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Vignettes: A Miniature Journal of Whim and Sentiment

Chapter 32: SEVILLE DANCING GIRLS
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About This Book

A series of brief, impressionistic sketches that record travel and everyday moments across towns and countryside. The pieces combine vivid sensory description—light, colour, smells, and sounds—with small character studies and snapshots of local life, from markets and festivals to quiet hours in churches and fields. The writing alternates playful whim and reflective sentiment, moving between urban bustle and pastoral stillness while attending to seasonal change and transient moods. Together the vignettes form a mosaic of place and moment, valuing mood, detail, and human gesture over narrative development.

SEVILLE DANCING GIRLS


December 10

The entertainment draws to its close, for it is past four in the morning. In the hall, several of the oil-lamps have already sputtered out; the rest are burning with dull, blear-eyed weariness. A score of unshaven Spaniards, close muffled in capas and lowering sombreros, sprawl in limp attitudes over the empty benches, and the circle of gaudy women that fill the stage sit listless, pasty-faced, somnolent.

And then, for the last time, the frenzy passes. The guitars start their sudden, bitter twanging, and the women their wild, rhythmical beating of hands.

Amid volleys of harsh, frenzied plaudits la Manolita dances, swaying her soft, girlish frame with a tense, exasperated restraint; supple as a serpent; coyly, subtly lascivious; languidly curling and uncurling her bare white arms.

Out in the cold night air, as I hasten home through the narrow, sleeping streets, her soft, girlish frame still sways before my eyes, to the bitter twanging of guitars.