[A Siren by Thomas Adolphus Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
A Siren

CHAPTER VI
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Talk was engendered,--talk of an undesirable description; and this was excessively disagreeable to the Marchese, who had views for his nephew which might be seriously compromised by it.

A liaison of the kind, let the real nature of it be what it would, was in any case discreditable to his nephew and heir, and damaging more or less to the position which he wished to see the young man occupy in the town.

It was especially so, as has been said, at the present conjuncture.
Then, of course, it could not be otherwise than injurious to the girl.
She had, in some sort, been recommended to his care.

And it disturbed him much, that the conduct of his nephew should be the means of damaging her reputation.
Yet the Marchese, being a man of sense, knew very well that it would not have done any good to attempt to exercise any such authority over the young man as to forbid him to visit the lodging of the Venetians.

In the first place, such a step would, according to the notions and ways of looking at things of the society in which he lived, have placed him himself in a very ridiculous light;--a danger which was not to be contemplated for an instant! And, besides, the Marchese was very well aware that even if such an attempt did not cause his nephew to assume a position of open rebellion, it would only have the effect of making him do secretly and still more objectionably what he did, as it was, comparatively openly.
Comparatively, it must be said; for Ludovico was very much more frequently at the little house in the Strada di S.Eufemia than his uncle wotted of.
Not much more frequently, however, than was very well known by most of his contemporaries and fellow-habitues of the Circolo,--by pretty well the whole of the "society" of Ravenna, that is to say.


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