
The Turquoise Cup, and, The Desert
"KHADIJA BELIEVES IN ME" - THE TURQUOISE CUP
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
THE DESERT
II
A richly imagined courtyard opens the story, where a dignified cardinal‑archbishop watches his pigeons from a shaded balcony, musing on the simplicity of their lives compared to his own lofty duties. His contemplations are interrupted by the arrival of a flamboyant English earl, a young man in trouble who speaks a mixture of Italian gestures and hesitant English, setting the stage for an unlikely dialogue between ecclesiastical solemnity and aristocratic anxiety.
The cardinal, ever the gracious host, offers tea and philosophical musings, while the earl’s nervous charm hints at deeper stakes hidden behind his polite embarrassment. Their conversation, laced with cultural misunderstandings and subtle humor, invites listeners into a world where politics, faith, and personal crises intersect under the gentle flutter of pigeon wings. As the first act unfolds, the stage is set for a tale that will explore loyalty, ambition, and the surprising connections forged in moments of vulnerability.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (148K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1852–1926
Best known for elegant, imaginative short stories, this Rochester lawyer-turned-writer published The Monk and the Dancer and The Turquoise Cup, works that earned warm praise in his day. His fiction often blends atmosphere, wit, and a taste for the dramatic.
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