Poor Therese had been told the sad story of the mother she had never known, and of whom no relics remained but some silky black hair, a ring, and that singular brooch—an ornament so unlike anything she had ever seen, and which was graven with a legend in a language to her so strange and barbarous; and her heart yearned for a further knowledge of whom she was, and whence she came, and for that mother's kiss, of which, though it had been planted a thousand times upon her little lips, she had no memory; and at times she mourned for that father she had never seen. Then it seemed so odd, so strange, so grievous that she could have any other father than the dear, kind old baron, for whom she had a love and reverence so filial and so strong.
But to resume.
"The evening lags, as if the sun would never set," yawned the petulant little beauty. "What shall we do with ourselves—speak, you provoking Nanon?"
"Play," was the pithy reply.
"I have played everything that came last from Paris, and my piano is now frightfully out of tune—the chords are fallen."
"Read."
"I have read MM. Marivaux, Bernis, and Jean Jacques de Rousseau till I am sick of them."
"Draw."
"It makes my head ache, and the Abbé Boissy says it will spoil my eyes, in which he seems to take a poetical interest."
"Sing."