White Shadows in the South Seas by Frederick O'Brien
page 272 of 457 (59%)
page 272 of 457 (59%)
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boughs, and the sluggish air was heavy with innumerable delicious
scents. I said to Mademoiselle N---- that the beauty of the islands was like that of a fantastic dream, an Arabian Night's tale. "Yes?" she said, with a note of weariness and irony. The feet of the horses made a sucking sound on the oozy ground. "I am half white," she said after a moment, and as the horses' hoofs struck the rocky trail again, she whipped up her mount and we galloped up the slope. After a time the trail widened into a road and I saw before us a queer enclosure. At first sight I thought it a wild-animal park. There were small houses like cages and a big, box-like structure in the center, all enclosed in a wire fence, a couple of acres in all. Drawing nearer, I saw that the houses were cabins painted in gaudy colors, and that the white box was a marble tomb of great size. Each slab of marble was rimmed with scarlet cement, and the top of the tomb, under a corrugated iron roof, was covered with those abominable bead-wreaths from Paris. Like the humbler Marquesans who have their coffins made and graves dug before their passing, Mademoiselle N----'s father had seen to it that this last resting-place was prepared while he lived, and he had placed it here in the center of his plantation, before the house that had been his home for thirty years. With something of his own crude strength and barbaric taste, it stood there, the grim reminder of her white father to the girl in whose veins his own blood mingled with that of the savage. She looked at it without emotion, and after I had surveyed it, we dismounted and she led me into her house. It was a neat and |
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