[The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas (Pere)]@TWC D-Link book
The Black Tulip

CHAPTER 16
7/7

"Teach me to read and write.

I shall make the best of your lessons, believe me; and, in this way, we shall never be separated any more, except by our own will." "Oh, then, we have an eternity before us," said Cornelius.
Rosa smiled, and quietly shrugged her shoulders.
"Will you remain for ever in prison ?" she said, "and after having granted you your life, will not his Highness also grant you your liberty?
And will you not then recover your fortune, and be a rich man, and then, when you are driving in your own coach, riding your own horse, will you still look at poor Rosa, the daughter of a jailer, scarcely better than a hangman ?" Cornelius tried to contradict her, and certainly he would have done so with all his heart, and with all the sincerity of a soul full of love.
She, however, smilingly interrupted him, saying, "How is your tulip going on ?" To speak to Cornelius of his tulip was an expedient resorted to by her to make him forget everything, even Rosa herself.
"Very well, indeed," he said, "the coat is growing black, the sprouting has commenced, the veins of the bulb are swelling, in eight days hence, and perhaps sooner, we may distinguish the first buds of the leaves protruding.

And yours Rosa ?" "Oh, I have done things on a large scale, and according to your directions." "Now, let me hear, Rosa, what you have done," said Cornelius, with as tender an anxiety as he had lately shown to herself.
"Well," she said, smiling, for in her own heart she could not help studying this double love of the prisoner for herself and for the black tulip, "I have done things on a large scale; I have prepared a bed as you described it to me, on a clear spot, far from trees and walls, in a soil slightly mixed with sand, rather moist than dry without a fragment of stone or pebble." "Well done, Rosa, well done." "I am now only waiting for your further orders to put in the bulb, you know that I must be behindhand with you, as I have in my favour all the chances of good air, of the sun, and abundance of moisture." "All true, all true," exclaimed Cornelius, clapping his hands with joy, "you are a good pupil, Rosa, and you are sure to gain your hundred thousand guilders." "Don't forget," said Rosa, smiling, "that your pupil, as you call me, has still other things to learn besides the cultivation of tulips." "Yes, yes, and I am as anxious as you are, Rosa, that you should learn to read." "When shall we begin ?" "At once." "No, to-morrow." "Why to-morrow ?" "Because to-day our hour is expired, and I must leave you." "Already?
But what shall we read ?" "Oh," said Rosa, "I have a book,--a book which I hope will bring us luck." "To-morrow, then." "Yes, to-morrow." On the following evening Rosa returned with the Bible of Cornelius de Witt..


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books