Innocent A Tale of Modern Life Author:Mrs. Oliphant General Books publication date: 2009 Original publication date: 1873 Original Publisher: Harper Subjects: Fiction / General Fiction / Classics Fiction / Literary Juvenile Nonfiction / Transportation / General Literary Criticism / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh Transportation / General Notes: This is a black and whi... more »te OCR reprint of the original. It has no illustrations and there may be typos or missing text. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. Excerpt: All this took place on the evening when Frederick Eastwood arrived in Pisa. From his chamber, where he was already asleep, and from the windows of the Casa Piccolomini, might have been seen the faint light in the third-floor windows which marked where the lonely girl was sitting. She was all by herself, and she did not know, as Mrs. Drainham said, what the meaning of the word friend was. But I must turn this page, and make a new beginning before I can tell you what manner of lonely soul this poor Innocent was. CHAPTER VII. The Palazzo Scaramucci. A Long, bare room, the walls painted in distemper, with a running border of leaves and flowers, and the same design running across the rafters overhead; three huge windows, with small panes, draped with old brocaded hangings round the top, but without either blinds or curtains to shut out the cloudy glimpses of the sky; very sparely furnished; some old cabinets and rococo tables by the walls, some old settees and chairs, which had once been handsome; the floor tiled with red triangular tiles, with pieces of carpet before the sofas. At one end a stove, which opened to show the little fire, erected upon a stone slab like a door-step, and with an ugly piece of black tube going almost horizontally into the wall, had been added for the advantage of the English forestieri, who insisted -- benighted northern people -- upon such access...« less