs under the  
shrubs; arbours for lovers; and beautiful groups of marble statuary by  
Bernini. Flowers! there are too many--during the spring the place is on  
fire with roses. Did I tell you that the queen is my sister? Do what you  
like with me. I am made for Jupiter to kiss my feet, and for Satan to  
spit in my face. Are you of any religion? I am a Papist. My father,  
James II., died in France, surrounded by Jesuits. I have never felt  
before as I feel now that I am near you. Oh, how I should like to pass  
the evening with you, in the midst of music, both reclining on the same  
cushion, under a purple awning, in a gilded gondola on the soft expanse  
of ocean! Insult me, beat me, kick me, cuff me, treat me like a brute! I  
adore you."  
Caresses can roar. If you doubt it, observe the lion's. The woman was  
horrible, and yet full of grace. The effect was tragic. First he felt  
the claw, then the velvet of the paw. A feline attack, made up of  
advances and retreats. There was death as well as sport in this game of  
come and go. She idolized him, but arrogantly. The result was contagious  
frenzy. Fatal language, at once inexpressible, violent, and sweet. The  
insulter did not insult; the adorer outraged the object of adoration.  
She, who buffeted, deified him. Her tones imparted to her violent yet  
amorous words an indescribable Promethean grandeur. According to  
Æschylus, in the orgies in honour of the great goddess the women were  
smitten by this evil frenzy when they pursued the satyrs under the  
765  


Page
763 764 765 766 767

Quick Jump
1 236 472 708 944