Plornish, going up this yard alone and leaving his Principal outside, found a gentleman with tight drab legs, a rather old hat, a little hooked stick, and a blue neckerchief (Captain
Maroon of Gloucestershire, a private friend of Captain Barbary); who happened to be there, in a friendly way, to mention these little circumstances concerning the remarkably fine grey gelding to any real judge of a horse and quick snapper-up of a good thing, who might look in at that address as per advertisement.
It was not the dress, but the face and whole figure of Princess Mary that was not pretty, but neither Mademoiselle Bourienne nor the little princess felt this; they still thought that if a blue ribbon were placed in the hair, the hair combed up, and the blue scarf arranged lower on the best
maroon dress, and so on, all would be well.
She had removed the handkerchief, and had put on a little cap with pink ribbons, and a
maroon dressing-jacket, daintily fulled at the neck and sleeves.
Caroline shook her loose ringlets of abundant but somewhat coarse hair over her rolling black eyes; parting her lips, as full as those of a hot-blooded
Maroon, she showed her well-set teeth sparkling between them, and treated me at the same time to a smile "de sa facon." Beautiful as Pauline Borghese, she looked at the moment scarcely purer than Lucrece de Borgia.
All the rooms were painted alike, in salmon-colour with a high dado of
maroon; and there was in them an odour of disinfectants, mingling as the afternoon wore on with the crude stench of humanity.
She is up now, and dressed in her thick
maroon wrapper; over her shoulders (lest she should stray despite our watchfulness) is a shawl, not placed there by her own hands, and on her head a delicious mutch.
Opening from the chamber was a fine bathroom having a marble tub with perfumed water; so the boy, still dazed by the novelty of his surroundings, indulged in a good bath and then selected a
maroon velvet costume with silver buttons to replace his own soiled and much worn clothing.
"You must
maroon me as soon as ever you can get amongst these islands off the Cambodge shore," he went on.
Jo in
maroon, with a stiff, gentlemanly linen collar, and a white chrysanthemum or two for her only ornament.
Put 'em ashore like
maroons? That would have been England's way.
Three days from the spot where Tarzan had been
marooned the Kincaid came to anchor in the mouth of a great river, and presently Rokoff came to Jane Clayton's cabin.
He told how his vessel had been run down by a steamer; how he had been boarded by Malay pirates; how his ship had caught fire; how he helped a political prisoner escape from a South African republic; how he had been wrecked one fall on the Magdalens and stranded there for the winter; how a tiger had broken loose on board ship; how his crew had mutinied and
marooned him on a barren island--these and many other tales, tragic or humorous or grotesque, did Captain Jim relate.