[Vittoria by George Meredith]@TWC D-Link book
Vittoria

CHAPTER XIII
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That did not the less encourage her to question Beppo rigorously forthwith; and as she was not to be deceived by an Italian's affectation of simplicity, she let him answer two or three times like a plain fool, and then abruptly accused him of standing prepared with these answers.

Beppo, within his own bosom, immediately ascribed to his sagacious instinct the mere spirit of opposition and dislike to serve any one save his own young mistress which had caused him to irritate the signora and be on his guard.

He proffered a candid admission of the truth of the charge; adding, that he stood likewise prepared with an unlimited number of statements.

'Questions, illustrious signora, invariably put me on the defensive, and seem to cry for a return thrust; and this I account for by the fact that my mother--the blessed little woman now among the Saints!--was questioned, brows and heels, by a ferruginously--faced old judge at the momentous period when she carried me.

So that, a question--and I show point; but ask me for a statement, and, ah, signora!' Beppo delivered a sweep of the arm, as to indicate the spontaneous flow of his tongue.
'I think,' said Laura, 'you have been a soldier, and a serving-man.' 'And a scene-shifter, most noble signora, at La Scala.' 'You accompanied the Signor Mertyrio to England when he was wounded ?' 'I did.' 'And there you beheld the Signorina Vittoria, who was then bearing the name of Emilia Belloni ?' 'Which name she changed on her arrival in Italy, illustrious signora, for that of Vittoria Campa--"sull' campo dells gloria"-- ah! ah!--her own name being an attraction to the blow-flies in her own country.


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