Tante

Tante

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Tante by Anne Douglas Sedgwick

Published:

1911

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Tante

By

3
(1 Review)

Book Excerpt

n. He sat twisting the moustache now, leaning his head to listen, amidst the babel of voices, to Betty Jardine's chatter, and the thrills of infectious expectancy that passed over the audience like breezes over a corn-field left him unaffected. His observant, indifferent glance had in it something of the schoolboy's barbarian calm and something of the disabused impersonality of worldly experience.

"Who is the young lady with Mrs. Forrester?" he asked presently. "In white, with yellow hair. Just in front of us. Do you know?"

Betty had leaned forward to look. "Don't you even know her by sight?" she said. "That is Miss Woodruff, the girl who follows Madame Okraska everywhere. She attached herself to her years ago, I believe, in Rome or Paris;--some sort of little art-student she was. What a bore that sort of devotion must be. Isn't she queer?"

"I had heard that she's an adopted daughter," said Captain Ashton; "the child of Norwegian peasants, and that Madame Okraska found her in a Norwegian

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A barrister falls in love with the often neglected ward of a celebrity pianist -- a rock star of her era -- and she with him; they marry, but when he doesn't fall in among the worshippers of the volatile star, the famous woman takes him in dislike and comes between the couple, exacerbating the inevitable conflicts between a young woman reared among artists and Bohemians around Europe and a man out of the staid English upper classes. The writing is well done and the characterizations good, but not enough happens to make it really interesting.