"Well, let me hear. If it can be done it shall be done."
"Ah," sighed Ippolita, with a hand on her heart, "ah, but it cannot be done!"
"Then why speak of it?"
"Because I want so much to do it. Listen."
Then Ippolita, clinging to her friend's neck, whispered her darling thought. The goatherds on the hills! There was freedom—clean, untrammelled freedom! No philandering, for no one would know she was a girl; no ceremony, no grimacing, no stiff clothes; no hair-tiring—she must cut off her hair—no bathing, ah, Heaven! If she might go for a few months, a few weeks, until the hue and cry was over, until the signori had thought of a new game; then she would come back, and her father would be so glad of her that he would not beat her more than she could fairly stand. It was a great scheme; indeed it was the only way. But how to do? How to do?
"I suppose it is a dream of mine," sighed she, knotting her fingers in and out of the gold chains.
Annina said nothing, but frowned a good deal. "I see that you are not safe in Padua," she said in the end. "You are really too handsome, my child. You couldn't show your nose without being known and reported. You must go outside if you are to be in peace."
"But I can't go, Nannina; you know it as well as I do."
"I am not so sure. Do you mean what you say, Ippolita?"
"Ah, Nannina!"
"Then you shall go. It so happens that I know