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Going Some

Creator: Beach, Rex Ellingwood, 1877-1949
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curled his black silken mustaches to needle-points. "It's that romantic Spaniard!" whispered Helen. "What does he want?" "It's his afternoon call on Mariedetta, the maid," said Jean. "They meet there twice a day, morning and afternoon." "A lovers' tryst!" breathed Miss Blake, eagerly. "Isn't he graceful and picturesque! Can we watch them?" "'Sh-h! There she comes!" From the opposite direction appeared a slim, swarthy Mexican girl, an Indian water-jug balanced upon her shoulders. She was clad in the straight-hanging native garment, belted in with a sash; her feet were in sandals, and she moved as silently as a shadow. During the four days since Miss Blake's arrival at the Flying Heart Ranch she had seen Mariedetta flitting noiselessly here and there, but had never heard her speak. The pretty, expressionless face beneath its straight black hair had ever retained its wooden stolidity, the velvety eyes had not laughed nor frowned nor sparkled. She seemed to be merely a part of this far southwestern
Some Remarks on the Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Written by Mr. William Shakespeare (1736)

Series Three: _Essays on the Stage_ No. 3 Anonymous [attributed to Thomas Hanmer], _Some Remarks on the Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Written by Mr. William Shakespeare_ (1736). With an Introduction by Clarence D. Thorpe and a Bibliographical Note The Augustan Reprint Society September, 1947 _Price_: 75c
picture; a bit of inanimate yet breathing local color. Now, however, the girl dropped her jug, and with a low cry glided to her lover, who tossed aside his cigarette and took her in his arms. From this distance their words were indistinguishable. "How perfectly romantic," said the Eastern girl, breathlessly. "I had no idea Mariedetta could love anybody." "She is a volcano," Jean answered. "Why, it's like a play!" "And it goes on all the time." "How gentle and sweet he is! I think he is charming. He is not at all like the other cowboys, is he?" While the two witnesses of the scene were eagerly discussing it, Joy, the Chinese cook, emerged from the kitchen bearing a bucket of water, his presence hidden from the lovers by the corner of the building. Carara languidly released his inamorata from his embrace and lounged out of sight around the building, pausing at the farther corner to waft her a graceful kiss from the ends of his fingers, as with a farewell flash of his white teeth he disappeared. Mariedetta recovered her water-jug and glided onward into the court in front of the cook-house, her face masklike, her