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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's
+Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: August 23, 2011 [EBook #37178]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Katherine Becker and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,
+
+ LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES,
+
+ AND
+
+ OTHER STORIES.
+
+ BY "OUIDA,"
+
+ AUTHOR OF "IDALIA," "STRATHMORE," "CHANDOS,"
+ "GRANVILLE DE VIGNE," ETC.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1900.
+
+
+
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,
+
+ AND OTHER STORIES.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+The Publishers have the pleasure of offering to the many admirers of the
+writings of "Ouida," the present volume of Contributions, which have
+appeared from time to time in the leading Journals of Europe, and which
+have recently been collected and revised by the author, for publication
+in book-form.
+
+They have also in press, to be speedily published, another similar
+volume of tales, from the same pen, together with an unpublished romance
+entitled "UNDER TWO FLAGS."
+
+Our editions of Ouida's Works are published by express arrangement with
+the author; and any other editions that may appear in the American
+market will be issued in violation of the courtesies usually extended
+both to authors and publishers.
+
+PHILADELPHIA, MAY, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE; OR, THE STORY OF A BROIDERED SHIELD 11
+
+ LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS; OR, OUR MALTESE PEERAGE 37
+
+ LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES; OR, THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.--
+ _In Three Seasons_:--
+ Season the First.--The Eligible 84
+ Season the Second.--The Ogre 121
+ Season the Third.--The Climax 164
+
+ A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUINZE; OR, PENDANT TO A PASTEL BY LA TOUR 211
+ I. The First Morning 212
+ II. The Second Morning 218
+ III. Midnight 227
+
+ "DEADLY DASH." A STORY TOLD ON THE OFF DAY. 235
+
+ THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING; OR, COACHES AND COUSINSHIP 265
+
+ THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD; OR, A DOUBLED-DOWN LEAF IN A MAN'S
+ LIFE 306
+
+ THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR; OR, NOT AT ALL A PROPER PERSON 339
+
+ A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUATORZE: PENDANT TO A PORTRAIT BY MIGNARD 368
+
+
+
+
+CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE;
+
+OR,
+
+THE STORY OF A BROIDERED SHIELD.
+
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of her county and her line, the
+handsomest of all the handsome women that had graced her race, when she
+moved, a century and a half ago, down the stately staircase, and through
+the gilded and tapestried halls of Lilliesford. The Town had run mad
+after her, and her face levelled politics, and was cited as admiringly
+by the Whigs at St. James's as by the Tories at the Cocoa-tree, by the
+beaux and Mohocks at Garraway's as by the alumni at the Grecian, by the
+wits at Will's as by the fops at Ozinda's.
+
+Wherever she went, whether to the Haymarket or the Opera, to the 'Change
+for a fan or the palace for a state ball, to Drury Lane to see Pastoral
+Philips's dreary dilution of Racine, or to some fair chief of her
+faction for basset and ombre, she was surrounded by the best men of her
+time, and hated by Whig beauties with virulent wrath, for she was a Tory
+to the backbone, indeed a Jacobite at heart; worshipped Bolingbroke,
+detested Marlborough and Eugene, believed in all the horrors of the
+programme said to have been plotted by the Whigs for the anniversary
+show of 1711, and was thought to have prompted the satire on those fair
+politicians who are disguised as _Rosalinda_ and _Nigranilla_ in the
+81st paper of the _Spectator_.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the greatest beauty of her day, lovelier still at
+four-and-twenty than she had been at seventeen, unwedded, though the
+highest coronets in the land had been offered to her; far above the
+coquetteries and minauderies of her friends, far above imitation of the
+affectations of "Lady Betty Modley's skuttle," or need of practising the
+Fan exercise; haughty, peerless, radiant, unwon--nay, more--untouched;
+for the finest gentleman on the town could not flatter himself that he
+had ever stirred the slightest trace of interest in her, nor boast, as
+he stood in the inner circle at the Chocolate-house (unless, indeed, he
+lied more impudently than Tom Wharton himself), that he had ever been
+honored by a glance of encouragement from the Earl's daughter. She was
+too proud to cheapen herself with coquetry, too fastidious to care for
+her conquests over those who whispered to her through Nicolini's song,
+vied to have the privilege of carrying her fan, drove past her windows
+in Soho Square, crowded about her in St. James's Park, paid court even
+to her little spaniel Indamara, and, to catch but a glimpse of her
+brocaded train as it swept a ball-room floor, would leave even their
+play at the Groom Porter's, Mrs. Oldfield in the green-room, a night
+hunt with Mohun and their brother Mohocks, a circle of wits gathered
+"within the steam of the coffeepot" at Will's, a dinner at Halifax's, a
+supper at Bolingbroke's,--whatever, according to their several tastes,
+made their best entertainment and was hardest to quit.
+
+The highest suitors of the day sought her smile and sued for her hand;
+men left the Court and the Mall to join the Flanders army before the
+lines at Bouchain less for loyal love of England than hopeless love of
+Cecil Castlemaine. Her father vainly urged her not to fling away offers
+that all the women at St. James's envied her. She was untouched and
+unwon, and when her friends, the court beauties, the fine ladies, the
+coquettes of quality, rallied her on her coldness (envying her her
+conquests), she would smile her slight proud smile and bow her stately
+head. "Perhaps she was cold; she might be; they were personnable men? Oh
+yes! she had nothing to say against them. His Grace of Belamour?--A
+pretty wit, without doubt. Lord Millamont?--Diverting, but a coxcomb. He
+had beautiful hands; it was a pity he was always thinking of them! Sir
+Gage Rivers?--As obsequious a lover as the man in the 'Way of the
+World,' but she had heard he was very boastful and facetious at women
+over his chocolate at Ozinda's. The Earl of Argent?--A gallant soldier,
+surely, but whatever he might protest, no mistress would ever rival with
+him the dice at the Groom Porter's. Lord Philip Bellairs?--A proper
+gentleman; no fault in him; a bel esprit and an elegant courtier;
+pleased many, no doubt, but he did not please her overmuch. Perhaps her
+taste was too finical, or her character too cold, as they said. She
+preferred it should be so. When you were content it were folly to seek a
+change. For her part, she failed to comprehend how women could stoop to
+flutter their fans and choose their ribbons, and rack their tirewomen's
+brains for new pulvillios, and lappets, and devices, and practise their
+curtsy and recovery before their pier-glass, for no better aim or stake
+than to draw the glance and win the praise of men for whom they cared
+nothing. A woman who had the eloquence of beauty and a true pride should
+be above heed for such affectations, pleasure in such applause!"
+
+So she would put them all aside and turn the tables on her friends, and
+go on her own way, proud, peerless, Cecil Castlemaine, conquering and
+unconquered; and Steele must have had her name in his thoughts, and
+honored it heartily and sincerely, when he wrote one Tuesday, on the
+21st of October, under the domino of his Church Coquette, "I say I do
+honor to those who _can be coquettes and are not such_, but I despise
+all who would be so, and, in despair of arriving at it themselves, hate
+and vilify all those who can." A definition justly drawn by his keen,
+quick graver, though doubtless it only excited the ire of, and was
+entirely lost upon, those who read the paper over their dish of bohea,
+or over their toilette, while they shifted a patch for an hour before
+they could determine it, or regretted the loss of ten guineas at crimp.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of the Town: when she sat at Drury Lane
+on the Tory side of the house, the devoutest admirer of Oldfield or Mrs.
+Porter scarcely heard a word of the _Heroic Daughter_, or the _Amorous
+Widow_, and the "beau fullest of his own dear self" forgot his
+silver-fringed gloves, his medallion snuff-box, his knotted cravat, his
+clouded cane, the slaughter that he planned to do, from gazing at her
+where she sat as though she were reigning sovereign at St. James's, the
+Castlemaine diamond's flashing crescent-like above her brow. At church
+and court, at park and assembly, there were none who could eclipse that
+haughty gentlewoman; therefore her fond women friends who had caressed
+her so warmly and so gracefully, and pulled her to pieces behind her
+back, if they could, so eagerly over their dainty cups of tea in an
+afternoon visit, were glad, one and all, when on "Barnabybright,"
+Anglicè, the 22d (then the 11th) of June, the great Castlemaine chariot,
+with its three herons blazoned on its coroneted panels, its laced
+liveries and gilded harness, rolled over the heavy, ill-made roads down
+into the country in almost princely pomp, the peasants pouring out from
+the wayside cottages to stare at my lord's coach.
+
+It was said in the town that a portly divine, who wore his scarf as one
+of the chaplains to the Earl of Castlemaine, had prattled somewhat
+indiscreetly at Child's of his patron's politics; that certain cipher
+letters had passed the Channel enclosed in chocolate-cakes as soon as
+French goods were again imported after the peace of Utrecht; that
+gentlemen in high places were strongly suspected of mischievous designs
+against the tranquillity of the country and government; that the Earl
+had, among others, received a friendly hint from a relative in power to
+absent himself for a while from the court where he was not best trusted,
+and the town where an incautious word might be picked up and lead to
+Tower Hill, and amuse himself at his goodly castle of Lilliesford, where
+the red deer would not spy upon him, and the dark beech-woods would tell
+no tales. And the ladies of quality, her dear friends and sisters, were
+glad when they heard it as they punted at basset and fluttered their
+fans complacently. They would have the field for themselves, for a
+season, while Cecil Castlemaine was immured in her manor of Lilliesford;
+would be free of her beauty to eclipse them at the next birthday, be
+quit of their most dreaded rival, their most omnipotent leader of
+fashion; and they rejoiced at the whisper of the cipher letter, the
+damaging gossipry of the Whig coffee-houses, the bad repute into which
+my Lord Earl had grown at St. James's, at the misfortune of their
+friend, in a word, as human nature, masculine or feminine, will ever
+do--to its shame be it spoken--unless the _fomes peccati_ be more
+completely wrung out of it than it ever has been since the angel Gabriel
+performed that work of purification on the infant Mahomet.
+
+It was the June of the year '15, and the coming disaffection was
+seething and boiling secretly among the Tories; the impeachment of
+Ormond and Bolingbroke had strengthened the distaste to the new-come
+Hanoverian pack, their attainder had been the blast of air needed to
+excite the smouldering wood to flame, the gentlemen of that party in the
+South began to grow impatient of the intrusion of the distant German
+branch, to think lovingly of the old legitimate line, and to feel
+something of the chafing irritation of the gentlemen of the North, who
+were fretting like stag-hounds held in leash.
+
+Envoys passed to and fro between St. Germain, and Jacobite nobles,
+priests of the church that had fallen out of favor and was typified as
+the Scarlet Woman by a rival who, though successful, was still bitter,
+plotted with ecclesiastical relish in the task; letters were conveyed in
+rolls of innocent lace, plans were forwarded in frosted confections,
+messages were passed in invisible cipher that defied investigation. The
+times were dangerous; full of plot and counterplot, of risk and danger,
+of fomenting projects and hidden disaffection--times in which men,
+living habitually over mines, learned to like the uncertainty, and to
+think life flavorless without the chance of losing it any hour; and
+things being in this state, the Earl of Castlemaine deemed it prudent to
+take the counsel of his friend in power, and retire from London for a
+while, perhaps for the safety of his own person, perhaps for the
+advancement of his cause, either of which were easier insured at his
+seat in the western counties than amidst the Whigs of the capital.
+
+The castle of Lilliesford was bowered in the thick woods of the western
+counties, a giant pile built by Norman masons. Troops of deer herded
+under the gold-green beechen boughs, the sunlight glistened through the
+aisles of the trees, and quivered down on to the thick moss, and ferns,
+and tangled grass that grew under the park woodlands; the water-lilies
+clustered on the river, and the swans "floated double, swan and shadow,"
+under the leaves that swept into the water; then, when Cecil Castlemaine
+came down to share her father's retirement, as now, when her name and
+titles on the gold plate of a coffin that lies with others of her race
+in the mausoleum across the park, where winter snows and sumer sun-rays
+are alike to those who sleep within, is all that tells at Lilliesford
+of the loveliest woman of her time who once reigned there as mistress.
+
+The country was in its glad green midsummer beauty, and the
+musk-rosebuds bloomed in profuse luxuriance over the chill marble of the
+terraces, and scattered their delicate odorous petals in fragrant
+showers on the sward of the lawns, when Cecil Castlemaine came down to
+what she termed her exile. The morning was fair and cloudless, its
+sunbeams piercing through the darkest glades in the woodlands, the
+thickest shroud of the ivy, the deepest-hued pane of the mullioned
+windows, as she passed down the great staircase where lords and
+gentlewomen of her race gazed on her from the canvas of Lely and
+Jamesone, Bourdain and Vandyke, crossed the hall with her dainty step,
+so stately yet so light, and standing by the window of her own
+bower-room, was lured out on to the terrace overlooking the west side of
+the park.
+
+She made such a picture as Vandyke would have liked to paint, with her
+golden glow upon her, and the musk-roses clustering about her round the
+pilasters of marble--the white chill marble to which Belamour and many
+other of her lovers of the court and town had often likened her. Vandyke
+would have lingered lovingly on the hand that rested on her stag-hound's
+head, would have caught her air of court-like grace and dignity, would
+have painted with delighted fidelity her deep azure eyes, her proud
+brow, her delicate lips arched haughtily like a cupid's bow, would have
+picked out every fold of her sweeping train, every play of light on her
+silken skirts, every dainty tracery of her point-lace. Yet even painted
+by Sir Anthony, that perfect master of art and of elegance, though more
+finished it could have hardly been more faithful, more instinct with
+grace, and life, and dignity, than a sketch drawn of her shortly after
+that time by one who loved her well, which is still hanging in the
+gallery at Lilliesford, lighted up by the afternoon sun when it streams
+in through the western windows.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood on the terrace looking over the lawns and
+gardens through the opening vistas of meeting boughs and interlaced
+leaves to the woods and hills beyond, fused in a soft mist of green and
+purple, with her hand lying carelessly on her hound's broad head. She
+was a zealous Tory, a skilled politician, and her thoughts were busy
+with the hopes and fears, the chances for and against, of a cause that
+lay near her heart, but whose plans were yet immature, whose first blow
+was yet unstruck, and whose well-wishers were sanguine of a success they
+had not yet hazarded, though they hardly ventured to whisper to each
+other their previous designs and desires. Her thoughts were far away,
+and she hardly heeded the beauty round her, musing on schemes and
+projects dear to her party, that would imperil the Castlemaine coronet
+but would serve the only royal house the Castlemaine line had ever in
+their hearts acknowledged.
+
+She had regretted leaving the Town, moreover; a leader of the mode, a
+wit, a woman of the world, she missed her accustomed sphere; she was no
+pastoral Phyllis, no country-born Mistress Fiddy, to pass her time in
+provincial pleasures, in making cordial waters, in tending her
+beau-pots, in preserving her fallen rose-leaves, in inspecting the
+confections in the still-room; as little was she able, like many fine
+ladies when in similar exile, to while it away by scolding her
+tirewomen, and sorting a suit of ribbons, in ordering a set of gilded
+leather hangings from Chelsea for the state chambers, and yawning over
+chocolate in her bed till mid-day. She regretted leaving the Town, not
+for Belamour, nor Argent, nor any, of those who vainly hoped, as they
+glanced at the little mirror in the lids of their snuff-boxes, that they
+might have graven themselves, were it ever so faintly, in her thoughts;
+but for the wits, the pleasures, the choice clique, the accustomed
+circle to which she was so used, the courtly, brilliant town-life where
+she was wont to reign.
+
+So she stood on the terrace the first morning of her exile, her thoughts
+far away, with the loyal gentlemen of the North, and the banished court
+at St. Germain, the lids drooping proudly over her haughty eyes, and her
+lips half parted with a faint smile of triumph in the visions limned by
+ambition and imagination, while the wind softly stirred the rich lace of
+her bodice, and her fingers lay lightly, yet firmly, on the head of her
+stag-hound. She looked up at last as she heard the ring of a horse's
+hoofs, and saw a sorrel, covered with dust and foam, spurred up the
+avenue, which, rounding past the terrace, swept on to the front
+entrance; the sorrel looked wellnigh spent, and his rider somewhat worn
+and languid, as a man might do with justice who had been in boot and
+saddle twenty-four hours at the stretch, scarce stopping for a stoup of
+wine; but he lifted his hat, and bowed down to his saddle-bow as he
+passed her.
+
+"Was it the long-looked-for messenger with definite news from St.
+Germain?" wondered Lady Cecil, as her hound gave out a deep-tongued bay
+of anger at the stranger. She went back into her bower-room, and toyed
+absently with her flowered handkerchief, broidering a stalk to a
+violet-leaf, and wondering what additional hope the horseman might have
+brought to strengthen the good Cause, till her servants brought word
+that his Lordship prayed the pleasure of her presence in the
+octagon-room. Whereat she rose, and swept through the long corridors,
+entered the octagon-room, the sunbeams gathering about her rich dress as
+they passed through the stained-glass oriels, and saluted the new-comer,
+when her father presented him to her as their trusty and welcome friend
+and envoy, Sir Fulke Ravensworth, with her careless dignity and queenly
+grace, that nameless air which was too highly bred to be condescension,
+but markedly and proudly repelled familiarity, and signed a pale of
+distance beyond which none must intrude.
+
+The new-comer was a tall and handsome man, of noble presence, bronzed by
+foreign suns, pale and jaded just now with hard riding, while his dark
+silver-laced suit was splashed and covered with dust; but as he bowed
+low to her, critical Cecil Castlemaine saw that not Belamour himself
+could have better grace, not my Lord Millamont courtlier mien nor whiter
+hands, and listened with gracious air to what her father unfolded to her
+of his mission from St. Germain, whither he had come, at great personal
+risk, in many disguises, and at breathless speed, to place in their
+hands a precious letter in cipher from James Stuart to his well-beloved
+and loyal subject Herbert George, Earl of Castlemaine. A letter spoken
+of with closed doors and in low whispers, loyal as was the household,
+supreme as the Earl ruled over his domains of Lilliesford, for these
+were times when men mistrusted those of their own blood, and when the
+very figure on the tapestry seemed instinct with life to spy and
+betray--when they almost feared the silk that tied a missive should
+babble of its contents, and the hound that slept beside them should read
+and tell their thoughts.
+
+To leave Lilliesford would be danger to the Envoy and danger to the
+Cause; to stay as guest was to disarm suspicion. The messenger who had
+brought such priceless news must rest within the shelter of his roof;
+too much were risked by returning to the French coast yet awhile, or
+even by joining Mar or Derwentwater, so the Earl enforced his will upon
+the Envoy, and the Envoy thanked him and accepted.
+
+Perchance the beauty, whose eyes he had seen lighten and proud brow
+flush as she read the royal greeting and injunction, made a sojourn near
+her presence not distasteful; perchance he cared little where he stayed
+till the dawning time of action and of rising should arrive, when he
+should take the field and fight till life or death for the "White Rose
+and the long heads of hair." He was a soldier of fortune, a poor
+gentleman with no patrimony but his name, no chance of distinction save
+by his sword; sworn to a cause whose star was set forever; for many
+years his life had been of changing adventure and shifting chances, now
+fighting with Berwick at Almanza, now risking his life in some delicate
+and dangerous errand for James Stuart that could not have been trusted
+so well to any other officer about St. Germain; gallant to rashness, yet
+with much of the acumen of the diplomatist, he was invaluable to his
+Court and Cause, but, Stuart-like, men-like, they hastened to employ,
+but ever forgot to reward!
+
+Lady Cecil missed her town-life, and did not over-favor her exile in the
+western counties. To note down on her Mather's tablets the drowsy
+homilies droned out by the chaplain on a Sabbath noon, to play at
+crambo, to talk with her tirewomen of new washes for the skin, to pass
+her hours away in knotting?--she, whom Steele might have writ of when he
+drew his character of _Eudoxia_, could wile her exile with none of these
+inanities; neither could she consort with gentry who seemed to her
+little better than the boors of a country wake, who had never heard of
+Mr. Spectator and knew nothing of Mr. Cowley, countrywomen whose
+ambition was in their cowslip wines, fox-hunters more ignorant and
+uncouth than the dumb brutes they followed.
+
+Who was there for miles around with whom she could stoop to associate,
+with whom she cared to exchange a word? Madam from the vicarage, in her
+grogram, learned in syrups, salves, and possets? Country Lady
+Bountifuls, with gossip of the village and the poultry-yard? Provincial
+Peeresses, who had never been to London since Queen Anne's coronation? A
+squirearchy, who knew of no music save the concert of their stop-hounds,
+no court save the court of the county assize, no literature unless by
+miracle 't were Tarleton's Jests? None such as these could cross the
+inlaid oak parquet of Lilliesford, and be ushered into the presence of
+Cecil Castlemaine.
+
+So the presence of the Chevalier's messenger was not altogether
+unwelcome and distasteful to her. She saw him but little, merely
+conversing at table with him with that distant and dignified courtesy
+which marked her out from the light, free, inconsequent manners in vogue
+with other women of quality of her time; the air which had chilled half
+the softest things even on Belamour's lips, and kept the vainest coxcomb
+hesitating and abashed.
+
+But by degrees she observed that the Envoy was a man who had lived in
+many countries and in many courts, was well versed in the tongues of
+France and Italy and Spain--in their belles-lettres too, moreover--and
+had served his apprenticeship to good company in the salons of
+Versailles, in the audience-room of the Vatican, at the receptions of
+the Duchess du Maine, and with the banished family at St. Germain. He
+spoke with a high and sanguine spirit of the troublous times approaching
+and the beloved Cause whose crisis was at hand, which chimed in with her
+humor better than the flippancies of Belamour, the airy nothings of
+Millamont. He was but a soldier of fortune, a poor gentleman who, named
+to her in the town, would have had never a word, and would have been
+unnoted amidst the crowding beaux who clustered round to hold her fan
+and hear how she had been pleasured with the drolleries of _Grief à la
+Mode_. But down in the western counties she deigned to listen to the
+Prince's officer, to smile--a smile beautiful when it came on her proud
+lips, as the play of light on the opals of her jewelled stomacher--nay,
+even to be amused when he spoke of the women of foreign courts, to be
+interested when he told, which was but reluctantly, of his own perils,
+escapes, and adventures, to discourse with him, riding home under the
+beech avenues from hawking, or standing on the western terrace at curfew
+to watch the sunset, of many things on which the nobles of the Mall and
+the gentlemen about St. James's had never been allowed to share her
+opinions. For Lady Cecil was deeply read (unusually deeply for her day,
+since fine ladies of her rank and fashion mostly contented themselves
+with skimming a romance of Scuderi's, or an act of _Aurungzebe_); but
+she rarely spoke of those things, save perchance now and then to Mr.
+Addison.
+
+Fulke Ravensworth never flattered her, moreover, and flattery was a
+honeyed confection of which she had long been cloyed; he even praised
+boldly before her other women of beauty and grace whom he had seen at
+Versailles, at Sceaux, and at St. Germain; neither did he defer to her
+perpetually, but where he differed would combat her sentiments
+courteously but firmly. Though a soldier and a man of action, he had an
+admirable skill at the limner's art; could read to her the Divina
+Commedia, or the comedies of Lope da' Vega, and transfer crabbed Latin
+and abstruse Greek into elegant English for her pleasures and though a
+beggared gentleman of most precarious fortunes, he would speak of life
+and its chances, of the Cause and its perils, with a daring which she
+found preferable to the lisped languor of the men of the town, who had
+no better campaigns than laying siege to a prude, cared for no other
+weapons than their toilettes and snuff-boxes, and sought no other
+excitement than a _coup d'éclat_ with the lion-tumblers.
+
+On the whole, through these long midsummer days, Lady Cecil found the
+Envoy from St. Germain a companion that did not suit her ill, sought
+less the solitude of her bower-room, and listened graciously to him in
+the long twilight hours, while the evening dews gathered in the cups of
+the musk-roses, and the star-rays began to quiver on the water-lilies
+floating on the river below, that murmured along, with endless song,
+under the beechen-boughs. A certain softness stole over her, relaxing
+the cold hauteur of which Belamour had so often complained, giving a
+nameless charm, supplying a nameless something, lacking before, in the
+beauty of The Castlemaine.
+
+She would stroke, half sadly, the smooth feathers of her tartaret falcon
+Gabrielle when Fulke Ravensworth brought her the bird from the
+ostreger's wrist, with its azure velvet hood, and silver bells and
+jesses. She would wonder, as she glanced through Corneille or Congreve,
+Philips or Petrarca, what it was, this passion of love, of which they
+all treated, on which they all turned, no matter how different their
+strain. And now and then would come over her cheek and brow a faint
+fitful wavering flush, delicate and changing as the flush from the
+rose-hued reflexions of western clouds on a statue of Pharos marble, and
+then she would start and rouse herself, and wonder what she ailed, and
+grow once more haughty, calm, stately, dazzling, but chill as the
+Castlemaine diamonds that she wore.
+
+So the summer-time passed, and the autumn came, the corn-lands brown
+with harvest, the hazel-copses strewn with fallen nuts, the beech-leaves
+turning into reddened gold. As the wheat ripened but to meet the sickle,
+as the nuts grew but to fall, as the leaves turned to gold but to
+wither, so the sanguine hopes, the fond ambitions of men, strengthened
+and matured only to fade into disappointment and destruction! Four
+months had sped by since the Prince's messenger had come to
+Lilliesford--months that had gone swiftly with him as some sweet
+delicious dream; and the time had come when he had orders to ride north,
+secretly and swiftly, speak with Mr. Forster and other gentlemen
+concerned in the meditated rising, and convey despatches and
+instructions to the Earl of Mar; for Prince James was projecting soon to
+join his loyal adherents in Scotland, and the critical moment was close
+at hand, the moment when, to Fulke Ravensworth's high and sanguine
+courage, victory seemed certain; failure, if no treachery marred, no
+dissension weakened, impossible; the moment to which he looked for
+honor, success, distinction, that should give him claim and title to
+aspire--_where_? Strong man, cool soldier though he was, he shrank from
+drawing his fancied future out from the golden haze of immature hope,
+lest he should see it wither upon closer sight. He was but a landless
+adventurer, with nothing but his sword and his honor, and kings he knew
+were slow to pay back benefits, or recollect the hands that hewed them
+free passage to their thrones.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood within the window of her bower-room, the red
+light of the October sun glittering on her gold-broidered skirt and her
+corsage sewn with opals and emeralds; her hand was pressed lightly on
+her bosom, as though some pain were throbbing there; it was new this
+unrest, this weariness, this vague weight that hung upon her; it was the
+perils of their Cause, she told herself; the risks her father ran: it
+was weak, childish, unworthy a Castlemaine! Still the pain throbbed
+there.
+
+Her hound, asleep beside her, raised his head with a low growl as a step
+intruded on the sanctity of the bower-room, then composed himself again
+to slumber, satisfied it was no foe. His mistress turned slowly; she
+knew the horses waited; she had shunned this ceremony of farewell, and
+never thought any would be bold enough to venture here without
+permission sought and gained.
+
+"Lady Cecil, I could not go upon my way without one word of parting.
+Pardon me if I have been too rash to seek it here."
+
+Why was it that his brief frank words ever pleased her better than
+Belamour's most honeyed phrases, Millamont's suavest periods? She
+scarcely could have told, save that there were in them an earnestness
+and truth new and rare to her ear and to her heart.
+
+She pressed her hand closer on the opals--the jewels of calamity--and
+smiled:
+
+"Assuredly I wish you God speed, Sir Fulke, and safe issue from all
+perils."
+
+He bowed low; then raised himself to his fullest height, and stood
+beside her, watching the light play upon the opals:
+
+"That is all you vouchsafe me?"
+
+"_All?_ It is as much as you would claim, sir, is it not? It is more
+than I would say to many."
+
+"Your pardon--it _is_ more than I should claim if prudence were ever by,
+if reason always ruled! I have no right to ask for, seek for, even wish
+for, more; such petitions may only be addressed by men of wealth and of
+high title; a landless soldier should have no pride to sting, no heart
+to wound; they are the prerogative of a happier fortune."
+
+Her lips turned white, but she answered haughtily; the crimson light
+flashing in her jewels, heirlooms priceless and hereditary, like her
+beauty and her pride:
+
+"This is strange language, sir! I fail to apprehend you."
+
+"You have never thought that I ran a danger deadlier than that which I
+have ever risked on any field? You have never guessed that I have had
+the madness, the presumption, the crime--it may be in your eyes--to love
+you."
+
+The color flushed to her face, crimsoning even her brow, and then fled
+back. Her first instinct was insulted pride--a beggared gentleman, a
+landless soldier, spoke to her of love!--of love!--which Belamour had
+barely had courage to whisper of; which none had dared to sue of her in
+return. He had ventured to feel this for her! he had ventured to speak
+of this to her!
+
+The Envoy saw the rising resentment, the pride spoken in every line of
+her delicate face, and stopped her as she would have spoken.
+
+"Wait! I know all you would reply. You think it infinite daring,
+presumption that merits highest reproof----"
+
+"Since you divined so justly, it were pity you subjected yourself and me
+to this most useless, most unexpected interview. Why----"
+
+"_Why?_ Because, perchance, in this life you will see my face no more,
+and you will think gently, mercifully of my offence (if offence it be to
+love you more than life, and only less than honor), when you know that I
+have fallen for the Cause, with your name in my heart, held only the
+dearer because never on my lips! Sincere love can be no insult to
+whomsoever proffered; Elizabeth Stuart saw no shame to her in the
+devotion of William Craven!"
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood in the crimson glory of the autumn sunset, her
+head erect, her pride unshaken, but her heart stirred strangely and
+unwontedly. It smote the one with bitter pain, to think a penniless
+exile should thus dare to speak of what princes and dukes had almost
+feared to whisper; what had she done--what had she said, to give him
+license for such liberty? It stirred the other with a tremulous warmth,
+a vague, sweet pleasure, that were never visitants there before; but
+that she scouted instantly as weakness, folly, debasement, in the Last
+of the Castlemaines.
+
+He saw well enough what passed within her, what made her eyes so
+troubled, yet her brow and lips so proudly set, and he bent nearer
+towards her, the great love that was in him trembling in his voice:
+
+"Lady Cecil, hear me! If in the coming struggle I win distinction,
+honor, rank--if victory come to us, and the King we serve remember me in
+his prosperity as he does now in his adversity--if I can meet you
+hereafter with tidings of triumph and success, my name made one which
+England breathes with praise and pride, honors gained such as even you
+will deem worthy of your line--then--then--will you let me speak of
+what you refuse to hearken to now--then may I come to you, and seek a
+gentler answer?"
+
+She looked for a moment upon his face, as it bent towards her in the
+radiance of the sunset light, the hope that hopes all things glistening
+in his eyes, the high-souled daring of a gallant and sanguine spirit
+flushing his forehead, the loud throbs of his heart audible in the
+stillness around; and her proud eyes grew softer, her lips quivered for
+an instant.
+
+Then she turned towards him with queenly grace:
+
+"_Yes!_"
+
+It was spoken with stately dignity, though scarce above her breath; but
+the hue that wavered in her cheek was but the lovelier, for the pride
+that would not let her eyes droop nor her tears rise, would not let her
+utter one softer word. That one word cost her much. That single
+utterance was much from Cecil Castlemaine.
+
+Her handkerchief lay at her feet, a delicate, costly toy of lace,
+embroidered with her shield and chiffre; he stooped and raised it, and
+thrust it in his breast to treasure it there.
+
+"If I fail, I send this back in token that I renounce all hope; if I can
+come to you with honor and with fame, this shall be my gage that I may
+speak, that you will listen?"
+
+She bowed her noble head, ever held haughtily, as though every crown of
+Europe had a right to circle it; his hot lips lingered for a moment on
+her hand; then Cecil Castlemaine stood alone in the window of her
+bower-room, her hand pressed again upon the opals under which her heart
+was beating with a dull, weary pain, looking out over the landscape,
+where the golden leaves were falling fast, and the river, tossing sadly
+dead branches on its waves, was bemoaning in plaintive language the
+summer days gone by.
+
+Two months came and went, the beech-boughs, black and sear, creaked in
+the bleak December winds that sighed through frozen ferns and over the
+couches of shivering deer, the snow drifted up on the marble terrace,
+and icedrops clung where the warm rosy petals of the musk-rosebuds had
+nestled. Across the country came terrible whispers that struck the
+hearts of men of loyal faith to the White Rose with a bolt of ice-cold
+terror and despair. Messengers riding in hot haste, open-mouthed
+peasants gossiping by the village forge, horsemen who tarried for a
+breathless rest at alehouse-doors, Whig divines who returned thanks for
+God's most gracious mercy in vouchsafing victory to the strong, all told
+the tale, all spread the news of the drawn battle of Sheriff-Muir, of
+the surrender under Preston walls, of the flight of Prince James. The
+tidings came one by one to Lilliesford, where my Lord Earl was holding
+himself in readiness to co-operate with the gentlemen of the North to
+set up the royal standard, broidered by his daughter's hands, in the
+western counties, and proclaim James III. "sovereign lord and king of
+the realms of Great Britain and Ireland." The tidings came to
+Lilliesford, and Cecil Castlemaine clenched her white jewelled hands in
+passionate anguish that a Stuart should have fled before the traitor of
+Argyll, instead of dying with his face towards the rebel crew; that men
+had lived who could choose surrender instead of heroic death; that _she_
+had not been there, at Preston, to shame them with a woman's reading of
+courage and of loyalty, and show them how to fall with a doomed city
+rather than yield captive to a foe!
+
+Perhaps amidst her grief for her Prince and for his Cause mingled--as
+the deadliest thought of all--a memory of a bright proud face, that had
+bent towards her with tender love and touching grace a month before, and
+that might now be lying pale and cold, turned upwards to the winter
+stars, on the field of Sheriff-Muir.
+
+A year rolled by. Twelve months had fled since the gilded carriage of
+the Castlemaines, with the lordly blazonment upon its panels, its
+princely retinue and stately pomp, had come down into the western
+counties. The bones were crumbling white in the coffins in the Tower,
+and the skulls over Temple-bar had bleached white in winter snows and
+spring-tide suns; Kenmuir had gone to a sleep that knew no wakening, and
+Derwentwater had laid his fair young head down for a thankless cause;
+the heather bloomed over the mounds of dead on the plains of
+Sheriff-Muir, and the yellow gorse blossomed under the city walls of
+Preston.
+
+Another summer had dawned, bright and laughing, over England; none the
+less fair for human lives laid down, for human hopes crushed out;
+daisies powdering the turf sodden with human blood, birds carolling
+their song over graves of heaped-up dead. The musk-roses tossed their
+delicate heads again amidst the marble pilasters, and the
+hawthorn-boughs shook their fragrant buds into the river at Lilliesford,
+the purple hills lay wrapped in sunny mist, and hyacinth-bells mingled
+with the tangled grass and fern under the woodland shades, where the red
+deer nestled happily. Herons plumed their silvery wings down by the
+water-side, swallows circled in sultry air above the great bell-tower,
+and wood-pigeons cooed with soft love-notes among the leafy branches.
+Yet the Countess of Castlemaine, last of her race, sole owner of the
+lands that spread around her, stood on the rose-terrace, finding no joy
+in the sunlight about her, no melody in the song of the birds.
+
+She was the last of her name; her father, broken-hearted at the news
+from Dumblain and Preston, had died the very day after his lodgment in
+the Tower. There was no heir male of his line, and the title had passed
+to his daughter; there had been thoughts of confiscation and attainder,
+but others, unknown to her, solicited what she scorned to ask for
+herself, and the greed of the hungry "Hanoverian pack" spared the lands
+and the revenues of Lilliesford. In haughty pride, in lonely mourning,
+the fairest beauty of the Court and Town withdrew again to the solitude
+of her western counties, and tarried there, dwelling amidst her women
+and her almost regal household, in the sacred solitude of grief, wherein
+none might intrude. Proud Cecil Castlemaine was yet prouder than of
+yore; alone, sorrowing for her ruined Cause and exiled King, she would
+hold converse with none of those who had had a hand in drawing down the
+disastrous fate she mourned, and only her staghound could have seen the
+weariness upon her face when she bent down to him, or Gabrielle the
+falcon felt her hand tremble when it stroked her folded wings. She stood
+on the terrace, looking over her spreading lands, not the water-lilies
+on the river below whiter than her lips, pressed painfully together.
+Perhaps she repented of certain words, spoken to one whom now she would
+never again behold--perhaps she thought of that delicate toy that was to
+have been brought back in victory and hope, that now might lie stained
+and stiffened with blood next a lifeless heart, for never a word in the
+twelve months gone by had there come to Lilliesford as tidings of Fulke
+Ravensworth.
+
+Her pride was dear to her, dearer than aught else; she had spoken as was
+her right to speak, she had done what became a Castlemaine; it would
+have been weakness to have acted otherwise; what was he--a landless
+soldier--that he should have dared as he had dared? Yet the sables she
+wore were not solely for the dead Earl, not solely for the lost Stuarts
+the hot mist that would blind the eyes of Cecil Castlemaine, as hours
+swelled to days, and days to months, and she--the flattered beauty of
+the Court and Town--stayed in self-chosen solitude in her halls of
+Lilliesford, still unwedded and unwon.
+
+The noon-hours chimed from the bell-tower, and the sunny beauty of the
+morning but weighed with heavier sadness on her heart; the song of the
+birds, the busy hum of the gnats, the joyous ring of the silver bell
+round her pet fawn's neck, as it darted from her side under the drooping
+boughs--none touched an answering chord of gladness in her. She stood
+looking over her stretching woodlands in deep thought, so deep that she
+heard no step over the lawn beneath, nor saw the frightened rush of the
+deer, as a boy, crouching among the tangled ferns, sprang up from his
+hiding-place under the beechen branches, and stood on the terrace before
+her, craving her pardon in childish, yet fearless tones. She turned,
+bending on him that glance which had made the over-bold glance of
+princes fall abashed. The boy was but a little tatterdemalion to have
+ventured thus abruptly into the presence of the Countess of Castlemaine;
+still it was with some touch of a page's grace that he bowed before her.
+
+"Lady, I crave your pardon, but my master bade me watch for you, though
+I watched till midnight."
+
+"Your master?"
+
+A flush, warm as that on the leaves of the musk-roses, rose to her face
+for an instant, then faded as suddenly. The boy did not notice her
+words, but went on in an eager whisper, glancing anxiously round, as a
+hare would glance fearing the hunters.
+
+"And told me when I saw you not to speak his name, but only to give you
+this as his gage, that though all else is lost he has not forgot _his_
+honor nor _your_ will."
+
+Cecil Castlemaine spoke no word, but she stretched out her hand and took
+it--her own costly toy of cambric and lace, with her broidered shield
+and coronet.
+
+"Your master! Then--he lives?"
+
+"Lady, he bade me say no more. You have his message; I must tell no
+further."
+
+She laid her hand upon his shoulder, a light, snow-white hand, yet one
+that held him now in a clasp of steel.
+
+"Child! answer me at your peril! Tell me of him whom you call your
+master. Tell me all--quick--quick!"
+
+"You are his friend?"
+
+"His friend? My Heaven! Speak on!"
+
+"He bade me tell no more on peril of his heaviest anger; but if you
+_are_ his friend, I sure may speak what you should know without me. It
+is a poor friend, lady, who has need to ask whether another be dead or
+living!"
+
+The scarlet blood flamed in the Countess's blanched face, she signed him
+on with impetuous command; she was unused to disobedience, and the
+child's words cut her to the quick.
+
+"Sir Fulke sails for the French coast to-morrow night," the boy went on,
+in tremulous haste. "He was left for dead--our men ran one way, and
+Argyll's men the other--on the field of Sheriff-Muir; and sure if he had
+not been strong indeed, he would have died that awful night, untended,
+on the bleak moor, with the winds roaring round him, and his life ebbing
+away. He was not one of those who _fled_; you know that of him if you
+know aught. We got him away before dawn, Donald and I, and hid him in a
+shieling; he was in the fever then, and knew nothing that was done to
+him, only he kept that bit of lace in his hand for weeks and weeks, and
+would not let us stir it from his grasp. What magic there was in it we
+wondered often, but 'twas a magic, mayhap, that got him well at last; it
+was an even chance but that he'd died, God bless him! though we did what
+best we could. We've been wandering in the Highlands all the year,
+hiding here and tarrying there. Sir Fulke sets no count upon his life.
+Sure I think he thanks us little for getting him through the fever of
+the wounds, but he could not have borne to be pinioned, you know, lady,
+like a thief, and hung up by the brutes of Whigs, as a butcher hangs
+sheep in the shambles! The worst of the danger's over--they've had
+their fill of the slaughter; but we sail to-morrow night for the French
+coast--England's no place for my master."
+
+Cecil Castlemaine let go her hold upon the boy, and her hand closed
+convulsively upon the dainty handkerchief--her gage sent so faithfully
+back to her!
+
+The child looked upon her face; perchance, in his master's delirium, he
+had caught some knowledge of the story that hung to that broidered toy.
+
+"If you _are_ his friend, madame, doubtless you have some last word to
+send him?"
+
+Cecil Castlemaine, whom nothing moved, whom nothing softened, bowed her
+head at the simple question, her heart wrestling sorely, her lips set
+together in unswerving pride, a mist before her haughty eyes, the
+broidered shield upon her handkerchief--the shield of her stately and
+unyielding race--pressed close against her breast.
+
+"You have no word for him, lady?"
+
+Her lips parted; she signed him away. Was this child to see her yielding
+to such weakness? Had she, Countess of Castlemaine, no better pride, no
+better strength, no better power of resolve, than this?
+
+The boy lingered.
+
+"I will tell Sir Fulke then, lady, that the ruined have no friends?"
+
+Whiter and prouder still grew the delicate beauty of her face; she
+raised her stately head, haughtily as she had used to glance over a
+glittering Court, where each voice murmured praise of her loveliness and
+reproach of her coldness; and placed the fragile toy of lace back in the
+boy's hands.
+
+"Go, seek your master, and give him this in gage that their calamity
+makes friends more dear to us than their success. Go, he will know its
+meaning!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In place of the noon chimes the curfew was ringing from the bell-tower,
+the swallows were gone to roost amidst the ivy, and the herons slept
+with their heads under their silvery wings among the rushes by the
+riverside, the ferns and wild hyacinths were damp with evening dew, and
+the summer starlight glistened amidst the quivering woodland leaves.
+There was the silence of coming night over the vast forest glades, and
+no sound broke the stillness, save the song of the grasshopper stirring
+the tangled grasses, or the sweet low sigh of the west wind fanning the
+bells of the flowers. Cecil Castlemaine stood once more on the
+rose-terrace, shrouded in the dense twilight shade flung from above by
+the beech-boughs, waiting, listening, catching every rustle of the
+leaves, every tremor of the heads of the roses, yet hearing nothing in
+the stillness around but the quick, uncertain throbs of her heart
+beating like the wing of a caged bird under its costly lace. Pride was
+forgotten at length, and she only remembered--fear and love.
+
+In the silence and the solitude came a step that she knew, came a
+presence that she felt. She bowed her head upon her hands; it was new to
+her this weakness, this terror, this anguish of joy; she sought to calm
+herself, to steel herself, to summon back her pride, her strength; she
+scorned herself for it all!
+
+His hand touched her, his voice fell on her ear once more, eager,
+breathless, broken.
+
+"Cecil! Cecil! is this true? Is my ruin thrice blessed, or am I mad, and
+dream of heaven?"
+
+She lifted her head and looked at him with her old proud glance, her
+lips trembling with words that all her pride could not summon into
+speech; then her eyes filled with warm, blinding tears, and softened to
+new beauty;--scarce louder than the sigh of the wind among the
+flower-bells came her words to Fulke Ravensworth's ear, as her royal
+head bowed on his breast.
+
+"Stay, stay! Or, if you fly, your exile shall be my exile, your danger
+my danger!"
+
+The kerchief is a treasured heirloom to her descendants now, and fair
+women of her race, who inherit from her her azure eyes and her queenly
+grace, will recall how the proudest Countess of their Line loved a
+ruined gentleman so well that she was wedded to him at even, in her
+private chapel, at the hour of his greatest peril, his lowest fortune,
+and went with him across the seas till friendly intercession in high
+places gained them royal permission to dwell again at Lilliesford
+unmolested. And how it was ever noticeable to those who murmured at her
+coldness and her pride, that Cecil Castlemaine, cold and negligent as of
+yore to all the world beside, would seek her husband's smile, and love
+to meet his eyes, and cherish her beauty for his sake, and be restless
+in his absence, even for the short span of a day, with a softer and more
+clinging tenderness than was found in many weaker, many humbler women.
+
+They are gone now the men and women of that generation, and their voices
+come only to us through the faint echo of their written words. In summer
+nights the old beech-trees toss their leaves in the silvery light of the
+stars, and the river flows on unchanged, with the ceaseless, mournful
+burden of its mystic song, the same now as in the midsummer of a century
+and a half ago. The cobweb handkerchief lies before me with its
+broidered shield; the same now as long years since, when it was
+treasured close in a soldier's breast, and held by him dearer than all
+save his honor and his word. So, things pulseless and passionless
+endure, and human life passes away as swiftly as a song dies off from
+the air--as quickly succeeded, and as quickly forgot! Ronsard's refrain
+is the refrain of our lives:
+
+ Le temps s'en va, le temps s'en va, ma dame!
+ Las! le temps, non; mais _nous_ nous, en allons!
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS;
+
+OR,
+
+OUR MALTESE PEERAGE.
+
+
+All first things are voted the best: first kisses, first _toga virilis_,
+first hair of the first whisker; first speeches are often so superior
+that members subside after making them, fearful of eclipsing themselves;
+first money won at play must always be best, as always the dearest
+bought; and first wives are always so super-excellent, that, if a man
+lose one, he is generally as fearful of hazarding a second as a trout of
+biting twice.
+
+But of all first things commend me to one's first uniform. No matter
+that we get sick of harness, and get into mufti as soon as we can now;
+there is no more exquisite pleasure than the first sight of one's self
+in shako and sabretasche. How we survey ourselves in the glass, and ring
+for hot water, that the handsome housemaid may see us in all our glory,
+and lounge accidentally into our sisters' schoolroom, that the
+governess, who is nice looking and rather flirty, may go down on the
+spot before us and our scarlet and gold, chains and buttons! One's first
+uniform! Oh! the exquisite sensation locked up for us in that first box
+from Sagnarelli, or Bond Street!
+
+I remember _my_ first uniform. I was eighteen--as raw a young cub as you
+could want to see. I had not been licked into shape by a public school,
+whose tongue may be rough, but cleans off grievances and nonsense better
+than anything else. I had been in that hotbed of effeminacy, Church
+principles and weak tea, a Private Tutor's, where mamma's darlings are
+wrapped up, and stuffed with a little Terence and Horace to show grand
+at home; and upon my life I do believe my sister Julia, aged thirteen,
+was more wide awake and up to life than I was, when the governor, an old
+rector, who always put me in mind of the Vicar of Wakefield, got me
+gazetted to as crack a corps as any in the Line.
+
+The ----th (familiarly known in the Service as the "Dare Devils," from
+old Peninsular deeds) were just then at Malta, and with, among other
+trifles, a chest protector from my father, and a recipe for
+milk-arrowroot from my Aunt Matilda who lived in a constant state of
+catarrh and of cure for the same, tumbled across the Bay of Biscay, and
+found myself in Byron's confounded "little military hot-house," where
+most military men, some time or other, have roasted themselves to death,
+climbing its hilly streets, flirting with its Valetta belles, drinking
+Bass in its hot verandas, yawning with ennui in its palace, cursing its
+sirocco, and being done by its Jew sharpers.
+
+From a private tutor's to a crack mess at Malta!--from a convent to a
+casino could hardly be a greater change. Just at first I was as much
+astray as a young pup taken into a stubble-field, and wondering what the
+deuce he is to do there; but as it is a pup's nature to sniff at birds
+and start them, so is it a boy's nature to snatch at the champagne of
+life as soon as he catches sight of it, though you may have brought him
+up on water from his cradle. I took to it, at least, like a retriever to
+water-ducks, though I was green enough to be a first-rate butt for many
+a day, and the practical jokes I had passed on me would have furnished
+the _Times_ with food for crushers on "The Shocking State of the Army"
+for a twelvemonth. My chief friend and ally, tormentor and initiator,
+was a little fellow, Cosmo Grandison; in Ours he was "Little Grand" to
+everybody, from the Colonel to the baggage-women. He was seventeen, and
+had joined about a year. What a pretty boy he was, too! All the fair
+ones in Valetta, from his Excellency's wife to our washerwomen, admired
+that boy, and spoilt him and petted him, and I do not believe there was
+a man of Ours who would have had heart to sit in court-martial on Little
+Grand if he had broken every one of the Queen's regulations, and set
+every General Order at defiance. I think I see him now--he was new to
+Malta as I, having just landed with the Dare Devils, _en route_ from
+India to Portsmouth--as he sat one day on the table in the mess-room as
+cool as a cucumber, in spite of the broiling sun, smoking, and swinging
+his legs, and settling his forage-cap on one side of his head, as
+pretty-looking, plucky, impudent a young monkey as ever piqued himself
+on being an old hand, and a knowing bird not to be caught by any chaff
+however ingeniously prepared.
+
+"Simon," began Little Grand (my "St. John," first barbarized by Mr. Pope
+for the convenience of his dactyles and hexameters into Sinjin, being
+further barbarized by this little imp into Simon)--"Simon, do you want
+to see the finest woman in this confounded little pepper-box? You're no
+judge of a woman, though, you muff--taste been warped, perhaps, by
+constant contemplation of that virgin Aunt Minerva--Matilda, is it? all
+the same."
+
+"Hang your chaff," said I; "you'd make one out a fool."
+
+"Precisely, my dear Simon; just what you are!" responded Little Grand,
+pleasantly, "Bless your heart, I've been engaged to half a dozen women
+since I joined. A man can hardly help it, you see; they've such a way of
+drawing you on, you don't like to disappoint them, poor little dears,
+and so you compromise yourself out of sheer benevolence. There's such a
+run on a handsome man--it's a great bore. Sometimes I think I shall
+shave my head, or do something to disfigure myself, as Spurina did. Poor
+fellow, I feel for him! Well, Simon, you don't seem curious to know who
+my beauty is?"
+
+"One of those Mitchell girls of the Twenty-first? You waltzed with 'em
+all night; but they're too tall for you, Grand."
+
+"The Mitchell girls!" ejaculated he, with supreme scorn. "Great
+maypoles! they go about with the Fusiliers like a pair of colors. On
+every ball-room battlefield one's safe to see _them_ flaunting away, and
+as everybody has a shot at 'em, their hearts must be pretty well riddled
+into holes by this time. No, mine's rather higher game than that. My
+mother's brother-in-law's aunt's sister's cousin's cousin once removed
+was Viscount Twaddle, and I don't go anything lower than the Peerage."
+
+"What, is it somebody you've met at his Excellency's?"
+
+"Wrong again, beloved Simon. It's nobody I've met at old Stars and
+Garters', though his lady-wife could no more do without me than without
+her sal volatile and flirtations. No, _she_ don't go there; she's too
+high for that sort of thing--sick of it. After all the European Courts,
+Malta must be rather small and slow. I was introduced to her yesterday,
+and," continued Little Grand, more solemnly than was his wont, "I do
+assure you she's superb, divine; and I'm not very easy to please."
+
+"What's her name?" I asked, rather impressed with this view of a lady
+too high for old Stars and Garters, as we irreverently termed her
+Majesty's representative in her island of Malta.
+
+Little Grand took his pipe out of his lips to correct me with more
+dignity.
+
+"Her _title_, my dear Simon, is the Marchioness St. Julian."
+
+"Is that an English peerage, Grand?"
+
+"Hum! What! Oh yes, of course! What else should it be, you owl!"
+
+Not being in a condition to decide this point, I was silent, and he went
+on, growing more impressive at each phrase:
+
+"She is splendid, really! And I'm a very _difficile_ fellow, you know;
+but such hair, such eyes, one doesn't see every day in those sun-dried
+Mitchells or those little pink Bovilliers. Well, yesterday, after that
+confounded luncheon (how I hate all those complimentary affairs!--one
+can't enjoy the truffles for talking to the ladies, nor enjoy the ladies
+for discussing the truffles), I went for a ride with Conran out to Villa
+Neponte. I left him there, and went down to see the overland steamers
+come in. While I was waiting, I got into talk, somehow or other, with a
+very agreeable, gentleman-like fellow, who asked me if I'd only just
+come to Malta, and all that sort of thing--you know the introductory
+style of action--till we got quite good friends, and he told me he was
+living outside this wretched little hole at the Casa di Fiori, and
+said--wasn't it civil of him?--said he should be very happy to see me if
+I'd call any time. He gave me his card--Lord Adolphus Fitzhervey--and a
+man with him called him 'Dolph.' As good luck had it, my weed went out
+just while we were talking, and Fitzhervey was monstrously pleasant,
+searched all over him for a fusee, couldn't find one, and asked me to go
+up with him to the Casa di Fiori and get a light. Of course I did, and
+he and I and Guatamara had some sherbet and a smoke together, and then
+he introduced me to the Marchioness St. Julian, his sister--by Jove!
+such a magnificent woman, Simon, _you_ never saw one like her, I'll
+wager. She was uncommonly agreeable, too, and _such_ a smile, my boy!
+She seemed to like me wonderfully--not rare that, though, you'll
+say--and asked me to go and take coffee there to-night after mess, and
+bring one of my chums with me; and as I like to show you life, young
+one, and your taste wants improving after Aunt Minerva, you may come, if
+you like. Hallo! there's Conran. I say, don't tell _him_. I don't want
+any poaching on my manor."
+
+Conran came in at that minute; he was then a Brevet-Major and Captain in
+Ours, and one of the older men who spoilt Little Grand in one way, as
+much as the women did in another. He was a fine, powerful fellow, with
+eyes like an eagle's, and pluck like a lion's; he had a grave look, and
+had been of late more silent and self-reticent than the other
+roistering, débonnair, light-hearted "Dare Devils;" but though, perhaps,
+tired of the wild escapades which reputation had once attributed to him,
+was always the most lenient to the boy's monkey tricks, and always the
+one to whom he went if his larks had cost him too dear, or if he was in
+a scrape from which he saw no exit. Conran had recently come in for a
+good deal of money, and there were few bright eyes in Malta that would
+not have smiled kindly on him; but he did not care much for any of them.
+There was some talk of a love-affair before he went to India, that was
+the cause of his hard-heartedness, though I must say he did not look
+much like a victim to the _grande passion_, in my ideas, which were
+drawn from valentines and odes in the "Woman, thou fond and fair
+deceiver" style; in love that turned its collars down and let its hair
+go uncut and refused to eat, and recovered with a rapidity proportionate
+to its ostentation; and I did not know that, if a man has lost his
+treasure, he _may_ mourn it so deeply that he may refuse to run about
+like Harpagon, crying for his _cassette_ to an audience that only laughs
+at his miseries.
+
+"Well, young ones," said Conran, as he came in and threw down his cap
+and whip, "here you are, spending your hours in pipes and bad wine. What
+a blessing it is to have a palate that isn't blasé, and that will
+swallow all wine just because it _is_ wine! That South African goes
+down with better relish, Little Grand, than you'll find in Château
+Margaux ten years hence. As soon as one begins to want touching up with
+olives, one's real gusto is gone."
+
+"Hang olives, sir! they're beastly," said Little Grand; "and I don't
+care who pretends they're not. Olives are like sermons and wives,
+everybody makes a wry face, and would rather be excused 'em, Major; but
+it's the custom to call 'em good things, and so men bolt 'em in
+complaisance, and while they hate the salt-water flavor, descant on the
+delicious rose taste!"
+
+"Quite true, Little Grand! but one takes olives to enhance the wine; and
+so, perhaps, other men's sermons make one enjoy one's racier novel, and
+other men's wives make one appreciate one's liberty still better. Don't
+abuse olives; you'll want them figuratively and literally before you've
+done either drinking or living!"
+
+"Oh! confound it, Major," cried Little Grand, "I do hope and trust a
+spent ball may have the kindness to double me up and finish me off
+before then."
+
+"You're not philosophic, my boy."
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" ejaculated Little Grand, piously. "I've an uncle, a
+very great philosopher, beats all the sages hollow, from Bion to Buckle,
+and writes in the Metaphysical Quarterly, but I'll be shot if he don't
+spend so much time in trying to puzzle out what life is, that all his
+has slipped away without his having _lived_ one bit. When I was staying
+with him one Christmas, he began boring me with a frightful theory on
+the non-existence of matter. I couldn't stand that, so I cut him short,
+and set him down to the luncheon-table; and while he was full swing with
+a Strasbourg pâté and Comet hock, I stopped him and asked him if, with
+them in his mouth, he believed in matter or not? He was shut up, of
+course; bless your soul, those theorists always are, if you're down upon
+'em with a little fact!"
+
+"Such as a Strasbourg pâté?--that _is_ an unanswerable argument with
+most men, I believe," said Conran, who liked to hear the boy chatter.
+"What are you going to do with yourself to-night, Grand?"
+
+"I am going to--ar--hum--to a friend of mine," said Little Grand, less
+glibly than usual.
+
+"Very well; I only asked, because I would have taken you to Mrs.
+Fortescue's with me; they're having some acting proverbs (horrible
+exertion in this oven of a place, with the thermometer at a hundred and
+twenty degrees); but if you've better sport it's no matter. Take care
+what friends you make, though, Grand; you'll find some Maltese
+acquaintances very costly."
+
+"Thank you. I should say I can take care of myself," replied Little
+Grand, with immeasurable scorn and dignity.
+
+Conran laughed, struck him across the shoulders with his whip, stroked
+his own moustaches, and went out again, whistling one of Verdi's airs.
+
+"I don't want him bothering, you know," explained Little Grand; "she's
+such a deuced magnificent woman!"
+
+She was a magnificent woman, this Eudoxia Adelaida, Marchioness St.
+Julian; and proud enough Little Grand and I felt when we had that soft,
+jewelled hand held out to us, and that bewitching smile beamed upon us,
+and that joyous presence dazzling in our eyes, as we sat in the
+drawing-room of that Casa di Fiori. She was about thirty-five, I should
+say (boys always worship those who might have been schoolfellows of
+their mothers), tall and stately, and imposing, with the most beautiful
+pink and white skin, with a fine set of teeth, raven hair, and eyes
+tinted most exquisitely. Oh! she was magnificent, our Marchioness St.
+Julian! Into what unutterable insignificance, what miserable, washed-out
+shadows sank Stars and Garters' lady, and the Mitchell girls, and all
+the belles of La Valetta, whom we hadn't thought so very bad-looking
+before.
+
+There was a young creature sitting a little out of the radiance of
+light, reading; but we had no eyes for anybody except the Marchioness
+St. Julian. We were in such high society, too; there was her brother,
+Lord Adolphus, and his bosom Pylades, the Baron Guatamara; and there was
+a big fellow, with hooked nose and very curly hair, who was introduced
+to us as the Prince of Orangia Magnolia; and a little wiry fellow, with
+bits of red and blue ribbon, and a star or two in his button-hole, who
+was M. le Due de Saint-Jeu. We were quite dazzled with the coruscations
+of so much aristocracy, especially when they talked across to each
+other--so familiarly, too--of Johnnie (that we Lord Russell), and Pam,
+and "old Buck" (my godfather Buckingham, Lord Adolphus explained to us),
+and Montpensier and old Joinville; and chatted of when they dined at the
+Tuileries, and stayed at Compiègne, and hunted at Belvoir, and spent
+Christmas at Holcombe or Longleat. We were in such high society! How
+contemptible appeared Mrs. Maberly's and the Fortescue soirées; how
+infinitesimally small grew Charlie Ruthven, and Harry Villiers, and Grey
+and Albany, and all the other young fellows who thought it such great
+guns to be _au mieux_ with little Graziella, or invited to Sir George
+Dashaway's. _We_ were a cut above those things now--rather!
+
+That splendid Marchioness! There was a head for a coronet, if you like!
+And how benign she was! Grand sat on the couch beside her, and I on an
+ottoman on her left, and she leaned back in her magnificent toilette,
+flirting her fan like a Castilian, and flashing upon us her superb eyes
+from behind it; not speaking very much, but showing her white teeth in
+scores of heavenly smiles, till Little Grand, the _blasé_ man of
+seventeen, and I the raw Moses of private tutelage, both felt that we
+had never come across anything like this; never, in fact, seen a woman
+worth a glance before.
+
+She listened to us--or rather to him; I was too awestruck to advance
+much beyond monosyllables--and laughed at him, and smiled encouragingly
+on my _gaucherie_ (and when a boy is _gauche_, how ready he is to
+worship such a helping hand!), and beamed upon us both with an
+effulgence compared with which the radiance of Helen, Galatea, Oenone,
+Messalina, Laïs, and all the legendary beauties one reads about, must
+have been what the railway night-lamps that _never_ burn are to the
+prismatic luminaries of Cremorne. They were all uncommonly pleasant, all
+except the girl who was reading, whom they introduced as the Signorina
+da' Guari, a Tuscan, and daughter to Orangia Magnolia, with one of those
+marvellously beautiful faces that one sees in the most splendid
+painters' models of the Campagna, who never lifted her head scarcely,
+though Guatamara and Saint-Jeu did their best to make her. But all the
+others were wonderfully agreeable, and quite _fête'd_ Little Grand and
+me, at which, they, being more than double our age, and seemingly at
+home alike with Belgravia and Newmarket, the Faubourg and the Pytchley,
+we felt to grow at least a foot each in the aroma of this Casa di Fiori.
+
+"This is rather stupid, Doxie," began Lord Adolphus, addressing his
+sister; "not much entertainment for our guests. What do you say to a
+game of vingt-et-un, eh, Mr. Grandison?"
+
+Little Grand fixed his blue eyes on the Marchioness, and said he should
+be very happy, but, as for entertainment--_he_ wanted no other.
+
+"No compliments, _petit ami_," laughed the Marchioness, with a dainty
+blow of her fan. "Yes, Dolph, have vingt-et-un, or music, or anything
+you like. Sing us something, Lucrezia."
+
+The Italian girl thus addressed looked up with a passionate, haughty
+flush, and answered, with wonderfully little courtesy I considered, "I
+shall not sing to-night."
+
+"Are you unwell, fairest friend?" asked the Duc de Saint-Jeu, bending
+his little wiry figure over her.
+
+She shrank away from him, and drew back, a hot color in her cheeks.
+
+"Signore, I did not address _you_."
+
+The Marchioness looked angry, if those divine eyes could look anything
+so mortal. However, she shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"Well, my dear Lucrezia, we can't make you sing, of course, if you
+won't. I, for my part, always do any little thing I can to amuse
+anybody; if I fail, I fail; I have done my best, and my friends will
+appreciate the effort, if not the result. No, my dear Prince, do not
+tease her," said the Marchioness to Orangia Magnolia, who was arguing, I
+thought, somewhat imperatively for such a well-bred and courtly man,
+with Lucrezia; "we will have vingt-et-un, and Lucrezia will give us the
+delight of her voice some other evening, I dare say."
+
+We had vingt-et-un; the Marchioness would not play, but she sat in her
+rose velvet arm-chair, just behind Little Grand, putting in pretty
+little speeches, and questions, and bagatelles, and calling attention to
+the gambols of her darling greyhound Cupidon, and tapping Little Grand
+with her fan, till, I believe, he neither knew how the game went, nor
+what money he lost; and I, gazing at her, and cursing him for his facile
+tongue, never noticed my naturels, couldn't have said what the maximum
+was if you had paid me for it, and might, for anything I knew to the
+contrary, have been seeing my life slip away with each card as Balzac's
+hero with the Peau de Chagrin. Then we had sherbet, and wine, and cognac
+for those who preferred it; and the Marchioness gave us permission to
+smoke, and took a dainty hookah with an amber mouthpiece for her own use
+(divine she did look, too, with that hookah between her ruby lips!); and
+the smoke, and the cognac, and the smiles, unloosed our tongues, and we
+spake like very great donkeys, I dare say, but I'm sure with not a tenth
+part the wisdom that Balaam's ass developed in his brief and pithy
+conversation.
+
+However great the bosh we talked, though, we found very lenient
+auditors. Fitzhervey and Guatamara laughed at all our witticisms; the
+Prince of Orangia Magnolia joined in with a "Per Baccho!" and a "Bravo!"
+and little Saint-Jeu wheezed, and gave a faint echo of "Mon Dieu!" and
+"Très bien, très bien, vraiment!" and the Marchioness St. Julian laughed
+too, and joined in our nonsense, and, what was much more, bent a willing
+ear to our compliments, no matter how florid; and Saint-Jeu told us a
+story or two, more amusing than _comme il faut_, at which the
+Marchioness tried to look grave, and _did_ look shocked, but laughed for
+all that behind her fan; and Lucrezia da' Guari sat in shadow, as still
+and as silent as the Parian Euphrosyne on the console, though her
+passionate eyes and expressive face looked the very antipodes of silence
+and statuetteism, as she flashed half-shy, half-scornful, looks upon us.
+
+If the first part of the evening had been delightful, this was something
+like Paradise! It was such high society! and with just dash enough of
+Mabille and coulisses laisseraller to give it piquancy. How different
+was the pleasantry and freedom of these _real_ aristos, after the
+humdrum dinners and horrid bores of dances that those snobs of Maberlys,
+and Fortescues, and Mitchells, made believe to call Society!
+
+What with the wine, and the smoke, and the smiles, I wasn't quite clear
+as to whether I saw twenty horses' heads or one when I was fairly into
+saddle, and riding back to the town, just as the first dawn was rising,
+Aphrodite-like, from the far blue waves of the Mediterranean. Little
+Grand was better seasoned, but even he was dizzy with the parting words
+of the Marchioness, which had softly breathed the delicious passport,
+"Come to-morrow."
+
+"By Jupiter!" swore Little Grand, obliged to give relief to his
+feelings--"by Jupiter, Simon! did you ever see such a glorious,
+enchanting, divine, delicious, adorable creature? Faugh! who could look
+at those Mitchell girls after her? Such eyes! such a smile! such a
+figure! Talk of a coronet! no imperial crown would be half good enough
+for her! And how pleasant those fellows are! I like that little chaffy
+chap, the Duke; what a slap-up story that was about the bal de l'Opéra.
+And Fitzhervey, too; there's something uncommonly thorough-bred about
+him, ain't there? And Guatamara's an immensely jolly fellow. Ah, myboy!
+that's something like society; all the ease and freedom of real rank; no
+nonsense about them, as there is about snobs. I say, what wouldn't the
+other fellows give to be in our luck? I think even Conran would warm up
+about her. But, Simon, she's deucedly taken with me--she is, upon my
+word; and she knows how to show it you, too! By George! one could die
+for a woman like that--eh?"
+
+"Die!" I echoed, while my horse stumbled along up the hilly road, and I
+swayed forward, pretty nearly over his head, while poetry rushed to my
+lips, and electric sparks danced before my eyes:
+
+ "To die for those we love! oh, there is power
+ In the true heart, and pride, and joy, for this
+ It is to live without the vanished light
+ That strength is needed!"
+
+"But I'll be shot if it shall be vanished light," returned Little Grand;
+"it don't look much like it yet. The light's only just lit, 'tisn't
+likely it's going out again directly; but she is a stunner! and----"
+
+"A stunner!" I shouted; "she's much more than that--she's an angel, and
+I'll be much obliged to you to call her by her right name, sir. She's a
+beautiful, noble, loving woman; the most perfect of all Nature's
+masterworks. She is divine, sir, and you and I are not worthy merely to
+kiss the hem of her garment."
+
+"Ain't we, though? I don't care much about kissing her dress; it's silk,
+and I don't know that I should derive much pleasure from pressing my
+lips on its texture; but her cheek----"
+
+ "Her cheek is like the Catherine pear,
+ The side that's next the sun!"
+
+I shouted, as my horse went down in a rut. "She's like Venus rising from
+the sea-shell; she's like Aurora, when she came down on the first ray of
+the dawn to Tithonus; she's like Briseis----"
+
+"Bother classics! she's like herself, and beats 'em all hollow. She's
+the finest creature ever seen on earth, and I should like to see the man
+who'd dare to say she wasn't. And--I say, Simon--_how much did you lose
+to-night_?"
+
+From sublimest heights I tumbled straight to bathos. The cold water of
+Grand's query quenched my poetry, extinguished my electric lights, and
+sobered me like a douche bath.
+
+"I don't know," I answered, with a sense of awe and horror stealing over
+me; "but I had a pony in my waistcoat-pocket that the governor had just
+sent me; Guatamara changed it for me, and--_I've only sixpence left_!"
+
+"Old boy," said Little Grand to me, the next morning, after early
+parade, "come in my room, and let's make up some despatches to the
+governors. You see," he continued, five minutes after,--"you see, we're
+both of us pretty well cleared out; I've only got half a pony, and you
+haven't a couple of fivers left. Now you know they evidently play rather
+high at the Casa di Fiori; do everything _en prince_, like nobs who've
+Barclays at their back; and one mustn't hang fire; horrid shabby that
+would look. Besides, fancy seeming mean before _her_! So I've been
+thinking that, though governors are a screwy lot generally, if we put it
+to 'em clearly the sort of set we've got into, and show 'em that we
+can't help, now that we are at Rome, doing as the Romans do, I should
+say they could hardly help bleeding a little--eh? Now, listen how I've
+put it. My old boy has a weakness for titles; he married my mother on
+the relationship to Viscount Twaddles (who doesn't know of her
+existence; but who does to talk about as 'our cousin'), and he'd eat up
+miles of dirt for a chance of coming to a strawberry-leaf; so I think
+this will touch him up beautifully. Listen! ain't I sublimely
+respectful? 'I'm sure, my dear father, you wilt be delighted to learn,
+that by wonderful luck, or rather I ought to say Providence, I have
+fallen on my feet in Malta, and got introduced to the very highest'
+(wait! let me stick a dash under very)--'the _very_ highest society
+here. They are quite tip-top. To show you what style, I need only
+mention Lord A. Fitzhervey, the Baron Guatamara, and the Marchioness St.
+Julian, as among my kindest friends. They have been yachting in the
+Levant, and are now staying in Malta: they are all most kind to me; and
+I know you will appreciate the intellectual advantages that such contact
+must afford me; at the same time you will understand that I can hardly
+enter such circles as a snob, and you will wish your son to comport
+himself as a gentleman; but gentlemanizing comes uncommon dear, I can
+tell you, with all the care in the world: and if you _could_ let me have
+another couple of hundred, I should vote you'--a what, Simon?--'an
+out-and-out brick' is the sensible style, but I suppose 'the best and
+kindest of parents' is the filial dodge, eh? There! 'With fond love to
+mamma and Florie, ever your affectionate son, COSMO GRANDISON.' Bravo!
+that's prime; that'll bring the yellows down, I take it. Here, old
+fellow, copy it to your governor; you couldn't have a more stunning
+effusion--short, and to the purpose, as cabinet councils ought to be,
+and ain't. Fire away, my juvenile."
+
+I did fire away; only I, of a more impressionable and poetic nature than
+Little Grand, gave a certain vent to my feelings in expatiating on the
+beauty, grace, condescension, &c., &c., of the Marchioness to my mother;
+I did _not_ mention the grivois stories, the brandy, and the hookah: I
+was quite sure they were the sign of that delirious ease and disregard
+of snobbish etiquette and convenances peculiar to the "Upper Ten," but I
+thought the poor people at home, in vicarage seclusion, would be too out
+of the world to fully appreciate such revelations of our _crême de la
+crême_; besides, my governor had James's own detestation of the divine
+weed, and considered that men who "made chimneys of their mouths" might
+just as well have the mark of the Beast at once.
+
+Little Grand and I were hard-up for cash, and _en attendant_ the
+governors' replies and remittances, we had recourse to the tender
+mercies and leather bags of napoleons, ducats, florins, and doubloons of
+a certain Spanish Jew, one Balthazar Miraflores, a shrivelled-skinned,
+weezing old cove, who was "most happy to lent anytink to his tear young
+shentlesmen, but, by Got! he was as poor as Job, he was indeed!" Whether
+Job ever lent money out on interest or not, I can't say; perhaps he did,
+as in the finish he ended with having quadrupled his cattle and lands,
+and all his goods--a knack usurers preserve in full force to this day;
+but all I can say is, that if he was not poorer than Mr. Miraflores, he
+was not much to be pitied, for he, miserly old shark, lived in his dark,
+dirty hole, like a crocodile embedded in Nile mud, and crushed the bones
+of all unwary adventurers who came within range of his great bristling
+jaws.
+
+Money, however, Little Grand and I got out of him in plenty, only for a
+little bit of paper in exchange; and at that time we didn't know that
+though the paper tax would be repealed at last, there would remain, as
+long as youths are green and old birds cunning, a heavy and a bitter tax
+on certain bits of paper to which one's hand is put, which Mr.
+Gladstone, though he achieve the herculean task of making draymen take
+kindly to vin ordinaire, and the popping of champagne corks a familiar
+sound by cottage-hearths, will never be able to include in his budgets,
+to come among the Taxes that are Repealed!
+
+Well, we had our money from old Balthazar that morning, and we played
+with it again that night up at the Casa di Fiori. Loo this time, by way
+of change. Saint-Jeu said he always thought it well to change your game
+as you change your loves: constancy, whether to cards or women, was most
+fatiguing. We liked Saint-Jeu very much, we thought him such a funny
+fellow. They said they did not care to play much--of course they didn't,
+when Guatamara had had écarté with the Grand-Duke of Chaffsandlarkstein
+at half a million a side, and Lord Dolph had broken the bank at Homburg
+"just for fun--no fun to old Blanc, who farms it, though, you know." But
+the Marchioness, who was doubly gracious that night, told them they must
+play, because it amused her _chers petits amis_. Besides, she said, in
+her pretty, imperious way, she liked to see it--it amused her. After
+that, of course, there was no more hesitation; down we sat, and young
+Heavystone with us.
+
+The evening before we had happened to mention him, said he was a fellow
+of no end of tin, though as stupid an owl as ever spelt his own name
+wrong when he passed a military examination, and the Marchioness,
+recalling the name, said she remembered his father, and asked us to
+bring him to see her; which we did, fearing no rival in "old Heavy."
+
+So down we three sat, and had the evening before over again, with the
+cards, and the smiles, and wiles of our divinity, and Saint-Jeu's
+stories and Fitzhervey's cognac and cigars; with this difference, that
+we found loo more exciting than vingt-et-un. They played it so fast,
+too, it was like a breathless heat for the Goodwood Cup, and the
+Marchioness watched it, leaning alternately over Grand's, and Heavy's,
+and my chair, and saying, with such naïve delight, "Oh, do take miss,
+Cosmo; I would risk it if I were you, Mr. Heavystone; _pray_ don't let
+my naughty brother win everything," that I'd have defied the stiffest of
+the Stagyrites or the chilliest of Calvinists to have kept their head
+cool with that syren voice in their ear.
+
+And La Lucrezia sat, as she had sat the night before, by the open
+window, still and silent, the Cape jasmines and Southern creepers
+framing her in a soft moonlight picture, contrast enough to the
+brilliantly lighted room, echoing with laughter at Saint-Jeu's stories,
+perfumed with Cubas and narghilés, and shrining the magnificent,
+full-blown, jewelled beauty of our Marchioness St. Julian, with which we
+were as rapidly, as madly, as unreasoningly, and as sentimentally in
+love as any boys of seventeen or eighteen ever could be. What greater
+latitude, you will exclaim, recalling certain buried-away episodes of
+_your_ hobbedehoyism, when you addressed Latin distichs to that
+hazel-eyed Hebe who presided over oyster patties and water ices at the
+pastrycook's in Eton; or ruined your governor's young plantations
+cutting the name of Adeliza Mary, your cousin, at this day a portly
+person in velvet and point, whom you can now call, with a thanksgiving
+in the stead of the olden tremor, Mrs. Hector M'Cutchin? Yes, we were in
+love in a couple of evenings, Little Grand vehemently and unpoetically,
+I shyly and sentimentally, according to our temperament, and as the fair
+Emily stirred feud between the two Noble Kinsmen, so the Marchioness St.
+Julian began to sow seeds of jealousy and detestation between us, sworn
+allies as we were. But "_le véritable amant ne connaît point_
+_d'amis_," and as soon as we began to grow jealous of each other, Little
+Grand could have kicked me to the devil, and I could have kicked _him_
+with the greatest pleasure in life.
+
+But I was shy, Little Grand was blessed with all the audacity
+imaginable; the consequence was, that when our horses came round, and
+the Maltese who acted as cherub was going to close the gates of Paradise
+upon us, he managed to slip into the Marchioness's boudoir to get a
+tête-à-tête farewell, while I strode up and down the veranda, not
+heeding Saint-Jeu, who was telling me a tale, to which, in any other
+saner moments, I should have listened greedily, but longing to execute
+on Little Grand some fierce and terrible vengeance, to which the
+vendetta should be baby's play. Saint-Jeu left me to put his arm over
+Heavy's shoulder, and tell him if ever he came to Paris he should be
+transported to receive him at the Hôtel de Millefleurs, and present him
+at the Tuileries; and I stood swearing to myself, and breaking off
+sprays of the veranda creepers, when I heard somebody say, very softly
+and low,--
+
+"Signore, come here a moment."
+
+It was that sweetly pretty mute whom we had barely noticed, absorbed as
+we were in the worship of our maturer idol, leaning out of the window,
+her cheeks flushed, her lips parted, her eyes sad and anxious. Of course
+I went to her, surprised at her waking up so suddenly to any interest in
+me. She put her hand on my coat-sleeve, and drew me down towards her.
+
+"Listen to me a moment. I hardly know how to warn you, and yet I must. I
+cannot sit quietly by and see you and your young friends being deceived
+as so many have been before you. Do not come here again---do not----"
+
+"Figlia mia! are you not afraid of the night-air?" said the Prince of
+Orangia Magnolia, just behind us.
+
+His words were kind, but there was a nasty glitter in his eyes.
+Lucrezia answered him in passionate Italian--of which I had no
+knowledge--with such fire in her eyes, such haughty gesticulation, and
+such a torrent of words, that I really began to think, pretty soft
+little dear as she looked, that she must positively be a trifle out of
+her mind, her silence before, and her queer speech to me, seemed such
+odd behavior for a young lady in such high society. She was turning to
+me again when Little Grand came out into the veranda, looking flushed,
+proud, and self-complaisant, as such a winner and slayer of women would
+do. My hand clenched on the jasmine, I thirsted to spring on him as he
+stood there with his provoking, self-contented smile, and his confounded
+coxcombical air, and his cursed fair curls--_my_ hair was dust-colored
+and as rebellious as porcupine-quills--and wash out in his blood or
+mine----A touch of a soft hand thrilled through my every nerve and
+fibre: the Marchioness was there, and signed me to her. Lucrezia, Little
+Grand, and all the rest of the universe vanished from my mind at the
+lightning of that angel smile and the rustle of that moire-antique
+dress. She beckoned me to her into the empty drawing-room.
+
+"Augustus" (I never thought my name could sound so sweet before), "tell
+me, what was my niece Lucrezia saying to you just now?"
+
+Now I had a sad habit of telling the truth; it was an out-of-the-world
+custom taught me, among other old-fashioned things, at home, though I
+soon found how inconvenient a _bêtise_ modern society considers it; and
+I blurted the truth out here, not distinctly or gracefully, though, as
+Little Grand would have done, for I was in that state of exaltation
+ordinarily expressed as not knowing whether one is standing in one's
+Wellingtons or not.
+
+The Marchioness sighed.
+
+"Ah, did she say that? Poor dear girl! She dislikes me so much, it is
+quite an hallucination, and yet, O Augustus, I have been to her like an
+elder sister, like a mother. Imagine how it grieves me," and the
+Marchioness shed some tears--pearls of price, thought I, worthy to drop
+from angel eyes--"it is a bitter sorrow to me, but, poor darling! she is
+not responsible."
+
+She touched her veiny temple significantly as she spoke, and I
+understood, and felt tremendously shocked at it, that the young, fair
+Italian girl was a fierce and cruel maniac, who had the heart (oh! most
+extraordinary madness did it seem to me; if _I_ had lost my senses I
+could never have harmed _her_!) to hate, absolutely hate, the noblest,
+tenderest, most beautiful of women!
+
+"I never alluded to it to any one," continued the Marchioness.
+"Guatamara and Saint-Jeu, though such intimate friends, are ignorant of
+it. I would rather have any one think ever so badly of me, than reveal
+to them the cruel misfortune of my sweet Lucrezia----"
+
+How noble she looked as she spoke!
+
+"But you, Augustus, you," and she smiled upon me till I grew as dizzy as
+after my first taste of milk-punch, "I have not the courage to let _you_
+go off with any bad impression of me. I have known you a very little
+while, it is true--but a few hours, indeed--yet there are affinities of
+heart and soul which overstep the bounds of time, and, laughing at the
+chill ties of ordinary custom, make strangers dearer than old
+friends----"
+
+The room revolved round me, the lights danced up and down, my heart beat
+like Thor's hammer, and my pulse went as fast as a favorite saving the
+distance. _She_ speaking so to me! My senses whirled round and round
+like fifty thousand witches on a Walpurgis Night, and down I went on my
+knees before my magnificent idol, raving away I couldn't tell you what
+now--the essence of everything I'd ever read, from Ovid to Alexander
+Smith. It must have been something frightful to hear, though Heaven
+knows I meant it earnestly enough. Suddenly I was pulled up with a
+jerk, as one throws an unbroken colt back on his haunches in the middle
+of his first start. _I thought I heard a laugh._
+
+She started up too. "Hush! another time! We may be overheard." And
+drawing her dress from my hands, which grasped it as agonisingly as a
+cockney grasps his saddle-bow, holding on for dear life over the Burton
+or Tedworth country, she stooped kindly over me, and floated away before
+_I_ was recovered from the exquisite delirium of my ecstatic trance.
+
+She loved me! This superb creature loved me! There was not a doubt of
+it; and how I got back to the barracks that night in my heavenly state
+of mind I could never have told. All I know is, that Grand and I never
+spoke a word, by tacit consent, all the way back; that I felt a fiendish
+delight when I saw his proud triumphant air, and thought how little he
+guessed, poor fellow!----And that Dream of One Fair Woman was as
+superior in rapture to the "Dream of Fair Women" as Tokay to the "Fine
+Fruity Port" that results from damsons and a decoction of sloes!
+
+The next day there was a grand affair in Malta to receive some foreign
+Prince, whose name I do not remember now, who called on us _en route_ to
+England. Of course all the troops turned out, and there was an
+inspection of us, and a grand luncheon and dinner, and ball, and all
+that sort of thing, which a month before I should have considered prime
+fun, but which now, as it kept me out of my paradise, I thought the most
+miserable bore that could possibly have chanced.
+
+"I say," said Heavy to me as I was getting into harness--"I say, don't
+you wonder Fitzhervey and the Marchioness ain't coming to the palace
+to-day? One would have thought Old Stars and Garters would have been
+sure to ask them."
+
+"Ask them? I should say so," I returned, with immeasurable disdain. "Of
+course he asked them; but she told me she shouldn't come, last night.
+She is so tired of such things. She came yachting with Fitzhervey solely
+to try and have a little quiet. She says people never give her a
+moment's rest when she is in Paris or London. She was sorry to
+disappoint Stars and Garters, but I don't think she likes his wife much:
+she don't consider her good ton."
+
+On which information Heavy lapsed into a state of profoundest awe and
+wonderment, it having been one of his articles of faith, for the month
+that we had been in Malta, that the palace people were exalted demigods,
+whom it was only permissible to worship from a distance, and a very
+respectful distance too. Heavy had lost some twenty odd pounds the night
+before--of course we lost, young hands as we were, unaccustomed to the
+society of that entertaining gentleman, Pam--and had grumbled not a
+little at the loss of his gold bobs. But now I could see that such a
+contemptibly pecuniary matter was clean gone from his memory, and that
+he would have thought the world well lost for the honor of playing cards
+with people who could afford to disappoint Old Stars and Garters.
+
+The inspection was over at last; and if any other than Conran had been
+my senior officer, I should have come off badly, in all probability, for
+the abominable manner in which I went through my evolutions. The day
+came to an end somehow or other, though I began to think it never would,
+the luncheon was ended, the bigwigs were taking their sieste, or
+otherwise occupied, and I, trusting to my absence not being noticed,
+tore off as hard as man can who has Cupid for his Pegasus. With a
+bouquet as large as a drum-head, clasped round with a bracelet, about
+which I had many doubts as to the propriety of offering to the possessor
+of such jewelry as the Marchioness must have, yet on which I thought I
+might venture after the scene of last night, I was soon on the veranda
+of the Casa di Fiori, and my natural shyness being stimulated into a
+distant resemblance of Little Grand's enviable brass, seeing the windows
+of the drawing-room open, I pushed aside the green venetians and entered
+noiselessly. The room did not look a quarter so inviting as the night
+before, though it was left in precisely a similar state. I do not know
+how it was, but those cards lying about on the floor, those sconces with
+the wax run down and dripping over them, those emptied caraffes that had
+diffused an odor not yet dissipated, those tables and velvet couches all
+_à tort et à travers_, did not look so very inviting after all, and even
+to my unsophisticated senses, scarcely seemed fit for a Peeress.
+
+There was nobody in the room, and I walked through it towards the
+boudoir; from the open door I saw Fitzhervey, Guatamara, and my
+Marchioness--but oh! what horror unutterable! doing--_que pensez-vous?_
+Drinking bottled porter!--and drinking bottled porter in a _peignoir_
+not of the cleanliest, and with raven tresses not of the neatest!
+
+Only fancy! she, that divine, _spirituelle_ creature, who had talked but
+a few hours before of the affinity of souls, to have come down, like any
+ordinary woman, to Guinness's stout, and a checked dressing-gown and
+unbrushed locks! To find your prophet without his silver veil, or your
+Leila dead drowned in a sack, or your Guinevere flown over with Sir
+Lancelot to Boulogne, or your long-esteemed Griselda gone off with your
+cockaded Jeames, is nothing to the torture, the unutterable anguish, of
+seeing your angel, your divinity, your bright particular star, your
+hallowed Arabian rose, come down to--Bottled Porter! Do not talk to me
+of Doré, sir, or Mr. Martin's pictures; their horrors dwindle into
+insignificance compared with the horror of finding an intimate liaison
+between one's first love and Bottled Porter!
+
+In my first dim, unutterable anguish, I should have turned and fled; but
+my syren's voice had not lost all its power, despite the stout and dirty
+dressing-gown, for she was a very handsome woman, and could stand such
+things as well as anybody. She came towards me, with her softest smile,
+glancing at the bracelet on the bouquet, apologizing slightly for her
+négligé:--"I am so indolent. I only dress for those I care to
+please--and I never hoped to see _you_ to-day." In short, magnetizing me
+over again, and smoothing down my outraged sensibilities, till I ended
+by becoming almost blind (_quite_ I could not manage) to the checked
+_robe de chambre_ and the unbrushed bandeaux, by offering her my
+braceleted bouquet, which was very graciously accepted, and even by
+sharing the atrocious London porter, "that horrid stuff," she called it,
+"how I hate it! but it is the only thing Sir Benjamin Brodie allows me,
+I am so very delicate, you know, my sensibilities so frightfully acute!"
+
+I had not twenty minutes to stay, having to be back at the barracks, or
+risk a reprimand, which, happily, the checked _peignoir_ had cooled me
+sufficiently to enable me to recollect. So I took my farewell--one not
+unlike Medora's and Conrad's, Fitzhervey and Guatamara having kindly
+withdrawn as soon as the bottled porter was finished--and I went out of
+the house in a very blissful state, despite Guinness and the unwelcome
+demi-toilette, which did not accord with Eugène Sue's and the Parlor
+Library's description of the general getting-up and stunning appearance
+of heroines and peeresses, "reclining, in robes of cloud-like tissue and
+folds of the richest lace, on a cabriole couch of amber velvet, while
+the air was filled with the voluptuous perfume of the flower-children of
+the South, and music from unseen choristers lulled the senses with its
+divinest harmony," &c., &c., &c.
+
+Bottled porter and a checked dressing-gown! Say what you like, sirs, it
+takes a very strong passion to overcome _those_. I have heard men
+ascribe the waning of their affections after the honeymoon to the
+constant sight of their wives--whom before they had only seen making
+papa's coffee with an angelic air and a toilette _tirée à quatre
+épingles_--everlastingly coming down too late for breakfast in a
+dressing-gown; and, upon my soul, if ever I marry, which Heaven in
+pitiful mercy forfend! and my wife make her appearance in one of those
+confounded _peignoirs_, I will give that much-run-after and
+deeply-to-be-pitied public character, the Divorce Judge, some more work
+to do--I will, upon my honor.
+
+However, the _peignoir_ had not iced me enough that time to prevent my
+tumbling out of the house in as delicious an ecstasy as if I had been
+eating some of Monte Cristo's "hatchis." As I went out, not looking
+before me, I came bang against the chest of somebody else, who, not
+admiring the rencontre, hit my cap over my eyes, and exclaimed, in not
+the most courtly manner you will acknowledge, "You cursed owl, take
+that, then! What are you doing here, I should like to know?"
+
+"Confound your impudence!" I retorted, as soon as my ocular powers were
+restored, and I saw the blue eyes, fair curls, and smart figure of my
+ancient Iolaüs, now my bitterest foe--"confound your impertinence! what
+are _you_ doing here? you mean."
+
+"Take care, and don't ask questions about what doesn't concern you,"
+returned Little Grand, with a laugh--a most irritating laugh. There are
+times when such cachinnations sting one's ears more than a volley of
+oaths. "Go home and mind your own business, my chicken. You are a green
+bird, and nobody minds you, but still you'll find it as well not to come
+poaching on other men's manors."
+
+"Other men's manors! Mine, if you please," I shouted, so mad with him I
+could have floored him where he stood.
+
+"Phew!" laughed Little Grand, screwing up his lips into a contemptuous
+whistle, "you've been drinking too much Bass, my daisy; 'tis n't good
+for young heads--can't stand it. Go home, innocent."
+
+The insult, the disdainful tone, froze my blood. My heart swelled with a
+sense of outraged dignity and injured manhood. With a conviction of my
+immeasurable superiority of position, as the beloved of that divine
+creature, I emancipated myself from the certain sort of slavery I was
+generally in to Little Grand, and spoke as I conceived it to be the
+habit of gentlemen whose honor had been wounded to speak.
+
+"Mr. Grandison, you will pay for this insult. I shall expect
+satisfaction."
+
+Little Grand laughed again--absolutely grinned, the audacious young
+imp--and he twelve months younger than I, too!
+
+"Certainly, sir. If you wish to be made a target of, I shall be
+delighted to oblige you. I can't keep ladies waiting. It is always Place
+aux dames! with me; so, for the present, good morning!"
+
+And off went the young coxcomb into the Casa di Fiori, and I, only
+consoled by the reflection of the different reception he would receive
+to what mine had been (_he_ had a braceleted bouquet, too, the young
+pretentious puppy!), started off again, assuaging my lacerated feelings
+with the delicious word of Satisfaction. I felt myself immeasurably
+raised above the heads of every other man in Malta--a perfect hero of
+romance; in fact, fit to figure in my beloved Alexandre's most
+highly-wrought yellow-papered _roman_, with a duel on my hands, and the
+love of a magnificent creature like my Eudoxia Adelaida. She had become
+Eudoxia Adelaida to me now, and I had forgiven, if not forgotten, the
+dirty dressing-gown: the bottled porter lay, of course, at Brodie's
+door. If he would condemn spiritual forms of life and light to the
+common realistic aliments of horrible barmaids and draymen, she could
+not help it, nor I either. If angels come down to earth, and are
+separated from their natural nourishment of manna and nectar, they must
+take what they can get, even though it be so coarse and sublunary a
+thing as Guinness's XXX, must they not, sir? Yes, I felt very _exalté_
+with my affair of honor and my affair of the heart, Little Grand for my
+foe, and my Marchioness, for a love. I never stopped to remember that I
+might be smashing with frightful recklessness the Sixth and the Seventh
+Commandments. If Little Grand got shot, he must thank himself; he should
+not have insulted me; and if there was a Marquis St. Julian, why--I
+pitied him, poor fellow! that was all.
+
+Full of these sublime sensations--grown at least three feet in my
+varnished boots--I lounged into the ball-room, feeling supreme pity for
+ensigns who were chattering round the door, admiring those poor, pale
+garrison girls. _They_ had not a duel and a Marchioness; _they_ did not
+know what beauty meant--what life was!
+
+I did not dance--I was above that sort of thing now--there was not a
+woman worth the trouble in the room; and about the second waltz I saw my
+would-be rival talking to Ruthven, a fellow in Ours. Little Grand did
+not look glum or dispirited, as he ought to have done after the
+interview he must have had; but probably that was the boy's brass. He
+would never look beaten if you had hit him till he was black and blue.
+Presently Ruthven came up to me. He was not over-used to his business,
+for he began the opening chapter in rather school-boy fashion.
+
+"Hallo, Gus! so you and Little Grand have been falling out. Why don't
+you settle it with a little mill? A vast deal better than pistols. Duels
+always seem to me no fun. Two men stand up like fools, and----"
+
+"Mr. Ruthven," said I, very haughtily, "if your principal desires to
+apologize----"
+
+"Apologize! Bless your soul, no! But----"
+
+"Then," said I, cutting him uncommonly short indeed, "you can have no
+necessity to address yourself to me, and I beg to refer you to my friend
+and second, Mr. Heavystone."
+
+Wherewith I bowed, turned on my heel, and left him.
+
+I did not sleep that night, though I tried hard, because I thought it
+the correct thing for heroes to sleep sweetly till the clock strikes the
+hour of their duel, execution, &c., or whatever it may hap. Egmont
+slept, Argyle slept, Philippe Egalité, scores of them, but I could not.
+Not that I funked it, thank Heaven--I never had a touch of that--but
+because I was in such a delicious state of excitement, self-admiration,
+and heroism, which had not cooled when I found myself walking down to
+the appointed place by the beach with poor old Heavy, who was intensely
+impressed by being charged with about five quires of the best
+cream-laid, to be given to the Marchioness in case I fell. Little Grand
+and Ruthven came on the ground at almost the same moment, Little Grand
+eminently jaunty and most _confoundedly_ handsome. We took off our caps
+with distant ceremony; the Castilian hidalgos were never more stately;
+but, then, what Knights of the Round Table ever splintered spears for
+such a woman?
+
+The paces were measured, the pistols taken out of their case. We were
+just placed, and Ruthven, with a handkerchief in his hand, had just
+enumerated, in awful accents, "One! two!"--the "three!" yet hovered on
+his lips, when we heard a laugh--the third laugh that had chilled my
+blood in twenty-four hours. Somebody's hand was laid on Little Grand's
+shoulder, and Conran's voice interrupted the whole thing.
+
+"Hallo, young ones! what farce is this?"
+
+"Farce, sir!" retorted Little Grand, hotly--"farce! It is no farce. It
+is an affair of honor, and----"
+
+"Don't make me laugh, my dear boy," smiled Conran; "it is so much too
+warm for such an exertion. Pray, why are you and your once sworn friend
+making popinjays of each other?"
+
+"Mr. Grandison has grossly insulted me," I began, "and I demand
+satisfaction. I will not stir from the ground without it, and----"
+
+"You _sha'n't_," shouted Little Grand. "Do you dare to pretend I want to
+funk, you little contemptible----"
+
+Though it was too warm, Conran went off into a fit of laughter.
+
+I dare say our sublimity had a comic touch in it of which we never
+dreamt. "My dear boys, pray don't, it is too fatiguing. Come, Grand,
+what is it all about?"
+
+"I deny your right to question me, Major," retorted Little Grand, in a
+fury. "What have you to do with it? I mean to punish that young owl
+yonder--who didn't know how to drink anything but milk-and-water, didn't
+know how to say bo! to a goose, till I taught him--for very abominable
+impertinence, and I'll----"
+
+"My impertinence! I like that!" I shouted. "It is your unwarrantable,
+overbearing self-conceit, that makes you the laughing-stock of all the
+mess, which----"
+
+"Silence!" said Conran's still stern voice, which subdued us into
+involuntary respect. "No more of this nonsense! Put up those pistols,
+Ruthven. You are two hot-headed, silly boys, who don't know for what you
+are quarrelling. Live a few years longer, and you won't be so eager to
+get into hot water, and put cartridges into your best friends. No, I
+shall not hear any more about it. If you do not instantly give me your
+words of honor not to attempt to repeat this folly, as your senior
+officer I shall put you under arrest for six weeks."
+
+O Alexandra Dumas!--O Monte Cristo!--O heroes of yellow paper and pluck
+invincible! I ask pardon of your shades; I must record the fact,
+lowering and melancholy as it is, that before our senior officer our
+heroism melted like Vanille ice in the sun, our glories tumbled to the
+ground like twelfth-cake ornaments under children's fingers, and before
+the threat of arrest the lions lay down like lambs.
+
+Conran sent us back, humbled, sulky, and crestfallen, and resumed his
+solitary patrol upon the beach, where, before the sun was fairly up, he
+was having a shot at curlews. But if he was a little stern, he was no
+less kind-hearted; and in the afternoon of that day, while he lay, after
+his siesta, smoking on his little bed, I unburdened myself to him. He
+did not laugh at me, though I saw a quizzical smile under his black
+moustaches.
+
+"What is your divinity's name?" he asked, when I had finished.
+
+"Eudoxia Adelaida, Marchioness St. Julian."
+
+"The Marchioness St. Julian! Oh!"
+
+"Do you know her?" I inquired, somewhat perplexed by his tone.
+
+He smiled straight out this time.
+
+"I don't know _her_, but there are a good many Peeresses in Malta and
+Gibraltar, and along the line of the Pacific, as my brother Ned, in the
+_Belisarius_, will tell you. I could count two score such of my
+acquaintance off at this minute."
+
+I wondered what he meant. I dare say he knew all the Peerage; but that
+had nothing to do with me, and I thought it strange that all the
+Duchesses, and Countesses, and Baronesses should quit their
+country-seats and town-houses to locate themselves along the line of the
+Pacific.
+
+"She's a fine woman, St. John?" he went on.
+
+"Fine!" I reiterated, bursting into a panegyric, with which I won't bore
+you as I bored him.
+
+"Well, you're going there to-night, you say; take me with you, and we'll
+see what I think of your Marchioness."
+
+I looked at his fine figure and features, recalled certain tales of his
+conquests, remembered that he knew French, Italian, German, and Spanish,
+but, not being very able to refuse, acquiesced with a reluctance I could
+not entirely conceal. Conran, however, did not perceive it, and after
+mess took his cap, and went with me to the Casa di Fiori.
+
+The rooms were all right again, my Marchioness was _en grande tenue_,
+amber silk, black lace, diamonds, and all that sort of style. Fitzhervey
+and the other men were in evening dress, drinking coffee; there was not
+a trace of bottled porter anywhere, and it was all very brilliant and
+presentable. The Marchioness St. Julian rose with the warmest effusion,
+her dazzling white teeth showing in the sunniest of smiles, and both
+hands outstretched.
+
+"Augustus, _bien aimé_, you are rather----"
+
+"Late," I suppose she was going to say, but she stopped dead short, her
+teeth remained parted in a stereotyped smile, a blankness of dismay came
+over her luminous eyes. She caught sight of Conran, and I imagined I
+heard a very low-breathed "Curse the fellow!" from courteous Lord Dolph.
+Conran came forward, however, as if he did not notice it; there was only
+that queer smile lurking under his moustaches. I introduced him to them,
+and the Marchioness smiled again, and Fitzhervey almost resumed his
+wonted extreme urbanity. But they were somehow or other wonderfully ill
+at ease--wonderfully, for people in such high society; and I was ill at
+ease too, from being only able to attribute Eudoxia Adelaida's evident
+consternation at the sight of Conran to his having been some time or
+other an old love of hers. "Ah!" thought I, grinding my teeth, "that
+comes of loving a woman older than one's self."
+
+The Major, however, seemed the only one who enjoyed himself. The
+Marchioness was beaming on him graciously, though her ruffled feathers
+were not quite smoothed down, and he was sitting by her with an intense
+amusement in his eyes, alternately talking to her about Stars and
+Garters, whom, by her answers, she did not seem to know so very
+intimately after all, and chatting with Fitzhervey about hunting, who,
+for a man that had hunted over every country, according to his own
+account, seemed to confuse Tom Edge with Tom Smith, the Burton with the
+Tedworth, a bullfinch with an ox-rail, in queer style, under Conran's
+cross-questioning. We had been in the room about ten minutes, when a
+voice, rich, low, sweet, rang out from some inner room, singing the
+glorious "Inflammatus." How strange it sounded in the Casa di Fiori!
+
+Conran started, the dark blood rose over the clear bronze of his cheek.
+He turned sharply on to the Marchioness. "Good Heaven! whose voice is
+that?"
+
+"My niece's," she answered, staring at him, and touching a hand-bell. "I
+will ask her to come and sing to us nearer. She has really a lovely
+voice."
+
+Conran grew pale again, and sat watching the door with the most
+extraordinary anxiety. Some minutes went by; then Lucrezia entered, with
+the same haughty reserve which her soft young face always wore when with
+her aunt. It changed, though, when her glance fell on Conran, into the
+wildest rapture I ever saw on any countenance. He fixed his eyes on her
+with the look Little Grand says he's seen him wear in battle--a
+contemptuous smile quivering on his face.
+
+"Sing us something, Lucrezia dear," began the Marchioness. "You
+shouldn't be like the nightingales, and give your music only to night
+and solitude."
+
+Lucrezia seemed not to hear her. She had never taken her eyes off
+Conran, and she went, as dreamily as that dear little _Amina_ in the
+"Sonnambula," to her seat under the jasmines in the window. For a few
+minutes Conran, who didn't seem to care two straws what the society in
+general thought of him, took his leave, to the relief, apparently, of
+Fitzhervey and Guatamara.
+
+As he went across the veranda--that memorable veranda!--I sitting in
+dudgeon near the other window, while Fitzhervey was proposing écarté to
+Heavy, whom we had found there on our entrance, and the Marchioness had
+vanished into her boudoir for a moment, I saw the Roman girl spring out
+after him, and catch hold of his arm:
+
+"Victor! Victor! for pity's sake!--I never thought we should meet like
+this!"
+
+"Nor did I."
+
+"Hush! hush! you will kill me. In mercy, say some kinder words!"
+
+"I can say nothing that it would be courteous to you to say."
+
+I couldn't have been as inflexible, whatever her sins might have been,
+with her hands clasped on me, and her face raised so close to mine.
+Lucrezia's voice changed to a piteous wail:
+
+"You love me no longer, then?"
+
+"Love!" said Conran, fiercely--"love! How dare you speak to me of love?
+I held you to be fond, innocent, true as Heaven; as such, you were
+dearer to me than life--as dear as honor. I loved you with as deep a
+passion as ever a man knew--Heaven help me! I love you now! How am I
+rewarded? By finding you the companion of blackguards, the associate of
+swindlers, one of the arch-intrigantes who lead on youths to ruin with
+base smiles and devilish arts. Then you dare talk to me of love!"
+
+With those passionate words he threw her off him. She fell at his feet
+with a low moan. He either did not hear, or did not heed it; and I,
+bewildered by what I heard, mechanically went and lifted her from the
+ground. Lucrezia had not fainted, but she looked so wild, that I
+believed the Marchioness, and set her down as mad; but then Conran must
+be mad as well, which seemed too incredible a thing for me to
+swallow--our cool Major mad!
+
+"Where does he live?" asked Lucrezia of me, in a breathless whisper.
+
+"He? Who?"
+
+"Victor--your officer--Signor Conran."
+
+"Why, he lives in Valetta, of course."
+
+"Can I find him there?"
+
+"I dare say, if you want him."
+
+"Want him! Oh, Santa Maria! is not his absence death? Can I find him?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I dare say. Anybody will show you Conran's rooms."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+With that, this mysterious young lady left me, and I turned in through
+the window again. Heavy and the men were playing at lansquenet, that
+most perilous, rapid, and bewitching of all the resistless Card Circes.
+There was no Marchioness, and having done it once with impunity, I
+thought I might do it again, and lifted the amber curtain that divided
+the boudoir from the drawing-room. What did I behold? Oh! torture
+unexampled! Oh! fiendish agony! There was Little Grand--self-conceited,
+insulting, impertinent, abominable, unendurable Little Grand--on the
+amber satin couch, with the Marchioness leaning her head on his
+shoulder, and looking up in his thrice-confounded face with her most
+adorable smile, _my_ smile, that had beamed, and, as I thought, beamed
+only upon me!
+
+If Mephistopheles had been by to tempt me, I would have sold my soul to
+have wreaked vengeance on them both. Neither saw me, thank Heaven! and I
+had self-possession enough not to give them the cruel triumph of
+witnessing my anguish. I withdrew in silence, dropped the curtain, and
+rushed to bury my wrongs and sorrows in the friendly bosom of the gentle
+night. It was my first love, and I had made a fool of myself. The two
+are synonymous.
+
+How I reached the barracks I never knew. All the night long I sat
+watching the stars out, raving to them of Eudoxia Adelaida, and cursing
+in plentiful anathemas my late Orestes. How should I bear his impudent
+grin every mortal night of my life across the mess-table? I tore up into
+shreds about a ream of paper, inscribed with tender sonnets to my
+faithless idol. I trampled into fifty thousand shreds a rosette off her
+dress, for which, fool-like, I had begged the day before. I smashed the
+looking-glass, which could only show me the image of a pitiful donkey. I
+called on Heaven to redress my wrongs. Oh! curse it! never was a fellow
+at once so utterly done for and so utterly done brown!
+
+And in the vicarage, as I learnt afterwards, when my letter was received
+at home, there was great glorification and pleasure. My mother and the
+girls were enraptured at the high society darling Gussy was moving in;
+"but then, you know, mamma, dear Gussy's manners are so gentle, so
+gentleman-like, they are sure to please wherever he goes!" Wherewith my
+mother cried, and dried her eyes, and cried again, over that abominable
+letter copied from Little Grand's, and smelling of vilest tobacco.
+
+Then entered a rectoress of a neighboring parish, to whom my mother and
+the girls related with innocent exultation of my grand friends at Malta;
+how Lord A. Fitzhervey was my sworn ally, and the Marchioness St. Julian
+had quite taken me under her wing. And the rectoress, having a son of
+her own, who was not doing anything so grand at Cambridge, but
+principally sotting beer at a Cherryhinton public, smiled and was
+wrathful, and said to her lord at dinner:
+
+"My dear, did you ever hear of a Marchioness St. Julian?"
+
+"No, my love, I believe not--never."
+
+"Is there one in the peerage?"
+
+"Can't say, my dear. Look in Burke."
+
+So the rectoress got Burke and closed it, after deliberate inspection,
+with malignant satisfaction.
+
+"I thought not. How ridiculous those St. Johns are about that ugly boy
+Augustus. As if Tom were not worth a hundred of him!"
+
+I was too occupied with my own miseries then to think about Conran and
+Lucrezia, though some time after I heard all about it. It seems, that, a
+year before, Conran was on leave in Rome, and at Rome, loitering about
+the Campagna one day, he made a chance acquaintance with an Italian
+girl, by getting some flowers for her she had tried to reach and could
+not. She was young, enthusiastic, intensely interesting, and had only an
+old Roman nurse, deaf as a post and purblind, with her. The girl was
+Lucrezia da Guari, and Lucrezia was lovely as one of her own myrtle or
+orange flowers. Somehow or other Conran went there the next day, and the
+next, and the next, and so on for a good many days, and always found
+Lucrezia. Now, Conran had at bottom a touch of unstirred romance, and,
+moreover, his own idea of what sort of woman he could love. Something in
+this untrained yet winning Campagna flower answered to both. He was old
+to trust his own discernment, and, after a month or two's walks and
+talks, Conran, one of the proudest men going, offered himself and his
+name to a Roman girl of whom he knew nothing, except that she seemed to
+care for him as he had had a fancy to be cared for all his life. It was
+a deucedly romantic thing--however, he did it! Lucrezia had told him her
+father was a military officer, but somehow or other this father never
+came to light, and when he called at their house--or rather
+rooms--Conran always found him out, which he thought queer, but, on the
+whole, rather providential, and he set the accident down to a
+foreigner's roaming habits.
+
+The day Conran had really gone the length of offering to make an unknown
+Italian his wife, he went, for the first time in the evening, to Da
+Guari's house. The servant showed him in unannounced to a
+brightly-lighted chamber, reeking with wine and smoke, where a dozen men
+were playing trente et quarante at an amateur bank, and two or three
+others were gathered round what he had believed his own fair and pure
+Campagna flower. He understood it all; he turned away with a curse upon
+him. He wanted love and innocence; adventuresses he could have by the
+score, and he was sick to death of them. From that hour he never saw her
+again till he met her at the Casa di Fiori.
+
+The next day I went to Conran while he was breakfasting, and unburdened
+my mind to him. He looked ill and haggard, but he listened to me very
+kindly, though he spoke of the people at the Casa di Fiori in a hard,
+brief, curious manner.
+
+"Plenty have been taken in like you, Gus," he said "I was, years ago, in
+my youth, when I joined the Army. There are scores of such women, as I
+told you, down the line of the Pacific, and about here; anywhere, in
+fact, where the army and navy give them fresh pigeons to be gulled. They
+take titles that sound grand in boys' ears, and fascinate them till
+they've won all their money, and then--send them to the dogs. Your
+Marchioness St. Julian's real name is Sarah Briggs."
+
+I gave an involuntary shriek. Sarah Briggs finished me. It was the
+death-stroke, that could never be got over.
+
+"She was a ballet-girl in London," continued Conran; "then, when she was
+sixteen, married that Fitzhervey, _alias_ Briggs, _alias_ Smith, _alias_
+what you please, and set up in her present more lucrative employment
+with her three or four confederates. Saint-Jeu was expelled from Paris
+for keeping a hell in the Chaussée d'Antin, Fitzhervey was a leg at
+Newmarket, Orangia Magnolia a lawyer's clerk, who was had up for
+forgery, Guatamara is--by another name--a scoundrel of Rome. There is
+the history of your Maltese Peerage, Gussy. Well, you'll be wider awake
+next time. Wait, there is somebody at my door. Stay here a moment, I'll
+come back to you."
+
+Accordingly, I stayed in his bedroom, where I had found him writing, and
+he went into his sitting-room, of which, from the diminutiveness of his
+domicile, I commanded a full view, sit where I would. What was my
+astonishment to see Lucrezia! I went to his bedroom door; it was locked
+from the outside, so I perforce remained where I was, to, _nolens
+volens_, witness the finish of last night's interview.
+
+Stern to the last extent and deadly pale, Conran stood, too surprised to
+speak, and most probably at a loss for words.
+
+Lucrezia came up to him nevertheless with the abandonment of youth and
+southern blood.
+
+"Victor! Victor! let me speak to you. You shall listen; you shall not
+judge me unheard."
+
+"Signorina, I have judged you by only too ample evidence."
+
+He had recovered himself now, and was as cool as needs be.
+
+"I deny it. But you love me still?"
+
+"Love you? More shame on me! A laugh, a compliment, a caress, a
+cashmere, is as much as such women as you are worth. Love becomes
+ridiculous named in the same breath with you."
+
+She caught hold of his hand and crushed it in both her own.
+
+"Kill me you will. Death would have no sting from your hand, but never
+speak such words to _me_."
+
+His voice trembled.
+
+"How can I choose but speak them? You know that I believed you in Italy,
+and how on that belief I offered you my name--a name never yet stained,
+never yet held unworthy. I lost you, to find you in society which
+stamped you for ever. A lovely fiend, holding raw boys enchained, that
+your associates might rifle their purses with marked cards and cogged
+dice. I hoped to have found a diamond, without spot or flaw. I
+discovered my error too late; it was only glass, which all men were free
+to pick up and trample on at their pleasure."
+
+He tried to wrench his hand away, but she would not let it go.
+
+"Hush! hush! listen to me first. If you once thought me worthy of your
+love, you may, surely, now accord me pity. I shall not trouble you long.
+After this, you need see me no more. I am going back to my old convent.
+You and the world will soon forget me, but I shall remember you, and
+pray for you, as dearer than my own soul."
+
+Conran's head was bent down now, and his voice was thick, as he answered
+briefly,
+
+"Go on."
+
+This scene half consoled me for Eudoxia Adelaida--(I mean, O Heavens,
+Sarah Briggs!)--it was so exquisitely romantic, and Conran and Lucrezia
+wouldn't have done at all badly for Monte Cristo and that dear little
+Haidee. I was fearfully poetic in those days.
+
+"When I met you in Rome," Lucrezia went on, in obedience to his
+injunction, "two years ago, you remember I had only left my convent and
+lived with my father but a month or two. I told you he was an officer. I
+only said what I had been told, and I knew no more than you that he was
+the keeper of a gambling house."
+
+She shuddered as she paused, and leaned her forehead on Conran's hand.
+He did not repulse her, and she continued, in her broken, simple
+English:
+
+"The evening you promised me what I should have needed to have been an
+angel to be worthy of--your love and your name--that very evening, when
+I reached home, my father bade me dress for a soirée he was going to
+give. I obeyed him, of course. I knew nothing but what he told me, and I
+went down, to find a dozen young nobles and a few Englishmen drinking
+and playing on a table covered with green cloth. Some few of them came
+up to me, but I felt frightened; their looks, their tones, their florid
+compliments, were so different to yours. But my father kept his eye on
+me, and would not let me leave. While they were leaning over my chair,
+and whispering in my ear, _you_ came to the door of the salon, and I
+went towards you, and you looked cold, and harsh, as I had never seen
+you before, and put me aside, and turned away without a word. Oh,
+Victor! why did you not kill me then? Death would have been kindness.
+Your Othello was kinder to Desdemona; he slew her--he did not _leave_
+her. From that hour I never saw you, and from that hour my father
+persecuted me because I would never join in his schemes, nor enter his
+vile gaming-rooms. Yet I have lived with him, because I could not get
+away. I have been too carefully watched. We Italians are not free, like
+your happy English girls. A few weeks ago we were compelled to leave
+Rome, the young Contino di Firenze had been stilettoed leaving my
+father's rooms, and he could stay in Italy no longer. We came here, and
+joined that hateful woman, who calls herself Marchioness St. Julian;
+and, because she could not bend me to her will, gives out that I am her
+niece, and mad! I wonder I am _not_ mad, Victor. I wish hearts would
+break, as the romancers make them; but how long one suffers and lives
+on! Oh, my love, my soul, my life, only say that you believe me, and
+look kindly at me once again, then I will never trouble you again, I
+will only pray for you. But believe me, Victor. The Mother Superior of
+my convent will tell you it is the truth that I speak. Oh, for the love
+of Heaven, believe me! Believe me or I shall die!"
+
+It was not in the nature of man to resist her; there was truth in the
+girl's voice and face, if ever truth walked abroad on earth. And Conran
+did believe her, and told her so in a few unconnected words, lifting her
+up in his arms, and vowing, with most unrighteous oaths, that her father
+should never have power to persecute her again as long as he himself
+lived to shelter and take care of her.
+
+I was so interested in my Monte Cristo and Haidee (it was so like a
+chapter out of a book), that I entirely forgot my durance vile, and my
+novel and excessively disgraceful, though enforced, occupation of spy;
+and there I stayed, alternating between my interest in them and my
+agonies at the revelations concerning my Eudoxia Adelaida--oh, hang it!
+I mean Sarah Briggs--till, after a most confounded long time, Conran saw
+fit to take Lucrezia off, to get asylum for her with the Colonel's wife
+for a day or two, that "those fools might not misconstrue her." By which
+comprehensive epithet he, I suppose, politely designated "Ours."
+
+Then I went my ways to my own room, and there I found a scented,
+mauve-hued, creamy billet-doux, in uncommon bad handwriting, though,
+from my miserable Eudoxia Adelaida to the "friend and lover of her
+soul." Confound the woman!--how I swore at that daintily-perfumed and
+most vilely-scrawled letter. To think that where that beautiful
+signature stretched from one side to the other--"Eudoxia Adelaida St.
+Julian"--there _ought_ to have been that short, vile, low-bred, hideous,
+Billingsgate cognomen of "Sarah Briggs!"
+
+In the note she reproached me--the wretched hypocrite!--for my departure
+the previous night, "without one farewell to your Eudoxia, O cruel
+Augustus!" and asked me to give her a rendezvous at some vineyards lying
+a little way off the Casa di Fiori, on the road to Melita. Now, being a
+foolish boy, and regarding myself as having been loved and wronged,
+whereas I had only been playing the very common _rôle_ of pigeon, I
+could not resist the temptation of going, just to take one last look of
+that fair, cruel face, and upbraid her with being the first to sow the
+fatal seeds of lifelong mistrust and misery in my only too fond and
+faithful, &c. &c. &c.
+
+So, at the appointed hour, just when the sun was setting over the
+far-away Spanish shore, and the hush of night was sinking over the
+little, rocky, peppery, military-thick, Mediterranean isle, I found
+myself _en route_ to the vineyards; which, till I came to Malta, had
+been one of my delusions, Idea picturing them in wreaths and avenues,
+Reality proving them hop-sticks and parched earth. I drew near; it was
+quite dark now, the sun had gone to sleep under the blue waves, and the
+moon was not yet up. Though I knew she was Sarah Briggs, and an
+adventuress who had made game of me, two facts that one would fancy
+might chill the passion out of anybody, so mad was I about that woman,
+that, if I had met her then and there, I should have let her wheedle me
+over, and gone back to the Casa di Fiori with her and been fleeced
+again: I am sure I should, sir, and so would you, if, at eighteen, new
+to life, you had fallen in with Eudox----pshaw!--with Sarah Briggs, my
+Marchioness St Julian.
+
+I drew near the vineyards: my heart beat thick, I could not see, but I
+was certain I heard the rustle of her dress, caught the perfume of her
+hair. All her sins vanished: how could I upbraid her, though she were
+three times over Sarah Briggs? Yes, she was coming; I _felt_ her near;
+an electric thrill rushed through me as soul met soul. I heard a
+murmured "Dearest, sweetest!" I felt the warm clasp of two arms, but--a
+cold row of undress waistcoat-buttons came against my face, and a voice
+I knew too well cried out, as I rebounded from him, impelled thereto by
+a not gentle kick,--
+
+"The devil! get out! Who the deuce are you?"
+
+We both stopped for breath. At that minute up rose the silver moon, and
+in its tell-tale rays we glared on one another, I and Little Grand.
+
+That silence was sublime: the pause between Beethoven's andante
+allegro--the second before the Spanish bull rushes upon the torreador.
+
+"You little miserable wretch!" burst out Grand, slowly and terribly;
+"you little, mean, sneaking, spying, contemptible milksop! I should like
+to know what you mean by bringing out your ugly phiz at this hour, when
+you used to be afraid of stirring out for fear of nurse's bogies? And to
+dare to come lurking after me!"
+
+"After you, Mr. Grandison!" I repeated, with grandiloquence. "Really you
+put too much importance on your own movements. I came by appointment to
+meet the Marchioness St. Julian, whom, I presume, as you are well
+acquainted with her, you know in her real name of Sarah Briggs, and
+to----"
+
+"Sarah Briggs!--_you_ come by appointment?" stammered Little Grand.
+
+"Yes, sir; if you disbelieve my word of honor, I will condescend to show
+you my invitation."
+
+"You little ape!" swore Grand, coming back to his previous wrath; "it is
+a lie, a most abominable, unwarrantable lie! _I_ came by appointment,
+sir; you did no such thing. Look there!"
+
+And he flaunted before my eyes in the moonlight the fac-simile of my
+letter, verbatim copy, save that in his Cosmo was put in the stead of
+Augustus.
+
+"Look there!" said I, giving him mine.
+
+Little Grand snatched it, read it over once, twice, thrice, then drooped
+his head, with a burning color in his face, and was silent.
+
+The "knowing hand" was done!
+
+We were both of us uncommonly quiet for ten minutes, neither of us liked
+to be the first to give in.
+
+At last Little Grand looked up and held out his hand, no more nonsense
+about him now.
+
+"Simon, you and I have been two great fools; we can't chaff one another.
+She's a cursed actress, and--let's make it up, old boy."
+
+We made it up accordingly--when Little Grand was not conceited he was a
+very jolly fellow--and then I gave him my whole key to the mysteries,
+intricacies, and charms of our Casa di Fiori. We could not chaff one
+another, but poor Little Grand was pitiably sore then, and for long
+afterwards. He, the "old bird," the cool hand, the sharp one of Ours, to
+have been done brown, to be the joke of the mess, the laugh of all the
+men, down to the weest drummer-boy! Poor Little Grand! He was too done
+up to swagger, too thoroughly angry with himself to swear at anybody
+else. He only whispered to me, "Why the dickens could she want you and
+me to meet our selves?"
+
+"To give us a finishing hoax, I suppose," I suggested.
+
+Little Grand drew his cap over his eyes, and hung his head down in
+abject humiliation.
+
+"I suppose so. What fools we have been, Simon! And, I say, I've borrowed
+three hundred of old Miraflores, and it's all gone up at that devilish
+Casa; and how I shall get it from the governor, Heaven knows, for _I_
+don't."
+
+"I'm in the same pickle, Grand," I groaned. "I've given that old rascal
+notes of hand for two hundred pounds, and, if it don't drop from the
+clouds, I shall never pay it. Oh, I say, Grand, love comes deucedly
+expensive."
+
+"Ah!" said he, with a sympathetic shiver, "think what a pair of hunters
+we might have had for the money!" With which dismal and remorseful
+remembrance the old bird, who had been trapped like a young pigeon,
+swore mightily, and withdrew into humbled and disgusted silence.
+
+Next morning we heard, to our comfort--what lots of people there always
+are to tell us how to lock our stable-door when our solitary mare has
+been stolen--that, with a gentle hint from the police, the Marchioness
+St. Julian, with her _confrères_, had taken wing to the Ionian Isles,
+where, at Corfu or Cephalonia, they will re-erect the Casa di Fiori, and
+glide gently on again from vingt-et-un to loo, and from loo to
+lansquenet, under eyes as young and blinded as our own. They went
+without Lucrezia. Conran took her into his own hands. Any other man in
+the regiment would have been pretty well ridiculed at taking a bride out
+of the Casa di Fiori; but the statements made by the high-born Abbess of
+her Roman convert were so clear, and so to the girl's honor, and he had
+such a way of holding his own, of keeping off liberties from himself and
+anything belonging to him, and was, moreover, known to be of such
+fastidious honor, that his young wife was received as if she had been a
+Princess in her own right. With her respected parent Conran had a brief
+interview previous to his flight from Malta, in which, with a few gentle
+hints, he showed that worthy it would be wiser to leave his daughter
+unmolested for the future, and I doubt if Mr. Orangia Magnolia, _alias_
+Pepe Guari, would know his own child in the joyous, graceful,
+daintily-dressed mistress of Conran's handsome Parisian establishment.
+
+Little Grand and I suffered cruelly. We were the butts of the mess for
+many a long month afterwards, when every idiot's tongue asked us on
+every side after the health of the Marchioness St. Julian? when we were
+going to teach them lansquenet? how often we heard from the aristocratic
+members of the Maltese Peerage? with like delightful pleasantries, which
+the questioners deemed high wit. We paid for it, too, to that arch old
+screw Balthazar; but I doubt very much if the money were not well lost,
+and the experience well gained. It cured me of my rawness and Little
+Grand of his self-conceit, the only thing that had before spoilt that
+good-hearted, quick-tempered, and clever-brained little fellow. Oh,
+Pater and Materfamilias, disturb not yourselves so unnecessarily about
+the crop of wild oats which your young ones are sowing broadcast. Those
+wild oats often spring from a good field of high spirit, hot courage,
+and thoughtless generosity, that are the sign and basis of nobler
+virtues to come, and from them very often rise two goodly
+plants--Experience and Discernment.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES:
+
+OR,
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE FIRST.--THE ELIGIBLE.
+
+One of the kindest-natured persons that I ever knew on this earth, where
+kind people are as rare as black eagles or red deer, is Helena, Countess
+of Marabout, _née_ De Boncoeur. She has foibles, she has weaknesses--who
+amongst us has not?--she will wear her dresses _décolletées_, though
+she's sixty, if Burke tells us truth; she will rouge and practise a
+thousand other little toilette tricks, but they are surely innocent,
+since they deceive nobody; and if you wait for a woman who is no
+artifices, I am afraid you shall have to forswear the sex _in toto_, my
+friends, and come growling back to your Diogenes' tub in the Albany,
+with your lantern still lit every day of your lives.
+
+Lady Marabout is a very charming person. As for her weaknesses, she is
+all the nicer for them, to my taste. I like people with weaknesses
+myself; those without them do look so dreadfully scornfully and
+unsympathizingly upon one from the altitude of their superiority, _de
+toute la hauteur de sa bêtise_, as a witty Frenchman says. Humanity was
+born with weaknesses. If I were a beggar, I might hope for a coin from
+a man with some; a man without any, I know, would shut up his
+porte-monnaie, with an intensified click, to make me feel trebly
+envious, and consign me to D 15 and his truncheon, on the score of
+vagrancy.
+
+Lady Marabout is a very charming person, despite her little foibles, and
+she gives very pleasant little dinners, both at her house in Lowndes
+Square and in her jointure villa at Twickenham, where the bad odors of
+Thames are drowned in the fragrance of the geraniums, piled in great
+heaps of red, white, and variegated blossom in the flowerbeds on the
+lawn. She has been married twice, but has only one son, by her first
+union--Carruthers, of the Guards--a very good fellow, whom his mother
+thinks perfection, though if she _did_ know certain scenes in her adored
+Philip's life, the good lady might hesitate before she endowed her son
+with all the cardinal virtues as she does at the present moment. She has
+no daughters, therefore you will wonder to hear that the prime misery,
+burden, discomfort, and worry of her life is chaperonage. But so it is.
+
+Lady Marabout is the essence of good nature; she can't say No: that
+unpleasant negative monosyllable was never heard to issue from her full,
+smiling, kind-looking lips: she is in a high position, she has an
+extensive circle, thanks to her own family and those of the baronet and
+peer she successively espoused; and some sister, or cousin, or friend,
+is incessantly hunting her up to bring out their girls, and sell them
+well off out of hand; young ladies being goods extremely likely to hang
+_on_ hand nowadays.
+
+"Of all troubles, the troubles of a chaperone are the greatest," said
+Lady Marabout to me at the wedding déjeûner of one of her protegées. "In
+the first place, one looks on at others' campaigns instead of conducting
+them one's self; secondly, it brings back one's own bright days to see
+the young things' smiles and blushes, like that girl's just now (I do
+hope she'll be happy!); and thirdly, one has all the responsibility, and
+gets all the blame if anything goes wrong. I'll never chaperone anybody
+again now I have got rid of Leila."
+
+So does Lady Marabout say twenty times; yet has she invariably some
+young lady under her wing, whose relatives are defunct, or invalided, or
+in India, or out of society somehow; and we all of us call her house The
+Yard, and her (among ourselves) not Lady Marabout but Lady Tattersall.
+The worries she has in her chaperone's office would fill a folio,
+specially as her heart inclines to the encouragement of romance, but her
+reason to the banishment thereof; and while her tenderness suffers if
+she thwarts her protégées' leanings, her conscience gives her neuralgic
+twinges if she abets them to unwise matches while under her dragonnage.
+
+"What's the matter, mother?" asked Carruthers, one morning. He's very
+fond of his mother, and will never let any one laugh at her in his
+hearing.
+
+"Matter? Everything!" replied Lady Marabout, concisely and
+comprehensively, as she sat on the sofa in her boudoir, with her white
+ringed hands and her _bien conservé_ look, and her kindly pleasant eyes
+and her rich dress; one could see what a pretty woman she has been, and
+that Carruthers may thank her for his good looks. "To begin with,
+Félicie has been so stupid as to marry; married the greengrocer (whom
+she will ruin in a week!), and has left me to the mercies of a stupid
+woman who puts pink with cerise, mauve with magenta, and sky-blue with
+azureline, and has no recommendation except that she is as ugly as the
+Medusa, and so will not tempt you to----"
+
+"Make love to her, as I did to Marie," laughed Carruthers. "Marie was a
+pretty little dear; it was very severe in you to send her away."
+
+Lady Marabout tried hard to look severe and condemnatory, but failed
+signally, nature had formed the smooth brow and the kindly eyes in far
+too soft a mould.
+
+"Don't jest about it, Philip; you know it was a great pain, annoyance,
+and scandal to me. Well! Félicie is gone, and Oakes was seen pawning
+some of my Mechlin the other day, so I have been obliged to discharge
+_her_; and they both of them suited me so well! Then Bijou is ill, poor
+little pet----"
+
+"With repletion of chicken panada?"
+
+"No; Bijou isn't such a gourmet. You judge him by yourself, I suppose;
+men always do! Then Lady Hautton told me last night that you were the
+wildest man on town, and at forty----"
+
+"You think I ought to _ranger_? So I will, my dear mother, some day; but
+at present I am--so very comfortable; it would be a pity to alter! What
+pains one's friends are always at to tell unpalatable things; if they
+would but be only half so eager to tell us the pleasant ones! I shall
+expect you to cut Lady Hautton if she speak badly of me, I can't afford
+to lose your worship, mother!"
+
+"My worship? How conceited you are, Philip! As for Lady Hautton, I
+believe she does dislike you, because you did not engage yourself to
+Adelina, and were selected aide-de-camp to her Majesty, instead of
+Hautton; still, I am afraid she spoke too nearly the truth."
+
+"Perhaps Marie has entered her service and told tales."
+
+But Lady Marabout wouldn't laugh, she always looks very grave about
+Marie.
+
+"My worst trouble," she began hastily, "is that your aunt Honiton is too
+ill to come to town; no chance of her being well enough to come at all
+this season; and of course the charge of Valencia has devolved on me.
+You know how I hate chaperoning, and I did _so_ hope I should be free
+this year; besides, Valencia is a great responsibility, very great; a
+girl of so much beauty always is; there will be sure to be so many men
+about her at once, and your aunt will expect me to marry her so very
+well. It is excessively annoying."
+
+"My poor dear mother!" cried Carruthers. "I grant you _are_ an object of
+pity. You are everlastingly having young fillies sent you to break in,
+and they want such a tight hand on the ribbons."
+
+"And a tight hand, as you call it, I never had, and never shall have,"
+sighed Lady Marabout. "Valencia will be no trouble to me on that score,
+however; she has been admirably educated, knows all that is due to her
+position, and will never give me a moment's anxiety by any imprudence or
+inadvertence. But she is excessively handsome, and a beauty is a great
+responsibility when she first comes out."
+
+"Val was always a handsome child, if I remember. I dare say she is a
+beauty now. When is she coming up? because I'll tell the men to mark the
+house and keep clear of it," laughed Carruthers. "You're a dreadfully
+dangerous person, mother; you have always the best-looking girl in town
+with you. Fulke Nugent says if he should ever want such a thing as a
+wife when he comes into the title, he shall take a look at the Marabout
+Yearlings Sale."
+
+"Abominably rude of you and your friends to talk me over in your turf
+slang! I wish _you_ would come and bid at the sale, Philip; I should
+like to see you married--well married, of course."
+
+"My beloved mother!" cried Carruthers. "Leave me in peace, if you
+please, and catch the others if you can. There's Goodey, now; every
+chaperone and débutante in London has set traps for him for the last I
+don't know how many years; wouldn't he do for Valencia?"
+
+"Goodwood? Of course he would; he would do for any one; the Dukedom's
+the oldest in the peerage. Goodwood is highly eligible. Thank you for
+reminding me, Philip. Since Valencia is coming, I must do my best for
+her." Which phrase meant with Lady Marabout that she must be very
+lynx-eyed as to settlements, and a perfect dragon to all detrimental
+connections, must frown with Medusa severity on all horrors of younger
+sons, and advocate with all the weight of personal experience the
+advantage and agrémens of a good position, in all of which
+practicalities she generally broke down, with humiliation unspeakable,
+immediately her heart was enlisted and her sympathies appealed to on the
+enemy's side. She sighed, played with her bracelets thoughtfully, and
+then, heroically resigning herself to her impending fate, brightened up
+a little, and asked her son to go and choose a new pair of
+carriage-horses for her.
+
+To look at Lady Marabout as she sat in her amber satin couch that
+morning, pleasant, smiling, well-dressed, well-looking, with the grace
+of good birth and the sunniness of good nature plainly written on her
+smooth brow and her kindly eyes, and wealth--delicious little
+god!--stamping itself all about her, from the diamond rings on her soft
+white fingers to the broidered shoe on the feet, of whose smallness she
+was still proud, one might have ignorantly imagined her to be the most
+happy, enviable, well-conditioned, easy-going dowager in the United
+Kingdom. But appearances are deceptive, and if we believe what she
+constantly asserted, Lady Marabout was very nearly worn into her grave
+by a thousand troubles; her almshouses, whose roofs would eternally blow
+off with each high wind; her dogs, whom she would overfeed; her ladies'
+maids, who were only hired to steal, tease, or scandalize her; the
+begging letter-writers, who distilled tears from her eyes and sovereigns
+from her purse, let Carruthers disclose their hypocrisies as he might;
+the bolder begging-letters, written by hon. secs., and headed by names
+with long handles, belonging to Pillars of the State and Lights of the
+Church, which compelled her to make a miserable choice between a
+straitened income or a remorseful conscience--tormented, in fine, with
+worries small and large, from her ferns, on which she spent a large
+fortune, and who drooped maliciously in their glass cases, with an
+ill-natured obstinacy characteristic of desperately-courted individuals,
+whether of the floral or the human world, to those marriageable young
+ladies whom she took under her wing to usher into the great world, and
+who were certain to run counter to her wishes and overthrow her plans,
+to marry ill, or not marry at all, or do something or other to throw
+discredit on her chaperoning abilities. She was, she assured us,
+_pétrie_ with worries, small and large, specially as she was so
+eminently sunny, affable, and radiant a looking person, that all the
+world took their troubles to her, selected her as their confidante, and
+made her the repository of their annoyances; but her climax of misery
+was to be compelled to chaperone, and as a petition for some débutante
+to be intrusted to her care was invariably made each season, and "No"
+was a monosyllable into which her lips utterly refused to form
+themselves, each season did her life become a burden to her. There was
+never any rest for the soul of Helena, Countess of Marabout, till her
+house in Lowndes Square was shut up, and her charges off her hand, and
+she could return in peace to her jointure-villa at Twickenham, or to
+Carruthers' old Hall of Deepdene, and among her flowers, her birds, and
+her hobbies, throw off for a while the weary burden of her worries as a
+chaperone.
+
+"Valencia will give me little trouble, I hope. So admirably brought-up a
+girl, and so handsome as she is, will be sure to marry soon, and marry
+well," thought Lady Marabout, self-congratulatorily, as she dressed for
+dinner the day of her niece's arrival in town, running over mentally the
+qualifications and attractions of Valencia Valletort, while Félicie's
+successor, Mademoiselle Despréaux, whose crime was then to put pink
+with cerise, mauve with magenta, and sky-blue with azureline, gave the
+finishing touches to her toilette--"Valencia will give me no trouble;
+she has all the De Boncoeur beauty, with the Valletort dignity. Who
+would do for her? Let me see; eligible men are not abundant, and those
+that are eligible are shy of being marked as Philip would say--perhaps
+from being hunted so much, poor things! There is Fulke Nugent, heir to a
+barony, and his father is ninety--very rich, too--he would do; and
+Philip's friend, Caradoc, poor, I know, but their Earldom's the oldest
+peerage patent. There is Eyre Lee, too; I don't much like the man,
+supercilious and empty-headed; still he's an unobjectionable alliance.
+And there is Goodwood. Every one has tried for Goodwood, and failed. I
+should like Valencia to win him; he is decidedly the most eligible man
+in town. I will invite him to dinner. If he is not attracted by
+Valencia's beauty, nothing can attract him----_Despréaux! comme vous
+êtes bête! Otez ces panaches, de grace!_"
+
+"Valencia will give me no trouble; she will marry at once," thought Lady
+Marabout again, looking across the dinner-table at her niece.
+
+If any young patrician might be likely to marry at once, it was the Hon.
+Valencia Valletort; she was, to the most critical, a beauty: her figure
+was perfect, her features were perfect, and if you complained that her
+large glorious eyes were a trifle too changeless in expression, that her
+cheek, exquisitely independent of Maréchale powder, Blanc de Perle, and
+liquid rouge, though it was, rarely varied with her thoughts and
+feelings, why, you were very exacting, my good fellow, and should
+remember that nothing is quite perfect on the face of the earth--not
+even a racer or a woman--and that whether you bid at the Marabout
+yearling sales or the Rawcliffe, if you wish to be pleased you'd better
+leave a hypercritical spirit behind you, and not expect to get _all_
+points to your liking. The best filly will have something faulty in
+temper or breeding, symmetry or pace, for your friend Jack Martingale to
+have the fun of pointing out to you when your money is paid and the
+filly in your stall; and your wife will have the same, only Martingale
+will point _her_ flaws out behind your back, and only hint them to you
+with an all-expressive "Not allowed to smoke in the dining-room _now_!"
+"A little bit of a flirt, madame--n'est-ce pas, Charlie?" "Reins kept
+rather tight, eh, old fellow?" or something equally ambiguous,
+significant, and unpleasant.
+
+"I must consider, Philip, I have brought out the beauty of the season,"
+said Lady Marabout to Carruthers, eying her niece as she danced at her
+first ball at the Dowager-Duchess of Amandine's, and beginning to
+brighten up a little under the weight of her responsibilities.
+
+"I think you have, mother. Val's indisputably handsome. You must tell
+her to make play with Goodwood or Nugent."
+
+Lady Marabout unfurled her fan, and indignantly interrupted him:
+
+"My dear Philip! do you suppose I would teach Valencia, or any girl
+under my charge, to lay herself out for any man, whoever or whatever it
+might be? I trust your cousin would not stoop to use such manoeuvres,
+did I even stoop to counsel them. Depend upon it, Philip, it is
+precisely those women who try to 'make play,' as you call it, with your
+sex that fail most to charm them. It is abominable the way in which you
+men talk, as if we all hunted you down, and would drive you to St.
+George's _nolens volens_!"
+
+"So you would, mother," laughed Carruthers. "We 'eligible men' have a
+harder life of it than rabbits in a warren, with a dozen beagles after
+them. From the minute we're of age we're beset with traps for the
+unwary, and the spring-guns are so dexterously covered, with an
+inviting, innocent-looking turf of courtesies and hospitalities that
+it's next to a mural impossibility to escape them, let one retire into
+one's self, keep to monosyllables through all the courses of all the
+dinners and all the turns of all the valses, and avoid everything
+'compromising,' as one may. I've suffered, and can tell you. I suffer
+still, though I believe and hope they are beginning to look on me as an
+incurable, given over to the clubs, the coulisses, and the cover-side.
+There's a fellow that's known still more of the _peines fortes et dures_
+than I. Goodwood's coming to ask for an introduction to Val, I would
+bet."
+
+He was coming for that purpose, and, though Lady Marabout had so
+scornfully and sincerely repudiated her son's counsel relative to making
+play with Goodwood, blandly ignorant of her own weaknesses like a good
+many other people, Lady Marabout was not above a glow of chaperone
+gratification when she saw the glance of admiration which the Pet
+Eligible of the season bestowed on Valencia Valletort. Goodwood was a
+good-looking fellow--a clever fellow--though possibly he shone best
+alone at a mess luncheon, in a chat driving to Hornsey Wood, round the
+fire in a smoking-room, on a yacht deck, or anywhere where ladies of the
+titled world were not encountered, he having become afraid of them by
+dint of much persecution, as any October partridge of a setter's nose.
+He was passably good-looking, ordinarily clever, a very good fellow as I
+say, and--he was elder son of his Grace of Doncaster, which fact would
+have made him the desired of every unit of the _beau sexe_, had he been
+hideous as the Veiled Prophet or Brutal Gilles de Rayes. The Beauty
+often loves the Beast in our day, as in the days of fairy lore. We see
+that beloved story of our petticoat days not seldom acted out, and when
+there is no possibility of personal transmogrification and amelioration
+for the Beast moreover; only--the Beauty has always had whispered in
+her little ear the title she will win, and the revenues she will gain,
+and the cloth of gold she will wear, if she caresses Bruin the
+enamoured, swears his ugly head is god-like, and vows fidelity
+unswerving!
+
+Goodwood was no uncouth Bruin, and he had strawberry-leaves in his gift;
+none of your lacquered, or ormolu, or silver-gilt coronets, such as are
+cast about nowadays with a liberality that reminds one of flinging a
+handful of halfpence from a balcony, where the nimblest beggar is first
+to get the prize; but of the purest and best gold; and Goodwood had been
+tried for accordingly by every woman he came across for the last dozen
+years. Women of every style and every order had primed all their rifles,
+and had their shot at him, and done their best to make a centre and
+score themselves as winner: belles and bas bleus, bewitching widows and
+budding débutantes, fast young ladies who tried to capture him in the
+hunting-field by clearing a bullfinch; saintly young ladies, who
+illuminated missals, and hinted they would like to take his conversion
+in hand; brilliant women, who talked at him all through a long rainy
+day, when Perthshire was flooded, and the black-fowl unattainable; showy
+women, who _posê'd_ for him whole evenings in their opera-boxes, whole
+mornings in their boudoir--all styles and orders had set at him, till he
+had sometimes sworn in his haste that all women were man-traps, and that
+he wished to Heaven he were a younger son in the Foreign Office, or a
+poor devil in the Line, or anything, rather than what he was; the Pet
+Eligible of his day.
+
+"Goodwood is certainly struck with her," thought Lady Marabout, as
+Despréaux disrobed her that night, running over with a retrogressive
+glance Valencia Valletort's successes at her first ball. "Very much
+struck, indeed, I should say. I will issue cards for another 'At Home.'
+As for 'making play' with him, as Philip terms it, of course that is
+only a man's nonsense. Valencia will need none of those trickeries, I
+trust; still, it is any one's duty to make the best alliance possible
+for such a girl, and--dear Adeliza would be very pleased."
+
+With which amiable remembrance of her sister (whom, conceiving it her
+duty to love, Lady Marabout persuaded herself that she _did_ love, from
+a common feminine opticism that there's an eleventh commandment which
+makes it compulsory to be attached to relatives _n'importe_ of whatever
+degree of disagreeability, though Lady Honiton was about the most odious
+hypochondriac going, in a perpetual state of unremitting battle with the
+whole outer world in general, and allopathists, homoeopathists, and
+hydropathists in especial), the most amiable lady in all Christendom
+bade Despréaux bring up her cup of coffee an hour earlier in the
+morning, she had so much to do! asked if Bijou had had some panada set
+down by his basket in case he wanted something to take in the night;
+wished her maid good night, and laid her head on her pillow as the dawn
+streamed through the shutters, already settling what bridal presents she
+should give her niece Valencia, when she became present Marchioness of
+Goodwood and prospective Duchess of Doncaster before the altar rails of
+St. George's.
+
+"That's a decidedly handsome girl, that cousin of yours, Phil," said
+Goodwood, on the pavement before her Grace of Amandine's, in Grosvenor
+Place, at the same hour that night.
+
+"I think she _is_ counted like me!" said Carruthers. "Of course she's
+handsome; hasn't she De Boncoeur blood in her, my good fellow? We're all
+of us good-looking, always have been, thank God! If you're inclined to
+sacrifice, Goodwood, now's your time, and my mother'll be delighted.
+She's brought out about half a million of débutantes, I should say, in
+her time, and all of 'em have gone wrong, somehow; wouldn't go off at
+all, like damp gunpowder, or would go off too quick in the wrong
+direction, like a volunteer's rifle charge; married ignominiously, or
+married obstinately, or never excited pity in the breast of any man, but
+had to retire to single-blessedness in the country, console themselves
+with piety and an harmonium, and spread nets for young clerical victims.
+Give her a triumph at last, and let her have glory for once, as a
+chaperone, in catching _you_!"
+
+Goodwood gave a little shiver, and tried to light a Manilla, which
+utterly refused to take light, for the twelfth time in half a minute.
+
+"Hold your tongue! If the Templars' Order were extant, wouldn't I take
+the vows and bless them! What an unspeakable comfort and protection that
+white cross would be to us, Phil, if we could stick it on our coats, and
+know it would say to every woman that looked at us, 'No go, my pretty
+little dears--not to be caught!' Marriage! I can't remember any time
+that that word wasn't my bugbear. When I was but a little chicken, some
+four years old, I distinctly remember, when I was playing with little
+Ida Keane on the terrace, hearing her mother simper to mine, 'Perhaps
+darling Goodwood may marry my little Ida some day, who knows?' I never
+would play with Ida afterwards; instinct preserved me; she's six or
+seven-and thirty now, and weighs ten stone, I'm positive. Why _won't_
+they let us alone? The way journalists and dowagers, the fellows who
+want to write a taking article, and the women who want to get rid of a
+taking daughter, all badger us, in public and private, about marriage
+just now, is abominable, on my life; the affair's _ours_, I should say,
+not theirs, and to marry isn't the ultimatum of a man's existence, nor
+anything like it."
+
+"I hope not! It's more like the extinguisher. Good night, old fellow."
+And Carruthers drove away in his hansom, while Goodwood got into his
+night-brougham, thinking that for the sake of the title, the evil
+(nuptial) day _must_ come, sooner or later, but dashed off to forget
+the disagreeable obligation over the supper-table of the most sparkling
+empress of the demi-monde.
+
+Lady Marabout had her wish; she brought out the belle of the season, and
+when a little time had slipped by, when the Hon. Val had been presented
+at the first Drawing-room, and shone there despite the worry, muddle,
+and squeeze incidental to that royal and fashionable ceremony, and she
+had gathered second-hand from her son what was said in the clubs
+relative to this new specimen of the Valletort beauty, she began to be
+happier under her duties than she had ever been before, and wrote
+letters to "dearest Adeliza," brimful of superlative adjectives and
+genuine warmth.
+
+"Valencia will do me credit: I shall see her engaged before the end of
+June; she will have only to choose," Lady Marabout would say to herself
+some twenty times in the pauses of the morning concerts, the morning
+parties, the bazaar committees, the toilette consultations, the
+audiences to religious beggars, whose name was Legion and rapacity
+unmeasured, the mass of unanswered correspondence whose debt lay as
+heavily on Lady Marabout as his chains on a convict, and were about as
+little likely to be knocked off, and all the other things innumerable
+that made her life in the season one teetotum whirl of small worries and
+sunshiny cares, from the moment she began her day, with her earliest cup
+of Mocha softened with cream from that pet dairy of hers at Fernditton,
+where, according to Lady Marabout, the cows were constantly _in articulo
+mortis_, but the milk invariably richer than anywhere else, an
+agricultural anomaly which presented no difficulties to _her_ reason.
+Like all women, she loved paradoxes, defied logic recklessly, and would
+clear at a bound a chasm of solecisms that would have kept Plato in
+difficulties about crossing it, and in doubt about the strength of his
+jumping-pole, all his life long.
+
+"She will do me great credit," the semi-consoled chaperone would say to
+herself with self-congratulatory relief; and if Lady Marabout thought
+now and then, "I wish she were a trifle--a trifle more--demonstrative,"
+she instantly checked such an ungrateful and hypercritical wish, and
+remembered that a heart is a highly treacherous and unadvisable
+possession for any young lady, and a most happy omission in her anatomy,
+though Lady Marabout had, she would confess to herself on occasions with
+great self-reproach, an unworthy and lingering weakness for that
+contraband article, for which she scorned and scolded herself with the
+very worst success.
+
+Lady Marabout _had_ a heart herself; to it she had had to date the
+greatest worries, troubles, imprudences, and vexations of her life; she
+had had to thank it for nothing, and to dislike it for much; it had made
+her grieve most absurdly for other people's griefs; it had given her a
+hundred unphilosophical pangs at philosophic ingratitude from people who
+wanted her no longer; it had teased, worried, and plagued her all her
+life long, had often interfered in the most meddling and inconvenient
+manner between her and her reason, her comfort and her prudence; and yet
+she had a weakness for the same detrimental organ in other people--a
+weakness of which she could no more have cured herself than of her
+belief in the detection-defying powers of liquid rouge, the potentiality
+of a Liliputian night-bolt against an army of burglars, the miraculous
+properties of sal volatile, the efficacy of sermons, and such-like
+articles of faith common to feminine orthodoxy. A weakness of which she
+never felt more ignominiously convicted and more secretly ashamed than
+in the presence of Miss Valletort, that young lady having a lofty and
+magnificent disdain for all such follies, quite unattainable to ordinary
+mortals, which oppressed Lady Marabout with a humiliating sense of
+inferiority to her niece of eighteen summers. "So admirably educated! so
+admirably brought up!" she would say to herself over and over again,
+and if heretic suggestions that the stiffest trained flowers are not
+always the best, that the upright and spotless arum-lily isn't so
+fragrant as the careless, brilliant, tangled clematis; that rose-boughs,
+tossing free in sunshine and liberty, beat hollow the most
+carefully-pruned standard that ever won a medal at Regent's Park, with
+such-like allegories, arising from contemplation of her conservatory or
+her balcony flowers, _would_ present themselves, Lady Marabout repressed
+them dutifully, and gratefully thought how many pounds' weight lighter
+became the weary burden of a chaperone's responsibilities when the
+onerous charge had been educated "on the best system."
+
+"Goodwood's attentions _are_ serious, Philip, say what you like," said
+the Countess to her son, as determinedly as a theologian states his pet
+points with wool in his ears, that he may not hear any Satan-inspired,
+rational, and mathematical disproval of them, with which you may rashly
+seek to soil his tympana and smash his arguments--"Goodwood's attentions
+_are_ serious, Philip, say what you like," said her ladyship, at a
+morning party at Kew, eating her Neapolitan ice, complacently glancing
+at the "most eligible alliance of the season," who was throwing the
+balls at lawn-billiards, and talking between whiles to the Hon. Val with
+praiseworthy and promising animation.
+
+"Serious indeed, mother, if they tend matrimony-wards!" smiled
+Carruthers. "It's a very serious time indeed for unwary sparrows when
+they lend an ear to the call-bird, and think about hopping on to the
+lime-twigs. I should think it's from a sense of compunction for the net
+you've led us into, that you all particularize our attentions, whenever
+they point near St. George's, by that very suggestive little adjective
+'serious!' Yes, I am half afraid poor Goodey is a little touched. He
+threw over our Derby sweepstakes up at Hornsey Wood yesterday to go and
+stifle himself in Willis's rooms at your bazaar, and buy a guinea cup
+of Souchong from Valencia; and, considering he's one of the best shots
+in England, I don't think you could have a more conclusive, if you could
+have a more poetic, proof of devoted renunciation. _I_'d fifty times
+rather get a spear in my side, à la Ivanhoe, for a woman than give up a
+Pigeon-match, a Cup-day, or a Field-night!"
+
+"You'll never do either!" laughed Lady Marabout, who made it one of her
+chief troubles that her son would not marry, chiefly, probably, because
+if he _had_ married she would have been miserable, and thought no woman
+good enough for him, would have been jealous of his wife's share of his
+heart, and supremely wretched, I have no doubt, at his throwing himself
+away, as she would have thought it, had his handkerchief lighted on a
+Princess born, lovely as Galatea, and blessed with Venus's cestus.
+
+"Never, _plaise à Dieu_!" responded her son, piously over his ice; "but
+if Goodwood's serious, what's Cardonnel? _He_'s lost his head, if you
+like, after the Valletort beauty."
+
+"Major Cardonnel!" said Lady Marabout, hastily. "Oh no, I don't think
+so. I hope not--I trust not."
+
+"Why so? He's one of the finest fellows in the Service."
+
+"I dare say; but you see, my dear Philip, he's not--not--desirable."
+
+Carruthers stroked his moustaches and laughed:
+
+"Fie, fie, mother! if all other Belgraviennes are Mammon-worshippers, I
+thought you kept clear of the paganism. I thought your freedom from it
+was the only touch by which you weren't 'purely feminine,' as the lady
+novelists say of their pet bits of chill propriety."
+
+"Worship Mammon! Heaven forbid!" ejaculated Lady Marabout. "But there
+are duties, you see, my dear; your friend is a very delightful man, to
+be sure; I like him excessively, and if Valencia felt any _great_
+preference for him----"
+
+"You'd feel it _your_ duty to counsel her to throw him over for
+Goodwood."
+
+"I never said so, Philip," interrupted Lady Marabout, with as near an
+approach to asperity as she could achieve, which approach was less like
+vinegar than most people's best honey.
+
+"But you implied it. What are 'duties' else, and why is poor Cardonnel
+'not desirable'?"
+
+Lady Marabout played a little tattoo with her spoon in perplexity.
+
+"My dear Philip, you know as well as I do what I mean. One might think
+you were a boy of twenty to hear you!"
+
+"My dear mother, like all disputants, when beaten in argument and driven
+into a corner, you resort to vituperation of your opponent!" laughed
+Carruthers, as he left her and lounged away to pick up the stick with
+which pretty Flora Elmers had just knocked the pipe out of Aunt Sally's
+head on to the velvet lawn of Lady George Frangipane's dower-house,
+leaving his mother by no means tranquillized by his suggestions.
+
+"Dear me!" thought Lady Marabout, uneasily, as she conversed with the
+Dowager-Countess of Patchouli on the respective beauties of two new
+pelargonium seedlings, the Leucadia and the Beatrice, for which her
+gardener had won prizes the day before at the Regent's Park Show--"dear
+me! why is there invariably this sort of cross-purposes in everything?
+It will be so grievous to lose Goodwood (and he _is_ decidedly struck
+with her; when he bought that rosebud yesterday of her at the bazaar,
+and put it in the breast of his waistcoat, I heard what he said, and it
+was no nonsense, no mere flirting complaisance either)--it would be so
+grievous to lose him; and yet if Valencia really care for Cardonnel--and
+sometimes I almost fancy she does--I shouldn't know which way to advise.
+I thought it would be odd if a season could pass quietly without my
+having some worry of this sort! With fifty men always about Valencia, as
+they are, how _can_ I be responsible for any mischief that may happen,
+though, to hear Philip talk, one would really imagine it was _my_ fault
+that they lost their heads, as he calls it! As if a forty-horse
+steam-power could stop a man when he's once off down the incline into
+love! The more you try to pull him back the more impetus you give him to
+go headlong down. I wish Goodwood would propose, and we could settle the
+affair definitively. It is singular, but she has had no offers hardly
+with all her beauty. It is very singular, in _my_ first season I had
+almost as many as I had names on my tablets at Almack's. But men don't
+marry now, they say. Perhaps 'tisn't to be wondered at, though I
+wouldn't allow it to Philip. Poor things! they lose a very great many
+pleasant things by it, and get nothing, I'm sure, nine times out of ten,
+except increased expenses and unwelcome worries. I don't think I would
+have married if I'd been a man, though I'd never admit it, of course, to
+one of them. There are plenty of women who know too much of their own
+sex ever to wonder that a man doesn't marry, though of course we don't
+say so; 'twouldn't be to our interest. Sculptors might as well preach
+iconoclasm, or wine-merchants tee-totalism, as women misoganism, however
+little in our hearts we may marvel at it. Oh, my dear Lady Patchouli!
+you praise the Leucadia too kindly--you do indeed--but if you really
+think so much of it, let me send you some slips. I shall be most happy,
+and Fenton will be only too proud; it is his favorite seedling."
+
+Carruthers was quite right. One fellow at least had lost his head after
+the beauty of the season, and he was Cardonnel, of the--Lancers, as fine
+a fellow, as Philip said, as any in the Queen's, but a dreadful
+detrimental in the eyes of all chaperones, because he was but the fourth
+son of one of the poorest peers in the United Kingdom, a fact which
+gave him an ægis from all assaults matrimonial, and a freedom from all
+smiles and wiles, traps and gins, which Goodwood was accustomed to tell
+him he bitterly envied him, and on which Cardonnel had fervently
+congratulated himself, till he came under the fire of the Hon. Val's
+large luminous eyes one night, when he was levelling his glass from his
+stall at Lady Marabout's box, to take a look at the new belle, as
+advised to do by that most fastidious female critic, Vane Steinberg.
+Valencia Valletort's luminous eyes had gleamed that night under their
+lashes, and pierced through the lenses of his lorgnon. He saw her, and
+saw nothing but her afterwards, as men looking on the sun keep it on
+their retina to the damage and exclusion of all other objects.
+
+Physical beauty, even when it is a little bit soulless, is an admirable
+weapon for instantaneous slaughter, and the trained and pruned standard
+roses show a very effective mass of bloom; though, as Lady Marabout's
+floral tastes and experiences told her, they don't give one the lasting
+pleasure that a careless bough of wild rose will do, with its untutored
+grace and its natural fragrance. With the standard you see we keep in
+the artificial air of the horticultural tent, and are never touched out
+of it for a second; its perfume seems akin to a bouquet, and its destiny
+is, we are sure, to a parterre. The wild-rose fragrance breathes of the
+hill-side and the woodlands, and brings back to us soft touches of
+memory, of youth, of a fairer life and a purer air than that in which we
+are living now.
+
+The Hon. Val did _not_ have as many offers as her aunt and chaperone had
+on the first flush of her pride in her anticipated. Young ladies,
+educated on the "best systems," are apt to be a trifle wearisome, and
+_don't_, somehow or other, take so well as the sedulous efforts of their
+pruners and trainers--the rarefied moral atmosphere of the
+conservatories, in which they are carefully screened from ordinary air,
+and the anxiety evinced lest the flower should ever forget itself, and
+sway naturally in the wind--deserve. But Cardonnel had gone mad after
+her, that perfect face of hers had done for him; and whatever Goodwood
+might be, _he_ was serious--he positively haunted the young beauty like
+her own shadow--he was leaning on the rails every morning of his life
+that she took her early ride--he sent her bouquets as lavishly as if
+he'd been a nursery gardener. By some species of private surveillance,
+or lover's clairvoyance, he knew beforehand where she would go, and was
+at the concert, fête, morning party, bazaar, or whatever it happened to
+be, as surely as was Lady Marabout herself. Poor Cardonnel was serious,
+and fiercely fearful of his all-powerful and entirely eligible rival;
+though greater friends than he and Goodwood had been, before this girl's
+face appeared on the world of Belgravia, never lounged arm-in-arm into
+Pratt's, or strolled down the "sweet shady side of Pall-Mall."
+
+Goodwood's attentions were very marked, too, even to eyes less willing
+to construe them so than Lady Marabout's. Goodwood himself, if chaffed
+on the subject, vouchsafed nothing; laughed, stroked his moustaches, or
+puffed his cigar, if he happened to have that blessed resource in all
+difficulties, and comforter under all embarrassments, between his lips
+at the moment; but decidedly he sought Valencia Valletort more, or, to
+speak more correctly, he shunned her less than he'd ever done any other
+young lady, and one or two Sunday mornings--_mirabile dictu!_--he was
+positively seen at St. Paul's, Knightsbridge, in the seat behind Lady
+Marabout's sittings. A fact which, combining as it did a brace of
+miracles at once, of early rising and unusual piety, set every
+Belgravienne in that fashionable sanctuary watching over the top of her
+illuminated prayer-book, to the utter destruction of her hopes and
+interruption of her orisons.
+
+Dowagers began to tremble behind their fans, young ladies to quake over
+their bouquets; the topic was eagerly discussed by every woman from
+Clarges Street to Lowndes Square; their Graces of Doncaster smiled well
+pleased on Valencia--she was unquestionable blood, and they so wished
+dear Goodwood to settle! There was whispered an awful whisper to the
+whole female world; whispered over matutinal chocolate, and luncheon
+Strasbourg pâtés, ball-supper Moëts', and demi-monde-supper Silleri,
+over Vane Steinberg's cigar and Eulalie Rosière's cigarette, over the
+_Morning Post_ in the clubs, and _Le Follet_ in the boudoir, that--the
+Pet Eligible would--marry! That the Pet Prophecy of universal smash was
+going to be fulfilled could hardly have occasioned greater
+consternation.
+
+The soul of Lady Marabout had been disquieted ever since her son's
+suggestions at Lady George Frangipane's morning party, and she began to
+worry: for herself, for Valencia, for Goodwood, for Cardonnel, for her
+responsibilities in general, and for her "dearest Adeliza's" alternate
+opinions of her duenna qualifications in particular. Lady Marabout had
+an intense wish, an innocent wish enough, as innocent and very similar
+in its way to that of an Eton boy to make a centre at a rifle-contest,
+viz., to win the Marquis of Goodwood; innocent, surely, for though
+neither the rifle prize nor the Pet Eligible could be won without
+mortification unspeakable to a host of unsuccessful aspirants, if we
+decree that sort of thing sinful and selfish, as everything natural
+seems to me to get decreed nowadays, we may as well shut up at once; if
+we may not try for the top of the pole, why erect poles at all,
+monsieur? If we must not do our best to pass our friend and brother, we
+must give up climbing forever, and go on all fours placably with Don and
+Pontos.
+
+Everybody has his ambition: one sighs for the Woolsack, another for the
+Hunt Cup; somebody longs to be First Minister, somebody else pines to be
+first dancer; one man plumes himself on a new fish-sauce, another on a
+fresh reform bill; A. thirsts to get a single brief, B. for the time
+when he shall be worried with no briefs at all; C. sets his hopes on
+being the acrobat at Cremorne, D. on being the acrobat of the Tuileries;
+fat bacon is Hodge the hedger's _summum bonum_, and Johannisberg _pur_
+is mine; Empedocles thinks notoriety everything, and Diogenes thinks
+quiet everything--each has his own reading of ambition, and Lady
+Marabout had hers; the Duchess of Doncaster thirsted for the Garter for
+her husband, Lady Elmers's pride was to possess the smallest terrier
+that ever took daisy tea and was carried in a monkey-muff, her Grace of
+Amandine slaved night and day to bring her party in and throw the
+ministry out. Lady Marabout sighed but for one thing--to win the Pet
+Eligible of the season, and give éclat for once to one phase of her
+chaperone's existence.
+
+Things were nicely in train. Goodwood was beginning to bite at that very
+handsome fly the Hon. Val, and promised to be hooked and landed without
+much difficulty before long, and placed, hopelessly for him,
+triumphantly for her, in the lime-basket of matrimony. Things were
+beautifully in train, and Lady Marabout was for once flattering herself
+she should float pleasantly through an unruffled and successful season,
+when Carruthers poured the one drop of _amari aliquid_ into her
+champagne-cup by his suggestion of Cardonnel's doom. And then Lady
+Marabout begun to worry.
+
+She who could not endure to see a fly hurt or a flower pulled
+needlessly, had nothing for it but to worry for Cardonnel's destiny, and
+puzzle over the divided duties which Carruthers had hinted to her. To
+reject the one man because he was not well off did seem to her
+conscience, uncomfortably awakened by Phil's innuendoes, something more
+mercenary than she quite liked to look at; yet to throw over the other,
+future Duke of Doncaster, the eligible, the darling, the yearned-for of
+all May Fair and Belgravia, seemed nothing short of madness to inculcate
+to Valencia; a positive treason to that poor absent, trusting, "dearest
+Adeliza," who, after the visions epistolarily spread out before her,
+would utterly refuse to be comforted if Goodwood any way failed to
+become her son-in-law, and, moreover, the heaviest blow to Lady Marabout
+herself that the merciless axe of that brutal headsman Contretemps could
+deal her.
+
+"I do not know really what to do or what to advise," would Lady Marabout
+say to herself over and over again (so disturbed by her onerous burden
+of responsibilities that she would let Despréaux arrange the most
+outrageous coiffures, and, never noticing them, go out to dinner with
+emeralds on blue velvet, or something as shocking to feminine nerves in
+her temporary aberration), forgetting one very great point, which,
+remembered, would have saved her all trouble, that nobody asked her to
+do anything, and not a soul requested her advice. "But Goodwood is
+decidedly won, and Goodwood must not be lost; in our position we owe
+something to society," she would invariably conclude these mental
+debates; which last phase, being of a vagueness and obscure application
+that might have matched it with any Queen's speech or electional address
+upon record, was a mysterious balm to Lady Marabout's soul, and spoke
+volumes to _her_, if a trifle hazy to you and to me.
+
+But Lady Marabout, if she was a little bit of a sophist, had not worn
+her eye-glass all these years without being keen-sighted on some
+subjects, and, though perfectly satisfied with her niece's conduct with
+Goodwood, saw certain symptoms which made her tremble lest the
+detrimental Lancer should have won greater odds than the eligible
+Marquis.
+
+"Arthur Cardonnel is excessively handsome! Such very good style!
+Isn't it a pity they're all so poor! His father played away
+everything--literally everything. The sons have no more to marry upon,
+any one of them, than if they were three crossing-sweepers," said her
+ladyship, carelessly, driving home from St. Paul's one Sunday morning.
+
+And, watching the effect of her stray arrow, she had beheld an actual
+flush on the beauty's fair, impassive cheek, and had positively heard a
+smothered sigh from an admirably brought-up heart, no more given
+ordinarily to such weaknesses than the diamond-studded heart pendent
+from her bracelet, the belle's heart and the bracelet's heart being both
+formed alike, to fetch their price, and bid to do no more:--power of
+volition would have been as inconvenient in, and interfered as greatly
+with, the sale of one as of the other.
+
+"She does like him!" sighed Lady Marabout over that Sabbath's luncheon
+wines. "It's always my fate--always; and Goodwood, never won before,
+will be thrown--actually thrown--away, as if he were the younger son of
+a Nobody!" which horrible waste was so terrible to her imagination that
+Lady Marabout could positively have shed tears at the bare prospect, and
+might have shed them, too, if the Hon. Val, the butler, two footmen, and
+a page had not inconveniently happened to be in the room at the time, so
+that she was driven to restrain her feelings and drink some Amontillado
+instead. Lady Marabout is not the first person by a good many who has
+had to smile over sherry with a breaking heart. Ah! lips have quivered
+as they laughed over Chambertin, and trembled as they touched the bowl
+of a champagne-glass. Wine has assisted at many a joyous festa enough,
+but some that has been drunk in gayety has caught gleams, in the eyes of
+the drinkers, of salt water brighter than its brightest sparkles: water
+that no other eyes can see. Because we may drink Badminton laughingly
+when the gaze of Society the Non-Sympathetic is on us, do you think we
+must never have tasted any more bitter dregs? _Va-t'en, bécasse!_ where
+have you lived! Nero does not always fiddle while Rome is burning from
+utter heartlessness, believe me, but rather--sometimes,
+perhaps--because his heart is aching!
+
+"Goodwood will propose to-night, I fancy, he is so very attentive,"
+thought Lady Marabout, sitting with her sister chaperones on the cosy
+causeuses of a mansion in Carlton Terrace, at one of the last balls of
+the departing season. "I never saw dear Valencia look better, and
+certainly her waltzing is----Ah! good evening, Major Cardonnel! Very
+warm to-night, is it not? I shall be so glad when I am down again at
+Fernditton. Town, in the first week of July, is really not habitable."
+
+And she furled her fan, and smiled on him with her pleasant eyes, and
+couldn't help wishing he hadn't been on the Marchioness Rondeletia's
+visiting list, he _was_ such a detrimental, and he was ten times
+handsomer than Goodwood!
+
+"Will Miss Valletort leave you soon?" asked Cardonnel, sitting down by
+her.
+
+"_Ah! monsieur, vous êtes là!_" thought Lady Marabout, as she answered,
+like a guarded diplomatist as she was, that it was not all settled at
+present what her niece's post-season destiny would be, whether Devon or
+Fernditton, or the Spas, with her mother, Lady Honiton; and then
+unfurled her fan again, and chatted about Baden and her own indecision
+as to whether she should go there this September.
+
+"May I ask you a question, and will you pardon me for its plainness?"
+asked Cardonnel, when she'd exhausted Baden's desirable and
+non-desirable points.
+
+Lady Marabout shuddered as she bent her head, and thought, "The creature
+is never going to confide in me! He will win me over if he do, he looks
+so like his mother! And what shall I say to Adeliza!"
+
+"Is your niece engaged to Goodwood or not?"
+
+If ever a little fib was tempting to any lady, from Eve downward, it was
+tempting to Lady Marabout now! A falsehood would settle everything,
+send Cardonnel off the field, and clear all possibility of losing the
+"best match of the season." Besides, if not engaged to Goodwood actually
+to-night, Val would be, if she liked, to-morrow, or the next day, or
+before the week was over at the furthest--would it be such a falsehood
+after all? She colored, she fidgeted her fan, she longed for the little
+fib!--how terribly tempting it looked! But Lady Marabout is a bad hand
+at prevarication, and she hates a lie, and she answered bravely, with a
+regretful twinge, "Engaged? No; not----"
+
+"Not yet! Thank God!"
+
+Lady Marabout stared at him and at the words muttered under his
+moustaches:
+
+"Really, Major Cardonnel, I do not see why you----"
+
+"Should thank Heaven for it? Yet I do--it is a reprieve. Lady Marabout,
+you and my mother were close friends; will you listen to me for a
+second, while we are not overheard? That I have loved your niece--had
+the madness to love her, if you will--you cannot but have seen; that she
+has given me some reasonable encouragement it is no coxcombry to say,
+though I have known from the first what a powerful rival I had against
+me; but that Valencia loves me and does not love him, I believe--nay, I
+_know_. I have said nothing decided to her; when all hangs on a single
+die we shrink from hazarding the throw. But I must know my fate
+to-night. If she come to you--as girls will, I believe, sometimes--for
+countenance and counsel, will you stand my friend?--will you, for the
+sake of my friendship with your son, your friendship with my mother,
+support my cause, and uphold what I believe Valencia's heart will say in
+my favor?"
+
+Lady Marabout was silent: no Andalusian ever worried her fan more
+ceaselessly in coquetry than she did in perplexity. Her heart was
+appealed to, and when that was enlisted, Lady Marabout was lost!
+
+"But--but--my dear Major Cardonnel, you are aware----" she began, and
+stopped. I should suppose it may be a little awkward to tell a man to
+his face he is "not desirable!"
+
+"I am aware that I cannot match with Goodwood? I am; but I know, also,
+that Goodwood's love cannot match with mine, and that your niece's
+affection is not his. That he may win her I know women too well not to
+fear, therefore I ask _you_ to be my friend. If she refuse me, will you
+plead for me?--if she ask for counsel, will you give such as your own
+heart dictates (I ask no other)--and, will you remember that on
+Valencia's answer will rest the fate of a man's lifetime?"
+
+He rose and left her, but the sound of his voice rang in Lady Marabout's
+ears, and the tears welled into her eyes: "Dear, dear! how like he
+looked to his poor dear mother! But what a position to place me in! Am I
+_never_ to have any peace?"
+
+Not at this ball, at any rate. Of all the worried chaperones and
+distracted duennas who hid their anxieties under pleasant smiles or
+affable lethargy, none were a quarter so miserable as Helena, Lady
+Marabout. Her heart and her head were enlisted on opposite sides; her
+wishes pulled one way, her sympathies another; her sense of justice to
+Cardonnel urged her to one side, her sense of duty to "dearest Adeliza"
+urged her to the other; her pride longed for one alliance, her heart
+yearned for the other. Cardonnel had confided in her and appealed to
+her; _sequitur_, Lady Marabout's honor would not allow her to go against
+him: yet, it was nothing short of grossest treachery to poor Adeliza,
+down there in Devon, expecting every day to congratulate her daughter on
+a prospective duchy won, to counsel Valencia to take one of these
+beggared Cardonnels, and, besides--to lose all her own laurels, to lose
+the capture of Goodwood!
+
+No Guelphs and Ghibelins, no Royalists and Imperialists, ever fought so
+hard as Lady Marabout's divided duties.
+
+"Valencia, Major Cardonnel spoke to me to-night," began that
+best-hearted and most badgered of ladies, as she sat before her
+dressing-room fire that night, alone with her niece.
+
+Valencia smiled slightly, and a faint idea crossed Lady Marabout's mind
+that Valencia's smile was hardly a pleasant one, a trifle too much like
+the play of moonbeams on ice.
+
+"He spoke to me about you."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Perhaps you can guess, my dear, what he said?"
+
+"I am no clairvoyante, aunt;" and Miss Val yawned a little, and held out
+one of her long slender feet to admire it.
+
+"Every woman, my love, becomes half a clairvoyante when she is in love,"
+said Lady Marabout, a little bit impatiently; she hadn't been brought up
+on the best systems herself, and though she admired the refrigeration
+(on principle), it irritated her just a little now and then. "Did
+he--did he say anything to _you_ to-night?"
+
+"Oh yes!"
+
+"And what did you answer him, my love?"
+
+"What would you advise me?"
+
+Lady Marabout sighed, coughed, played nervously with the tassels of her
+peignoir, crumpled Bijou's ears with a reckless disregard to that
+priceless pet's feelings, and wished herself at the bottom of the
+Serpentine. Cardonnel had trusted her, she couldn't desert _him_; poor
+dear Adeliza had trusted her, she couldn't betray _her_; what was right
+to one would be wrong to the other, and to reconcile her divided duties
+was a Danaid's labor. For months she had worried her life out lest her
+advice should be asked, and now the climax was come, and asked it was.
+
+"What a horrible position!" thought Lady Marabout.
+
+She waited and hesitated till the pendule had ticked off sixty seconds,
+then she summoned her courage and spoke:
+
+"My dear, advice in such matters is often very harmful, and always very
+useless; plenty of people have asked my counsel, but I never knew any of
+them take it unless it chanced to chime in with their fancy. A woman's
+best adviser is her own heart, specially on such a subject as this. But
+before I give my opinion, may I ask if you have accepted him?"
+
+Lady Marabout's heart throbbed quick and fast as she put the momentous
+question, with an agitation for which she would have blushed before her
+admirably nonchalante niece; but the tug of war was coming, and if
+Goodwood should be lost!
+
+"You have accepted him?" she asked again.
+
+"No! I--refused him."
+
+The delicate rose went out of the Hon. Val's cheeks for once, and she
+breathed quickly and shortly.
+
+Goodwood was _not_ lost then!
+
+Was she sorry--was she glad? Lady Marabout hardly knew; like Wellington,
+she felt the next saddest thing after a defeat is a victory.
+
+"But you love him, Valencia?" she asked, half ashamed of suggesting such
+weakness, to this glorious beauty.
+
+The Hon. Val unclasped her necklet as if it were a chain, choking her,
+and her face grew white and set: the coldest will feel on occasion, and
+all have _some_ tender place that can wince at the touch.
+
+"Perhaps; but such folly is best put aside at once. Certainly I prefer
+him to others, but to accept him would have been madness, absurdity. I
+told him so!"
+
+"You told him so! If you had the heart to do so, Valencia, he has not
+lost much in losing you!" burst in Lady Marabout, her indignation
+getting the better of her judgment, and her heart, as usual, giving the
+coup de grace to her reason. "I am shocked at you! Every tender-hearted
+woman feels regret for affection she is obliged to repulse, even when
+she does not return it; and you, who love this man----"
+
+"Would you have had me accept him, aunt?"
+
+"Yes," cried Lady Marabout, firmly, forgetting every vestige of "duty,"
+and every possibility of dear Adeliza's vengeance, "if you love him, I
+would, decidedly. When I married my dear Philip's father, he was what
+Cardonnel is, a cavalry man, as far off his family title then as
+Cardonnel is off his now."
+
+"The more reason I should not imitate your imprudence, my dear aunt;
+death might not carry off the intermediate heirs quite so courteously in
+this case! No, I refused Major Cardonnel, and I did rightly; I should
+have repented it by now had I accepted him. There is nothing more silly
+than to be led away by romance. You De Boncoeurs _are_ romantic, you
+know; we Valletorts are happily free from the weakness. I am very tired,
+aunt, so good night."
+
+The Hon. Val went, the waxlight she carried shedding a paler shade on
+her handsome face, whiter and more set than usual, but held more
+proudly, as if it already wore the Doncaster coronet; and Lady Marabout
+sighed as she rang for her maid.
+
+"Of course she acted wisely, and I ought to be very pleased; but that
+poor dear fellow!--his eyes _are_ so like his mother's!"
+
+"I congratulate you, mother, on a clear field. You've sent poor Arthur
+off very nicely," said Carruthers, the next morning, paying his general
+visit in her boudoir before the day began, which is much the same time
+in Town as in Greenland, and commences, whatever almanacs may say,
+about two or half-past P.M. "Cardonnel left this morning for Heaven
+knows where, and is going to exchange, Shelleto tells me, into the
+----th, which is ordered to Bengal, so _he_ won't trouble you much more.
+When shall I be allowed to congratulate my cousin as the future Duchess
+of Doncaster?"
+
+"Pray, don't tease me, Philip. I've been vexed enough about your friend.
+When he came to me this morning, and asked me if there was no hope, and
+I was obliged to tell him there was none, I felt wretched," said Lady
+Marabout, as nearly pettishly as she ever said anything; "but I am
+really not responsible, not in the least. Besides, even you must admit
+that Goodwood is a much more desirable alliance, and if Valencia had
+accepted Cardonnel, pray what would all Belgravia have said? Why, that,
+disappointed of Goodwood, she took the other out of pure pique! We owe
+something to society, Philip, and something to ourselves."
+
+Carruthers laughed:
+
+"Ah, my dear mother, you women will never be worth all you ought to be
+till you leave off kowtow-ing to 'what will be said,' and learn to defy
+that terrible oligarchy of the Qu'en dira-t-on?"
+
+"When will Goodwood propose?" wondered Lady Marabout, fifty times a day,
+and Valencia Valletort wondered too. Whitebait was being eaten, and
+yachts being fitted, manned, and victualled, outstanding Ascot debts
+were being settled, and outstanding bills were being passed hurriedly
+through St. Stephen's; all the clockwork of the season was being wound
+up for the last time previous to a long standstill, and going at a deuce
+of a pace, as if longing to run down, and give its million wheels and
+levers peace; while everybody who'd anything to settle, whether monetary
+or matrimonial, personal or political, was making up his mind about it
+and getting it off his hands, and some men were being pulled up by
+wide-awake Jews to see what they were "made of," while others were
+pulled up by adroit dowagers to know what they had "meant" before the
+accounts of the season were scored out and settled. "Had Goodwood
+proposed?" asked all Belgravia. "Why hadn't Goodwood proposed?" asked
+Lady Marabout and Valencia. Twenty most favorable opportunities for the
+performance of that ceremony had Lady Marabout made for him
+"accidentally on purpose" the last fortnight; each of those times she
+had fancied the precious fish hooked and landed, and each time she had
+seen him, free from the hook, floating on the surface of society.
+
+"He _must_ speak definitely to-morrow," thought Lady Marabout. But the
+larvæ of to-morrow burst into the butterfly of to-day, and to-day passed
+into the chrysalis of yesterday, and Goodwood was always very nearly
+caught, and never _quite_!
+
+"Come up-stairs, Philip; I want to show you a little Paul Potter I
+bought the other day," said Lady Marabout one morning, returning from a
+shopping expedition to Regent Street, meeting her son at her own door
+just descending from his tilbury. "Lord Goodwood calling, did you say,
+Soames? Oh, very well."
+
+And Lady Marabout floated up the staircase, but signed to her footman to
+open the door, not of the drawing-room, but of her own boudoir.
+
+"The Potter is in my own room, Philip; you must come in here if you wish
+to see it," said that adroit lady, for the benefit of Soames. But when
+the door was shut, Lady Marabout lowered her voice confidentially: "The
+Potter isn't here, dear; I had it hung in the little cabinet through the
+drawing-rooms, but I don't wish to go up there for a few moments--you
+understand."
+
+Carruthers threw himself in a chair, and laughed till the dogs Bijou,
+Bonbon, and Pandore all barked in a furious concert.
+
+"I understand! So Goody's positively coming to the point up there, is
+he?"
+
+"No doubt he is," said Lady Marabout, reprovingly. "Why else should he
+come in when I was not at home? There is nothing extraordinary in it.
+The only thing I have wondered at is his having delayed so long."
+
+"If a man had to hang himself, would you wonder he put off pulling the
+bolt?"
+
+"I don't see any point in your jests at all!" returned Lady Marabout.
+"There is nothing ridiculous in winning such a girl as Valencia."
+
+"No; but the question here is not of winning her, but of buying her. The
+price is a little high--a ducal coronet and splendid settlements, a
+wedding-ring and bondage for life; but he will buy her, nevertheless.
+Cardonnel couldn't pay the first half of the price, and so he was swept
+out of the auction-room. You are shocked, mother! Ah, truth _is_
+shocking sometimes, and always _maladroit_; one oughtn't to bring it
+into ladies' boudoirs."
+
+"Hold your tongue, Philip! I will not have you so satirical. Where do
+you take it from? Not from me, I am sure! Hark! there is Goodwood going!
+That is his step on the stairs, I think! Dear me, Philip, I wish you
+sympathized with me a little more, for I _do_ feel happy, and I can't
+help it; dear Adeliza will be so gratified."
+
+"My dear mother, I'll do my best to be sympathetic, I'll go and
+congratulate Goodwood as he gets in his cab, if you fancy I ought; but,
+you see, if I were in Dahomey beholding the head of my best friend
+coming off, I couldn't quite get up the amount of sympathy in their
+pleasure at the refreshing sight the Dahomites might expect from me, and
+so----"
+
+But Lady Marabout missed the comparison of herself to a Dahomite, for
+she had opened the door and was crossing to the drawing-rooms, her eyes
+bright, her step elastic, her heart exultant at the triumph of her
+manoeuvres. The Hon. Val was playing with some ferns in an étagère at
+the bottom of the farthest room, and responded to the kiss her aunt
+bestowed on her about as much as if she had been one of the statuettes
+on the consoles.
+
+"Well, love, _what did he say_?" asked Lady Marabout, breathlessly, with
+eager delight and confident anticipation.
+
+Like drops of ice on warm rose-leaves fell each word of the intensely
+chill and slightly sulky response on Lady Marabout's heart.
+
+"He said that he goes to Cowes to-morrow for the Royal Yacht Squadron
+dinner, and then on in the _Anadyomene_ to the Spitzbergen coast for
+walruses. He left a P. P. C. card for you."
+
+"_Walruses!_" shrieked Lady Marabout.
+
+"Walruses," responded the Hon. Val.
+
+"And said no more than that?"
+
+"No more than that!"
+
+The Pet Eligible had flown off uncaught after all! Lady Marabout needed
+no further explanation--_tout fut dit_. They were both silent and
+paralyzed. Do you suppose Pompey and Cornelia had much need of words
+when they met at Lesbos after the horrible déroute of Pharsalia?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I'm in your mother's blackest books for ever, Phil," said Goodwood to
+Carruthers in the express to Southampton for the R.Y.C. Squadron Regatta
+of that year, "but I can't help it. It's no good to badger us into
+marriage; it only makes us double, and run to earth. I _was_ near
+compromising myself with your cousin, I grant, but the thing that
+chilled me was, she's too _studied_. It's all got up beforehand, and
+goes upon clockwork, and it don't interest one accordingly; the
+mechanism's perfect, but we know when it will raise its hand, and move
+its eyes, and bow its head, and when we've looked at its beauty once we
+get tired of it. That's the fault in Valencia, and in scores of them,
+and as long as they _won't_ be natural, why, they can't have much chance
+with us!"
+
+Which piece of advice Carruthers, when he next saw his mother, repeated
+to her, for the edification of all future débutantes, adding a small
+sermon of his own:
+
+"My dear mother, I ask you, is it to be expected that we can marry just
+to oblige women and please the newspapers? Would you have me marched off
+to Hanover Square because it would be a kindness to take one of Lady
+Elmers' marriageable daughters, or because a leading journal fills up an
+empty column with farcical lamentation on our dislike to the bondage? Of
+course you wouldn't; yet, for no better reasons, you'd have chained poor
+Goodwood, if you could have caught him. Whether a man likes to marry or
+not is certainly his own private business, though just now it's made a
+popular public discussion. Do you wonder that we shirk the institution?
+If we have not fortune, marriage cramps our energies, our resources, our
+ambitions, loads us with petty cares, and trebles our anxieties. To one
+who rises with such a burden on his shoulders, how many sink down in
+obscurity, who, but for the leaden weight of pecuniary difficulties with
+which marriage has laden their feet, might have climbed the highest
+round in the social ladder? On the other side, if we have fortune, if we
+have the unhappy happiness to be eligible, is it wonderful that we are
+not flattered by the worship of young ladies who love us for what we
+shall give them, that we don't feel exactly honored by being courted for
+what we are worth, and that we're not over-willing to give up our
+liberty to oblige those who look on us only as good speculations? What
+think you, eh?"
+
+Lady Marabout looked up and shook her head mournfully:
+
+"My dear Philip, you are right. I see it--I don't dispute it; but when a
+thing becomes personal, you know philosophy becomes difficult. I have
+such letters from poor dear Adeliza--such letters! Of course she thinks
+it is all my fault, and I believe she will break entirely with me. It is
+so very shocking. You see all Belgravia coupled their names, and the
+very day that he went off to Cowes in that heartless, abominable manner,
+if an announcement of the alliance as arranged did not positively appear
+in the _Court Circular_! It did indeed! I am sure Anne Hautton was at
+the bottom of it; it would be just like her. Perhaps poor Valencia
+cannot be pitied after her treatment of Cardonnel, but it is very hard
+on _me_."
+
+Lady Marabout is right: when a thing becomes personal, philosophy
+becomes difficult. When your gun misses fire, and a fine cock bird
+whirrs up from the covert and takes wing unharmed, never to swell the
+number of your triumphs and the size of your game-bag, could you by any
+chance find it in your soul to sympathize with the bird's gratification
+at your mortification and its own good luck? I fancy not.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;
+
+OR
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE SECOND--THE OGRE.
+
+"If there be one class I dislike more than another, it is that class;
+and if there be one person in town I utterly detest, it is that man!"
+said our friend Lady Marabout, with much unction, one morning, to an
+audience consisting of Bijou, Bonbon, and Pandore, a cockatoo, an Angora
+cat, and a young lady sitting in a rocking-chair, reading the magazines
+of the month. The dogs barked, the cockatoo screamed, the cat purred a
+vehement affirmative, the human auditor looked up, and laughed:
+
+"What is the class, Lady Marabout, may I ask?"
+
+"Those clever, detestable, idle, good-for-nothing, fashionable,
+worthless men about town, who have not a penny to their fortune, and
+spend a thousand a year on gloves and scented tobacco--who are seen at
+everybody's house, and never at their own--who drive horses fit for a
+Duke's stud, and haven't money enough to keep a donkey on thistles--who
+have handsome faces and brazen consciences--who are positively leaders
+of ton, and yet are glad to write feuilletons before the world is up to
+pay their stall at the Opera--who give a guinea for a bouquet, and
+can't pay a shilling of their just debts,--I detest the class, my dear!"
+
+"So it seems, Lady Marabout. I never heard you so vehement. And who is
+the particular scapegoat of this type of sinners?"
+
+"Chandos Cheveley."
+
+"Chandos Cheveley? Isn't he that magnificent man Sir Philip introduced
+to me at the Amandines' breakfast yesterday? Why, Lady Marabout, his
+figure alone might outbalance a multitude of sins!"
+
+"He is handsome enough. _Did_ Philip introduce him to you, my dear? I
+wonder! It was very careless of him. But men _are_ so thoughtless; they
+will know anybody themselves, and they think we may do the same. The men
+called here while we were driving this morning. I am glad we were out:
+he very seldom comes to _my_ house."
+
+"But why is he so dreadful? The Amandines are tremendously exclusive, I
+thought."
+
+"Oh, he goes everywhere! No party is complete without Chandos Cheveley,
+and I have heard that at September or Christmas he has more invitations
+than he could possibly accept; but he is a most objectionable man, all
+the same--a man every one dreads to see come near her daughters. He has
+extreme fascination of manner, but he has not a farthing! How he lives,
+dresses, drives the horses he does, is one of those miracles of London
+men's lives which _we_ can never hope to puzzle out. Philip says he
+likes him, but Philip never speaks ill of anybody, except a woman now
+and then, who teases him; but the man is my detestation--has been for
+years. I was annoyed to see his card: it is the first time he has called
+this season. He knows I can't endure his class or him."
+
+With which Lady Marabout wound up a very unusually lengthy and
+uncharitable disquisition, length and uncharitableness being both out of
+her line; and Lady Cecil Ormsby rolled her handkerchief into a ball,
+threw it across the room for Bonbon, the spaniel puppy, and laughed till
+the cockatoo screamed with delight:
+
+"Dear Lady Marabout, do forgive me, but it is such fun to hear you
+positively, for once, malicious! Who is your Horror, genealogically
+speaking? this terrible--what's his name?--Chandos Cheveley?"
+
+"The younger son of a younger son of one of the Marquises of Danvers, I
+believe, my dear; an idle man about town, you know, with not a sou to be
+idle upon, who sets the fashion, but never pays his tailor. I am never
+malicious, I hope, but I do consider men of that stamp very
+objectionable."
+
+"But what is Sir Philip but a man about town?"
+
+"My son! Of course he is a man about town. My dear, what else should he
+be? But if Philip likes to lounge all his days away in a club-window, he
+has a perfect right; he has fortune. Chandos Cheveley is not worth a
+farthing, and yet yawns away his day in White's as if he were a
+millionnaire; the one can support his _far niente_, the other cannot.
+There are gradations in everything, my love, but in nothing more than
+among the men, of the same set and the same style, whom one sees in
+Pall-Mall."
+
+"There are chestnut horses and horse-chestnuts, chevaliers and
+chevaliers d'industrie, rois and rois d'Yvetot, Carrutherses and Chandos
+Cheveleys!" laughed Lady Cecil. "I understand, Lady Marabout. Il y a
+femmes et femmes--men about town and men about town, I shall learn all
+the classes and distinctions soon. But how is one to know the sheep that
+may be let into the fold from the wolves in sheep's clothing, that must
+be kept out of it? Your Ogre is really very distinguished-looking."
+
+"Distinguished? Oh yes, my love; but the most distinguished men are the
+most objectionable sometimes. I assure you, my dear Cecil, I have seen
+an elder son whom sometimes I could hardly have told from his own valet,
+and a younger of the same family with the style of a D'Orsay. Why, did I
+not this very winter, when I went to stay at Rochdale, take Fitzbreguet
+himself, whom I had not chanced to see since he was a child, for one of
+the men out of livery, and bid him bring Bijou's basket out of the
+carriage. I did indeed--_I_ who hate such mistakes more than any one!
+And Lionel, his second brother, has the beauty of an Apollo and the _air
+noble_ to perfection. One often sees it; it's through the doctrine of
+compensation, I suppose, but it's very perplexing, and causes endless
+_embrouillements_."
+
+"When the mammas fall in love with Lord Fitz's coronet, and the
+daughters with Lord Lionel's face, I suppose?" interpolated Lady Cecil.
+
+"Exactly so, dear. As for knowing the sheep from the wolves, as you call
+them," went on Lady Marabout, sorting her embroidery silks, "you may
+very soon know more of Chandos Cheveley's class--(this Magenta braid is
+good for nothing; it's a beautiful color, but it fades immediately)--you
+meet them in the country at all fast houses, as they call them nowadays,
+like the Amandines'; they are constantly invited, because they are so
+amusing, or so dead a shot, or so good a whip, and live on their
+invitations, because they have no _locale_ of their own. You see, all
+the women worth nothing admire, and all the women worth anything shun,
+them. They have a dozen accomplishments, and not a single reliable
+quality; a hundred houses open to them, and not a shooting-box of their
+own property or rental. You will meet this Chandos Cheveley everywhere,
+for instance, as though he were somebody desirable. You will see him in
+his club-window, as though he were born only to read the papers; in the
+Ride, mounted on a much better animal than Fitzbreguet, though the one
+pays treble the price he ought, and the other, I dare say, no price at
+all; at Ascot, on Amandine's or Goodwood's drag, made as much of among
+them all as if he were an heir-apparent to the throne; and yet, my love,
+that man hasn't a penny, lives Heaven knows where, and how he gets money
+to keep his cab and buy his gloves is, as I say, one of those mysteries
+of settling days, whist-tables, periodical writing, Baden _coups de
+bonheur_, and such-like fountains of such men's fortunes which we can
+never hope to penetrate--and very little we should benefit if we could!
+My dearest Cecil! if it is not ten minutes to five! We must go and drive
+at once."
+
+Lady Ormsby was a great pet of Lady Marabout's; she had been so from a
+child; so much so, that when, the year after Valencia Valletort's
+discomfiture (a discomfiture so heavy and so public, that that young
+beauty was seized with a fit of filial devotion, attended her mamma to
+Nice, and figured not in Belgravia the ensuing season, and even Lady
+Marabout's temper had been slightly soured by it, as you perceive),
+another terrible charge was shifted on her shoulders by an appeal from
+the guardians of the late Earl of Rosediamond's daughter for her to be
+brought out under the Marabout wing, she had consented, and surrendered
+herself to be again a martyr to responsibility for the sake of Cecil and
+Cecil's lost mother. The young lady was a beauty; she was worse, she was
+an heiress; she was worse still, she was saucy, wayward, and notable for
+a strong will of her own--a more dangerous young thorough-bred was never
+brought to a gentler Rarey; and yet she was the first charge of this
+nature that Lady Marabout had ever accepted in the whole course of her
+life with no misgivings and with absolute pleasure. First, she was very
+fond of Cecil Ormsby; secondly, she longed to efface her miserable
+failure with Valencia by a brilliant success, which should light up all
+the gloom of her past of chaperonage; thirdly, she had a sweet and
+long-cherished diplomacy nestling in her heart to throw her son and Lord
+Rosediamond's daughter together, for the eventual ensnaring and
+fettering of Carruthers, which policy nothing could favor so well as
+having the weapon for that deadly purpose in her own house through
+April, May, and June.
+
+Cecil Ormsby was a beauty and an heiress--spirited, sarcastic,
+brilliant, wilful, very proud; altogether, a more spirited young filly
+never needed a tight hand on the ribbons, a light but a firm seat, and a
+temperate though judicious use of the curb to make her endure being
+ridden at all, even over the most level grass countries of life. And
+yet, for the reasons just mentioned, Lady Marabout, who never had a
+tight hand upon anything, who is to be thrown in a moment by any wilful
+kick or determined plunge, who is utterly at the mercy of any filly that
+chooses to take the bit between her own teeth and bolt off, and is
+entirely incapable of using the curb, even to the most ill-natured and
+ill-trained Shetland that ever deserved to have its mouth sawed,--Lady
+Marabout undertook the jockeyship without fear.
+
+"I dare say you wonder, after my grief with Valencia, that I have
+consented to bring another girl out, but when I heard it was poor
+Rosediamond's wish--his dying wish, one may almost say--that Cecil
+should make her début with me, what _was_ I to do, my dear?" she
+explained, half apologetically, to Carruthers, when the question was
+first agitated. Perhaps, too, Lady Marabout had in her heart been
+slightly sickened of perfectly trained young ladies brought up on the
+best systems, and admitted to herself that the pets of the foreign
+houses may _not_ be the most attractive flowers after all.
+
+So Lady Cecil Ormsby was installed in Lowndes Square, and though she was
+the inheritor of her mother's wealth, which was considerable, and
+possessor of her own wit and beauty, which were not inconsiderable
+either, and therefore a prize to fortune-hunters and a lure to
+misogamists, as Lady Marabout knew very well how to keep the first off,
+and had her pet project of numbering her refractory son among the
+converted second, she rather congratulated herself than otherwise in
+having the pleasure and éclat of introducing her; and men voted the
+Marabout Yearlings Sale of that season, since it comprised Rosediamond's
+handsome daughter, as dangerous as a horse-dealer's auction to a young
+greenhorn, or a draper's "sale, without reserve, at enormous sacrifice,"
+to a lady with a soul on bargains bent.
+
+"How very odd! Just as we have been talking of him, there is that man
+again! I must bow to him, I suppose; though if there _be_ a person I
+dislike----" said Lady Marabout, giving a frigid little bend of her head
+as her barouche, with its dashing roans, rolled from her door, and a
+tilbury passed them, driving slowly through the square.
+
+Cecil Ormsby bowed to its occupant with less severity, and laughed under
+the sheltering shadow of her white parasol-fringe.
+
+"The Ogre has a very pretty trap, though, Lady Marabout, and the most
+delicious gray horse in it! Such good action!"
+
+"If its action is good, my love, I dare say it is more than could be
+said of its master's actions. He is going to call on that Mrs.
+Maréchale, very probably; he was always there last season."
+
+And Lady Marabout shook her head and looked grave, which, combined with
+the ever-damnatory demonstrative conjunction, blackened Mrs. Maréchale's
+moral character as much as Lady Marabout could blacken any one's, she
+loving as little to soil her own fingers and her neighbors' reputations
+with the indelible Italian chalk of scandal as any lady I know; being
+given, on the contrary, when compelled to draw any little social croquis
+of a back-biting nature, to sketch them in as lightly as she could, take
+out as many lights as possible, and rub in the shadows with a very
+chary and pitying hand, except, indeed, when she took the portrait of
+such an Ogre as Chandos Cheveley, when I can't say she was quite so
+merciful, specially when policy and prejudice combined to suggest that
+it would be best (and not unjust) to use the blackest Conté crayons
+obtainable.
+
+The subject of it would not have denied the correctness of the
+silhouette Lady Marabout had snipped out for the edification of Lady
+Cecil, had he caught a glimpse of it: he had no habitation, nor was ever
+likely to have any, save a bachelor's suite in a back street; he had
+been an idle man for the last twenty years, with not a sou to be idle
+upon; the springs of his very precarious fortunes, his pursuits, habits,
+reputation, ways and means, were all much what she had described them;
+yet he set the fashion much oftener than Goodwood, and dukes and
+millionnaires would follow the style of his tie, or the shape of his
+hat; he moved in the most brilliant circles as Court Circulars have it,
+and all the best houses were open to him. At his Grace of Amandine's,
+staying there for the shooting, he would alter the stud, find fault with
+the claret, arrange a Drive for deer in the forest, and flirt with her
+Grace herself, as though, as Lady Marabout averred, he had been
+Heir-apparent or Prince Regent, who honored the Castle by his mere
+presence, Amandine all the while swearing by every word he spoke,
+thinking nothing well done without Cheveley, and submitting to be set
+aside in his own Castle, with the greatest gratification at the
+extinction.
+
+But that Chandos Cheveley was not worth a farthing, that he was but a
+Bohemian on a brilliant scale, that any day he might disappear from that
+society where he now glittered, never to reappear, everybody knew; how
+he floated there as he did, kept his cab and his man, paid for his stall
+at the Opera, his club fees, and all the other trifles that won't wait,
+was an eternal puzzle to every one ignorant of how expensively one may
+live upon nothing if one just gets the knack, and of how far a
+fashionable reputation, like a cake of chocolate, will go to support
+life when nothing more substantial is obtainable. Lady Marabout had
+sketched him correctly enough, allowing for a little politic bitterness
+thrown in to counteract Carruthers's thoughtlessness in having
+introduced him to Rosediamond's daughter (that priceless treasure for
+whom Lady Marabout would fain have had a guard of Janissaries, if they
+would not have been likely to look singular and come expensive); and
+ladies of the Marabout class did look upon him as an Ogre, guarded their
+daughters from his approach at a ball as carefully, if not as
+demonstratively, as any duck its ducklings from the approach of a
+water-rat, did not ask him to their dinners, and bowed to him chillily
+in the Ring. Others regarded him as harmless, from his perfect
+pennilessness; what danger was there in the fascinations of a man whom
+all Belgravia knew hadn't money enough to buy dog-skin gloves, though he
+always wore the best Paris lavender kid? While others, the pretty
+married women chiefly, from her Grace of Amandine downwards to Mrs.
+Maréchale, of Lowndes Square, flirted with him, fearfully, and
+considered Chandos Cheveley what nobody ever succeeded in disproving
+him, the most agreeable man on town, with the finest figure, the best
+style, and the most perfect bow, to be seen in the Park any day between
+March and July. But then, as Lady Marabout remarked on a subsequent
+occasion, a figure, a style, and a bow are admirable and enviable
+things, but they're not among the cardinal virtues, and don't do to live
+upon; and though they're very good buoys to float one on the smooth
+sparkling sea of society, if there come a storm, one may go down,
+despite them, and become helpless prey to the sharks waiting below.
+
+"Philip certainly admires her very much; he said the other day there
+was something in her, and that means a great deal from him," thought
+Lady Marabout, complacently, as she and Cecil Ormsby were wending their
+way through some crowded rooms. "Of course I shall not influence Cecil
+towards him; it would not be honorable to do so, since she might look
+for a higher title than my son's; still, if it should so fall out,
+nothing would give me greater pleasure, and really nothing would seem
+more natural with a little judicious manage----"
+
+"May I have the honor of this valse with you?" was spoken in, though not
+to, Lady Marabout's ear. It was a soft, a rich, a melodious voice
+enough, and yet Lady Marabout would rather have heard the hiss of a
+Cobra Capella, for the footmen _might_ have caught the serpent and
+carried it off from Cecil Ormsby's vicinity, and she couldn't very well
+tell them to rid the reception-chambers of Chandos Cheveley.
+
+Lady Marabout vainly tried to catch Cecil's eye, and warn her of the
+propriety of an utter and entire repudiation of the valse in question,
+if there were no "engaged" producible to softly chill the hopes and
+repulse the advances of the aspirant; but Lady Cecil's soul was
+obstinately bent saltatory-wards; her chaperone's ocular telegram was
+lost upon her, and only caught by the last person who should have seen
+it, who read the message off the wires to his own amusement, but
+naturally was not magnanimous enough to pass it on.
+
+"I ought to have warned her never to dance with that detestable man. If
+I could but have caught her eye even now!" thought Lady Marabout,
+restlessly. The capella _would_ have been much the more endurable of the
+two; the serpent couldn't have passed its arm round Rosediamond's
+priceless daughter and whirled her down the ball-room to the music of
+Coote and Timney's band, as Chandos Cheveley was now doing.
+
+"Why did _you_ not ask her for that waltz, Philip?" cried the good lady,
+almost petulantly.
+
+Carruthers opened his eyes wide.
+
+"My dear mother, you know I never dance! I come to balls to oblige my
+hostesses and look at the women, but not to carry a seven-stone weight
+of tulle illusion and white satin, going at express pace, with the
+thermometer at 80 deg., and a dense crowd jostling one at every turn in
+the circle. _Bien obligé!_ that's not my idea of pleasure; if it were
+the Pyrrhic dance, now, or the Tarantella, or the Bolero, under a
+Castilian chestnut-tree----"
+
+"Hold your tongue! You might have danced for once, just to have kept her
+from Chandos Cheveley."
+
+"From the best waltzer in London? Not so selfish. Ask Amandine's wife if
+women don't like to dance with that fellow!"
+
+"I should be very sorry to mention his name to her, or any of her set,"
+responded Lady Marabout, getting upon certain virtuous stilts of her
+own, which she was given to mount on rare occasion and at distant
+intervals, always finding them very uncomfortable and unsuitable
+elevations, and being as glad to cast them off as a traveller to kick
+off the _échasses_ he has had to strap on over the sandy plains of the
+Landes.
+
+"What could possess you to introduce him to Cecil, Philip? It was
+careless, silly, unlike you; you know how I dislike men of
+his--his--objectionable stamp," sighed Lady Marabout, the white and gold
+namesakes in her coiffure softly trembling a gentle sigh in the perfumy
+zephyr raised by the rotatory whirl of the waltzers, among whom she
+watched with a horrible fascination, as one watches a tiger being pugged
+out of its lair, or a deserter being led out to be shot, Chandos
+Cheveley, waltzing Rosediamond's priceless daughter down the ball-room.
+
+"He is so dreadfully handsome! I wonder why it is that men and women,
+who have no fortune but their faces, will be so dangerously, so
+obstinately, so provokingly attractive as one sees them so often!"
+thought Lady Marabout, determining to beat an immediate retreat from the
+present salons, since they were infested by the presence of her Ogre, to
+Lady Hautton's house in Wilton Crescent.
+
+Lady Hautton headed charitable bazaars, belonged to the Cummingite
+nebulæ, visited Homes and Hospitals (floating to the bedside of luckless
+feminine patients to read out divers edifying passages, whose effect
+must have been somewhat neutralized to the hearers, one would imagine,
+by the envy-inspiring rustle of her silks, the flash of her rings, and
+the chimes of her bracelets, chains, and châtelaine), looked on the
+"Amandine set" as lost souls, and hence "did not know" Chandos
+Cheveley--a fact which, though the Marabout and Hautton antagonism was
+patent to all Belgravia, served to endear her all at once to her foe;
+Lady Marabout, like a good many other people, being content to sink
+personal resentment, and make a truce with the infidels for the sake of
+enjoying a mutual antipathy--that closest of all links of union!
+
+Lady Marabout and Lady Hautton were foes, but they were dear Helena and
+dear Anne, all the same; dined at each other's tables, and smiled in
+each other's faces. They might be private foes, but they were public
+friends; and Lady Marabout beat a discreet retreat to the Hautton's
+salons--"so many engagements" is so useful a plea!--and from the Hautton
+she passed on to a ball at the Duke of Doncaster's; and, as at both, if
+Lady Cecil Ormsby did not move "a goddess from above," she moved a
+brilliant, sparkling, nonchalante, dangerous beauty, with some of her
+sex's faults, all her sex's witcheries, and more than her sex's
+mischief, holding her own royally, saucily, and proudly, and Chandos
+Cheveley was encountered no more, but happily detained at petit souper
+in a certain Section of the French Embassy, Lady Marabout drove
+homewards, in the gray of the morning, relieved, complacent, and
+gratified, dozing deliciously, till she was woke up with a start.
+
+"Lady Marabout, what a splendid waltzer your Ogre, Chandos Cheveley,
+is!"
+
+Lady Marabout opened her eyes with a jerk that set her feathers
+trembling, her diamonds scintillating, and her bracelets ringing an
+astonished little carillon.
+
+"My love, how you frightened me!"
+
+Cecil Ormsby laughed--a gay, joyous laugh, innocent of having disturbed
+a doze, a lapse into human weakness of which her chaperone never
+permitted herself to plead guilty.
+
+"Frightened you, did I? Why, your _bête noire_ is as terrible to you as
+Coeur de Lion to the Saracen children, or Black Douglas to the Lowland!
+And, really, I can't see anything terrible in him; he is excessively
+brilliant and agreeable, has something worth hearing to say to you,
+and his waltzing is----!"
+
+Lady Cecil Ormsby had not a word in her repertory--though it
+was an enthusiastic and comprehensive one, and embraced five
+languages--sufficiently commendatory to finish her sentence.
+
+"I dare say, dear! I never denied, or heard denied, his having every
+accomplishment under the sun. The only pity is, he has nothing more
+substantial!" returned Lady Marabout, a little bit tartly for _her_
+lips, only used to the softest (and most genuine) milk of roses.
+
+Lord Rosediamond's daughter laughed a little mournfully, and played with
+her fan.
+
+"Poor man! Brilliant and beggared, fashionable and friendless, courted
+and cashiered--a sad destiny! Do you know, Lady Marabout, I have half a
+mind to champion your Ogre!"
+
+"My love, don't talk nonsense!" said Lady Marabout, hastily, at which
+Lady Cecil only laughed still more softly and gayly again, and sprung
+down as the carriage stopped in Lowndes Square.
+
+"Rosediamond's daughter's deucedly handsome, eh, Cheveley? I saw you
+waltzing with her last night," said Goodwood at Lord's the next morning,
+watching a match between the Household Cavalry and the Zingari Eleven.
+
+"Yes, she is the best thing we have seen for some time," said Cheveley,
+glancing round to see if the Marabout liveries were on the ground.
+
+"Don't let the Amandine or little Maréchale hear you say so, or you'll
+have a deuce of a row," laughed Goodwood. "She's worth a good deal, too;
+she's all her mother's property, and that's something, I know. The
+deaths in her family have kept her back two years or more, but now she
+_is_ out, I dare say Lady Tattersall will put her up high in the
+market."
+
+"No doubt. Why don't _you_ make the investment--she's much more
+attractive than that Valletort ice statue who hooked you so nearly last
+year? Fortescue's out! Well done, little Jimmy! Ah! there's the Marabout
+carriage. I am as unwelcome to that good lady, I know, as if I were
+Quasimodo or Quilp, and as much to be shunned, in her estimation, as
+Vidocq, armed to the teeth; nevertheless, I shall go and talk to them,
+if only in revenge for the telegraphic warning of 'dangerous' she shot
+at Lady Cecil last night when I asked her to waltz. Goodwood, don't you
+envy me my happy immunity from traps matrimonial?"
+
+"There is that man again--how provoking! I wish we had not come to see
+Philip's return match. He is positively coming up to talk to us,"
+thought Lady Marabout, restlessly, as her Ogre lifted his hat to her. In
+vain did she do her best to look severe, to look frigid, to chill him
+with a withering "good morning," (a little word, capable, if you notice,
+of expressing every gradation in feeling, from the nadir of delighted
+intimacy to the zero of rebuking frigidity;) her coldest ice was as warm
+as a pine-apple ice that has been melting all day under a refreshment
+tent at a horticultural fête? Her _rôle_ was _not_ chilliness, and never
+could be; she would have beamed benign on a headsman who had led her out
+to instant decapitation, and been no more able to help it than a peach
+to help its bloom or a claret its bouquet. She did her utmost to freeze
+Chandos Cheveley, but either she failed signally, or he, being blessed
+with the brazen conscience she had attributed to him, was steeled to all
+the tacit repulses of her looks, for he leant against the barouche-door,
+let her freeze him away as she might, and chatted to Cecil Ormsby,
+"positively," Lady Marabout remarked to that safest confidante, herself,
+"positively as if the man had been welcome at my house for the last ten
+years! If Cecil _would_ but second me, he couldn't do it; but she _will_
+smile and talk with him just as though he were Goodwood or Fitzbreguet!
+It is very disagreeable to be forced against one's will like this into
+countenancing such a very objectionable person; and yet what _can_ one
+do?"
+
+Which query she could by no means satisfactorily answer herself, being a
+regular female Nerva for clemency, utterly incapable of the severity
+with which that stern Catiline, Lady Hautton, would have signed the
+unwelcome intruder out of the way in a brace of seconds. And under
+Nerva's gentle rule, though Nerva was longing with all her heart to have
+the courage to call the lictors and say, "Away with him!" Cheveley leant
+against the door of the carriage unmolested, though decidedly undesired
+by one of its occupants, talked to by Lady Cecil, possibly because she
+found him as agreeable as her Grace of Amandine and Lillia Maréchale had
+done before her, possibly only from that rule of contrariety which is
+such a pet motor-power with her sex; and Lady Marabout reclined among
+her cushions, tucked up in her tiger-skin in precisely that state of
+mind in which Fuseli said to his wife, "Swear, my dear, you don't know
+how much good it will do you," dreading in herself the possible advent
+of the Hautton carriage, for that ancient enemy and rigid pietist, of
+whose keen tongue and eminent virtue she always stood secretly in awe,
+to see this worthless and utterly objectionable member of that fast,
+graceless, and "very incorrect" Amandine set, absolutely _en sentinelle_
+at the door of her barouche!
+
+Does your best friend _ever_ come when you want him most? Doesn't your
+worst foe _always_ come when you want him least? Of course, at that
+juncture, the Hautton carriage came on the ground (Hautton was one of
+the Zingari Club, and maternal interest brought her foe to Lord's as it
+had brought herself), and the Hautton eye-glass, significantly and
+surprisedly raised, said as distinctly to Lady Marabout, as though
+elfishly endowed with vocal powers, "You allow _that_ man acquaintance
+with Rosediamond's daughter!" Lady Marabout was stung to the soul by the
+deserved rebuke, but she didn't know how on earth to get rid of the
+sinner! There he leaned, calmly, nonchalantly, determinedly, as if he
+were absolutely welcome; and Lady Cecil talked on to him as if he were
+absolutely welcome too.
+
+Lady Marabout felt branded in the eyes of all Belgravia to have Chandos
+Cheveley at her carriage-door, the most objectionable man of all his
+most objectionable class.
+
+"It is very strange!" she thought. "I have seen that man about town the
+last five-and-twenty years--ever since he was a mere boy, taken up and
+petted by Adeline Patchouli for some piece of witty Brummelian impudence
+he said to her on his first introduction--and he has never sought my
+acquaintance before, but always seemed to be quite aware of my dislike
+to him and all his set. It is very grievous he should have chosen the
+very season I have poor dear Rosediamond's daughter with me; but it is
+always my fate--if a thing can happen to annoy me it always will!"
+
+With which Lady Marabout, getting fairly distracted under the iron hand
+of adverse fate, and the ruthless surveillance of the Hautton glass,
+invented an impromptu necessity for immediate shopping at Lewis and
+Allonby's, and drove off the ground at the sole moment of interest the
+match possessed for her--viz., when Carruthers was rattling down
+Hautton's stumps, and getting innings innumerable for the Household.
+
+"Mais ce n'est que le premier pas qui coûte;" the old proverb's so true
+we wear it threadbare with repeating it! Lady Marabout might as well
+have stayed on Lord's ground, and not lacerated her feelings by leaving
+at the very hour of the Household Cavalry's triumphs, for any good that
+she did thereby. The Hautton eye-glass had lighted on Chandos Cheveley,
+and Chandos Cheveley's eye-glass on Rosediamond's daughter;--and Cecil
+Ormsby arched her eyebrows, and gave her parasol a little impatient
+shake as they quitted Lord's.
+
+"Lady Marabout, I never could have believed you ill-natured; you
+interrupted my ball last night, and my conversation this morning! I
+shall scold you if you ever do so again. And now tell me (as curiosity
+is a weakness incidental to all women, no woman ought to refuse to
+relieve it in another) why _are_ you so prejudiced against that very
+handsome, and very amusing person?"
+
+"Prejudiced, my dear child! I am not in the least prejudiced," returned
+Lady Marabout. (Nobody ever admitted to a prejudice that _I_ ever heard.
+It's a plant that grows in all gardens, and is sedulously matted up,
+watered, and strengthened; but invariably disavowed by its sturdiest
+cultivators.) "As for Chandos Cheveley, I merely mentioned to you what
+all town knows about him; and the dislike I have to his class is one of
+principle, not of prejudice."
+
+Lady Cecil made a _moue mutine_:
+
+"Oh, Lady Marabout! if you go to 'principle,' _tout est perdu!_
+'Principle' has been made to bear the onus of every private pique since
+the world began, and has had to answer for more cruelties and injustice
+than any word in the language. The Romans flung the Christians to the
+lions 'on principle,' and the Europeans slew the Mahomedans 'on
+principle,' and 'principle' lighted the autos-da-fé, and signed to the
+tormentor to give a turn more to the rack! Please don't appeal to
+anything so severe and hypocritical. Come, what are the Ogre's sins?"
+
+Lady Marabout laughed, despite the subject.
+
+"Do you think I am a compiler of such catalogues, my love? Pray do not
+let us talk any more about Chandos Cheveley, he is very little worth it;
+all I say to you is, be as cool to him as you can, without rudeness, of
+course. I am never at home when he calls, and were I you, I would be
+always engaged when he asks you to waltz; his acquaintance can in no way
+benefit you."
+
+Lady Cecil gave a little haughty toss of her head, and lay back in the
+barouche.
+
+"_I_ will judge of that! I am not made for fetters of any kind, you
+know, and I like to choose my own acquaintance as well as to choose my
+own dresses. I cannot obey you either this evening, for he asked me to
+put him on my tablets for the first waltz at Lord Anisette's ball, and I
+consented. I had no 'engaged' ready, unless I had had a falsehood ready
+too, and _you_ wouldn't counsel that, Lady Marabout, I am very sure?"
+
+With which straightforward and perplexing question Cecil Ormsby
+successfully silenced her chaperone, by planting her in that
+disagreeable position known as between the horns of a dilemma; and Lady
+Marabout, shrinking alike from the responsibility of counselling a
+"necessary equivocation," as society politely terms its indispensable
+lies, and the responsibility of allowing Cecil acquaintance with the
+"very worst" of the Amandine set, sighed, wondered envyingly how Anne
+Hautton would act in her place, and almost began to wish somebody else
+had had the onerous stewardship of that brilliant and priceless jewel,
+Rosediamond's daughter, now that the jewel threatened to be possessed
+with a will of its own:--the greatest possible flaw in a gem of pure
+water, which they only want to scintillate brilliantly among the
+bijouterie of society, and let itself be placed passively in the setting
+most suitable for it, that can be conceived in the eyes of lady
+lapidaries intrusted with its sale.
+
+"It is very odd," thought Lady Marabout; "she seems to have taken a much
+greater fancy to that odious man than to Philip, or Goodwood, or Fitz,
+or any one of the men who admire her so much. I suppose I always _am_ to
+be worried in this sort of way! However, there can be no real danger;
+Chandos Cheveley is the merest butterfly flirt, and with all his faults
+none ever accused him of fortune-hunting. Still, they say he is
+wonderfully fascinating, and certainly he has the most beautiful voice I
+ever heard; and if Cecil should ever like him at all, I could never
+forgive myself, and what _should_ I say to General Ormsby?"
+
+The General, Cecil's uncle and guardian, is one of the best-humored,
+best-tempered, and most _laissez-faire_ men in the Service, but was, for
+all that, a perpetual dead weight on Lady Marabout's mind just then, for
+was not he the person to whom, at the end of the season, she would have
+to render up account of the successes and the shortcomings of her
+chaperone's career?
+
+"Do you think of proposing Chandos Cheveley as a suitable alliance for
+Cecil Ormsby, my dear Helena?" asked Lady Hautton, with that smile which
+was felt to be considerably worse than strychnine by her foes and
+victims, at a house in Grosvenor Place, that night.
+
+"God forbid!" prayed Lady Marabout, mentally, as she joined in the
+Hautton laugh, and shivered under the stab of the Hautton sneer, which
+was an excessively sharp one. Lady Hautton being one of a rather
+numerous class of eminent Christians, so panoplied in the armor of
+righteousness that they can tread, without feeling it, on the tender
+feet of others.
+
+The evening was spoiled to Lady Marabout; she felt morally and guiltily
+responsible for an unpardonable indiscretion:--with that man waltzing
+with Cecil Ormsby, her "graceful, graceless, gracious Grace" of Amandine
+visibly irritated with jealousy at the sight, and Anne Hautton
+whispering behind her fan with acidulated significance. Lady Marabout
+had never been more miserable in her life! She heard on all sides
+admiration of Rosediamond's daughter; she was gratified by seeing
+Goodwood, Fitzbreguet, Fulke Nugent, every eligible man in the room,
+suing for a place on her tablets; she had the delight of beholding
+Carruthers positively join the negligent beauty's train; and yet the
+night was a night of purgatory to Lady Marabout, for Chandos Cheveley
+had his first waltz, and several after it, and the Amandine set were
+there to gossip, and the Hautton clique to be shocked, at it.
+
+"Soames, tell Mason, when Mr. Chandos Cheveley calls, I am not at home,"
+said Lady Marabout at breakfast.
+
+"Yes, my lady," said Soames, who treasured up the order, and told it to
+Mr. Chandos Cheveley's man at the first opportunity, though, greatly to
+his honor, we must admit, he did _not_ imitate the mild formula of fib,
+and tell his mistress her claret was not corked when it was so
+incontestably.
+
+Cecil Ormsby lifted her head and looked across the table at her hostess,
+and the steady gaze of those violet eyes, which were Rosediamond's
+daughter's best weapons of war, so discomposed Lady Marabout, that she
+forgot herself sufficiently to proffer Bijou a piece of bread, an
+unparalleled insult, which that canine Sybarite did not forget all day
+long.
+
+"Not at home, sir," said Mason, as duly directed, when Cheveley's cab
+pulled up, a week or two after the general order, at the door.
+
+Cheveley smiled to himself as his gray had her head turned, and the
+wheel grated off the trottoir, while he lifted his hat to Cecil Ormsby,
+just visible between the amber curtains and above the balcony flowers of
+one of the windows of the drawing-room--quite visible enough for her
+return smile and bow to be seen in the street by Cheveley, in the room
+by Lady Marabout.
+
+"Some of Lady Tattersall's generalship!" he thought, as the gray trotted
+out of the square. "Well! I have no business there. Cecil Ormsby is not
+her Grace of Amandine, nor little Maréchale, and the good lady is quite
+right to brand me 'dangerous' to her charge, and pronounce me
+'inadmissible' to her footman. I've very little title to resent her
+verdict."
+
+"My dearest Cecil, whatever possessed you to bow to that man!" cried
+Lady Marabout, in direst distress.
+
+"Is it not customary to bow to one's acquaintances--I thought it was?"
+asked Lady Cecil, with demure mischief.
+
+"But, my dear, from a window!--and when Mason is saying we are not at
+home!"
+
+"That isn't _Mason's_ fib, or _Mason's_ fault, Lady Marabout!" suggested
+Cecil, with wicked emphasis.
+
+"There is no falsehood or fault at all anywhere--everybody knows well
+enough what 'not at home' means," returned Lady Marabout, almost
+pettishly.
+
+"Oh yes," laughed the young lady, saucily. "It means 'I am at home and
+sitting in my drawing room, but I shall not rise to receive you, because
+you are not worth the trouble.' It's a polite cut direct, and a honeyed
+rudeness--a bitter almond wrapped up in a sugar dragée, like a good many
+other bonbons handed about in society."
+
+"My dear Cecil, you have some very strange ideas; you will get called
+satirical if you don't take care," said Lady Marabout, nervously.
+
+Cecil Ormsby's tone worried her, and made her feel something as she felt
+when she had a restive, half-broken pair of horses in her carriage, for
+the direction of whose next plunge or next kick nobody could answer.
+
+"And if I be--what then?"
+
+"My dear child, you could not anyhow get a more disadvantageous
+reputation! It may amuse gentlemen though it frightens half _them_; but
+it offends all women irremediably. You see, there are so few whom it
+doesn't hit somewhere," returned Lady Marabout, quite innocent of the
+neat satire of her own last sentence.
+
+Cecil Ormsby laughed, and threw herself down by her chaperone's side:
+
+"Never mind: I can bear their enmity; it is a greater compliment than
+their liking. The women whom women love are always quiet, colorless,
+inoffensive--foils. Lady Marabout, tell me, why did you give that
+general order to Mason?"
+
+"I have told you before, my dear. Because I have no wish to know Mr.
+Chandos Cheveley," returned Lady Marabout, as stiffly as she could say
+anything. "It is, as I said, not from prejudice, but from prin----"
+
+"Lady Marabout, if you use that word again, I will drive to uncle
+Ormsby's rooms in the Albany and stay with him for the season; I will,
+positively! I am sure all the gentlemen there will be delighted to have
+my society! Pray, what _are_ your Ogre's crimes? Did you ever hear
+anything dishonorable, mean, ungenerous, attributed to him? Did you ever
+hear he broke his word, or failed to act like a gentleman, or was a
+defaulter at any settling day?"
+
+Lady Marabout required some explanation of what a defaulter at a
+settling day might be, and, on receiving it, was compelled to confess
+that she never _had_ heard anything of that kind imputed to Chandos
+Cheveley.
+
+"Of course I have not, my dear. The man is a gentleman, everybody knows,
+however idle and improvident a one. If he could be accused of anything
+of that kind, he would not belong to such clubs, and associate with such
+men as he does. Besides, Philip would not know him; certainly would not
+think well of him, which I confess he does. But that is not at all the
+question."
+
+"_Ne vous en déplaise_, I think it very much and very entirely the
+question," returned Lady Cecil, with a toss of her haughty little head.
+"If you can bring nothing in evidence against a man, it is not right to
+send him to the galleys and mark him 'Forçat.'"
+
+"My dear Cecil, there is plenty in evidence against him," said Lady
+Marabout, with a mental back glance to certain stories told of the
+"Amandine set," "though not of that kind. A man may be perfectly
+unexceptionable in his conduct with his men friends, but very
+objectionable acquaintance for us to seek, all the same."
+
+"Ah, I see! Lord Goodwood may bet, and flirt, and lounge his days away,
+and be as fast a man as he likes, and it is all right; but if Mr.
+Cheveley does the same, it is all wrong, because he is not worth
+forgiving."
+
+"Naturally it is," returned Lady Marabout, seriously and naïvely. "But
+how very oddly you put things, my love; and why you should interest
+yourself in this man, when everything I tell you is to his disadvantage,
+I cannot imagine."
+
+A remark that showed Lady Marabout a skilful tactician, insomuch as it
+silenced Cecil--a performance rather difficult of accomplishment.
+
+"I am very glad I gave the order to Mason," thought that good lady. "I
+only wish we did not meet the man in society; but it is impossible to
+help that. We are all cards of one pack, and get shuffled together,
+whether we like it or not. I wish Philip would pay her more attention;
+he admires her, I can see, and he can make any woman like him in ten
+days when he takes the trouble; but he is so tiresome! She would be
+exactly suited to him; she has all he would exact--beauty, talent, good
+blood, and even fortune, though that he would not need. The alliance
+would be a great happiness to me. Well, he dines here to-night, and he
+gives that concert at his barracks to-morrow morning, purely to please
+Cecil, I am sure. I think it may be brought about with careful
+management."
+
+With which pleasant reflection she went to drive in the Ring, thinking
+that her maternal and duenna duties would be alike well fulfilled, and
+her chaperone's career well finished, if by any amount of tact,
+intrigue, finesses, and diplomacy she could live to see Cecil Ormsby
+sign herself Cecil Carruthers.
+
+"If that man were only out of town!" she thought, as Cheveley passed
+them in Amandine's mail-phaeton at the turn.
+
+Lady Marabout might wish Cheveley were out of town--and wish it devoutly
+she did--but she wasn't very likely to have her desire gratified till
+the general migration should carry him off in its tide to the deck of a
+yacht, a lodge in the Highlands, a German Kursaal, or any one of those
+myriad "good houses" where nobody was so welcome as he, the best shot,
+the best seat, the best wit, the best billiard-player, the best
+whist-player, and the best authority on all fashionable topics, of any
+man in England. Cheveley used to aver that he liked Lady Marabout,
+though she detested him; nay, that he liked her _for_ her detestation;
+he said it was cordial, sincere, and refreshing, therefore a treat in
+the world of Belgravia; still, he didn't like her so well as to leave
+Town in the middle of May to oblige her; and though he took her hint as
+it was meant, and pulled up his hansom no more at her door, he met her
+and Rosediamond's daughter at dinners, balls, concerts, morning-parties
+innumerable. He saw them in the Ring; he was seen by them at the Opera;
+he came across them constantly in the gyration of London life. Night
+after night Lady Cecil persisted in writing his name in her tablets;
+evening after evening a bizarre fate worried Lady Marabout, by putting
+him on the left hand of her priceless charge at a dinner-party. Day
+after day all the harmony of a concert was marred to her ear by seeing
+her Ogre talking of Beethoven and Mozart, chamber music and bravura
+music in Cecil's: morning after morning gall was poured into her
+luncheon sherry, and wormwood mingled in her vol-au-vent, by being told,
+with frank mischief, by her desired daughter-in-law, that she "had seen
+Mr. Cheveley leaning on the rails, smoking," when she had taken her
+after-breakfast canter.
+
+"Chandos Cheveley getting up before noon! He _must_ mean something
+unusual!" thought her chaperone.
+
+"Helena has set her heart on securing Cecil Ormsby for Carruthers. I
+hope she may succeed better than she did with poor Goodwood last
+season," laughed Lady Hautton, with her inimitable sneer, glancing at
+the young lady in question at a bazaar in Willis's Rooms, selling
+rosebuds for anything she liked to ask for them, and cigars tied up with
+blue ribbon a guinea the half-dozen, at the Marabout stall. Lady Hautton
+had just been paying a charitable visit to St. Cecilia's Refuge, of
+which she was head patroness, where, having floated in with much
+benignity, been worshipped by a select little toady troop, administered
+spiritual consolation with admirable condescension, and distributed
+illuminated texts for the adornment of the walls and refreshment of the
+souls, she was naturally in a Christian frame of mind towards her
+neighbors. Lady Marabout caught the remark--as she was intended to
+do--and thought it not quite a pleasant one; but, my good sir, did you
+ever know those estimable people, who spend all their time fitting
+themselves for another world, ever take the trouble to make themselves
+decently agreeable in the present one? The little pleasant courtesies,
+affabilities, generosities, and kindnesses, that rub the edge off the
+flint-stones of the Via Dolorosa, are quite beneath the attention of
+Mary the Saint, and only get attended to by Martha the Worldly, poor
+butterfly thing! who is fit for nothing more serviceable and profitable!
+
+Lady Marabout _had_ set her heart on Cecil Ormsby's filling that post of
+honor--of which no living woman was deserving in her opinion--that of
+"Philip's wife;" an individual who had been, for so many years, a fond
+ideal, a haunting anxiety, and a dreaded rival, en même temps, to her
+imagination. She _was_ a little bit of a match-maker: she had, over and
+over again, arranged the most admirable and suitable alliances;
+alliances that would have shamed the scepticism of the world in general,
+as to the desirability of the holy bonds, and brought every refractory
+man to the steps of St. George's; alliances, that would have come off
+with the greatest éclat, but for one trifling hindrance and
+difficulty--namely, the people most necessary to the arrangements could
+never by any chance be brought to view them in the same light, and were
+certain to give her diplomacy the _croc-en-jambe_ at the very moment of
+its culminating glory and finishing finesses. She was a little bit of a
+match-maker--most kind-hearted women are; the tinder they play with is
+much better left alone, but _they_ don't remember that! Like children in
+a forest, they think they'll light a pretty bright fire, just for fun,
+and never remember what a seared, dreary waste that fire may make, or
+what a prairie conflagration it may stretch into before it's stopped.
+
+"Cecil Ormsby is a terrible flirt," said Lady Hautton, to another lady,
+glancing at the rapid sale of the rosebuds and cigars, the bunches of
+violets and the sprays of lilies of the valley, in which that brilliant
+beauty was doing such thriving business at such extravagant profits,
+while the five Ladies Hautton presided solemnly over articles of
+gorgeous splendor, which threatened to be left on hand, and go in a
+tombola, as ignominiously as a beauty after half a dozen seasons, left
+unwooed and unwon, goes to the pêle-mêle raffle of German Bad society,
+and is sold off at the finish to an unknown of the Line, or a Civil
+Service fellow, with five hundred a year.
+
+"Was Cecil a flirt?" wondered Lady Marabout. Lady Marabout was fain to
+confess to herself that she thought she was--nay, that she hoped she
+was. If it wasn't flirting, that way in which she smiled on Chandos
+Cheveley, sold him cigarettes, laughed with him over the ices and
+nectarines he fetched her, and positively invested him with the cordon
+d'honneur of a little bouquet of Fairy roses, for which twenty men sued,
+and he (give Satan his due) did not even ask--if it wasn't flirting,
+_what was it_? Lady Marabout shivered at the suggestion; and though she
+was, on principle, excessively severe on flirting, she could be very
+glad of what she didn't approve, when it aided her, on occasion--like
+most other people--and would so far have agreed with Talleyrand, as to
+welcome the worst crime (of coquetry) as far less a sin than the
+unpardonable blunder of encouraging an Ogre!
+
+"I can't send Cecil away from the stall, as if she were a naughty child,
+and I can't order the man out of Willis's Rooms," thought that unhappy
+and fatally-worried lady, as she presided behind her stall, an emphatic
+witness of the truth of the poeticism that "grief smiles and gives no
+sign," insomuch as she looked the fairest, sunniest, best-looking, and
+best-tempered Dowager that ever shrouded herself in Chantilly lace.
+
+"I do think those ineligible, detrimental, objectionable persons ought
+not to be let loose on society as they are," she pondered; "let them
+have their clubs and their mess breakfasts, their Ascot and their
+Newmarket, their lansquenet parties and their handicap pigeon matches,
+if they like; but to have them come amongst _us_ as they do, asked
+everywhere if they happen to have good blood and good style, free to
+waltz and flirt and sing, and show all sorts of attention to
+marriageable girls, while all the while they are no more available for
+anything serious than if they were club stewards or cabmen--creatures
+that live on their fashionable aroma, and can't afford to buy the very
+bottles of bouquets on their toilette-tables--fast men, too, who,
+knowing they can never marry themselves, make a practice of turning
+marriage into ridicule, and help to set all the rich men more dead
+against it than they are,--to have them come promiscuously among the
+very best people, with nothing to distinguish them as dangerous, or
+label them as 'ought to be avoided,'--it's dreadful! it's a social evil!
+it _ought_ to be remedied! They muzzle dogs in June, why can't they
+label Ogres in the season? I mustn't send poor little Bijou out for a
+walk in Kensington Gardens without a string, these men ought not to go
+about in society without restriction: a snap of Bijou's doesn't do half
+such mischief as a smile of theirs!"
+
+And Lady Marabout chatted across the stall to his Grace of Doncaster,
+and entrapped him into purchases of fitting ducal prodigality, and
+smiled on scores of people she didn't know, in pleasant _pro tempore_
+expediency that had, like most expediency in our day, its ultimate goal
+in their purses and pockets, and longed for some select gendarmerie to
+clear Willis's Rooms of her Cobra Capella, and kept an eye all the while
+on Cecil Ormsby--Cecil, selling off everything on the stall by sheer
+force of her bright violet eyes, receiving ten-pound notes for guinea
+trifles, making her Bourse rise as high as she liked, courted for a
+spray of mignonette as entreatingly as ever Law was courted in the Rue
+Quincampoix for Mississippi scrip, served by a Corps d'Elite, in whom
+she had actually enlisted Carruthers, Goodwood, Fulke Nugent,
+Fitzbreguet, and plenty of the most desirable and most desired men in
+town, yet of which--oh the obstinacy of women! she had actually made
+Chandos Cheveley, with those wicked little Fairy roses in his coat,
+positively the captain and the chief!
+
+"It is enough to break one's heart!" thought Lady Marabout, wincing
+under the Hautton glance, which she saw only the plainer because she
+_wouldn't_ see it at all, and which said with horrible distinctness,
+"There is that man, who can hardly keep his own cab, who floats on
+society like a pleasure-boat, without rudder, ballast, or anchors, of
+whom I have told you, in virtuous indignation and Christian charity,
+fifty thousand naughty stories, who visits that wicked, notorious little
+Maréchale, who belongs to the Amandine set, who is everything that he
+ought not and nothing that he ought to be, who hasn't a penny he doesn't
+make by a well-made betting-book or a dashed-off magazine
+article,--there he is flirting all day at your own stall with
+Rosediamond's daughter, and you haven't the _savoir faire_, the strength
+of will, the tact, the proper feeling, to stop it!"
+
+To all of which charges Lady Marabout humbly bent her head,
+metaphorically speaking, and writhed, in secret, under the glance of her
+ancient enemy, while she talked and laughed with the Duke of Doncaster.
+C. Petronius, talking epicureanisms and witicisms, while the life-blood
+was ebbing away at every breath, was nothing to the suffering and the
+fortitude of Helena, Lady Marabout, turning a smiling, sunny, tranquil
+countenance to the world in front of her stall, while that world could
+see Chandos Cheveley admitted behind it!
+
+"I must do something to stop this!" thought Lady Marabout, with the
+desperation of a Charlotte Corday.
+
+"Is Cheveley going in for the Ormsby tin?" said Amandine to Eyre Lee.
+"Best thing he could do, eh? But Lady Tattersall and the trustees would
+cut rough, I am afraid."
+
+"What does Chandos mean with that daughter of Rosediamond's?" wondered
+her Grace, annoyedly. She had had him some time in her own rose chains,
+and when ladies have driven a lover long in that sort of harness, they
+could double-thong him with all the might of their little hands, if they
+fancy he is trying to break away.
+
+"Is Chandos Cheveley turning fortune-hunter? I suppose he would like
+Lady Cecil's money to pay off his Ascot losses," said Mrs. Maréchale,
+with a malicious laugh. At Ascot, the day before, he had not gone near
+her carriage; the year before he had driven her down in her
+mail-phaeton: what would there be too black to say of him _now_?
+
+"I must do something to stop this!" determined Lady Marabout, driving
+homewards, and glancing at Cecil Ormsby, as that young lady lay back in
+the carriage, a little grave and dreamy after her day's campaign--signs
+of the times terrifically ominous to her chaperone, skilled in reading
+such meteorological omens. But how was the drag to be put on the wheel?
+That momentous question absorbed Lady Marabout through her toilette that
+evening, pursued her to dinner, haunted her through two soirées, kept
+her wide awake all night, woke up with her to her early coffee, and
+flavored the potted tongue and the volaille à la Richelieu she took for
+her breakfast. "I can't turn the man out of town, and I can't tell
+people to strike him off their visiting-lists, and I can't shut Cecil
+and myself up in this house as if it were a convent, and, as to speaking
+to her, it is not the slightest use. She has such a way of putting
+things that one can never deny their truth, or reason them away, as one
+can with other girls. Fond as I am of her, she's fearfully difficult to
+manage. Still I owe it as a sacred duty to poor Rosediamond and the
+General, who says he places such implicit confidence in me, to
+interfere. It is my duty; it can't be helped. I must speak to Chandos
+Cheveley himself. I have no right to consult my own scruples when so
+much is at stake," valorously determined Lady Marabout, resolved to
+follow stern moral rules, and, when right was right, to let "le diable
+prendre le fruit."
+
+To be a perfect woman of the world, I take it, ladies must weed out
+early in life all such little contemptible weaknesses as a dislike to
+wounding other people; and a perfect woman of the world, therefore, Lady
+Marabout was not, and never would be. Nohow could she acquire Anne
+Hautton's invaluable sneer--nohow could she imitate that estimable
+pietist's delightful way of dropping little icy-barbed sentences, under
+which I have known the bravest to shrink, frozen, out of her path. Lady
+Marabout was grieved if she broke the head off a flower needlessly, and
+she could not cure herself of the same lingering folly in disliking to
+say a thing that pained anybody; it is incidental to the De Boncoeur
+blood--Carruthers inherits it--and I have seen fellows spared through
+it, whom he could else have withered into the depths of their boots by
+one of his satirical mots. So she did not go to her task of speaking to
+Chandos Cheveley, armed at all points for the encounter, and taking
+pleasure in feeling the edge of her rapier, as Lady Hautton would have
+done. The Cobra was dangerous, and must be crushed, but Lady Marabout
+did not very much relish setting her heel on it; it was a glittering,
+terrible, much-to-be-feared, and much-to-be-abused serpent,--but it
+might _feel_ all the same, you see.
+
+"I dislike the man on principle, but I don't want to pain him," she
+thought, sighing for the Hautton stern _savoir faire_ and Achilles
+impenetrability, and goading herself on with the remembrance of duty and
+General Ormsby, when the opportunity she had resolved to seek presented
+itself accidentally at a breakfast at Lady George Frangipane's toy
+villa at Fulham, and she found herself comparatively alone in the
+rose-garden with Cheveley, for once without Cecil's terrible violet eyes
+upon her.
+
+"Will you allow me a few words with you, Mr. Cheveley?" she asked, in
+her blandest manner--the kindly hypocrite!
+
+The blow must be dealt, but it might as well be softened with a few
+chloroform fumes, and not struck savagely with an iron-spiked mace.
+
+Cheveley raised his eyes.
+
+"With me? With the greatest pleasure!"
+
+"He is a mere fortune-hunter. I will _not_ spare him, I am resolved,"
+determined Lady Marabout, as she toyed with her parasol-handle, remarked
+incidentally how unequalled Lady George was in roses, especially in the
+tea-rose, and dealt blow No. 1. "Mr. Cheveley, I am going to speak to
+you very frankly. I consider frankness in all things best, myself----"
+
+Cheveley bowed, and smiled slightly.
+
+"I wish he would answer, it would make it so much easier; he will only
+look at one with those eyes of his, and certainly they _are_ splendid!"
+thought Lady Marabout, as she went on quickly, on the same principle as
+the Chasseurs Indiens approach an abattis at double-quick. "When Lord
+Rosediamond died last year he left, as probably you are aware, his
+daughter in my sole care; it was a great responsibility--very great--and
+I feel, of course, that I shall have to answer to him for my discharge
+of it."
+
+Lady Marabout didn't say whether Rosediamond was accustomed to visit her
+per medium, and hear her account of her stewardship nightly through a
+table-claw; but we must suppose that he was. Cheveley bowed again, and
+didn't inquire, not being spiritually interested.
+
+"Why _won't_ he answer?" thought Lady Marabout. "That I have not been
+blind to your very marked attention to my dear Cecil, I think you must
+be aware, Mr. Cheveley, and it is on that subject, indeed, that I----"
+
+"Wished to speak to me? I understand!" said Cheveley as she paused, with
+that faint smile, half sad, half proud, that perplexed Lady Marabout.
+"You are about to insinuate to me gently that those attentions have been
+exceedingly distasteful to you, exceedingly unacceptable in me; you
+would remind me that Lady Cecil Ormsby is a beauty and an heiress, and
+that I am a fortune-hunter, whose designs are seen through and motives
+found out; you would hint to me that our intercourse must cease: is it
+not so?"
+
+Lady Marabout, cursed with that obstinate, ill-bred, unextinguishable
+weakness for truth incidental and ever fatal to the De Boncoeurs,
+couldn't say that it was _not_ what she was going to observe to him, but
+it was exceedingly unpleasant, now it was put in such plain,
+uncomplimentary terms, to admit to the man's face that she was about to
+tell him he was a mercenary schemer, whose attentions only sprang from a
+lawless passion for the _beaux yeux_ of Cecil's _cassette_.
+
+She would have told him all that, and much more, with greatest dignity
+and effect, if he hadn't anticipated her; but to have her weapon parried
+before it was fairly out of its sheath unnerved her arm at the outset.
+
+"What _would_ Anne Hautton do? Dear me! there never was anybody
+perpetually placed in such wretched positions as I am!" thought Lady
+Marabout, as she played with her parasol, and murmured something not
+very clear relative to "responsibility" and "not desirable," two words
+as infallibly a part of Lady Marabout's stock in trade as a sneer at the
+"swells" is of _Punch's_. How she sighed for some cold, nonchalant,
+bitter sentence, such as the Hautton répertoire could have supplied! how
+she scorned herself for her own weakness and lack of severity! But she
+would not have relished hurting a burglar's feelings, though she had
+seen him in the very act of stealing her jewel-boxes, by taxing him with
+the theft; and though the Ogre _must_ be crushed, the crushing began to
+give Lady Marabout neuralgic twinges. She was no more able to say the
+stern things she had rehearsed and resolved upon, than she was able to
+stab him with her parasol, or strangle him with her handkerchief.
+
+"I guessed rightly what you were about to say to me?" said Cheveley, who
+seemed somehow or other to have taken all the talk into his own hands,
+and to have become the master of the position. "I thought so. I do not
+wonder at your construction; I cannot blame you for your resolution.
+Lady Cecil has some considerable fortune, they say; it is very natural
+that you should have imagined a man like myself, with no wealth save a
+good name, which only serves to make lack of wealth more conspicuous,
+incapable of seeking her society for any better, higher, more
+disinterested motive than that of her money; it was not charitable,
+perhaps, to decide unhesitatingly that it was impossible I could be
+drawn to her by any other attraction, that it was imperative I must be
+dead to everything in her that gives her a nobler and a higher charm;
+but it was very natural, and one learns never to hope for the miracle of
+a charitable judgment, _even_ from Lady Marabout!"
+
+"My dear Mr. Cheveley, indeed you mistake!" began Lady Marabout,
+restlessly. That was a little bit of a story, he didn't mistake at all;
+but Lady Marabout, collapsing like an india-rubber ball under the prick
+of a sarcasm, shivered all over at his words, his voice, his slight sad
+smile. "The man is as dreadful as Cecil," she thought; "he puts things
+so horribly clearly!"
+
+"Mistake? I do not think I do. You have thought all this, and very
+naturally; but now hear me for a moment. I have sought Lady Cecil's
+society, that is perfectly true; we have been thrown together in
+society, very often accidentally; sometimes, I admit, through my own
+seeking. Few men could be with her and be steeled against her. I have
+been with her too much; but I sought her at first carelessly, then
+irresistibly and unconsciously, never with the motive you attribute to
+me. I am not as utterly beggared as you deem me, but neither am I
+entirely barren of honor. Believe me, Lady Marabout, my pride alone
+would be amply sufficient to raise a barrier between me and Cecil
+stronger than any that could be opposed to me by others. Yesterday I
+casually overheard words from Amandine which showed me that society,
+like you, has put but one construction on the attention I have paid
+her--a construction I might have foreseen had I not been unconsciously
+fascinated, and forgetful, for the time, of the infallible whispers of
+my kind friends. Her fortune, I know, was never numbered among her
+attractions for me; so little, that now that Amandine's careless words
+have reminded me of the verdict of society, I shall neither seek her nor
+see her again. Scores of men marry women for their money, and their
+money alone, but I am not one of them; with my own precarious fortunes,
+only escaping ruin because I am not rich enough to tempt ruin. I would
+never take advantage of any interest I may have excited in her, to speak
+to her of a passion that the world would tell her was only another name
+for avarice and selfishness. I dare not trust myself with her longer,
+perhaps. I am no god to answer for my self-control; but you need not
+fear; I will never seek her love--never even tell her of mine. I shall
+leave town to-morrow; what _I_ may suffer matters not. Lady Cecil is
+safe from me! Whatever you may have heard of my faults, follies, or
+vices, none ever told you, I think, that I broke my word?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"And when the man said that, my dear Philip, I assure you I felt as
+guilty as if I had done him some horrible wrong; he stood there with his
+head up, looking at me with his sad proud eyes--and they are
+beautiful!--till, positively, I could almost have cried--I could,
+indeed, for though I don't like him on principle, I couldn't help
+pitying him," said Lady Marabout, in a subsequent relation of the scene
+to her son. "Wasn't it a terrible position? I was as near as possible
+forgetting everything due to poor Rosediamond, and saying to him that I
+believed Cecil liked him and would never like anybody else, but, thank
+Heaven! I remembered myself, and checked myself in time. If it had been
+anybody but Chandos Cheveley, I should really have admired him, he spoke
+so nobly! When he lifted his hat and left me, though I _ought_ to have
+been glad (and I _was_ glad, of course) that Cecil would be free from
+the society of anybody so objectionable and so dangerous, I felt
+wretched for him--I did indeed. It _is_ so hard always to be placed in
+such miserable positions!"
+
+By which you will perceive that the triumphant crushing of Lady
+Marabout's Cobra didn't afford her the unmixed gratification she had
+anticipated.
+
+"I have done what was my duty to poor Rosediamond, and what General
+Ormsby's confidence merited," she solaced herself that day, feeling
+uncomfortably and causelessly guilty, she hardly knew why, when she saw
+Chandos Cheveley keeping sedulously with the "Amandine set," and read in
+Cecil's tell-tale face wonder, perplexity, and regret thereat, till the
+Frangipane fête came to an end. She had appeased the manes of the late
+Rosediamond, who, to her imagination, always appeared sitting up aloft
+keeping watch over the discharge of her chaperone's duties, but she had
+a secret and horrible dread that she had excited the wrath of
+Rosediamond's daughter. She had driven her Ogre off the scene, it is
+true, but she could not feel that she had altogether come off the best
+in the contest. Anne Hautton had congratulated her, indeed, on having
+"acted with decision _at last_," but then she had marred it all by
+asking if Carruthers was likely to be engaged to Cecil? And Lady
+Marabout had been forced to confess he was not; Philip, when pressed by
+her that very morning to be a little attentive to Cecil, having shaken
+his head and laughed:
+
+"She's a bewitching creature, mother, but she don't bewitch _me_! You
+know what Shakspeare says of wooing, wedding, and repentance. I've no
+fancy for the inseparable trio!"
+
+Altogether, Lady Marabout was far from peace and tranquillity, though
+the Cobra _was_ crushed, as she drove away from the Frangipane
+breakfast, and she was little nearer them when Cecil turned her eyes
+upon her with a question worse to Lady Marabout's ear than the roar of a
+Lancaster battery.
+
+"What have you said to him?"
+
+"My dear Cecil! What have I said to whom?" returned Lady Marabout, with
+Machiavellian surprise.
+
+"You know well enough, Lady Marabout! What have you said to him--to Mr.
+Cheveley?"
+
+Cecil's impetuosity invariably knocked Lady Marabout down at one blow,
+as a ball knocks down the pegs at lawn billiards. She rallied after the
+shock, but not successfully, and tried at coldness and decision, as
+recommended by Hautton prescriptions.
+
+"My dear Cecil, I have said to him what I think it my duty to say to
+him. Responsible as I am for you----"
+
+"Responsible for me, Lady Marabout? Indeed you are not. I am responsible
+for myself!" interrupted Lady Cecil, with that haughty arch of her
+eyebrows and that flush on her face before which Lady Marabout was
+powerless. "What have you said to him? I _will_ know!"
+
+"I said very little to him, indeed, my dear; he said it all himself."
+
+"What did he say himself?"
+
+"I _must_ tell her--she is so dreadfully persistent," thought the
+unhappy and badgered Peeress; and tell her she did, being a means of
+lessening the young lady's interest in the subject of discussion as
+little judicious as she could well have hit upon.
+
+Lady Cecil listened, silent for once, shading her face with her parasol,
+shading the tears that gathered on her lashes and rolled down her
+delicate flushed cheeks, at the recital of Chandos Cheveley's words,
+from her chaperone's sight.
+
+Lady Marabout gathered courage from the tranquillity with which her
+recital was heard.
+
+"You see, my love, Chandos Cheveley's own honor points in the same
+direction with my judgment," she wound up, in conclusion. "He has acted
+rightly at last, I allow, and if you--if you have for the moment felt a
+tinge of warmer interest in him--if you have been taken by the
+fascination of his manner, and invested him with a young girl's romance,
+you will soon see with us how infinitely better it is that you should
+part, and how impossible it is that----"
+
+Lady Cecil's eyes flashed such fire through their tears, that Lady
+Marabout stopped, collapsed and paralyzed.
+
+"It is by such advice as that you repay his nobility, his generosity,
+his honor!--it is by such words as those you reward him for acting as
+not one man in a hundred would have acted! Hush, hush, Lady Marabout, I
+thought better of you!"
+
+"Good Heavens! _where will it end?_" thought Lady Marabout,
+distractedly, as Rosediamond's wayward daughter sprang down at the door
+with a flush in her face, and a contemptuous anger in her eyes, that
+made Bijou, jumping on her, stop, stare, and whine in canine dismay.
+
+"And I fancied she was listening passively!" thought Lady Marabout.
+
+"Well! the man is gone to-day, that is one comfort. I am very thankful I
+acted as I did," reasoned that ever-worried lady in her boudoir the next
+morning. "I am afraid Cecil is really very fond of him, there were such
+black shadows under her eyes at breakfast, poor child! But it is much
+better as it is--much better. I should never have held up my head again
+if I had allowed her to make such a disadvantageous alliance. I can
+hardly bear to think of what would have been said, even now the danger
+is over!"
+
+While Lady Marabout was thus comforting herself over her embroidery
+silks, Cecil Ormsby was pacing into the Park, with old Twitters the
+groom ten yards behind her, taking her early ride before the world was
+up--it was only eleven o'clock; Cecil had been used to early rising, and
+would never leave it off, having discovered some recipe that made her
+independent of ordinary mortals' quantum of sleep.
+
+"Surely he will be here this morning to see me for the last time,"
+thought that young lady, as she paced up the New Ride under the
+Kensington Gardens trees, with her heart beating quickly under the gold
+aiglettes of her riding-jacket.
+
+"I must see her once more, and then----" thought Chandos Cheveley, as he
+leaned against the rails, smoking, as he had done scores of mornings
+before. His man had packed his things; his hansom was waiting at the
+gates to take him to the station, and his portmanteau was lettered
+"Ischl." He had only come to take one last look of the face that haunted
+him as no other had ever succeeded in doing. The ring of a horse's hoof
+fell on his ear. There she came, on her roan hack, with the sun glancing
+off her chestnut hair. He looked up to bow to her as she passed on, for
+the Ride had never been a rendezvous for more than a bow (Cecil's
+insurrectionary tactics had always been carried on before Lady
+Marabout's face), but the roan was pulled up by him that morning for
+the very first time, and Cecil's eyes fell on him through their lashes.
+
+"Mr. Cheveley--is it true you are going out of town?"
+
+"Quite true."
+
+If her voice quivered as she asked the question, he barely kept his own
+from doing the same as he answered it.
+
+"Will you be gone long?"
+
+"Till next season, at earliest."
+
+His promise to Lady Marabout was hard to keep! He would not have trusted
+his strength if he had known she would have done more than canter on
+with her usual bow and smile.
+
+Cecil was silent. The groom waited like a statue his ten yards behind
+them. She played with her reins nervously, the color coming and going
+painfully in her face.
+
+"Lady Marabout told me of--of some conversation you had with her
+yesterday?"
+
+Low as the words were, Cheveley heard them, and his hand, as it lay on
+the rails, shook like a girl's.
+
+Cecil was silent again; she looked at him, her eyes full of unshed
+tears, as the color burned in her face, and she drooped her head almost
+to a level with her hands as they played with the reins.
+
+"She told me--you----"
+
+She stopped again. Cecil was new to making proposals, though not to
+rejecting them. Cheveley set his teeth to keep in the words that rushed
+to his lips, and Cecil saw the struggle as she bent her head lower and
+lower to the saddle, and twisted the reins into a Gordian knot.
+
+"Do you--must we--why should----"
+
+Fragmentary monosyllables enough, but sufficient to fell his strength.
+
+"For God's sake do not tempt me!" he muttered. "You little know----"
+
+"I know all!" she whispered softly.
+
+"You cannot! My worthless life!--my honor! I could not take such a
+sacrifice, I would not!----"
+
+"But--if my peace----"
+
+She could not end her phrase, yet it said enough;--his hand closed on
+hers.
+
+"Your peace! Good God! in _my_ hands! I stay; then--let the world say
+what it likes!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Drive back; I have changed my mind about going abroad to-day," said
+Cheveley, as he got into his hansom at Albert Gate.
+
+"How soon she has got over it! Girls do," thought Lady Marabout, as
+Cecil Ormsby came in from her ride with the brightest bloom on her
+cheeks a June breeze ever fanned there. She laid her hat on the table,
+flung her gauntlets at Bijou, and threw herself on her knees by Lady
+Marabout, a saucy smile on her face, though her lashes were wet.
+
+"Dear Lady Marabout, I can forgive you now, but you will never forgive
+me!"
+
+Lady Marabout turned white as her point-lace cap, gave a little gasp of
+paralyzed terror, and pushed back her chair as though a shell had
+exploded on the hearth-rug.
+
+"Cecil! Good Heaven!--you don't mean----"
+
+"Yes I do," said Cecil, with a fresh access of color, and a low, soft
+laugh.
+
+Lady Marabout gasped again for breath:
+
+"General Ormsby!" was all she could ejaculate.
+
+"General Ormsby? What of him? Did you ever know uncle Johnnie refuse to
+please _me_? And if my money be to interfere with my happiness, and not
+promote it, as I conceive it its duty and purpose to do, why, I am of
+age in July, you know, and I shall make a deed of gift of it all to the
+Soldiers' Home or the Wellington College, and there is only one person
+who will care for me _then_."
+
+Lady Cecil was quite capable of carrying her threat into execution, and
+Lady Cecil had her own way accordingly, as she had had it from her
+babyhood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shall never hold up my head again! And what a horrible triumph for
+Anne Hautton! I am always the victim--always!" said Lady Marabout, that
+day two months, when the last guest at Cecil Ormsby's wedding déjeûner
+had rolled away from the house. "A girl who might have married anybody,
+Philip; she refused twenty offers this season--she did, indeed! It is
+heart-breaking, say what you like; you needn't laugh, it _is_. Why did I
+offer them Fernditton for this month, you say, if I didn't countenance
+the alliance? Nonsense! that is nothing to the purpose. Of course, I
+seemed to countenance it to a degree, for Cecil's sake, and I admire
+Chandos Cheveley, I confess (at least I should do, if I didn't dislike
+his class on principle); but, say what you like, Philip, it is the most
+terrible thing that could have happened for _me_. Those men _ought_ to
+be labelled, or muzzled, or done something with, and not be let loose on
+society as they are. He has a noble nature, you say. I don't say
+anything against his nature! She worships him? Well, I know she does.
+What is that to the point? He will make her happy? I am sure he will. He
+has the gentlest way with her possible. But how does that console _me_?
+Think what _you_ feel when an outsider, as you call it, beats all the
+favorites, upsets all your betting-books, and carries off the Doncaster
+Cup, and then realize, if you've any humanity in you, what _we_ feel
+under such a trial as this is to me! Only to think what Anne Hautton
+will always say!"
+
+Lady Marabout is not the only person to whom the first thought, the most
+dreaded ghost, the ghastliest skeleton, the direst aggravation, the
+sharpest dagger-thrust, under all troubles, is the remembrance of that
+one omnipotent Ogre--"QU'EN DIRA-T-ON?"
+
+"Laugh at her, mother," counselled Carruthers; and, _amis lecteurs_, I
+pass on his advice to you as the best and sole bowstring for strangling
+the ogre in question, which is the grimmest we have in all Bogeydom.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;
+
+OR,
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE THIRD.--THE CLIMAX.
+
+"My dear Philip, the most unfortunate thing has happened," said Lady
+Marabout, one morning; "really the greatest contretemps that could have
+occurred. I suppose I never _am_ to be quiet!"
+
+"What's the row _now_, madre carissima?" asked her son.
+
+"It is no row, but it is an annoyance. You have heard me speak of my
+poor dear friend Mrs. Montolieu; you know she married unhappily, poor
+thing, to a dreadful creature, something in a West India
+regiment--nobody at all. It is very odd, and it is very wrong, and there
+must be a great mistake somewhere, but certainly most marriages _are_
+unhappy."
+
+"And yet you are always recommending the institution! What an
+extraordinary obstinacy and opticism, my dear mother! I suppose you do
+it on the same principle as nurses recommend children nasty medicines,
+or as old Levett used to tender me dry biscuit _sans confiture_:
+''Tisn't so nice as marmalade, I know, Master Philip, but then, dear,
+it's _so_ wholesome!'"
+
+"Hold your tongue, Philip," cried Lady Marabout; "I don't mean it in
+that sense at all, and you know I don't. If poor Lilla Montolieu is
+unhappy, I am sure it is all her abominable odious husband's fault; she
+is the sweetest creature possible. But she has a daughter, and
+concerning that daughter she wrote to me about a month ago, and--I never
+was more vexed in my life--she wants me to bring her out this season."
+
+"A victim again! My poor dear mother, you certainly deserve a Belgravian
+testimonial; you shall have a statue set up in Lowndes Square
+commemorative of the heroic endurance of a chaperone's existence,
+subscribed for gratefully by the girls you married well, and
+penitentially by the girls you couldn't marry at all."
+
+Lady Marabout laughed a little, but sighed again:
+
+"'It is fun to you, but it is death to me'----"
+
+"As the women say when we flirt with them," interpolated Carruthers.
+
+"You see, poor dear Lilla didn't know what to do. There she is, in that
+miserable island with the unpronounceable name that the man is governor
+of; shut out of all society, with nobody to marry this girl to if she
+had her there, except their secretary, or a West Indian planter. Of
+course, no mother would ruin her daughter's prospects, and take her into
+such an out-of-the-world corner. She knew no one so well as myself, and
+so to me she applied. She is the sweetest creature! I would do anything
+to oblige or please her, but I can't help being very sorry she has
+pounced upon me. And I don't the least know what this girl is like, not
+even whether she is presentable. I dare say she was petted and spoiled
+in that lazy, luxurious, tropical life when she was little, and she has
+been brought up the last few years in a convent in France, the very last
+education _I_ should choose for a girl. Fancy, if I should find her an
+ignorant, unformed hoyden, or a lethargic, overgrown child, or an
+artificial French girl, who goes to confession every day, and carries
+on twenty undiscoverable love affairs--fancy, if she should be ugly, or
+awkward, or brusque, or gauche, as ten to one she will be--fancy, if I
+find her utterly unpresentable!--what in the world shall I do?"
+
+"Decline her," suggested Carruthers. "I wouldn't have a horse put in my
+tilbury that I'd never seen, and risk driving a spavined, wall-eyed,
+underbred brute through the Park; and I suppose the ignominy of the
+début would be to you much what the ignominy of such a turn-out would be
+to me."
+
+"Decline her? I can't, my dear Philip! I agreed to have her a month ago.
+I have never seen you to tell you till now, you know; you've been so
+sworn to Newmarket all through the Spring Meetings. Decline her? she
+comes to-night!"
+
+"Comes to-night?" laughed Carruthers. "All is lost, then. We shall see
+the Countess of Marabout moving through London society with a West
+Indian, who has a skin like Othello; has as much idea of manners as a
+housemaid that suddenly turns out an heiress, and is invited by people
+to whom she yesterday carried up their hot water; reflects indelible
+disgrace on her chaperone by gaucheries unparalleled; throws glass or
+silver missiles at Soames's head when he doesn't wait upon her at
+luncheon to her liking, as she has been accustomed to do at the
+negroes----"
+
+"Philip, pray don't!" cried Lady Marabout, piteously.
+
+"Or, we shall welcome under the Marabout wing a young lady fresh from
+convent walls and pensionnaire flirtations, who astonishes a
+dinner-party by only taking the first course, on the score of jours
+maigres and conscientious scruples; who is visited by révérends pères
+from Farm Street, and fills your drawing-room with High Church curates,
+whom she tries to draw over from their 'mother's' to their 'sister's'
+open arms; who goes every day to early morning mass instead of taking
+an early morning canter, and who, when invited to sing at a soirée
+musicale, begins 'Sancta Maria adorata!'"
+
+"Philip, _don't_!" cried Lady Marabout. "Bark at him, Bijou, the
+heartless man! It is as likely as not little Montolieu may realize one
+of your horrible sketches. Ah, Philip, you don't know what the worries
+of a chaperone are!"
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" laughed Carruthers.
+
+"It is easy to make a joke of it, and very tempting, I dare say--one's
+woes always _are_ amusing to other people, they don't feel the smart
+themselves, and only laugh at the grimace it forces from one--but I can
+tell you, Philip, it is anything but a pleasant prospect to have to go
+about in society with a girl one may be ashamed of!--I don't know
+anything more trying; I would as soon wear paste diamonds as introduce a
+girl that is not perfectly good style."
+
+"But why not have thought of all this in time?"
+
+Lady Marabout sank back in her chair, and curled Bijou's ears, with a
+sigh.
+
+"My dear Philip, if everybody always thought of things in time, would
+there be any follies committed at all? It's precisely because repentance
+comes too late, that repentance is such a horrible wasp, with such a
+merciless sting. Besides, _could_ I refuse poor Lilla Montolieu, unhappy
+as she is with that bear of a man?"
+
+"I never felt more anxious in my life," thought Lady Marabout, as she
+sat before the fire in her drawing-room--it was a chilly April
+day--stirring the cream into her pre-prandial cup of tea, resting one of
+her small satin-slippered feet on Bijou's back, while the firelight
+sparkled on the Dresden figures, the statuettes, the fifty thousand
+costly trifles, in which the Marabout rooms equalled any in Belgravia.
+"I never felt more anxious--not on any of Philip's dreadful yachting
+expeditions, nor even when he went on that perilous exploring tour into
+Arabia Deserta, I do think. If she _should_ be unpresentable--and then
+poor dear Lilla's was not much of a match, and the girl will not have a
+sou, she tells me frankly; I can hardly hope to do anything for her.
+There is one thing, she will not be a responsibility like Valencia or
+Cecil, and what would have been a bad match for _them_ will be a good
+one for her. She must accept the first offer made her, if she have any
+at all, which will be very doubtful; few Benedicts bow to Beatrices
+nowadays, unless Beatrice is a good 'investment,' as they call it. She
+will soon be here. That is the carriage now stopped, I do think. How
+anxious I feel! Really it can't be worse for a Turkish bridegroom never
+to see his wife's face till after the ceremony than it is for one not to
+have seen a girl till one has to introduce her. If she shouldn't be good
+style!"
+
+And Lady Marabout's heart palpitated, possibly prophetically, as she set
+down her little Sèvres cup and rose out of her arm-chair, with Bijou
+shaking his silver collar and bells, to welcome the new inmate of
+Lowndes Square, with her sunny smile and her kindly voice, and her soft
+beaming eyes, which, as I have often stated, would have made Lady
+Marabout look amiable at an Abruzzi bandit who had demanded her purse,
+or an executioner who had led her out to capital punishment, and now
+made her radiate, warm and bright, on a guest whose advent she dreaded.
+Hypocrisy, you say. Not a bit of it! Hypocrisy may be eminently
+courteous, but take my word for it, it's never _cordial_! There are
+natures who throw such golden rays around them naturally, as there are
+others who think brusquerie and acidity cardinal virtues, and deal them
+out as points of conscience; are there not sunbeams that shine kindly
+alike on fragrant violet tufts and barren brambles, velvet lawns and
+muddy trottoirs? are there not hail-clouds that send jagged points of
+ice on all the world pêle-mêle, as mercilessly on the broken rose as on
+the granite boulder?
+
+"She _is_ good style, thank Heaven!" thought Lady Marabout, as she went
+forward, with her white soft hands, their jewels flashing in the light,
+outstretched in welcome. "My dear child, how much you are like your
+mother! You must let me be fond of you for her sake, first, and
+then--for your own!"
+
+The conventional thought did not make the cordial utterance insincere.
+The two ran in couples--we often drive such pairs, every one of us--and
+if they entail insincerity, _Veritas, vale!_
+
+"Madre mia, I called to inquire if you have survived the anxiety of last
+night, and to know what _jeune sauvage_ or feir _religieuse_ you may
+have had sent you for the galvanizing of Belgravia?" said Carruthers,
+paying his accustomed visit in his mother's boudoir, and throwing
+macaroons at Bijou's nose.
+
+"My dear Philip, I hardly know; she puzzles me. She's what, if she were
+a man, I should classify as a detrimental."
+
+"Is she awkward?"
+
+"Not in the least. Perfect manners, wherever she learned them."
+
+"Brusque?"
+
+"Soft as a gazelle. Very like her mother."
+
+"Brown?"
+
+"Fair as that statuette, with a beautiful bloom; lovely gold hair, too,
+and hazel eyes."
+
+"What are the shortcomings, then?"
+
+"There are none; and it's that that puzzles me. She's been six years in
+that convent, and yet, I do assure you, her style is perfect. She's
+hardly eighteen, but she's the air of the best society. She is--a--well,
+_almost_ nobody, as people rank now, you know, for poor dear Lilla's
+marriage was not what she should have made, but the girl might be a
+royal duke's daughter for manner."
+
+"A premature artificial _femme du monde_? Bah! nothing more odious,"
+said Carruthers, poising a macaroon on Pandore's nose. "Make
+ready!--present!--fire! There's a good dog!"
+
+"No, nothing of that sort: very natural, frank, vivacious. Nothing
+artificial about her; very charming indeed! But she might be a young
+Countess, the queen of a _monde_ rather than a young girl just out of a
+French convent; and, you know, my dear Philip, that sort of wit and
+nonchalance may be admirable for Cecil Cheveley, assured of her
+position, but they're dangerous to a girl like this Flora Montolieu:
+they will make people remark her and ask who she is, and try to pull her
+to pieces, if they don't find her somebody they _dare_ not hit. I would
+much rather she were of the general pattern, pleasing, but nothing
+remarkable, well-bred, but nothing to envy, thoroughly educated, but
+monosyllabic in society; such a girl as that passes among all the rest,
+suits mediocre men (and the majority of men _are_ mediocre, you know, my
+dear Philip), and pleases women because she is a nice girl, and no
+rival; but this little Montolieu----"
+
+And Lady Marabout sighed with a prescience of coming troubles, while
+Carruthers laughed and rose.
+
+"Will worry your life out! I must go, for I have to sit in court-martial
+at two (for a mere trifle, a deuced bore to us, but _le service
+oblige_!), so I shall escape introduction to your little Montolieu
+to-day. Why _will_ you fill your house with girls, my dear mother?--it
+is fifty times more agreeable when you are reigning alone. Henceforth, I
+can't come in to lunch with you without going through the formula of a
+mild flirtation--women think you so ill-natured if you don't flirt a
+little with them, that amiable men like myself haven't strength of mind
+to refuse. You should keep _your_ house an open sanctuary for me, when
+you know I've no other in London except when I retreat into White's and
+the U. S.!"
+
+"She puzzles me!" pondered Lady Marabout, as Despréaux disrobed her that
+night. "I always _am_ to be puzzled, I think! I never _can_ have one of
+those quiet, mediocre, well-mannered, remarkable-for-nothing girls, who
+have no idiosyncrasies and give nobody any trouble; one marries them
+safely to some second-rate man; nobody admires them, and nobody dislikes
+them; they're to society what neutral tint is among body-colors, or
+rather what grays are among dresses, inoffensive, unimpeachable, always
+look ladylike, but never look brilliant; colorless dresses are very
+useful, and so are characterless girls; and I dare say the draper would
+tell us the grays in the long run are the easiest to sell, as the girls
+are to marry; they please the commonplace taste of the generality, and
+do for every-day wear! Flora Montolieu puzzles me; she is very charming,
+very striking, very lovable, but she puzzles me! I have a presentiment
+that that child will give me a world of anxiety, an infinitude of
+trouble!"
+
+And Lady Marabout laid her head on her pillow, not the happier that
+Flora Montolieu was lying asleep in the room next her, dreaming of the
+wild-vine shadows and the night-blooming flowers of her native tropics,
+under the rose-curtains of her new home in Lowndes Square, already a
+burden on the soul and a responsibility on the mind of that home's most
+genial and generous mistress.
+
+"If she were a man, I should certainly call her a detrimental," said
+Lady Marabout, after a more deliberate study of her charge. "You know,
+my dear Philip, the sort of man one call detrimental; attractive enough
+to do a great deal of damage, and ineligible enough to make the damage
+very unacceptable: handsome and winning, but a younger son, or a
+something nobody wants; a delightful flirtation, but a terrible
+alliance; you know what I mean! Well, that is just what this little
+Montolieu is in our sex; I am quite sure it is what she will be
+considered; and if it be bad for a man, it is very much worse for a
+woman! Everybody will admire her, and nobody will marry her; I have a
+presentiment of it!"
+
+With which prophetical mélange of the glorious and the inglorious for
+her charge's coming career, Lady Marabout sighed, and gave a little
+shiver, such as
+
+ Sous des maux ignorés nous fait gémir d'avance,
+
+as Delphine Gay well phrased it. And she floated out of her boudoir to
+the dining-room for luncheon, at which unformal and pleasant meal
+Carruthers chanced to stay, criticise a new dry sherry, and take a look
+at this unsalable young filly of the Marabout Yearling Sales.
+
+"I don't know about her being detrimental, mother, nor about her being
+little; she in more than middle height," laughed he; "but I vow she is
+the prettiest thing you've had in your list for some time. You've had
+much greater beauties, you say? Well, perhaps so; but I bet you any
+money she will make a sensation."
+
+"I'm sure she will," reiterated Lady Marabout, despairingly. "I have no
+doubt she will have a brilliant season; there is something very
+piquante, taking, and uncommon about her; but who will marry her at the
+end of it?"
+
+Carruthers shouted with laughter.
+
+"Heaven forbid that I should attempt to prophesy! I would undertake as
+readily to say who'll be the owner of the winner of the Oaks ten years
+hence! I can tell you who _won't_----"
+
+"Yourself; because you'll never marry anybody at all," cried Lady
+Marabout. "Well! I must say I should not wish you to renounce your
+misogamistic notions here. The Montolieus are not at all what _you_
+should look for; and a child like Flora would be excessively ill suited
+to you. If I could see you married, as I should desire, to some woman of
+weight and dignity, five or six-and-twenty, fit for you in every
+way----"
+
+"_De grace, de grace!_ My dear mother, the mere sketch will kill me, if
+you insist on finishing it! Be reasonable! Can anything be more
+comfortable, more tranquil, than I am now? I swing through life in a
+rocking-chair; if I'm a trifle bored now and then, it's my heaviest
+trial. I float as pleasantly on the waves of London life, in my way, as
+the lotus-eaters of poetry on the Ganges in theirs; and _you'd_ have the
+barbarity to introduce into my complacent existence the sting of
+matrimony, the phosphorus of Hymen's torch, the symbolical serpent of a
+wedding-ring?--for shame!"
+
+Lady Marabout laughed despite herself, and the solemnity, in _her_ eyes,
+of the subject.
+
+"I _should_ like to see you happily married, for all that, though I
+quite despair of it now; but perhaps you are right."
+
+"Of course I am right! Adam was tranquil and unworried till fate sent
+him a wife, and he was typical of the destinies of his descendants.
+Those who are wise, take warning; those who are not, neglect it and
+repent. Lady Hautton et C^{ie} are very fond of twisting scriptural
+obscurities into 'types.' _There's_ a type plain as day, and salutary to
+mankind, if detrimental to women!"
+
+"Philip, you are abominable! don't be so wicked!" cried Lady Marabout,
+enjoying it all the more because she was a little shocked at it, as your
+best women will on occasion; human nature is human nature everywhere,
+and the female heart gives pleasurable little pulses at the sight of
+forbidden fruits now, as in the days of Eve.
+
+"Who's that Miss Montolieu with your mother this year, Phil?" dozens of
+men asked Carruthers, that season, across the mess-table, in the
+smoking-room of the Guards, in the Ride or the Ring, in the doorways of
+ball-rooms, or anywhere where such-like questions are asked and new
+pretty women discussed.
+
+"What is it in her that takes so astonishingly?" wondered Lady Marabout,
+who is, like most women, orthodox on all points, loving things by rule,
+worrying if they go out of the customary routine, and was, therefore,
+quite incapable of reconciling herself to so revolutionary a fact as a
+young lady being admired who was not a beauty, and sought while she was
+detrimental in every way. It was "out of the general rule," and your
+orthodox people hate anything "out of the general run," as they hate
+their prosperous friends: the force of hatred can no further go! Flora
+Montolieu's crime in Belgravia was much akin to the Bonapartes' crimes
+to the Bourbons. Thrones must be filled legitimately, if not worthily,
+in the eyes of the orthodox people, and this Petit Caporal of Lady
+Marabout's had no business to reign where the Hereditary Princesses and
+all the other noble lines failed to sway the sceptre. Lady Marabout,
+belonging to the noble lines herself, agreed in her heart with them, and
+felt a little bit guilty to have introduced this democratic and
+unwelcome element in society.
+
+Flora Montolieu "took," as people say of bubble companies, meaning that
+they will pleasantly ruin a million or two: or of new fashions, meaning
+that they will become general with the many and, _sequitur_, unwearable
+with the few. She had the brilliance and grace of one of her own
+tropical flowers, with something piquante and attractive about her that
+one had to leave nameless, but that was all the more charming for that
+very fact perhaps; full of life and animation, but soft as a gazelle, as
+her chaperone averred; not characterless, as Lady Marabout fondly
+desired (on the same principle, I suppose, as a timid whip likes a horse
+as spiritless as a riding-school hack), but gifted with plenty of very
+marked character, so much, indeed, that it rather puzzled her
+_camériste_.
+
+"Girls shouldn't have marked character; they should be clay that one can
+mould, not a self-chiselled statuette, that will only go into its own
+niche, and won't go into any other. This little Montolieu would make
+just such a woman as Vittoria Colonna or Madame de Sablé, but one
+doesn't want _those_ qualities in a girl, who is but a single little ear
+in the wheat-sheaf of society, and whom one wants to marry off, but
+can't expect to marry well. Her poor mother, of course, will look to me
+to do something advantageous for her, and I verily believe she is that
+sort of girl that will let me do nothing," thought Lady Marabout,
+already beginning to worry, as she talked to Lady George Frangipane at a
+breakfast in Palace Gardens, and watched Flora Montolieu, with
+Carruthers on her left and Goodwood on her right, amusing them both, to
+all semblance, and holding her own to the Lady Hautton's despite, who
+held _their_ own so excessively chillily and loftily that no ordinary
+mortals cared to approach them, but, beholding them, thought
+involuntarily of the stately icebergs off the Spitzbergen coast, only
+that the icebergs _could_ melt or explode when their time came, and the
+time was never known when the Hautton surface could be moved to anger or
+melt to any sunshine whatever. At least, whether their maids or their
+mother ever beheld the first of the phenomena, far be it from me to say,
+but the world never saw either.
+
+"Well, Miss Montolieu, how do you like our life here?" Carruthers was
+asking. "Which is preferable--Belgravia or St. Denis?"
+
+"Oh, Belgravia, decidedly," laughed Lady Marabout's charge. "I think
+your life charming. All change, excitement, gayety, who would not like
+it?"
+
+"Nobody--that is not fresh to it?"
+
+"Fresh to it? Ah! are you one of the class who find no beauty in
+anything unless it is new? If so, do not charge the blame on to the
+thing, as your tone implies; take it rather to yourself and your own
+fickleness."
+
+"Perhaps I do," smiled Carruthers. "But whether one's self or 'the
+thing' is to blame, the result's much the same--satiety! Wait till you
+have had two or three seasons, and then tell me if you find this
+mill-wheel routine, these circus gyrations, so delightful! We are the
+performing stud, who go round and round in the hippodrome, day after day
+for show, till we are sick of the whole programme, knowing our white
+stars are but a daub of paint, and our gay spangles only tinfoil. You
+are a little pony just joined to the troupe, and just pleased with the
+glitter of the arena. Wait till you've had a few years of it before you
+say whether going through the same hoops and passing over the same
+sawdust is so very amusing."
+
+"If I do not, I shall desert the troupe, and form a circus of my own
+less mechanical and more enjoyable."
+
+"_Il faut souffrir pour être belle, il faut souffrir encore plus pour
+être à la mode!_" said Goodwood, on her right, while Lady Egidia Hautton
+thought, "How bold that little Montolieu is!" and her sister, Lady
+Feodorowna, wondered what her cousin Goodwood _could_ see there.
+
+"I do not see the necessity," interrupted Flora, "and I certainly would
+never bow to the 'il faut.' I would make fashion follow me; I would not
+follow fashion." ("That child talks as though she were the Duchess of
+Amandine;" thought Lady Marabout, catching fragmentary portions across
+the table, the Marabout oral and oracular organs being always
+conveniently multiplied when she was armed cap à pie as a chaperone.)
+"Sir Philip, you talk as if you belonged to the 'nothing-is-new, and
+nothing-is-true, and it-don't-signify' class. I should have thought you
+were above the nil admirari affectation."
+
+"He admires, as we all do, when we find something that compels our
+homage," said Goodwood, with an emphasis that would have made the hearts
+of any of the Hereditary Princesses palpitate with gratification, but at
+which the ungrateful Petit Caporal only glanced at him a little
+surprisedly with her large hazel eyes, as though she by no means saw the
+point of the speech.
+
+Carruthers laughed:
+
+"Nil admirari? Oh no. I enjoy life, but then it is thanks to the clubs,
+my yacht, my cigar-case, my stud, a thousand things,--not thanks at all
+to Belgravia."
+
+"Complimentary to the Belgraviennes!" cried Flora, with a shrug of her
+shoulders. "They have not known how to amuse you, then?"
+
+"Ladies never _do_ amuse us!" sighed Carruthers. "_Tant pis pour nous!_"
+
+"Are you going to Lady Patchouli's this evening?" asked Goodwood.
+
+"I believe we are. I think Lady Marabout said so."
+
+"Then I shall exert myself, and go too. It will be a terrible
+bore--balls always are. But to waltz with _you_ I will try to encounter
+it!"
+
+Flora Montolieu arched her eyebrows, and gave him a little disdainful
+glance.
+
+"Lord Goodwood, do not be so sure that I shall waltz at all with you. If
+_you_ take vanity for wit, _I_ cannot accept discourtesy as compliment!"
+
+"Well hit, little lady!" thought Carruthers, with a mental bravissima.
+
+"What a speech!" thought Lady Marabout, across the table, as shocked as
+though a footman had dropped a cascade of iced hock over her.
+
+"You got it for once, Goodwood," laughed Carruthers, as they drove away
+in his tilbury. "You never had such a sharp brush as that."
+
+"By Jove, no! Positively it was quite a new sensation--refreshing,
+indeed! One grows so tired of the women who agree with one eternally.
+She's charming, on my word. Who _is_ she, Phil? In an heraldic sense, I
+mean."
+
+"My dear child, what could possess you to answer Lord Goodwood like
+that?" cried Lady Marabout, as her barouche rolled down Palace Gardens.
+
+"Possess me? The Demon of Mischief, I suppose."
+
+"But, my love, it was a wonderful compliment from him!"
+
+"Was it? I do not see any compliment in those vain, impertinent,
+Brummelian amour-propreisms. I must coin the word, there is no good one
+to express it."
+
+"But, my dear Flora, you know he is the Marquis of Goodwood, the Duke of
+Doncaster's son! It is not as if he were a boy in the Lancers, or an
+unfledged _petit maître_ from the Foreign Office----"
+
+"Were he her Majesty's son, he should not gratify his vanity at my
+expense! If he expected me to be flattered by his condescension, he
+mistook me very much. He has been allowed to adopt that tone, I suppose;
+but from a man to a woman a chivalrous courtesy is due, though the man
+be an emperor."
+
+"Perhaps so--of course; but that _is_ their tone nowadays, my love, and
+you cannot alter it. I always say the Regency-men inaugurated it, and
+their sons and grandsons out-Herod Herod. But to turn a tide, or be a
+wit with impunity, a woman wants to occupy a prominent and unassailable
+position. Were you the Duchess of Amandine, you might say that sort of
+thing, but a young girl just out _must not_--indeed she must not! The
+Hauttons heard you, and the Hauttons are very merciless people;
+perfectly bred themselves, and pitiless on the least infringement of the
+convenances. Besides, ten to one you may have gained Goodwood's
+ill-will; and he is a man whose word has immense weight, I assure you."
+
+"I do not see anything remarkable in him to give him weight," said the
+literal and unimpressible little Montolieu. "He is a commonplace person
+to my taste, neither so brilliant nor so handsome by a great deal as
+many gentlemen I see--as Sir Philip, for instance, Lady Marabout?"
+
+"An my son? No, my love, he is not; very few men have Philip's talents
+and person," said Lady Marabout, consciously mollified and propitiated,
+but going on, nevertheless, with a Spartan impartiality highly laudable
+"Goodwood's rank, however, is much higher than Philip's (at least it
+stands so, though really the Carruthers are by far the older, dating as
+far back as Ethelbert II., while the Doncaster family are literally
+unknown till the fourteenth century, when Gervaise d'Ascotte received
+the acolade before Ascalon from Godfrey de Bouillon); Goodwood _has_
+great weight, my dear, in the best circles. A compliment from him is a
+great compliment to any woman, and the sort of answer you gave him----"
+
+"Must have been a great treat to him, dear Lady Marabout, if every one
+is in the habit of kow-towing before him. Princes, you know, are never
+so happy as when they can have a little bit of nature; and my speech
+must have been as refreshing to Lord Goodwood as the breath of his
+Bearnese breezes and the freedom of his Pyrenean forests were to Henri
+Quatre after the court etiquette and the formal ceremonial of Paris."
+
+"I don't know about its being a treat to him, my dear; it was more
+likely to be a shower-bath. And your illustration isn't to the point.
+The Bearnese breezes were Henri Quatre's native air, and might be
+pleasant to him; but the figurative ones are not Goodwood's, and I am
+sure cannot please him."
+
+"But, Lady Marabout, I do not want to please him!" persisted the young
+lady, perversely. "I don't care in the least what he thinks, or what he
+says of me!"
+
+"Dear me, how oddly things go!" thought Lady Marabout. "There was
+Valencia, one of the proudest girls in England, his equal in every way,
+an acknowledged beauty, who would have said the dust on the trottoir was
+diamonds, and worn turquoises on azureline, or emeralds on rose, I
+verily believe, if such opticisms and gaucheries had been Goodwood's
+taste; and here is this child--for whom the utmost one can do will be to
+secure a younger son out of the Civil Service, or a country
+member--cannot be made to see that he is of an atom more importance
+than Soames or Mason, and treats him with downright nonchalant
+indifference. What odd anomalies one sees in everything!"
+
+"Who _is_ that young lady with you this season?" Lady Hautton asked,
+smiling that acidulated smile with which that amiable saint always puts
+long questions to you of which she knows the answer would be _peine
+forte et dure_. "Not the daughter of that horrid John Montolieu, who did
+all sorts of dreadful things, and was put into a West India regiment?
+Indeed! that man? Dear me! Married the sister of your incumbent at
+Fernditton? Ah, really!--very singular! But how do you come to have
+brought out the daughter?"
+
+At all of which remarks Lady Marabout winced, and felt painfully guilty
+of a gross democratic dereliction from legitimate and beaten paths,
+conscious of having sinned heavily in the eyes of the world and Lady
+Hautton, by bringing within the sacred precincts of Belgravia the
+daughter of a _mauvais sujet_ in a West India corps and a sister of a
+perpetual curate. The world was a terrible dragon to Lady Marabout; to
+her imagination it always appeared an incarnated and omniscient bugbear,
+Argus-eyed, and with all its hundred eyes relentlessly fixed on her,
+spying out each item of her shortcomings, every little flaw in the
+Marabout diamonds, any spur-made tear in her Honiton flounces, any
+crease in her train at a Drawing-room, any lèse-majesté against the
+royal rule of conventionalities, any glissade on the polished oak floor
+of society, though like a good many other people she often worried
+herself needlessly; the flaws, tears, creases, high treasons, and false
+glissades being fifty to one too infinitesimal or too unimportant to
+society for one of the hundred eyes (vigilant and unwinking though I
+grant they are) to take note of them. The world was a terrible bugbear
+to Lady Marabout, and its special impersonation was Anne Hautton. She
+disliked Anne Hautton; she didn't esteem her; she knew her to be a
+narrow, censorious, prejudiced, and strongly malicious lady; but she was
+the personification of the World to Lady Marabout, and had weight and
+terror in consequence. Lady Marabout is not the first person who has
+burnt incense and bowed in fear before a little miserable clay image she
+cordially despised, for no better reason--for the self-same reason,
+indeed.
+
+"She evidently thinks I ought not to have brought Flora out; and perhaps
+I shouldn't; though, poor little thing, it seems very hard she may not
+enjoy society--fitted for society, too, as she is--just because her
+father is in a West India regiment, and poor Lilla was only a
+clergyman's daughter. Goodwood really seems to admire her. I can never
+forgive him for his heartless flirtation with Valencia; but if he _were_
+to be won by a Montolieu, what would the Hauttons say?"
+
+And sitting against the wall, with others of her sisterhood, at a ball,
+a glorious and golden vision rose up before Lady Marabout's eyes.
+
+If the unknown, unwelcome, revolutionary little Montolieu should go in
+and win where the Lady Hauttons had tried and failed through five
+seasons--if this little tropical flower should be promoted to the
+Doncaster conservatory, where all the stately stephanotises of the
+peerage had vainly aspired to bloom--if this Petit Caporal should be
+crowned with the Doncaster diadem, that all the legitimate rulers had
+uselessly schemed to place on their brows! The soul of Lady Marabout
+rose elastic at the bare prospect--it would be a great triumph for a
+chaperone as for a general to conquer a valuable position with a handful
+of boy recruits.
+
+If it _should_ be! Anne Hautton would have nothing to say after _that_!
+
+And Lady Marabout, though she was the most amiable lady in Christendom,
+was not exempt from a feeling of longing for a stone to roll to the
+door of her enemy's stronghold, or a flourish of trumpets to silence the
+boastful and triumphant _fanfare_ that was perpetually sounding at sight
+of her defeats from her opponent's ramparts.
+
+Wild, visionary, guiltily scheming, sinfully revolutionary seemed such a
+project in her eyes. Still, how tempting! It would be a terrible blow to
+Valencia, who'd tried for Goodwood fruitlessly, to be eclipsed by this
+unknown Flora; it would be a terrible blow to their Graces of Doncaster,
+who held nobody good enough, heraldically speaking, for their
+heir-apparent, to see him give the best coronet in England to a
+bewitching little interloper, sans money, birth, or rank. "They wouldn't
+like it, of course; I shouldn't like it for Philip, for instance, though
+she's a very sweet little thing; all the Ascottes would be very vexed,
+and all the Valletorts would never forgive it; but it would be _such_ a
+triumph over Anne Hautton!" pondered Lady Marabout, and the last clause
+carried the day. Did you ever know private pique fail to carry the day
+over public charity?
+
+And Lady Marabout glanced with a glow of prospective triumph, which,
+though erring to her Order, was delicious to her individuality, at
+Goodwood waltzing with the little Montolieu a suspicious number of
+times, while Lady Egidia Hautton was condemned to his young brother,
+Seton Ascotte, and Lady Feodorowna danced positively with nobody better
+than their own county member, originally a scion of Goodwood's bankers!
+Could the force of humiliation further go? Lady Hautton sat smiling and
+chatting, but the tiara on her temples was a figurative thorn crown, and
+Othello's occupation was gone. When a lady's daughters are dancing with
+an unavailable _cadet_ of twenty, and a parvenu, only acceptable in the
+last extremities of despair, what good is it for her to watch the smiles
+and construe the attentions?
+
+"We shall see who triumphs now," thought Lady Marabout, with a glow of
+pleasure, for which her heart reproached her a moment afterwards. "It is
+very wrong," she thought; "if those poor girls don't marry, one ought to
+pity them; and as for her--going through five seasons, with a fresh
+burden of responsibility leaving the schoolroom, and added on your hands
+each year, _must_ sour the sweetest temper; it would do mine, I am sure.
+I dare say, if I had had daughters, I should have been ten times more
+worried even than I am."
+
+Which she would have been, undoubtedly, and the eligibles on her
+visiting-list ten times more too! Men wouldn't have voted the Marabout
+dinners and soirées so pleasant as they did, under the sway of that
+sunshiny hostess, if there had been Lady Maudes and Lady Marys to exact
+attention, and lay mines under the Auxerre carpets, and man-traps among
+the épergne flowers of Lowndes Square. Nor would Lady Marabout have been
+the same; the sunshine couldn't have shone so brightly, nor the milk of
+roses flowed so mildly under the weight and wear of marriageable but
+unmarried daughters; the sunshine would have been fitful, the milk of
+roses curdled at best. And no wonder! Those poor women! they have so
+much to go through in the world, and play but such a monotonous rôle,
+taken at its most brilliant and best, from first to last, from cradle to
+grave, from the berceaunettes in which they commence their existence to
+the mausoleum in which they finish it. If they _do_ get a little bit
+soured when they have finished their own game, and have to sit at the
+card-tables, wide awake however weary, vigilant however drowsy, alert
+however bored to death, superintending the hands of the fresh players,
+surreptitiously suggesting means for securing the tricks, keeping a
+dragon's eye out for revokes, and bearing all the brunt of the blame if
+the rubber be lost--if they do get a little bit soured, who can, after
+all, greatly wonder?
+
+"That's a very brilliant little thing, that girl Montolieu," said
+Goodwood, driving over to Hornsey Wood, the morning after, with
+Carruthers and some other men, in his drag.
+
+"A deuced pretty waltzer!" said St. Lys, of the Bays; "turn her round in
+a square foot."
+
+"And looks very well in the saddle; sits her horse better than any woman
+in the Ride, except Rosalie Rosière, and as she came from the Cirque
+Olympique originally, one don't count _her_," said Fulke Nugent. "I _do_
+like a woman to ride well, I must say. I promised your mother to take a
+look at the Marabout Yearling Sale, Phil, if ever I wanted the
+never-desirable and ever-burdensome article she has to offer, and if
+anything could tempt me to pay the price she asks, I think it would be
+that charming Montolieu."
+
+"She's the best thing Lady Tattersall ever had on hand," said Goodwood,
+drawing his whip over his off-wheeler's back. "You know, Phil--gently,
+gently, Coronet!--what spoilt your handsome cousin was, as I said, that
+it was all mechanism; perfect mechanism, I admit, but all artificial,
+prearranged, put together, wound up to smile in this place, bow in that,
+and frown in the other; clockwork every inch of it! Now--so-ho, Zouave!
+confound you, _won't_ you be quiet?--little Montolieu hasn't a bit of
+artifice about her; 'tisn't only that you don't know what she's going to
+say, but that _she_ doesn't either; and whether it's a smile or a frown,
+a jest or a reproof, it's what the moment brings out, not what's planned
+beforehand."
+
+"The hard hit you had the other day seems to have piqued your interest,"
+said Carruthers, smoothing a loose leaf of his Manilla.
+
+"Naturally. The girl didn't care a button about my compliment (I only
+said it to try her), and the plucky answer she gave me amused me
+immensely. Anything unartificial and frank is as refreshing as
+hock-and-seltzer after a field-day--one likes it, don't you know?"
+
+"Wonderfully eloquent you are, Goody. If you come out like that in St.
+Stephen's, we sha'n't know you, and the ministerialists will look down
+in the mouth with a vengeance!"
+
+"Don't be satirical, Phil! If I admire Mademoiselle Flora, what is it to
+you, pray?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Carruthers, with unnecessary rapidity of
+enunciation.
+
+"My love, what are you going to wear to-night? The Bishop of Bonviveur
+is coming. He was a college friend of your poor uncle's; knew your dear
+mother before she married. I want you to look your very best and charm
+him, as you certainly do most people," said Lady Marabout. Adroit
+intriguer! The bishop was going, sans doute; the bishop loved good wine,
+good dinners, and good society, and found all three in Lowndes Square,
+but the bishop was entirely unavailable for purposes matrimonial, having
+had three wives, and being held tight in hand by a fourth; however, a
+bishop is a convenient piece to cover your king, in chess, and the
+bishop served admirably just then in Lady Marabout's moves as a _locum
+tenens_ for Goodwood. Flora Montolieu, in her innocence, made herself
+look her prettiest for her mother's old friend, and Flora Montolieu was
+conveniently ready, looking her prettiest, for her chaperone's
+pet-eligible, when Goodwood--who hated to dine anywhere in London except
+at the clubs, the Castle, or the Guards' mess, and was as difficult to
+get for your dinners as birds'-nests soup or Tokay pur--entered the
+Marabout drawing-rooms.
+
+"Anne Hautton will see he dined here to-night, in the _Morning Post_
+to-morrow morning, and she will know Flora must attract him very
+unusually. What _will_ she, and Egidia, and Feodorowna say?" thought
+Lady Marabout, with a glow of pleasure, which she was conscious was
+uncharitable and sinful, and yet couldn't repress, let her try how she
+might.
+
+In scheming for the future Duke of Doncaster for John Montolieu's
+daughter, she felt much as democratically and treasonably guilty to her
+order as a prince of the blood might feel heading a Chartist émeute; but
+then, suppose the Chartist row was that Prince's sole chance of crushing
+an odious foe, as it was the only chance for her to humiliate the
+Hautton, don't you think it might look tempting? Judge nobody, my good
+sir, till you've been in similar circumstances yourself--a golden rule,
+which might with advantage employ those illuminating colors with which
+ladies employ so much of their time just now. Remembering it, they might
+hold their white hands from flinging those sharp flinty stones, that
+surely suit them so ill, and that soil their fingers in one way quite as
+much as they soil the victim's bowed head in another? Illuminate the
+motto, mesdames and demoiselles! Perhaps you _will_ do that--on a smalt
+ground, with a gold Persian arabesque round, and impossible flowers
+twined in and out of the letters; but, _remember_ it!--pardon! It were
+asking too much.
+
+"My dear Philip, did you notice how very marked Goodwood's attentions
+were to Flora last night?" asked Lady Marabout, the morning after, in
+one of her most sunshiny and radiant moods, as Carruthers paid her his
+general matutinal call in her boudoir.
+
+"Marked?"
+
+"Yes, marked! Why do you repeat it in that tone? If they _were_ marked,
+there is nothing to be ridiculed that I see. They were very marked,
+indeed, especially for him; he's such an unimpressible,
+never-show-anything man. I wonder you did not notice it!"
+
+"My dear mother!" said Carruthers, a little impatiently, brushing up the
+Angora cat's ruff the wrong way with his cane, "do you suppose I pass my
+evenings noticing the attentions other men may see fit to pay to young
+ladies?"
+
+"Well--don't be impatient. You never used to be," said Lady Marabout.
+"If you were in my place just for a night or two, or any other
+chaperone's, you'd be more full of pity. But people never _will_
+sympathize with anything that doesn't touch themselves. The only chords
+that strike the key-note in anybody is the chord that sounds 'self;' and
+that is the reason why the world is as full of crash and tumult as
+Beethoven's 'Storm.'"
+
+"Quite right, my dear mother!"
+
+"Of course it's quite right. I always think you have a great deal of
+sympathy for a man, Philip, even for people you don't harmonize
+with--(you could sympathize with that child Flora, yesterday, in her
+rapturous delight at seeing that Coccoloba Uvifera in the Patchouli
+conservatory, because it reminded her of her West Indian home, and you
+care nothing whatever about flowers, nor yet about the West Indies, I
+should suppose)--but you never will sympathize with me. You know how
+many disappointments and grievances and vexations of every kind I have
+had the last ten, twenty, ay, thirty, forty seasons--ever since I had to
+chaperone your aunt Eleanore, almost as soon as I was married, and was
+worried, more than anybody ever _was_ worried, by her coquetteries and
+her inconsistencies and her vacillations--so badly as she married, too,
+at the last! Those flirting beauties so often do; they throw away a
+hundred admirable chances and put up with a wretched _dernier
+resort_;--let a thousand salmon break away from the line out of their
+carelessness, and end by being glad to land a little minnow. I don't
+know when I _haven't_ been worried by chaperoning. Flora Montolieu is a
+great anxiety, a great difficulty, little detrimental that she is!"
+
+"Detrimental! What an odd word you choose for her."
+
+"I don't choose it for her; she _is_ it," returned Lady Marabout,
+decidedly.
+
+"How so?"
+
+"How so! Why, my dear Philip, I told you the very first day she came.
+How so! when she is John Montolieu's daughter, when she has no birth to
+speak of, and not a farthing to her fortune."
+
+"If she were Jack Ketch's daughter, you could not speak much worse. Her
+high-breeding might do credit to a Palace; I only wish one found it in
+all Palaces! and I never knew you before measure people by their money."
+
+"My dear Philip, no more I do. I can't bear you when you speak in that
+tone; it's so hard and sarcastic, and unlike you. _I_ don't know what
+you mean either. I should have thought a man of the world like yourself
+knew well enough what I intend when I say Flora is a detrimental. She
+has a sweet temper, very clever, very lively, very charming, as any one
+knows by the number of men that crowd about her, but a detrimental she
+is----"
+
+"Poor little heart!" muttered Carruthers in his beard, too low for his
+mother to hear.
+
+"--And yet I am quite positive that if she herself act judiciously, and
+it is well managed for her, Goodwood may be won before the season is
+over," concluded Lady Marabout.
+
+Carruthers, not feeling much interest, it is presumed, in the
+exclusively feminine pursuit of match-making, returned no answer, but
+played with Bijou's silver bells, and twisted his own tawny moustaches.
+
+"I am quite positive it _may be_, if properly managed," reiterated Lady
+Marabout. "You might second me a little, Philip."
+
+"_I?_ Good Heavens! my dear mother, what are you thinking of? I would
+sooner turn torreador, and throw lassos over bulls at Madrid, than help
+you to fling nuptial cables over poor devils in Belgravia. Twenty to
+one? I'm going to the Yard to look at a bay filly of Cope Fielden's,
+and then on to a mess-luncheon of the Bays."
+
+"Must you go?" said his mother, looking lovingly on him. "You look
+tired, Philip. Don't you feel well?"
+
+"Perfectly; but Cambridge had us out over those confounded Wormwood
+Scrubs this morning, and three hours in this June sun, in our harness,
+makes one swear. If it were a sharp brush, it would put life into one;
+as it is, it only inspires one with an intense suffering from boredom,
+and an intense desire for hock and seltzer."
+
+"I am very glad you haven't a sharp brush, as you call it, for all
+that," said Lady Marabout. "It might be very pleasant to you, Philip,
+but it wouldn't be quite so much so to me. I wish you would stay to
+luncheon."
+
+"Not to-day, thanks; I have so many engagements."
+
+"You have been very good in coming to see me this season--even better
+than usual. It _is_ very good of you, with all your amusements and
+distractions. You have given me a great many days this month," said Lady
+Marabout, gratefully. "Anne Hautton sees nothing of Hautton, she says,
+except at a distance in Pall-Mall or the Park, all the season through.
+Fancy if I saw no more of you! Do you know, Philip, I am almost
+reconciled to your never marrying. I have never seen anybody I should
+like at all for you, unless you had chosen Cecil Ormsby--Cecil Cheveley
+I mean; and I am sure I should be very jealous of your wife if you had
+one. I couldn't help it!"
+
+"Rest tranquil, my dear mother; you will never be put to the test!" said
+Carruthers, with a laugh, as he bid her good morning.
+
+"Perhaps it _is_ best he shouldn't marry: I begin to think so," mused
+Lady Marabout, as the door closed on him. "I used to wish it very much
+for some things. He is the last of his name, and it seems a pity; there
+ought to be an heir for Deepdene; but still marriage _is_ such a
+lottery (he is right enough there, though I don't admit it to him: it's
+a tombola where there is one prize to a million of blanks; one can't
+help seeing that, though, on principle, I never allow it to him or any
+of his men), and if Philip had any woman who didn't appreciate him, or
+didn't understand him, or didn't make him happy, how wretched _I_ should
+be! I have often pictured Philip's wife to myself, I have often
+idealized the sort of woman I should like to see him marry, but it's
+very improbable I shall ever meet my ideal realized; one never does!
+And, after all, whenever I have fancied, years ago, he _might_ be
+falling in love, I have always felt a horrible dread lest she shouldn't
+be worthy of him--a jealous fear of her that I could not conquer. It's
+much better as it is; there is no woman good enough for him."
+
+With which compliment to Carruthers at her sex's expense Lady Marabout
+returned to weaving her pet projected toils for the ensnaring of
+Goodwood, for whom also, if asked, I dare say the Duchess of Doncaster
+would have averred on _her_ part, looking through _her_ maternal Claude
+glasses, no woman was good enough either. When ladies have daughters to
+marry, men always present to their imaginations a battalion of
+worthless, decalogue-smashing, utterly unreliable individuals, amongst
+whom there is not one fit to be trusted or fit to be chosen; but when
+their sons are the candidates for the holy bond, they view all women
+through the same foggy and non-embellishing medium, which, if it does
+not speak very much for their unprejudiced discernment, at least speaks
+to the oft-disputed fact of the equality of merit in the sexes, and
+would make it appear that, in vulgar parlance, there must be six of the
+one and half a dozen of the other.
+
+"Flora, soft and careless, and rebellious as she looks, _is_ ambitious,
+and has set her heart on winning Goodwood, I do believe, as much as ever
+poor Valencia did. True, she takes a different plan of action, as Philip
+would call it, and treats him with gay nonchalante indifference, which
+certainly seems to pique him more than ever my poor niece's beauty and
+quiet deference to his opinions did; but that is because she reads him
+better, and knows more cleverly how to rouse him. She has set her heart
+on winning Goodwood, I am certain, ambitious as it seems. How eagerly
+she looked out for the Blues yesterday at that Hyde Park
+inspection--though I am sure Goodwood does not look half so handsome as
+Philip does in harness, as they call it; Philip is so much the finer
+man! I will just sound her to-day--or to-night as we come back from the
+opera," thought Lady Marabout, one morning.
+
+Things were moving to the very best of her expectations. Learning
+experience from manifold failures, Lady Marabout had laid her plans this
+time with a dexterity that defied discomfiture: seconded by both the
+parties primarily necessary to the accomplishment of her manoeuvres,
+with only a little outer-world opposition to give it piquancy and
+excitement, she felt that she might defy the fates to checkmate her
+here. This should be her Marathon and Lemnos, which, simply reverted to,
+should be sufficient to secure her immunity from the attacks of any
+feminine Xantippus who should try to rake up her failures and tarnish
+her glory. To win Goodwood with a nobody's daughter would be a feat as
+wonderful in its way as for Miltiades to have passed "in a single day
+and with a north wind," as Oracle exacted, to the conquest of the
+Pelasgian Isles; and Lady Marabout longed to do it, as you, my good sir,
+may have longed in your day to take a king in check with your only
+available pawn, or win one of the ribands of the turf with a little
+filly that seemed to general judges scarcely calculated to be in the
+first flight at the Chester Consolation Scramble.
+
+Things were beautifully in train; it even began to dawn on the
+perceptions of the Hauttons, usually very slow to open to anything
+revolutionary and unwelcome. Her Grace of Doncaster, a large,
+lethargic, somnolent dowager, rarely awake to anything but the interests
+and restoration of the old ultra-Tory party in a Utopia always dreamed
+of and never realized, like many other Utopias political and poetical,
+public and personal, had turned her eyes on Flora Montolieu, and asked
+her son the question inevitable, "_Who_ is she?" to which Goodwood had
+replied with a devil-may-care recklessness and a headlong indefiniteness
+which grated on her Grace's ears, and imparted her no information
+whatever: "One of Lady Tattersall's yearlings, and the most charming
+creature _I_ ever met. You know that? Why did you ask me, then? You know
+all I do, and all I care to do!"--a remark that made the Duchess wish
+her very dear and personal friend, Lady Marabout, were comfortably and
+snugly interred in the mausoleum of Fern Ditton, rather than alive in
+the flesh in Belgravia, chaperoning young ladies whom nobody knew, and
+who were not to be found in any of Sir E. Burke's triad of volumes.
+
+Belgravia, and her sister Mayfair, wondered at it, and talked over it,
+raked up the parental Montolieu lineage mercilessly, and found out, from
+the Bishop of Bonviveur and Sauceblanche, that the uncle on the distaff
+side had been only a Tug at Eton, and had lived and died at Fern Ditton
+a perpetual curate and nothing else--not even a dean, not even a rector!
+Goodwood _couldn't_ be serious, settled the coteries. But the more
+hints, innuendoes, questions, and adroitly concealed but simply
+suggested animadversion Lady Marabout received, the greater was her
+glory, the warmer her complacency, when she saw her Little Montolieu,
+who was not little at all, leading, as she undoubtedly did lead, the
+most desired eligible of the day captive in her chains, sent bouquets by
+him, begged for waltzes by him, followed by him at the Ride, riveting
+his lorgnon at the Opera, monopolizing his attention--though, clever
+little intriguer, she knew too well how to pique him ever to let him
+monopolize hers.
+
+"She certainly makes play, as Philip would call it, admirably with
+Goodwood," said Lady Marabout, admiringly, at a morning party, stirring
+a cup of Orange Pekoe, yet with a certain irrepressible feeling that she
+should almost prefer so very young a girl not to be quite so adroit a
+schemer at seventeen. "That indifference and nonchalance is the very
+thing to pique and retain such a courted fastidious creature as
+Goodwood; and she knows it, too. Now a clumsy casual observer might even
+fancy that she liked some others--even you, Philip, for instance--much
+better; she talks to you much more, appeals to you twice as often,
+positively teases you to stop and lunch or come to dinner here, and
+really told you the other night at the Opera she missed you when you
+didn't come in the morning; but to anybody who knows anything of the
+world, it is easy enough to see which way her inclinations (yes, I _do_
+hope it is inclination as well as ambition--I am not one of those who
+advocate pure _mariages de convenance_; I don't think them right,
+indeed, though they are undoubtedly very expedient sometimes) turn. I do
+not think _anybody_ ever could prove me to have erred in my
+quick-sightedness in those affairs. I may have been occasionally
+mistaken in other things, or been the victim of adverse and unforeseen
+circumstances which were beyond my control, and betrayed me; but I know
+no one can read a girl's heart more quickly and surely than I, or a
+man's either, for that matter."
+
+"Oh, we all know you are a clairvoyante in heart episodes, my dear
+mother; they are the one business of your life!" smiled Carruthers,
+setting down his ice, and lounging across the lawn to a group of cedars,
+where Flora Montolieu stood playing at croquet, and who, like a scheming
+adventuress, as she was, immediately verified Lady Marabout's words, and
+piqued Goodwood à outrance by avowing herself tired of the game, and
+entering with animated verve into the prophecies for Ascot with
+Carruthers, whose bay filly Sunbeam, sister to Wild-Falcon, was entered
+to run for the Queen's Cup.
+
+"What an odd smile that was of Philip's," thought Lady Marabout, left to
+herself and her Orange Pekoe. "He has been very intimate with Goodwood
+ever since they joined the Blues, cornets together, three-and-twenty
+years ago; surely he can't have heard him drop anything that would make
+him fancy he was _not serious_?"
+
+An idle fear, which Lady Marabout dismissed contemptuously from her mind
+when she saw how entirely Goodwood--in defiance of the Hauttons' sneer,
+the drowsy Duchess's unconcealed frown, all the comments sure to be
+excited in feminine minds, and all the chaff likely to be elicited from
+masculine lips at the mess-table, and in the U. S., and in the Guards'
+box before the curtain went up for the ballet--vowed himself to the
+service of the little detrimental throughout that morning party, and
+spoke a temporary adieu, whose tenderness, if she did not exactly catch,
+Lady Marabout could at least construe, as he pulled up the tiger-skin
+over Flora's dainty dress, before the Marabout carriage rolled down the
+Fulham Road to town. At which tenderness of farewell Carruthers--steeled
+to all such weaknesses himself--gave a disdainful glance and a
+contemptuous twist of his moustaches, as he stood by the door talking to
+his mother.
+
+"You too, Phil?" said Goodwood, with a laugh, as the carriage rolled
+away.
+
+Carruthers stared at him haughtily, as he will stare at his best friends
+if they touch his private concerns more nearly than he likes; a stare
+which said disdainfully, "I don't understand you," and thereby told the
+only lie to which Carruthers ever stooped in the whole course of his
+existence.
+
+Goodwood laughed again.
+
+"If you poach on my manor _here_, I shall kill you Phil; so _gare à
+vous_!"
+
+"You are in an enigmatical mood to-day! I can't say I see much wit in
+your riddles," said Carruthers, with his grandest and most contemptuous
+air, as he lit his Havana.
+
+"Confound that fellow! I'd rather have had any other man in London for a
+rival! Twenty and more years ago how he cut me out with that handsome
+Virginie Peauderose, that we were both such mad boys after in Paris.
+However, it will be odd if _I_ can't win the day here. A Goodwood
+rejected--pooh! There isn't a woman in England that would do it!"
+thought Goodwood, as he drove down the Fulham Road.
+
+"'_His_ manor!' Who's told him it's his? And if it be, what is that to
+me?" thought Carruthers, as he got into his tilbury. "Philip, _you_'re
+not a fool, like the rest of them, I hope? You've not forsworn yourself
+surely? Pshaw!--nonsense!--impossible!"
+
+"Certainly she _has_ something very charming about her. If I were a man
+I don't think I could resist her," thought Lady Marabout, as she sat in
+her box in the grand tier, tenth from the Queen's, moving her fan
+slowly, lifting her lorgnon now and then, listening vaguely to the music
+of the second act of the "Barbiere," for probably about the two
+hundredth time in her life, and looking at Flora Moutolieu, sitting
+opposite to her.
+
+"The women are eternally asking me who she is, I don't care a hang
+_who_, but she's the prettiest thing in London," said Fulke Nugent,
+which was the warmest praise that any living man about town remembered
+to have heard fall from his lips, which limited themselves religiously
+to one legitimate laudation, which is a superlative nowadays, though Mr.
+Lindley Murray, if alive, wouldn't, perhaps, receive or recognize it as
+such: "Not bad-looking."
+
+"It isn't _who_ a woman is, it's _what_ she is, that's the question, I
+take it," said Goodwood, as he left the Guards' box to visit the
+Marabout.
+
+"By George!" laughed Nugent to Carruthers, "Goodey must be serious, eh,
+Phil? He don't care a button for little Bibi; he don't care even for
+Zerlina. When the ballet begins, I verily believe he's thinking less of
+the women before him than of the woman who has left the house; and if a
+fellow can give more ominous signs of being 'serious,' as the women
+phrase it, I don't know 'em, do you?"
+
+"I don't know much about that sort of thing at all!" muttered
+Carruthers, as he went out to follow Goodwood to the Marabout box.
+
+That is an old, old story, that of the fair Emily stirring feud between
+Palamon and Arcite. It has been acted out many a time since Beaumont and
+Fletcher lived and wrote their twin-thoughts and won their twin laurels;
+but the bars that shut the kinsmen in their prison-walls, the ivy-leaves
+that filled in the rents of their prison-stones, were not more entirely
+and blissfully innocent of the feud going on within, and the battle
+foaming near them, than the calm, complacent soul of Lady Marabout was
+of the rivalry going on close beside her for the sake of little
+Montolieu.
+
+She certainly thought Philip made himself specially brilliant and
+agreeable that night; but then that was nothing new, he was famous for
+talking well, and liked his mother enough not seldom to shower out for
+her some of his very best things; certainly she thought Goodwood did not
+shine by the contrast, and looked, to use an undignified word, rather
+cross than otherwise; but then nobody _did_ shine beside Philip, and she
+knew a reason that made Goodwood pardonably cross at the undesired
+presence of his oldest and dearest chum. Even _she_ almost wished Philip
+away. If the presence of her idolized son could have been unwelcome to
+her at any time, it was so that night.
+
+"It isn't like Philip to monopolize her so, he who has so much tact
+usually, and cares nothing for girls himself," thought Lady Marabout;
+"he must do it for mischief, and yet _that_ isn't like him at all; it's
+very tiresome, at any rate."
+
+And with that skilful diplomacy in such matters, on which, if it was
+sometimes overthrown, Lady Marabout not unjustly plumed herself, she
+dexterously entangled Carruthers in conversation, and during the crash
+of one of the choruses whispered, as he bent forward to pick up her fan,
+which she had let drop,
+
+"Leave Flora a little to Goodwood; he has a right--he spoke decisively
+to her to-day."
+
+Carruthers bowed his head, and stooped lower for the fan.
+
+He left her accordingly to Goodwood till the curtain fell after the last
+act of the "Barbiere;" and Lady Marabout congratulated herself on her
+own adroitness. "There is nothing like a little tact," she thought;
+"what would society be without the guiding genius of tact, I wonder? One
+dreadful Donnybrook Fair!"
+
+But, someway or other, despite all her tact, or because her son
+inherited that valuable quality in a triple measure to herself, someway,
+it was Goodwood who led her to her carriage, and Carruthers who led the
+little Montolieu.
+
+"Terribly _bête_ of Philip; how very unlike him!" mused Lady Marabout,
+as she gathered her burnous round her.
+
+Carruthers talked and laughed as he led Flora Montolieu through the
+passages, more gayly, perhaps, than usual.
+
+"My mother has told me some news to-night, Miss Montolieu," he said,
+carelessly. "Am I premature in proffering you my congratulations? But
+even if I be so, you will not refuse the privilege to an old friend--to
+a very sincere friend--and will allow me to be the first to wish you
+happiness?"
+
+Lady Marabout's carriage stopped the way. Flora Montolieu colored,
+looked full at him, and went to it, without having time to answer his
+congratulations, in which the keenest-sighted hearer would have failed
+to detect anything beyond every-day friendship and genuine indifference.
+The most truthful men will make the most consummate actors when spurred
+up to it.
+
+"My dear child, you look ill to-night; I am glad you have no
+engagements," said Lady Marabout, as she sat down before the
+dressing-room fire, toasting her little satin-shod foot--she has a
+weakness for fire even in the hottest weather--while Flora Montolieu lay
+back in a low chair, crushing the roses mercilessly. "You _do_ feel
+well? I should not have thought so, your face looks so flushed, and your
+eyes so preternaturally dark. Perhaps it is the late hours; you were not
+used to them in France, of course, and it must be such a change to this
+life from your unvarying conventual routine at St. Denis. My love, what
+was it Lord Goodwood said to you to-day?"
+
+"Do not speak to me of him, Lady Marabout, I hate his name!"
+
+Lady Marabout started with an astonishment that nearly upset the cup of
+coffee she was sipping.
+
+"Hate his name? My dearest Flora, why, in Heaven's name?"
+
+Flora did not answer; she pulled the roses off her hair as though they
+had been infected with Brinvilliers' poison.
+
+"What has he done?"
+
+"_He_ has done nothing!"
+
+"Who has done anything, then?"
+
+"Oh, no one--no one has done anything, but--I am sick of Lord Goodwood's
+name--tired of it!"
+
+Lady Marabout sat almost speechless with surprise.
+
+"Tired of it, my dear Flora?"
+
+Little Montolieu laughed:
+
+"Well, tired of it, perhaps from hearing him praised so often, as the
+Athenian trader grew sick of Aristides, and the Jacobin of Washington's
+name. Is it unpardonably heterodox to say so?"
+
+Lady Marabout stirred her coffee in perplexity:
+
+"My dear child, pray don't speak in that way; that's like Philip's tone
+when he is enigmatical and sarcastic, and worries me. I really cannot in
+the least understand you about Lord Goodwood, it is quite
+incomprehensible to me. I thought I overheard him to-day at Lady
+George's concert speak very definitely to you indeed, and when he was
+interrupted by the Duchess before you could give him his reply, I
+thought I heard him say he should call to-morrow morning to know your
+ultimate decision. Was I right?"
+
+"Quite right."
+
+"He really proposed marriage to you to-day?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And yet you say you are sick of his name?"
+
+"Does it follow, imperatively, Lady Marabout, that because the Sultan
+throws his handkerchief, it must be picked up with humility and
+thanksgiving?" asked Flora Montolieu, furling and unfurling her fan with
+an impatient rapidity that threatened entire destruction of its ivory
+and feathers, with their Watteau-like group elaborately painted on
+them--as pretty a toy of the kind as could be got for money, which had
+been given her by Carruthers one day in payment of some little bagatelle
+of a bet.
+
+"Sultan!--Humility!" repeated Lady Marabout, scarcely crediting her
+senses. "My dear Flora, do you know what you are saying? You must be
+jesting! There is not a woman in England who would be insensible to the
+honor of Goodwood's proposals. You are jesting, Flora!"
+
+"I am not, indeed!"
+
+"You mean to say, you could positively think of _rejecting_ him!" cried
+Lady Marabout, rising from her chair in the intensity of her amazement,
+convinced that she was the victim of some horrible hallucination.
+
+"Why should it surprise you if I did?"
+
+"_Why?_" repeated Lady Marabout, indignantly. "Do you ask me _why_? You
+must be a child, indeed, or a consummate actress, to put such a
+question; excuse me, my dear, if I speak a little strongly: you
+perfectly bewilder me, and I confess I cannot see your motives or your
+meaning in the least. You have made a conquest such as the proudest
+women in the peerage have vainly tried to make; you have one of the
+highest titles in the country offered to you; you have won a man whom
+everybody declared would never be won; you have done this, pardon me,
+without either birth or fortune on your own side, and then you speak of
+rejecting Goodwood--Goodwood, of all the men in England! You cannot be
+serious, Flora, or, if you are, you must be mad!"
+
+Lady Marabout spoke more hotly than Lady Marabout had ever spoken in all
+her life. Goodwood absolutely won--Goodwood absolutely "come to the
+point"--the crowning humiliation of the Hauttons positively within her
+grasp--her Marathon and Lemnos actually gained! and all to be lost and
+flung away by the unaccountable caprice of a wayward child! It was
+sufficient to exasperate a saint, and a saint Lady Marabout never
+pretended to be.
+
+Flora Montolieu toyed recklessly with her fan.
+
+"You told Sir Philip this evening, I think, of----"
+
+"I hinted it to him, my dear--yes. Philip has known all along how much I
+desired it, and as Goodwood is one of his oldest and most favorite
+friends, I knew it would give him sincere pleasure both for my sake and
+Goodwood's, and yours too, for I think Philip likes you as much as he
+ever does any young girl--better, indeed; and I could not imagine--I
+could not dream for an instant--that there was any doubt of your
+acceptation, as, indeed, there _cannot_ be. You have been jesting to
+worry me, Flora!"
+
+Little Montolieu rose, threw her fan aside, as if its ivory stems had
+been hot iron, and leaned against the mantelpiece.
+
+"You advise me to accept Lord Goodwood, then, Lady Marabout?"
+
+"My love, if you need my advice, certainly!--such an alliance will never
+be proffered to you again; the brilliant position it will place you in I
+surely have no need to point out!" returned Lady Marabout. "The little
+hypocrite!" she mused, angrily, "as if her own mind were not fully made
+up--as if any girl in Europe would hesitate over accepting the Doncaster
+coronet--as if a nameless Montolieu could doubt for a moment her own
+delight at being created Marchioness of Goodwood! Such a triumph as
+_that_--why I wouldn't credit _any_ woman who pretended she wasn't
+dazzled by it!"
+
+"I thought you did not approve of marriages of convenience?"
+
+Lady Marabout played a tattoo--slightly perplexed tattoo--with her spoon
+in her Sèvres saucer.
+
+"No more I do, my dear--that is, under some circumstances; it is
+impossible to lay down a fixed rule for everything! Marriages of
+convenience--well, perhaps not; but as _I_ understand these words, they
+mean a mere business affair, arranged as they are in France, without the
+slightest regard to the inclinations of either; merely regarding whether
+the incidents of fortune, birth, and station are equal and suitable.
+Marriages _de convenance_ are when a parvenu barters his gold for good
+blood, or where an _ancienne princesse_ mends her fortune with a
+_nouveau riche_, profound indifference, meanwhile, on each side. I do
+not call this so; decidedly not! Goodwood must be very deeply attached
+to you to have forgotten his detestation of marriage, and laid such a
+title as his at your feet. Have you any idea of the weight of the Dukes
+of Doncaster in the country? Have you any notion of what their
+rent-roll is? Have you any conception of their enormous influence, their
+very high place, the magnificence of their seats? Helmsley almost equals
+Windsor! All these are yours if you will; and you affect to
+hesitate----"
+
+"To let Lord Goodwood buy me!"
+
+"Buy you? Your phraseology is as strange as my son's!"
+
+"To accept him only for the coronet and the rent-roll, his position and
+his Helmsley, seems not a very grateful and flattering return for his
+preference?"
+
+"I do not see that at all," said Lady Marabout, irritably. Is there
+anything more annoying than to have unwelcome truths thrust in our
+teeth? "It is not as though he were odious to you--a hideous man, a
+coarse man, a cruel man, whose very presence repelled you. Goodwood is a
+man quite attractive enough to merit some regard, independent of his
+position; you have an affectionate nature, you would soon grow attached
+to him----"
+
+Flora Montolieu shook her head.
+
+"And, in fact," she went on, warming with her subject, and speaking all
+the more determinedly because she was speaking a little against her
+conscience, and wholly for her inclinations, "my dear Flora, if you need
+persuasion--which you must pardon me if I doubt your doing in your
+heart, for I cannot credit any woman as being insensible to the suit of
+a future Duke of Doncaster, or invulnerable to the honor it does her--if
+you need persuasion, I should think I need only refer to the happiness
+it will afford your poor dear mother, amidst her many trials, to hear of
+so brilliant a triumph for you. You are proud--Goodwood will place you
+in a position where pride may be indulged with impunity, nay, with
+advantage. You are ambitious--what can flatter your ambition more than
+such an offer. You are clever--as Goodwood's wife you may lead society
+like Madame de Rambouillet or immerse yourself in political intrigue
+like the Duchess of Devonshire. It is an offer which places within your
+reach everything most dazzling and attractive, and it is one, my dear
+Flora, which you must forgive me if I say a young girl of obscure rank,
+as rank goes, and no fortune whatever, should pause before she lightly
+rejects. You cannot afford to be fastidious as if you were an heiress or
+a lady-in-your-own-right."
+
+That was as ill-natured a thing as the best-natured lady in Christendom
+ever said on the spur of self-interest, and it stung Flora Montolieu
+more than her hostess dreamed.
+
+The color flushed into her face and her eyes flashed.
+
+"You have said sufficient, Lady Marabout, I accept the Marquis
+to-morrow!"
+
+And taking up her fan and her opera-cloak, leaving the discarded roses
+unheeded on the floor, she bade her chaperone good-night, and floated
+out of the dressing-room, while Lady Marabout sat stirring the cream in
+a second cup of coffee, a good deal puzzled, a little awed by the odd
+turn affairs had taken, with a slight feeling of guilt for her own share
+in the transaction, an uncomfortable dread lest the day should ever come
+when Flora should reproach her for having persuaded her into the
+marriage, a comfortable conviction that nothing but good _could_ come of
+such a brilliant and enviable alliance, and, above all other conflicting
+feelings, one delicious, dominant, glorified security of triumph over
+the Hauttons, _mère et filles_.
+
+But when morning dawned, Lady Marabout's horizon seemed cleared of all
+clouds, and only radiant with unshadowed sunshine. Goodwood was coming,
+and coming to be accepted.
+
+She seemed already to read the newspaper paragraphs announcing his
+capture and Flora's conquest, already to hear the Hauttons' enforced
+congratulations, already to see the nuptial party gathered round the
+altar rail of St. George's. Lady Marabout had never felt in a sunnier,
+more light-hearted mood, never more completely at peace with herself and
+all the world as she sat in her boudoir at her writing-table, penning a
+letter which began:
+
+ "MY DEAREST LILLA,--What happiness it gives me to congratulate
+ you on the brilliant future opening to your sweet Flora----"
+
+And which would have continued, no doubt, with similar eloquence if it
+had not been interrupted by Soames opening the door and announcing "Sir
+Philip Carruthers," who walked in, touched his mother's brow with his
+moustaches, and went to stand on the hearth with his arm on the
+mantelpiece.
+
+"My dear Philip, you never congratulated me last night; pray do so now!"
+cried Lady Marabout, delightedly, wiping her pen on the pennon, which a
+small ormolu knight obligingly carried for that useful purpose. Ladies
+always wipe their pens as religiously as they bolt their bedroom doors,
+believe in cosmetics, and go to church on a Sunday.
+
+"Was your news of last night true, then?" asked Carruthers, bending
+forwards to roll Bijou on its back with his foot.
+
+"That Goodwood had spoken definitively to her? Perfectly. He proposed to
+her yesterday at the Frangipane concert--not _at_ the concert, of
+course, but afterwards, when they were alone for a moment in the
+conservatories. The Duchess interrupted them--did it on purpose--and he
+had only time to whisper hurriedly he should come this morning to hear
+his fate. I dare say he felt tolerably secure of it. Last night I
+naturally spoke to Flora about it. Oddly enough, she seemed positively
+to think at first of rejecting him--_rejecting_ him!--only fancy the
+madness! Between ourselves, I don't think she cares anything about him,
+but with such an alliance as that, of course I felt it my bounden duty
+to counsel her as strongly as I could to accept the unequalled position
+it proffered her. Indeed, it could have been only a girl's waywardness,
+a child's caprice to pretend to hesitate, for she _is_ very ambitious
+and very clever, and I would never believe that any woman--and she less
+than any--would be proof against such dazzling prospects. It would be
+absurd, you know, Philip. Whether it was hypocrisy or a real reluctance,
+because she doesn't feel for him the idealic love she dreams of, I don't
+know, but I put it before her in a way that plainly showed her all the
+brilliance of the proffered position, and before she bade me good night,
+I had vanquished all her scruples, if she had any, and I am able to
+say----"
+
+"Good God, what have you done?"
+
+"Done?" re-echoed Lady Marabout, vaguely terrified. "Certainly I
+persuaded her to accept him. She _has_ accepted him probably; he is here
+now! I should have been a strange person indeed to let any young girl in
+my charge rashly refuse such an offer."
+
+"You induced her to accept him! God forgive you!"
+
+Lady Marabout turned pale as death, and gazed at him with undefinable
+terror.
+
+"Philip! You do not mean----"
+
+"Great Heavens! have you never seen, mother----?"
+
+He leaned his arms on the marble, with his forehead bowed upon them, and
+Lady Marabout gazed at him still, as a bird at a basilisk.
+
+"Philip, Philip! what have I done? How could I tell?" she murmured,
+distractedly, tears welling into her eyes. "If I had only known! But how
+could I dream that child had any fascination for you? How could I
+fancy----"
+
+"Hush! No, you are in no way to blame. You could not know it. _I_ barely
+knew it till last night," he answered, gently.
+
+"Philip loves her, and _I_ have made her marry Goodwood!" thought Lady
+Marabout, agonized, remorseful, conscience-struck, heart-broken in a
+thousand ways at once. The climax of her woes was reached, life had no
+greater bitterness for her left; her son loved, and loved the last woman
+in England she would have had him love; that woman was given to another,
+and _she_ had been the instrument of wrecking the life to save or serve
+which she would have laid down her own in glad and instant sacrifice!
+Lady Marabout bowed her head under a grief, before which the worries so
+great before, the schemes but so lately so precious, the small triumphs
+just now so all-absorbing, shrank away into their due insignificance.
+Philip suffering, and suffering through her! Self glided far away from
+Lady Marabout's memory then, and she hated herself, more fiercely than
+the gentle-hearted soul had ever hated any foe, for her own criminal
+share in bringing down this unforeseen terrific blow on her beloved
+one's head.
+
+"Philip, my dearest, what _can_ I do?" she cried, distractedly; "if I
+had thought--if I had guessed----"
+
+"Do nothing. A woman who could give herself to a man whom she did not
+love should be no wife of mine, let me suffer what I might."
+
+"But _I_ persuaded her, Philip! Mine is the blame!"
+
+His lips quivered painfully:
+
+"Had she cared for me as--I may have fancied, she had not been so easy
+to persuade! She has much force of character, where she wills. He is
+here now, you say; I cannot risk meeting him just yet. Leave me for a
+little while; leave me--I am best alone."
+
+Gentle though he always was to her, his mother knew him too well ever to
+dispute his will, and the most bitter tears Lady Marabout had ever
+known, ready as she was to weep for other people's woes, and rarely as
+she had to weep for any of her own, choked her utterance and blinded
+her eyes as she obeyed and closed the door on his solitude. Philip--her
+idolized Philip--that ever her house should have sheltered this creature
+to bring a curse upon him! that ever she should have brought this
+tropical flower to poison the air for the only one dear to her!
+
+"I am justly punished," thought Lady Marabout, humbly and
+penitentially--"justly. I thought wickedly of Anne Hautton. I did not do
+as I would be done by. I longed to enjoy their mortification. I advised
+Flora against my own conscience and against hers. I am justly chastised!
+But that _he_ should suffer through me, that my fault has fallen on his
+head, that my Philip, my noble Philip, should love and not be loved, and
+that _I_ have brought it on him----Good Heaven! what is that?"
+
+"That" was a man whom her eyes, being misty with tears, Lady Marabout
+had brushed against, as she ascended the staircase, ere she perceived
+him, and who, passing on with a muttered apology, was down in the hall
+and out of the door Mason held open before she had recovered the shock
+of the rencontre, much before she had a possibility of recognizing him
+through the mist aforesaid.
+
+A fear, a hope, a joy, a dread, one so woven with another there was no
+disentangling them, sprang up like a ray of light in Lady Marabout's
+heart--a possibility dawned in her: to be rejected as an impossibility?
+Lady Marabout crossed the ante-room, her heart throbbing tumultuously,
+spurred on to noble atonement and reckless self-sacrifice, if fate
+allowed them.
+
+She opened the drawing-room door; Flora Montolieu was alone.
+
+"Flora, you have seen Goodwood?"
+
+She turned, her own face as pale and her own eyes as dim as Lady
+Marabout's.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You have refused him?"
+
+Flora Montolieu misconstrued her chaperone's eagerness, and answered
+haughtily enough:
+
+"I have told him that indifference would be too poor a return for his
+affections to insult him with it, and that I would not do him the injury
+of repaying his trust by falsehood and deception. I meant what I said to
+you last night; I said it on the spur of pain, indignation, no matter
+what; but I could not keep my word when the trial came."
+
+Lady Marabout bent down and kissed her, with a fervent gratitude that
+not a little bewildered the recipient.
+
+"My dear child! thank God! little as I thought to say so. Flora, tell
+me, you love some one else?"
+
+"Lady Marabout, you have no right----"
+
+"Yea, I have a right--the strongest right! Is not that other my son?"
+
+Flora Montolieu looked up, then dropped her head and burst into
+tears--tears that Lady Marabout soothed then, tears that Carruthers
+soothed, yet more effectually still, five minutes afterwards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That _I_ should have sued that little Montolieu, and sued to her for
+Philip!" mused Lady Marabout. "It is very odd. Perhaps I get used to
+being crossed and disappointed and trampled on in every way and by
+everybody; but certainly, though it is most contrary to my wishes,
+though a child like that is the last person I should ever have chosen or
+dreamt of as Philip's wife, though it is a great pain to me, and Anne
+Hautton of course will be delighted to rake up everything she can about
+the Montolieus, and it _is_ heart-breaking when one thinks how a
+Carruthers _might_ marry, how the Carruthers always _have_ married,
+rarely any but ladies in their own right for countless generations,
+still it _is_ very odd, but I certainly feel happier than ever I did in
+my life, annoyed as I am and grieved as I am. It _is_ heart-breaking
+(that horrid John Montolieu! I wonder what relation one stands in
+legally to the father of one's son's wife; I will ask Sir Fitzroy
+Kelley; not that the Montolieus are likely to come to England)--it is
+very sad when one thinks whom Philip might have married; and yet she
+certainly is infinitely charming, and she really appreciates and
+understands him. If it were not for what Anne Hautton will always say, I
+could really be pleased! To think what an anxious hope, what a dreaded
+ideal, Philip's wife has always been to me; and now, just as I had got
+reconciled to his determined bachelor preferences, and had grown to
+argue with him that it was best he shouldn't marry, he goes and falls in
+love with this child! Everything is at cross-purposes in life, I think!
+There is only one thing I am resolved upon--I will NEVER chaperone
+anybody again."
+
+And she kept her vow. None can christen her Lady Tattersall any longer
+with point, for there are no yearling sales in that house in Lowndes
+Square, whatever there be in the other domiciles of that fashionable
+quarter. Lady Marabout has shaken that burden off her shoulders, and
+moves in blissful solitude and tripled serenity through Belgravia,
+relieved of responsibility, and wearing her years as lightly, losing the
+odd trick at her whist as sunnily, and beaming on the world in general
+as radiantly as any dowager in the English Peerage.
+
+That she was fully reconciled to Carruthers's change of resolve was
+shown in the fact that when Anne Hautton turned to her, on the evening
+of his marriage-day, after the dinner to which Lady Marabout had bidden
+all her friends, and a good many of her foes, with an amiable murmur:
+
+"I am _so_ grieved for you, dearest Helena--I know what your
+disappointment must be!--what should _I_ feel if Hautton----Your
+_belle-fille_ is charming, certainly, very lovely; but then--such a
+connection! You have my deepest sympathies! I always told you how wrong
+you were when you fancied Goodwood admired little Montolieu--I beg her
+pardon, I mean Lady Carruthers--but you _will_ give your imagination
+such reins!"
+
+Lady Marabout smiled, calmly and amusedly, felt no pang, and--thought of
+Philip.
+
+I take it things must be very rose-colored with us when we can smile
+sincerely on our enemies, and defeat their stings simply because we feel
+them not.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUINZE;
+
+OR,
+
+PENDANT TO A PASTEL BY LA TOUR.
+
+
+I have, among others hanging on my wall, a pastel of La Tour's; of the
+artist-lover of Julie Fel, of the monarch of pastellistes, the touch of
+whose crayons was a "brevet of wit and of beauty," and on whose easel
+bloomed afresh the laughing eyes, the brilliant tints, the rose-hued
+lips of all the loveliest women of the "Règne Galant," from the
+princesses of the Blood of the House of Bourbon to the princesses of the
+green-room of the Comédie-Française. Painted in the days of Louis
+Quinze, the light of more than a century having fallen on its soft
+colors to fade and blot them with the icy brush of time, my pastel is
+still fresh, still eloquent. The genius that created it is gone--gone
+the beauty that inspired it--but the picture is deathless! It shows me
+the face of a woman, of a beautiful woman, else, be sure she would not
+have been honored by the crayons of La Tour; her full Southern lips are
+parted with a smile of triumph; a chef-d'oeuvre of coquetry, a
+head-dress of lace and pearls and little bouquets of roses is on her
+unpowdered hair, which is arranged much like Julie Fel's herself in the
+portrait that hangs, if I remember right, at the Musée de Saint Quentin;
+and her large eyes are glancing at you with languor, malice, victory,
+all commingled. At the back of the picture is written "Mlle. Thargélie
+Dumarsais;" the letters are faded and yellow, but the pastel is living
+and laughing yet, through the divine touch of the genius of La Tour.
+With its perfume of dead glories, with its odor of the Beau Siècle, the
+pastel hangs on my wall, living relic of a buried age, and sometimes in
+my mournful moments the full laughing lips of my pastel will part, and
+breathe, and speak to me of the distant past, when Thargélie Dumarsais
+saw all Paris at her feet, and was not humbled then as now by being only
+valued and remembered for the sake of the talent of La Tour. My
+beautiful pastel gives me many confidences. I will betray one to you--a
+single leaf from a life of the eighteenth century.
+
+
+I.
+
+THE FIRST MORNING.
+
+In the heart of Lorraine, nestled down among its woods, stood an old
+château that might have been the château of the Sleeping Beauty of fairy
+fame, so sequestered it stood amidst its trees chained together by
+fragrant fetters of honeysuckle and wild vine, so undisturbed slept the
+morning shadows on the wild thyme that covered the turf, so unbroken was
+the silence in which the leaves barely stirred, and the birds folded
+their wings and hushed their song till the heat of the noonday should be
+passed. Beyond the purple hills stretching up in the soft haze of
+distance in the same province of laughing, luxurious, sunlit Lorraine,
+was Lunéville, the Lunéville of Stanislaus, Montesquieu, of Voltaire, of
+Hénault, of Boufflers, a Versailles in miniature, even possessing a
+perfect replica of Pompadour in its own pretty pagan of a Marquise.
+Within a few leagues was Lunéville, but the echo of its mots and
+madrigals did not reach over the hills, did not profane the sunny air,
+did not mingle with the vintage-song of the vine-dressers, the silver
+babble of the woodland brook, the hushed chant of the Ave Maria, the
+vesper bells chimed from the churches and monasteries, which made the
+sole music known or heard in this little valley of Lorraine.
+
+The château of Grande Charmille stood nestled in its woods, gray,
+lonely, still, silent as death, yet not gloomy, for white pigeons
+circled above its pointed towers, brilliant dragon-flies fluttered above
+the broken basin of the fountain that sang as gayly as it rippled among
+the thyme as though it fell into a marble cup, and bees hummed their
+busy happy buzz among the jessamine that clung to its ivy-covered
+walls--walls built long before Lorraine had ceased to be a kingdom and a
+power, long before a craven and effeminated Valois had dared to kick the
+dead body of a slaughtered Guise. Not gloomy with the golden light of a
+summer noon playing amidst the tangled boughs and on the silvered
+lichens; not gloomy, for under the elm-boughs on the broken stone steps
+that led to the fountain, her feet half buried in violet-roots and wild
+thyme, leaning her head on her hand, as she looked into the water, where
+the birds flew down to drink, and fluttered their wings fearless of her
+presence, was a young girl of sixteen--and if women sometimes darken
+lives, it must be allowed that they always illumine landscapes!
+
+Aline, when Boufflers saw her in the spring morning, in all the grace of
+youth and beauty, unconscious of themselves, made not a prettier picture
+than this young dreamer under the elm-boughs of the Lorraine woods, as
+she bent over the water, watching it bubble and splash from the
+fountain-spout, and hide itself with a rippling murmur under the broad
+green reeds and the leaves of the water-lily. She was a charming
+picture: a brunette with long ebon tresses, with her lashes drooping
+over her black, languid, almond-shaped eyes, a smile on her half-pouted
+lips, and all the innocence and dawning beauty of her sixteen years
+about her, while she sat on the broken steps, now brushing the
+water-drops off the violets, now weaving the reeds into a pretty,
+useless toy, now beckoning the birds that came to peck on the
+rose-sprays beside her.
+
+"Favette! where are your dreams?"
+
+Favette, the young naïad of the Lorraine elm-woods, looked up, the plait
+of rushes dropping from her hands, and a warm sudden blush tinging her
+cheeks and brow with a tint like that on the damask rose-leaves that had
+fallen into the water, and floated there like delicate shells.
+
+"Mon Dieu, Monsieur Léon! how you frightened me!"
+
+And like a startled fawn, or a young bird glancing round at a rustle
+amidst the leaves, Favette sprang up, half shy, half smiling, all her
+treasures gathered from the woods--of flowers, of mosses, of berries, of
+feathery grasses, of long ivy-sprays--falling from her lap on to the
+turf in unheeded disorder.
+
+"_I_ frightened you, Favette? Surely not. Are you sorry to see me,
+then?"
+
+"Sorry? Oh no, Monsieur Léon!" and Favette glanced through her thick
+curled lashes, slyly yet archly, and began to braid again her plait of
+rushes.
+
+"Come, tell me, then, what and whom were you dreaming of, ma mie, as you
+looked down into the water? Tell me, Favette. You have no secrets from
+your playmate, your friend, your brother?"
+
+Favette shook her head, smiling, and plaited her rushes all wrong, the
+blush on her cheeks as bright as that on the cups of the rose-leaves
+that the wind shook down in a fresh shower into the brook.
+
+"Come, tell me, mignonne. Was it--of me?"
+
+"Of you? Well, perhaps--yes!"
+
+It was first love that whispered in Favette's pretty voice those three
+little words; it was first love that answered in his, as he threw
+himself down on the violet-tufted turf at her feet, as Boufflers at
+Aline's.
+
+"Ah, Favette, so should it be! for every hope, every dream, every
+thought of _mine_, is centred in and colored by you."
+
+"Yet you can leave me to-day," pouted Favette, with a sigh and a _moue
+mutine_, and gathering tears in her large gazelle eyes.
+
+"Leave you? Would to Heaven I were not forced! But against a king's will
+what power has a subject? None are too great, none are too lowly, to be
+touched by that iron hand if they provoke its grasp. Vincennes yawns for
+those who dare to think, For-l'Evêque for those who dare to jest.
+Monsieur de Voltaire was sent to the Bastille for merely defending a
+truth and his own honor against De Rohan-Chabot. Who am I, that I should
+look for better grace?"
+
+Favette struck him, with her plaited rushes, a reproachful little blow.
+
+"Monsieur Vincennes--Monsieur Voltaire--who are they? I know nothing of
+those stupid people!"
+
+He smiled, and fondly stroked her hair:
+
+"Little darling! The one is a prison that manacles the deadly crimes of
+Free Speech and Free Thought; the other, a man who has suffered for
+both, but loves both still, and will, sooner or later, help to give both
+to the world----"
+
+"Ah, you think of your studies, of your ambitions, of your great heroes!
+You think nothing of me, save to call me a little darling. You are
+cruel, Monsieur Léon!"
+
+And Favette twisted her hand from his grasp with petulant sorrow, and
+dashed away her tears--the tears of sixteen--as bright and free from
+bitterness as the water-drops on the violet-bells.
+
+"_I_ cruel--and to you! My heart must indeed be badly echoed by my lips,
+if you have cause to fancy so a single moment. Cruel to you? Favette,
+Favette! is a man ever cruel to the dearest thing in his life, the
+dearest name in his thoughts? If I smiled I meant no sneer; I love you
+as you are, mignonne; the picture is so fair, one touch added, or one
+touch effaced, would mar the whole in _my_ eyes. I love you as you are!
+with no knowledge but what the good sisters teach you in their convent
+solitude, and what the songs of the birds, the voices of the flowers,
+whisper to you of their woodland lore. I love you as you are! Every
+morning when I am far away from you, and from Lorraine, I shall think of
+you gathering the summer roses, calling the birds about you, bending
+over the fountain to see it mirror your own beauty; every evening I
+shall think of you leaning from the window, chanting softly to yourself
+the Ora pro nobis, while the shadows deepen, and the stars we have so
+often watched together come out above the pine-hills. Favette, Favette!
+exile will have the bitterness of death to me; to give me strength to
+bear it, tell me that you love me more dearly than as the brother you
+have always called me; that you will so love me when I shall be no
+longer here beside you, but shall have to trust to memory and fidelity
+to guard for me in absence the priceless treasure of your heart?"
+
+Favette's head drooped, and her hands played nervously with the now torn
+and twisted braid of rushes: he saw her heart beat under its muslin
+corsage, like a bee caught and caged in the white leaves of a lily; and
+she glanced at him under her lashes with a touch of naïve coquetry.
+
+"If I tell you so, what gage have I, Monsieur Léon, that, a few months
+gone by, you will even remember it? In those magnificent cities you will
+soon forget Lorraine; with the _grandes dames_ of the courts you will
+soon cease to care for Favette?"
+
+"Look in my eyes, Favette, they alone can answer you as I would answer!
+Till we meet again none shall supplant you for an hour, none rob you of
+one thought; you have my first love, you will have my last. Favette, you
+believe me?"
+
+"Yes--I believe!" murmured Favette, resting her large eyes fondly on
+him. "We will meet as we part, though you are the swallow, free to take
+flight over the seas to foreign lands, and I am the violet, that must
+stay where it is rooted in the Lorraine woods!"
+
+"Accept the augury," he whispered, resting his lips upon her low smooth
+brow. "Does not the swallow ever return to the violet, holding it fairer
+than all the gaudy tropical flowers that may have tempted him to rest on
+the wing and delay his homeward flight? Does not the violet ever welcome
+him the same, in its timid winning spring-tide loveliness, when he
+returns to, as when he quitted, the only home he loves? Believe the
+augury, Favette; we shall meet as we part!"
+
+And they believed the augury, as they believed in life, in love, in
+faith; they who were beginning all, and had proved none of the
+treacherous triad!
+
+What had he dreamed of in his solitary ancestral woods fairer than this
+Lorraine violet, that had grown up with him, side by side, since he, a
+boy of twelve, gathered heaths from the clefts of the rocks that the
+little child of six years old cried for and could not reach? What had
+she seen that she loved half so well as M. le Chevalier from the Castle,
+whom her uncle, the Curé, held as his dearest and most brilliant pupil,
+whose eyes always looked so lovingly into hers, and whose voice was
+always lavishing fond names on his petite Favette?
+
+They believed the augury, and were happy even in the sweet sorrow of
+parting--sorrow that they had never known before--as they sat together
+in the morning sunlight, while the water bubbled among the violet tufts,
+among the grasses and wild thyme, and the dragon-flies fluttered their
+green and gold and purple wings amidst the tendrils of the vines, and
+the rose-leaves, drifted gently by the wind, floated down the brook,
+till they were lost in deepening shadow under the drooping boughs.
+
+
+II.
+
+THE SECOND MORNING.
+
+"Savez-vous que Favart va écrire une nouvelle comédie--La Chercheuse
+d'Esprit?"
+
+"Vraiment? Il doit bien écrire cela, car il s'occupe toujours à le
+_chercher_, et n'arrive jamais à le trouver!"
+
+The mot had true feminine malice, but the lips that spoke it were so
+handsome, that had even poor Favart himself, the poet-pastrycook who
+composed operas and comedies while he made méringues and fanfreluches,
+and dreamed of libretti while he whisked the cream for a supper, been
+within hearing, they would have taken the smart from the sting; and, as
+it was, the hit only caused echoes of softly-tuned laughter, for the
+slightest word of those lips it was the fashion through Paris just then
+to bow to, applaud, and re-echo.
+
+Before her Psyche, shrouded in cobweb lace, powdered by Martini,
+gleaming with pearls and emeralds, scented with most delicate amber,
+making her morning toilette, and receiving her morning levee according
+to the fashion of the day, sat the brilliant satirist of poor Favart.
+The _ruelle_ was crowded; three marshals, De Richelieu, Lowendal, and
+Maurice de Saxe; a prince, De Soubise; a poet, Claude Dorat; an abbé,
+Voisenon; a centenarian, Saint-Aulaire; peers uncounted, De Bièvre, De
+Caylus, De Villars, D'Etissac, Duras, D'Argenson--a crowd of
+others--surrounded and superintended her toilette, in a glittering troop
+of courtiers and gentlemen. Dames d'atours (for she had her maids of
+honor as well as Marie Leczinska) handed her her flacons of perfume, or
+her numberless notes, on gold salvers, chased by Réveil; the ermine
+beneath her feet, humbly sent by the Russian ambassador--far superior to
+what the Czarina sent to Madame de Mailly--had cost two thousand louis;
+her bedroom outshone in luxury any at Versailles, Choisy, or La Muette,
+with its Venetian glass, its medallions of Fragonard, its plaques of
+Sèvres, its landscapes of Watteau, framed in the carved and gilded
+wainscoting, its Chinese lamps, swinging by garlands of roses, its
+laughing Cupids, buried under flowers, painted in fresco above the
+alcove, its hangings of velvet, of silk, of lace; and its cabinets, its
+screens, its bonbonnières, its jewel-boxes, were costly as those of the
+Marquises de Pompadour or De Prie.
+
+Who was she?--a Princess of the Blood, a Duchess of France, a mistress
+of the King?
+
+Lords of the chamber obeyed her wishes, ministers signed lettres de
+cachet at her instance; "_ces messieurs_," la Queue de la Régence, had
+their rendezvous at her suppers; she had a country villa that eclipsed
+Trianon; she had fêtes that outshone the fêtes at Versailles; she had a
+"_droit de chasse_" in one of the royal districts; she had the first
+place on the easels of Coypel, Lancret, Pater, Vanloo, La Tour; the
+first place in the butterfly odes of Crébillon le Gai, Claude Dorat;
+Voisenon.
+
+Who was she?--the Queen of France? No; much more--the Queen of Paris!
+
+She was Thargélie Dumarsais; matchless as Claire Clairon, beautiful as
+Madeleine Gaussin, resistless as Sophie Arnould, great as Adrienne
+Lecouvreur. She was a Power in France--for was she not the Empress of
+the Comédie? If Madame Lenormand d'Etioles ruled the government at
+Versailles, Mademoiselle Thargélie Dumarsais ruled the world at Paris;
+and if the King's favorite could sign her enemies, by a smile, to the
+Bastille, the Court's favorite could sign hers, by a frown, to
+For-l'Evêque.
+
+The foyer was nightly filled while she played in _Zaïre_, or
+_Polyeucte_, or _Les Folies Amoureuses_, with a court of princes and
+poets, marshals and marquises, beaux esprits and abbés galants; and
+mighty nobles strewed with bouquets the path from her carriage to the
+coulisses; bouquets she trod on with nonchalant dignity, as though
+flowers only bloomed to have the honor of dying under her foot. Louis
+Quinze smilingly humored her caprices, content to wait until it was her
+pleasure to play at his private theatre; dukes, marquises, viscounts,
+chevaliers, vied who should ruin himself most magnificently and most
+utterly for her; and lovers the most brilliant and the most flattering,
+from Richelieu, Roi de Ruelles, to Dorat, poet of boudoir-graces and
+court-Sapphos, left the titled beauties of Versailles for the
+self-crowned Empress of the Français. She had all Paris for her
+chentela, from Versailles to the Caveau; for even the women she deposed,
+the actors she braved, the journalists she consigned to For-l'Evêque,
+dared not raise their voice against the idol of the hour. A Queen of
+France? Bah! Pray what could Marie Leczinska, the pale, dull pietist,
+singing canticles in her private chapel, compare for power, for sway,
+for courtiers, for brilliant sovereignty, for unrivalled triumph, with
+Thargélie Dumarsais, the Queen of the Theatre?
+
+Ravishingly beautiful looked the matchless actress as she sat before her
+Psyche, flashing _oeillades_ on the brilliant group who made every added
+aigrette, every additional bouquet of the coiffure, every little
+_mouche_, every touch to the already perfect toilette, occasion for
+flattering simile and soft-breathed compliment; ravishingly beautiful,
+as she laughed at Maurice de Saxe, or made a disdainful _moue_ at an
+impromptu couplet of Dorat's, or gave a blow of her fan to Richelieu, or
+asked Saint-Aulaire what he thought of Vanloo's portrait of her as
+_Rodugune_; ravishingly beautiful, with her charms that disdained alike
+rouge and maréchale powder, and were matchless by force of their own
+coloring, form, and voluptuous languor, when, her toilette finished,
+followed by her glittering crowd, she let Richelieu lead her to his
+carriage.
+
+There was a review of Guards on the plain at Sablons that morning, a
+fête afterwards, at which she would be surrounded by the most brilliant
+staff of an army of Noblesse, and Richelieu was at that moment the most
+favored of her troop of lovers. M. le Duc, as every one knows, never
+sued at court or coulisse in vain, and the love of Thargélie Dumarsais,
+though perhaps with a stronger touch of romance in it than was often
+found in the atmosphere of the foyer, was, like the love of her time and
+her class, as inconstant and vivacious, now settling here, now lighting
+there, as any butterfly that fluttered among the limes at Trianon. Did
+not the jest-loving _parterre_ ever salute with gay laughter two lines
+in a bagatelle-comedy of the hour--
+
+ Oui l'Amour papillonne, sans entraves, à son gré;
+ Chargé longtemps de fers, de soie même, il mourrait!--
+
+when spoken by Thargélie Dumarsais--laughter that hailed her as
+head-priestess of her pleasant creed, in a city and a century where the
+creed was universal?
+
+"Ah, bonjour! You have not seen her before, have you, semi-Englishman?
+You have found nothing like her in the foggy isles, I wager you fifty
+louis!" cried one of Thargélie Dumarsais's court, the Marquis de la
+Thorillière, meeting a friend of his who had arrived in Paris only the
+day before, M. le Chevalier de Tallemont des Réaux, as Richelieu's
+cortége rolled away, and the Marquis crossed to his own carriage.
+
+"Her? Whom? I have not been in Paris for six years, you know. What can I
+tell of its idols, as I remember of old that they change every hour?"
+
+"True! but, bon Dieu! not to know la Dumarsais! What it must be to have
+been buried in those benighted Britannic Isles! Did you not see her in
+Richelieu's carriage?"
+
+"No. I saw a carriage driving off with such an escort and such fracas,
+that I thought it could belong to nobody less than to Madame Lenormand
+d'Etioles; but I did not observe it any further. Who is this beauty I
+ought to have seen?"
+
+"Thargélie Dumarsais, for whom we are all ruining ourselves with the
+prettiest grace in the world, and for whom you will do the same when you
+have been once to the Français; that is, if you have the good fortune to
+attract her eyes and please her fancy, which you may do, for the fogs
+have agreed with you, Léon!--I should not wonder if you become the
+fashion, and set the women raving of you as 'leur zer zevalier!'"
+
+"Thanks for the prophecy, but I shall not stay long enough to fulfil it,
+and steal your myrtle crowns. I leave again to-morrow."
+
+"_Leave?_ Sapristi! See what it is to have become half English, and
+imbibed a taste for spleen and solitude! Have you written another
+satire, or have you learned such barbarism as to dislike Paris?"
+
+"Neither; but I leave for Lorraine to-morrow. It is five years since I
+saw my old pine-woods."
+
+"Dame! it is ten years since _I_ saw the wilds of Bretagne, and I will
+take good care it shall be a hundred before I see them again. _Hors de
+Paris, c'est hors du monde._ Come with me to La Dumarsais's _petit
+souper_ to-night, and you will soon change your mind."
+
+"My good Armand, you have not been an exile, as I have; you little know
+how I long for the very scent of the leaves, the very smell of the earth
+at Grande Charmille! But bah! I talk in Hebrew to you. You have been
+lounging away your days in titled beauties, _petits salons_, making
+butterfly verses, learning their broidery, their lisp, and their
+perfumes, talking to their parrots, and using their cosmétiques, till
+you care for no air but what is musk-scented! But what of this
+Dumarsais of yours--does she equal Lecouvreur?"
+
+"Eclipses her!--with Paris as with Maurice de Saxe. Thargélie Dumarsais
+is superb, mon cher--unequalled, unrivalled! We have had nothing like
+her for beauty, for grace, for talent, nor, pardieu! for extravagance!
+She ruined _me_ last year in a couple of months. Richelieu is in favor
+just now--with what woman is he not? Thargélie is very fond of the
+Marshals of France! Saxe is fettered to her hand and foot, and the
+Duchesse de Bouillon hates her as rancorously as she does Adrienne. Come
+and see her play _Phèdre_ to-night, and you will renounce Lorraine. I
+will take you to supper with her afterwards; she will permit any friend
+of mine entry, and then, generous man that I am, I shall have put you
+_en chemin_ to sun yourself in her smiles and ingratiate yourself in her
+favor. Don't give me too much credit for the virtue though, for I
+confess I should like to see Richelieu supplanted."
+
+"Does his reign threaten to last long, then?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders, and gave his badine an expressive
+whisk.
+
+"Dieu sait! we are not prophets in Paris. It would be as easy to say
+where that weathercock may have veered to-morrow, as to predict where la
+Dumarsais's love may have lighted ere a month! Where are you going, may
+I ask?"
+
+"To see Lucille de Verdreuil. I knew her at Lunéville; she and Madame de
+Boufflers were warm friends till Stanislaus, I believe, found Lucille's
+eyes lovelier than Madame la Marquise deemed fit, and then they
+quarrelled, as women ever do, with virulence in exact proportion to the
+ardor of their friendship."
+
+"As the women quarrel at Choisy for _notre maître_! They will be friends
+again when both have lost the game, like Louise de Mailly and the
+Duchesse de Châteauroux. The poor Duchess! Fitz-James and Maurepas,
+Châtillon and Bouillon, Rochefoucauld and le Père Pérussot, all
+together, were too strong for her. All the gossip of that Metz affair
+reached you across the water, I suppose? Those pests of Jesuits! if they
+want him to be their Very Christian King, and to cure him of his worship
+of Cupidon, they will have to pull down all the stones of La Muette and
+the Parc aux Cerfs! What good is it to kill _one_ poor woman when women
+are as plentiful as roses at Versailles? And now let me drive you to
+Madame de Vaudreuil; if _she_ do not convert you from your fancy for
+Lorraine this morning, Thargélie Dumarsais will to-night."
+
+"_Mon zer zevalier, Paris at ado'able! Vous n'êtes pas sé'ieux en
+voulant le quitter, z'en suis sûre!_" cried the Comtesse de Vaudreuil,
+in the pretty lisp of the day, a charming little blonde, patched and
+powdered, nestled in a chair before a fire of perfumed wood, teasing her
+monkey Zulmé with a fan of Pater's, and giving a pretty little sign of
+contempt and disbelief with some sprays of jessamine employed in the
+chastisement of offenders more responsible and quite as audacious as
+Zulmé.
+
+Her companion, her "zer zevalier," was a young man of seven-and-twenty,
+with a countenance frank, engaging, nobly cast, far more serious, far
+more thoughtful in its expression, than was often seen in that laughing
+and mocking age. Exiled when a mere boy for a satirical pamphlet which
+had provoked the wrath of the Censeur Royal, and might have cost him the
+Bastille but for intercession from Lunéville, he had passed his youth
+less in pleasure than in those philosophical and political problems then
+beginning to agitate a few minds; which were developed later on in the
+"Encyclopédie," later still in the Assemblée Nationale. Voltaire and
+Helvétius had spoken well of him at Madame de Geoffrin's; Claudine de
+Tencin had introduced him the night before in her brilliant salons; the
+veteran Fontenelle had said to him, "_Monsieur, comme censeur royal je
+refusai mon approbation à votre brochure; comme homme libre je vous en
+félicite_"--all that circle was prepared to receive him well, the young
+Chevalier de Tallemont might make a felicitous season in Paris if he
+chose, with the romance of his exile about him, and Madame de Vaudreuil
+smiling kindly on him.
+
+"The country!" she cried; "the country is all very charming in eclogues
+and pastorals, but out of them it is a desert of ennui! What _can_ you
+mean, Léon, by leaving Paris to-morrow? Ah, méchant, there must be
+something we do not see, some love besides that of the Lorraine woods!"
+
+"Madame, is there not my father?"
+
+"_Bien zoli!_ But at your age men are not so filial. There is some other
+reason--but what? Any love you had there five years ago has hardly any
+attractions now. Five years! Ma foi, five months is an eternity that
+kills the warmest passion!"
+
+"May there not be some love, madame, that time only strengthens?"
+
+"I never heard of it if there be. It would be a very dreary affair, I
+should fancy, smouldering, smouldering on and on like an ill-lit fire.
+Nobody would thank you for it, mon cher, _here_! Come, what is your
+secret? Tell it me."
+
+Léon de Tallemont smiled; the smile of a man who has happy thoughts, and
+is indifferent to ridicule.
+
+"Madame, one can refuse you nothing! My secret? It is a very simple one.
+The greatest pang of my enforced exile was the parting from one I loved;
+the greatest joy of my return is that I return to her."
+
+"_Bon Dieu! comme c'est drôle!_ Here is a man talking to me of love, and
+of a love not felt for _me_!" thought Madame la Comtesse, giving him a
+soft glance of her beautiful blue eyes. "You are a very strange man.
+You have lived out of France till you have grown wretchedly serious and
+eccentric. Loved this woman for five years? Léon! Léon! you are telling
+me a fairy tale. Who is she, this enchantress? She must have some
+mysterious magic. Tell me--quick!"
+
+"She is no enchantress, madame, and she has no magic save the simple one
+of having ever been very dear to me. We grew up together at Grande
+Charmille; she was the orphan niece of the Priest, a fond, innocent,
+laughing child, fresh and fair, and as untouched by a breath of impure
+air as any of the violets in the valley. She was scarcely out of the
+years of childhood when I left her, with beauty whose sweetest grace of
+all was its own unconsciousness. Through my five long years of exile I
+have remembered Favette as I saw her last under the elm-boughs in the
+summer light, her eyes dim with the tears of our parting, her young
+heart heaving with its first grief. I have loved her too well for others
+to have power to efface or to supplant her; of her only have I thought,
+of her only have I dreamed, holding her but the dearer as the years grew
+further from the hour of our separation, nearer to the hour of our
+reunion. I have heard no word of her since we parted; but of what value
+is love without trust and fidelity in trial? The beauty of her childhood
+may have merged into the beauty of womanhood, but I fear no other change
+in Favette. As we parted so we vowed to meet, and I believe in her love
+as in my own. I know that I shall find my Lorraine violet without stain
+or soil. Madame, Favette is still dearer to me now, Heaven help me, than
+five years ago. Five years--five years--true! it _is_ an eternity! Yet
+the bitterness of the past has faded for ever from me _now_, and I only
+see--the future!"
+
+Madame de Vaudreuil listened in silence; his words stirred in her chords
+long untouched, never heard amidst the mots, the madrigals, the
+laughter of her world of Paris, Versailles, and Choisy. She struck him a
+little blow with her jessamine-sprays, with a mist gathering over her
+lovely blue eyes.
+
+"Hush, hush, Léon! you speak in a tongue unknown here. A word
+of the heart amongst us sounds a word of a _Gaulois_ out of
+fashion--forbidden!"
+
+
+III.
+
+MIDNIGHT.
+
+The Français was crowded. Thargélie Dumarsais, great in _Electre_,
+_Chimène_, _Inès_, as in "_Ninette à la Cour_," "_Les Moissonneurs_," or
+"_Annette et Lubin_," was playing in "_Phèdre_." Louis Quinze was
+present, with all the powdered marquises, the titled wits, the
+glittering gentlemen of the Court of Versailles; but no presence stayed
+the shout of adoration with which the parterre welcomed the idol of the
+hour, and Louis le Bien-aimé (des femmes!) himself added his royal quota
+to the ovation, and threw at her feet a diamond, superb as any in his
+regalia. It was whispered that the Most Christian King was growing
+envious of his favorite's favor with la Dumarsais, and would, ere long,
+supersede him.
+
+The foyer was filled with princes of the blood, marshals of France,
+dukes, marquises, the élite of her troop of lovers; lords and gentlemen
+crowded the passages, flinging their bouquets for her carpet as she
+passed; and poor scholars, young poets, youths without a sou--amongst
+them Diderot, Gilbert, Jean-Jacques Rousseau--pressed forward to catch a
+glimpse, by the light of the links, of this beauty, on which only the
+eyes of grands seigneurs who could dress Cupidon in a court habit
+_parfilé d'or_ were allowed to gaze closely, as she left the Français,
+after her unmatched and uninterrupted triumphs, and went to her
+carriage with Richelieu. The suppers of Thargélie Dumarsais were
+renowned through Paris; they equalled in magnificence the suppers of the
+Regency, rivalled them for license, and surpassed them for wit. All the
+world might flock to her fêtes where she undisguisedly sought to surpass
+the lavishness of Versailles, even by having showers of silver flung
+from her windows to the people in the streets below; but to her _soupers
+à huis clos_ only a chosen few were admitted, and men would speak of
+having supped with la Dumarsais as boastfully as women of having supped
+with the King at Choisy.
+
+"What you have lost in not seeing her play _Phèdre_! Helvétius would
+have excused you; all the talk of his salons is not worth one glance at
+la Dumarsais. Mon ami! you will be converted to Paris when once you have
+seen her," said the Marquis de la Thorillière, as his carriage stopped
+in the Chaussée d'Antin.
+
+Léon de Tallemont laughed, and thought of the eyes that would brighten
+at his glance, and the heart that would beat against his once more under
+the vine shadows of Lorraine. No new magic, however seductive, should
+have strength to shake his allegiance to that Memory, and, true to his
+violet in Lorraine, he defied the Queen of the Foyer.
+
+"We are late, but that is always a more pardonable fault than to be too
+early," said the Marquis, as they were ushered across the vestibule,
+through several salons, into the supper-room, hung with rich tapestries
+of "Les Nymphes au Bain," "Diane Chasseresse," and "Apollon et Daphné;"
+with gilded consoles, and rosewood buffets, enamelled with medallion
+groups, and crowded with Sèvres and porcelaine de Saxe, while Venetian
+mirrors at each end of the salle reflected the table, with its wines,
+and fruits, and flowers, its gold dishes and Bohemian glass. The air was
+heavily perfumed, and vibrating with laughter. The guests were
+Richelieu, Bièvre, Saxe, D'Etissac, Montcrif, and lovely Marie Camargo,
+the queen of the coulisses who introduced the "short skirts" of the
+ballet, and upheld her innovation so stanchly amidst the outcries of
+scandalized Jansenists and journalists. But even Marie Camargo herself
+paled--and would have paled even had she been, what she was not, in the
+first flush of her youth--before the superb beauty, the languid
+voluptuousness, the sensuous grace, the southern eyes, the full lips,
+like the open leaves of a damask rose, melting yet mocking, of the most
+beautiful and most notorious woman of a day in which beauty and
+notoriety were rife, the woman with the diamond of Louis Quinze
+sparkling in the light upon her bosom, whom Versailles and Paris hailed
+as Thargélie Dumarsais.
+
+The air, scented with amber, rang with the gay echoes of a stanza of
+Dorat's, chanted by Marie Camargo; the "Cupids and Bacchantes," painted
+in the panels of Sèvres, seemed to laugh in sympathy with the revel over
+which they presided; the light flashed on the King's diamond, to which
+Richelieu pointed, with a wicked whisper; for the Marshal was getting
+tired of his own reign, and his master might pay his court when he
+would. Thargélie Dumarsais, more beautiful still at her _petit souper_
+than at her _petit lever_, with her hair crowned with roses, true
+flowers of Venus that might have crowned Aspasia, looked up laughingly
+as her lacqueys ushered in le Marquis de la Thorillière and le Chevalier
+de Tallemont.
+
+"M. le Marquis," cried the actress, "you are late! It is an impertinence
+forbidden at my court. I shall sup in future with barred doors, like M.
+d'Orléans; then all you late-comers----"
+
+Through the scented air, through the echoing laughter, stopping her own
+words, broke a startled bitter cry:
+
+"_Mon Dieu, c'est Favette!_"
+
+Thargélie Dumarsais shrank back in her rose velvet fauteuil as though
+the blow of a dagger had struck her; the color fled from her lips, and
+underneath the delicate rouge on her cheeks; her hand trembled as it
+grasped the King's aigrette.
+
+"Favette--Favette! Who calls me that?"
+
+It was a forgotten name, the name of a bygone life that fell on her ear
+with a strange familiar chime, breaking in on the wit, the license, the
+laughter of her midnight supper, as the subdued and mournful sound of
+vesper bells might fall upon the wild refrains and noisy drinking-songs
+of bacchanalian melody.
+
+A surprised silence fell upon the group, the laughter hushed, the voices
+stopped; it was a strange interruption for a midnight supper. Thargélie
+Dumarsais involuntarily rose, her lips white, her eyes fixed, her hand
+clasped convulsively on the King's diamond. A vague, speechless terror
+held mastery over her, an awe she could not shake off had fastened upon
+her, as though the dead had risen from their graves, and come thither to
+rebuke her for the past forgotten, the innocence lost. The roses in her
+hair, the flowers of revel, touched a cheek blanched as though she
+beheld some unearthly thing, and the hand that lay on the royal jewel
+shook and trembled.
+
+"Favette? Favette?" she echoed again. "It is so many years since I heard
+that name!"
+
+Her guests sat silent still, comprehending nothing of this single name
+which had such power to move and startle her. Richelieu alone, leaning
+back in his chair, leisurely picked out one of his brandy-cherries, and
+waited as a man waits for the next scene at a theatre:
+
+"Is it an unexpected tragedy, or an arranged comedy, ma chère? Ought one
+to cry or to laugh? Give me the _mot d'ordre_!"
+
+His words broke the spell, and called Thargélie Dumarsais back to the
+world about her. Actress by profession and by nature, she rallied with a
+laugh, putting out her jewelled hand with a languid glance from her long
+almond-shaped eyes.
+
+"A friend of early years, my dear Duc, that is all. Ah, Monsieur de
+Tallemont what a strange rencontre! When did you come to Paris? I
+scarcely knew you at the first moment; you have so long been an exile,
+one may pardonably be startled by your apparition, and take you for a
+ghost! I suppose you never dreamed of meeting Favette Fontanie under my
+_nom de théâtre_? Ah! how we change, do we not, Léon? Time is so short,
+we have no time to stand still! Marie, ma chère, give Monsieur le
+Chevalier a seat beside you--he cannot be happier placed!"
+
+Léon de Tallemont heard not a word that she spoke; he stood like a man
+stunned and paralyzed by a sudden and violent blow, his head bowed, a
+mortal pallor changing his face to the hues of death, the features that
+were a moment before bright, laughing, and careless, now set in mute and
+rigid anguish.
+
+"Favette! Favette!" he murmured, hoarsely, in the vague dreamy agony
+with which a man calls wildly and futilely on the beloved dead to come
+back to him from the silence and horror of the grave.
+
+"Peste!" laughed Richelieu. "This cast-off lover seems a strange fellow!
+Does he not know that absent people have never the presumption to dream
+of keeping their places, but learn to give them graciously up!--shall I
+teach him the lesson? If he have his sixteen quarterings, a prick of my
+sword will soon punish his impudence!"
+
+The jeer fell unheeded on Léon de Tallemont's ear; had he heard it, the
+flippant sneer would have had no power to sting him then. Regardless of
+the men around the supper-table, he grasped Thargélie Dumarsais's hands
+in his:
+
+"This is how we meet!"
+
+She shrank away from his glance, terrified, she scarce knew why, at the
+mute anguish upon his face.
+
+Perhaps for a moment she realized how utterly she had abused the love
+and wrecked the life of this man; perhaps with his voice came back to
+her thronging thoughts of guileless days, memories ringing through the
+haze of years, as distant chimes ring over the water from lands we have
+quitted, reaching us when we have floated far away out to sea--memories
+of an innocent and untroubled life, when she had watched the woodland
+flowers open to the morning sun, and listened to the song of the brooks
+murmuring over the violet roots, and heard the sweet evening song of the
+birds rise to heaven under the deep vine shadows of Lorraine.
+
+One moment she was silent, her eyes falling, troubled and guilty,
+beneath his gaze; then she looked up, laughing gayly, and flashing on
+him her languid lustrous glance.
+
+"You look like a somnambulist, _mon ami_! Did nobody ever tell you,
+then, how Mme. de la Vrillière carried me off from Lorraine, and brought
+me in her train to Paris, till, when Favette Fontanie was tired of being
+petted like the spaniel, the monkey, and the parrot, she broke away from
+Madame la Marquise, and made, after a little probation at the Foire St.
+Laurent, her appearance at the Français as Thargélie Dumarsais? _Allons
+donc!_ have I lost my beauty, that you look at me thus? You should be
+reminding me of the proverb, '_On revient toujours à ses premiers
+amours!_' Surely, Thargélie Dumarsais will be as attractive to teach
+such a lesson as that little peasant girl, Favette, used to be? Bah,
+Léon! Can I not love you as well again in Paris as I once loved you at
+Grande Charmille? And--who knows?--perhaps I will!"
+
+She leaned towards him; her breath fanning his cheek, her scented hair
+brushing his lips, her lustrous eyes meeting his with eloquent meaning,
+her lips parted with the resistless witchery of that melting and
+seductive _sourire d'amour_ to which they were so admirably trained. He
+gazed down on her, breathless, silence-stricken--gazed down on the
+sorceress beauty to which the innocent loveliness of his Lorraine flower
+had changed. Was this woman, with the rouge upon her cheeks, the crimson
+roses in her hair, the mocking light in her eyes, the wicked laugh on
+her lips, the diamond glittering like a serpent's eye in her bosom--was
+she the guileless child he had left weeping, on the broken steps of the
+fountain, tears as pure as the dew in the violet-bells, with the summer
+sunlight streaming round her, and no shade on her young brow darker than
+the fleeting shadow flung from above by the vine-leaves? A cry broke
+once more from his lips:
+
+"Would to God I had died before to-night!"
+
+Then he lifted his head, with a smile upon his face--a smile that
+touched and vaguely terrified all those who saw it--the smile of a
+breaking heart.
+
+"I thank you for your proffered embraces, but _I_ am faithful. I love
+but one, and I have lost her; Favette is dead! I know nothing of
+Thargélie Dumarsais, the Courtesan."
+
+He bowed low to her and left her--never to see her face again.
+
+A silence fell on those he had quitted, even upon Richelieu; perhaps
+even he realized that all beauty, faith, and joy were stricken from this
+man's life; and--reality of feeling was an exile so universally banished
+from the gay salons of the Dix-huitième Siècle, that its intrusion awed
+them as by the unwonted presence of some ghostly visitant.
+
+Thargélie Dumarsais sat silent--her thoughts had flown away once more
+from her brilliant supper-chamber to the fountain at Grande Charmille:
+she was seeing the dragon-flies flutter among the elm-boughs, and the
+water ripple over the wild thyme; she was feeling the old priest's
+good-night kiss upon her brow, and her own hymn rise and mingle with the
+chant of the vesper choir; she was hearing the song of the forest-birds
+echo in the Lorraine woods, and a fond voice whisper to her, "Fear not,
+Favette!--we shall meet as we part!"
+
+Richelieu took up his Dresden saucer of cherries once more with a burst
+of laughter.
+
+"_Voilà un drôle!_--this fellow takes things seriously. What fools there
+are in this world! It will be a charming little story for Versailles.
+Dieu! how Louis will laugh when I tell it him! I fear though, ma chérie,
+that the 'friend of your childhood' will make you lose your reputation
+by his impolite epithets!"
+
+"When one has nothing, one can lose nothing--eh, ma chère?" laughed
+Marie Camargo. "Monsieur le Duc, she does not hear us----"
+
+"No, _l'infidèle_!" cried Richelieu. "Mademoiselle! I see plainly you
+love this rude lover of bygone days better than you do us!--is it not
+the truth?"
+
+"Chut! nobody asks for truths in a polite age!" laughed Thargélie
+Dumarsais, shaking off unwelcome memories once for all, and looking down
+at the King's diamond gleaming in the light--the diamond that prophesied
+to her the triumph of the King's love.
+
+"Naturally," added La Camargo. "My friend, I shall die with envy of your
+glorious jewel. _Dieu! comme il brille!_"
+
+
+
+
+"DEADLY DASH."
+
+A STORY TOLD ON THE OFF DAY.
+
+
+On the off-day after the Derby everybody, except the great winners, is,
+it will be generally admitted, the resigned prey to a certain gentle
+sadness, not to say melancholy, that will only dissipate itself under a
+prolonged regimen of S. and B., seidlitz well dashed with Amontillado,
+or certain heavenly West Indian decoctions;--this indisposition, I would
+suggest, we should call, delicately and dubiously, Epsomitis. It will
+serve to describe innumerable forms and degrees of the reactionary
+malady.
+
+There is the severest shape of all, "dead money," that covers four
+figures, dropped irretrievably, and lost to the "milkers;" lost always
+_you_ say because of a cough, or because of a close finish, or because
+of something dark, or because of a strain in the practising gallops, or
+because of a couple of brutes that cannoned just at the start; and
+never, of course, because the horse you had fancied was sheerly and
+simply only fit for a plater. There is the second severe form, when you
+awake with a cheerful expectation of a summons for driving "at twelve
+miles an hour" (as if that wasn't moderate and discreet!), and for
+thereby smashing a greengrocer's cart into the middle of next week, and
+running a waggonette into an omnibus, as you came back from the Downs,
+of which you have no more remembrance than that there was a crash, and
+a smash, and a woman's screams, and a man's "d--n the swells!" and a
+_tintamarre_ of roaring conductor and bellowing greengrocer, and
+infuriated females, through which you dashed somehow with a cheer--more
+shame for you--and a most inappropriate _l'Africaine_ chorus from the
+men on your drag. There is the milder form, which is only the rueful
+recollection of seeing, in a wild ecstasy, the chestnut with the white
+blaze sweep with his superb stride to the front, and of having, in your
+moment of rapturous gratitude to the red and blue, rushed,
+unintentionally, during the discussion of Fortnum and Mason's hamper,
+into a promise to take Euphrosyne Brown to Baden in August, where you
+know very well she will cost you more than all your sums netted through
+Gladiateur. There are the slenderer touches of the malady, which give
+you, over your breakfast coffee, a certain dolorous meditation as to how
+you could have been such a fool as to have placed all your trust in
+Danebury, or to have put in a hole through Spring Cottage just what your
+yacht costs for three months; which makes you wonder why on earth you
+took that lot of actresses on to the hill, and threw money enough away
+on them in those wages of idiotcy (or wages of sin, as your uncle the
+dean would translate it), of cashmeres, eau de Cologne, gloves, and
+bracelets, to have purchased those two weight-carriers offered you at
+£600 the pair, and dirt-cheap at that; or which makes you only dully and
+headachily conscious that you drank champagne up on the box-seat as if
+you were a young fellow from Eton, and now pay for the juvenile folly,
+as you know you deserve to do, when that beautiful white Burgundy at
+your club, or your own cool perfect claret at home, seems to stare you
+in the face and ask, "Why did you crack all those bottles of Dry on the
+Downs?"
+
+There are symptoms and varieties innumerable of the malady that I
+propose shall be known henceforward as Epsomitis; therefore, the off-day
+finds everybody more or less slightly done-up and mournful. Twenty-four
+hours and the Oaks, if properly prepared for by a strictly medicinal
+course of _brûles-gueules_, as the Chasseurs say, smoked perseveringly,
+will bring all patients round on the Friday; but during the twenty-four
+hours a sense that all on and off the course is vanity and vexation of
+spirit will generally and somnolently predominate in the universal and
+fashionable disease of Epsomitis.
+
+One off-day, after the magnificent victory of Monarque's unrivalled son,
+an acquaintance of mine, suffering considerably from these symptoms,
+sought my philosophy and my prescriptions. A very sharp irritant for
+Epsomitis may be administered in the form of "I told you so? It's all
+your own fault!" But this species of blister and douche bath combined is
+rarely given unless the patient be mad enough to let his wife, if he
+unluckily have one, learn what ails him. As far as I was concerned, I
+was much too sympathetic with the sufferer to be down upon him with the
+triumphant reminder that I had cautioned him all along not to place his
+trust in Russley. I, instead, prescribed him cool wines, and led him on
+to talk of other people's misfortunes, the very best way to get
+reconciled with your own. We talked of old times, of old memories, of
+old acquaintance, in the twilight, between Derby and Oaks. We got a
+little melancholy; too much champagne is always productive on the morrow
+of a gently sentimental tinge, and a man is always inclined to look on
+the world as a desert when he has the conviction that he himself has
+been made a fool in it. Among other names, that of Deadly Dash came up
+between us. What had become of him? I did not know; he did. He told me;
+and I will tell it here, for the story is of the past now.
+
+"Deadly Dash! What a shot he was! Never missed," said my friend, whose
+own gun is known well enough at Hornsey-wood House; therewith falling
+into a reverie, tinged with the Jacques-like gloom of Epsomitis in its
+severest form, from which he awoke to tell me slowly, between long
+draughts of iced drinks, what I write now. I alter his tale in nothing,
+save in filling in with words the gaps and blanks that he made,
+all-eloquent in his halting oratory, by meditative, plaintive,
+moralizing puffs from his tonic, the _brûle gueule_, and an occasional
+appeal to my imagination in the customary formula of "Oh, bother!--_you_
+understand--all the rest of it you know," which, though it tells
+everything over claret, is not so clear a mode of relation in type. For
+all else here the story is as he gave it to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Deadly Dash!" It was a fatal sounding sobriquet, and had a fatal
+fascination for many, for me as well as the rest, when I was in my salad
+days and joined the old ----th, amongst whose Light Dragoons, it was so
+signally and ominously famous. The nickname had a wide significance;
+"_he always kills_," was said with twofold truth, in twofold meaning of
+Dash; in a _barrière_ duel he would wheel lightly, aim carelessly, and
+send the ball straight as any arrow through heart or lung, just as he
+fancied, in the neatest style anybody could dream of; and in an intrigue
+he took just the same measures, and hit as invariably with the self-same
+skill and the self-same indifference. "He always kills" applied equally
+to either kind of affair, and got him his sobriquet, which he received
+with as laughing an equanimity as a riding man gets the Gilt Vase, or a
+"lover of the leash" the Ravensworth Stakes, or the Puppy Cup and
+Goblet. He was proud of it, and had only one regret, that he lived in
+the dead days of the duel, and could only go out when he was on French
+soil. In dare-devilry of every sort he out-Heroded Herod, and distanced
+any who were mad enough to try the pace with him in that steeple-chase
+commonly called "going to the bad." It was a miracle how often he used
+to reach the stage of "_complete_ ruin" that the Prince de Soubise once
+sighed for as an unattainable paradise; and picked himself up again,
+without a hair turned, as one may say, and started off with as fresh a
+pace as though nothing had knocked him over. Other men got his speed
+sometimes; but nobody could ever equal his stay. For an "out and out
+goer" there was nobody like Deadly Dash; and though only a Captain of
+Horse, with few "expectations," he did what Dukes daren't have done, and
+lived at a faster rate than all the elder sons in the kingdom put
+together. Dash had the best bow and the brightest wits, the lightest
+morals and the heaviest debts of any _sabreur_ in the Service; very
+unscrupulous fellows were staggered at _his_ devil-me-care vices; and as
+for reputation,--"a deuced pleasant fellow, Dash," they used to say at
+the Curragh, in the Guards' Club, at Thatched House anniversary dinners,
+in North Indian cantonments, in Brighton barrack-rooms, or in any of the
+many places where Deadly Dash was a household word; "a very pleasant
+fellow; no end 'fit' always, best fun in life over the olives when you
+get him in humor; shoot you dead though next morning, if he want, and
+you be handy for him in a neat snug little Bad; make some devil of a
+_mot_ on you too afterwards, just as pleasantly as if he were offering
+you a Lopez to smoke!"
+
+Now, that was just the sort of celebrity that made me mad to see the
+owner of it; there wasn't a living being, except that year's favorite
+out of the Whitewall establishment, that I was half so eager to look at,
+or so reverent when I thought of, as "the Killer." I was very young
+then. I had gone through a classic course of yellow covers from Jeffs'
+and Rolandi's, and I had a vague impression that a man who had had a
+dozen _barrière_ affairs abroad, and been "_enfant_" to every lovely
+_lionne_ of his day, must of necessity be like the heroes of Delphine
+Demireps' novels, who had each of them always a "je ne sais quoi de
+farouche et de fier dans ses grands yeux noirs, et toute la révélation
+d'une ame usée, mais dominée par des passions encore inépuisables,
+écrite sur son sombre et pale visage," &c, &c, in the Demireps' most
+telling style.
+
+I don't know quite what I expected to see in the Killer, but I think it
+was a sort of compound of Monte Christo, Mephistopheles, and Murat mixed
+in one; what I did see was a slight delicate man with a face as fair and
+soft as a girl's, the gentlest possible manners, and a laugh like music.
+Deadly Dash had led a life as bad as he could lead, had lit his cigar
+without a tremor in the wrist, on many gray mornings, while his
+adversary lay dying hard among the red rank grasses, had gamed so deep
+twenty-four hours at a stretch that the most reckless _galérie_ in
+Europe held their breath to watch his play; had had a tongue of silver
+for his intrigues and a nerve of steel for his _vendetta_; had lived in
+reckless rioting and drunk deep; but the Demirep would not have had him
+at any price in her romance; he looked so simply and quietly
+thorough-bred, he was so utterly guiltless of all her orthodox traits.
+The gentlest of mortals was Deadly Dash; when you first heard his sweet
+silvery voice, and his laughter as light and airy as a woman's, you
+would never believe how often abroad there a dead man had been left to
+get stiff and cold among the clotted herbage, while the Killer went out
+of the town by the early express, smoking and reading the "Charivari,"
+and sipping some cold Curaçoa punch out of his flask.
+
+"Of course!" growled a man to me once in the Guards' smoking-room, an
+order of the Scots Fusilleers to Montreal having turned him misanthrope.
+"Did Mephistopheles ever come out in full harness, with horns and tail
+complete, eh? Not such a fool. He looked like a gentleman, and talked
+like a wit. Would the most dunder-headed Cain in Christendom, I should
+be glad to know, be such an ass as to go about town with the brand on
+his forehead, when he could turn down Bond Street any day and get a
+dash of the ladies' pearl powder? Who ever _shows_ anything now, my good
+fellow? Not that Dash 'paints,' to give the deuce his due--except
+himself a little blacker even than he is; he don't cant; he couldn't
+cant; not to save his life, I believe. But as to his bewitching you,
+almost as bad as he does the women, I know all about that. I used to
+swear by him till----"
+
+"Till what?"
+
+"Till he cut a brother of mine out with Rachel, and shot him in the
+woods of Chantilly for flaring-up rough at the rivalry. Charlie was
+rather a good fellow, and Dash and I didn't speak after that, you see.
+Great bore; bosh too, perhaps. Dash brews the best Curaçoa punch in
+Europe, and if he name you the winning mount for the Granby, you may let
+the talent damn you as they like. Still you know as he killed
+Charlie,--" and the Guardsman stuck a great cheroot in his mouth, in
+doubt as to whether, after all, it wasn't humbug, and an uncalled-for
+sacrifice, rather scenic and sentimental, to drop an expert at Curaçoa
+brew, and a sure prophet for Croxton Park, just because in a legitimate
+fashion he had potted your brother and relieved your entail;--on the
+whole, a friendly act rather than otherwise? "Keep clear of the Killer,
+though, young one," he added, as he sauntered out. "He's like that
+cheetah cub of Berkeley's; soft as silk, you know, _patte de velours_,
+and what d'ye call 'em, and all the rest of it, but deucedly deadly to
+deal with."
+
+I did know: it was the eternal refrain that was heard on all sides; from
+the wily Jews through whose meshes he slipped; the unhappy duns who were
+done by him; the beauties who were bewitched by him; the hosts and
+husbands who, having him down for the pheasants, found him poach other
+preserves than those of the cover-sides; the women who had their
+characters shattered by a silvery sneer from a voice that was as soft,
+in its murderous slander, as in its equally murderous wooing; and all
+the rest, who, in some shape or another, owed ruin to that Apollo
+Apollyon--Deadly Dash. Ruin which at last became so wide and so deep,
+that even vice began to look virtuous when his name was mentioned (vice
+always does when she thinks you are really cleared out), and men of his
+own corps and his own club began to get shy of having the Killer's arm
+linked in theirs too often down Pall Mall, for its wrist was terribly
+steady in either Hazard, whether of the yard of green table or the
+twenty yards of green turf.
+
+At last the crisis came: the Killer killed one too many; a Russian
+Prince in the Bois de Vincennes, in a quarrel about a pretty wretched
+little chorus-singer of the Café Alcazar, who took their fancies both at
+once. The _mondes_ thought it terribly wicked, not the deed you know,
+but the audacity of a cavalry man's having potted a Very Serene High
+Mightiness. In a Duke, all these crimes and crimcons, though as scarlet,
+would have been held but the crimson gold-dotted fruit adorning the
+strawberry-leaves; Deadly Dash, a Light Dragoon whose name was signed to
+plenty of "floating little bills," could not bid high enough to purchase
+his pardon from society, which says to its sinners with austere front of
+virtue, "Oblivion cannot be hired,--unless," adds Society, dropping to
+mellowest murmur her whisper, "unless you can give us a premium!" So
+Dash, with a certain irresistible though private pressure upon him from
+the Horse Guards--sent in his papers to sell. What had been done so
+often could not now be done again; the first steeple-chaser in the
+Service could not at last even save his stake, but was finally,
+irretrievably, struck out.
+
+Certainly the fellow was a bad fellow, and deserved his crash so far; he
+had no scruples, and no conscience; he spared neither woman nor man; of
+remorse he had never felt a twinge, and if you were in his path he would
+pick you off some way or other as indifferently as if you were one of
+the pigeons at Hornsey. And yet, he had been kind to me, though I was a
+young one; with his own variable Free Lance sort of liberality, the man
+would give his last sou to get you out of any difficulty, and would
+carry off your mistress, or beggar you at chicken-hazard, with the
+self-same pleasant air the next day: and I could not help being sorry
+that things had come to this pass with him. He shot so superbly! Put him
+where you would, in a warm corner while the bouquets of pheasants were
+told off; in a punt, while a square half-mile of wild-ducks whirred up
+from the marshes; in a dark forest alley in Transylvania, while the
+great boar rushed down through the twilight, foaming blood and roaring
+fury; in a still Indian night with the only target here and there a
+dusky head diving amidst the jhow jungle three hundred yards away: put
+him where you would, he was such a magnificent shot! The sins of a
+Frankenstein should not have lost such a marksman as Deadly Dash to the
+Service.
+
+But the authorities thought otherwise; they were not open to the fact,
+that the man who had been out in more _barrière_ affairs, and had won
+more Grand Military stakes than any other, should, by all laws of
+war-policy, have had his blackest transgressions forgiven him, till he
+could have been turned to account against Ghoorkas, Maories, or Caffres.
+The authorities instead, made him send in his papers, not knowing the
+grand knack of turning a scamp into a hero--a process that requires some
+genius and some clairvoyance in the manipulator,--and Deadly Dash, with
+his lightest and airiest laugh, steamed down channel one late autumn
+night, marked, disgraced, and outlawed, for creditors by the score were
+after him, knowing very well that he and his old gay lawless life, and
+his own wild pleasant world, and his old lands yonder in the green heart
+of the grass countries that had gone rood by rood to the Hebrews, were
+all divorced for ever with a great gulf between them that could never
+close.
+
+So he dropped out of the Service, out of the country, out of
+remembrance, out of regret; nobody said a De Profundis over him, and
+some men breathed the freer. We can rarely be sure of any who will be
+sorry to miss us; but we can always be certain of some to be glad we are
+gone. And in the Killer's case these last were legion. Here and there
+were one or two who owed him a wayward, inconstant bizarre fit of
+generosity; but there were on the other hand hundreds who owed him
+nothing less than entire ruin.
+
+So Deadly Dash went with nobody to regret him and nobody to think of him
+for a second, after the nine hours' wonder in the clubs and the
+mess-rooms that his levanting "under a cloud" occasioned; and so the old
+sobriquet, that had used to have so signal a notoriety, dropped out of
+men's mouths and was forgotten. Where he was gone no one knew; and to be
+sure no one asked. Metaphorically, he was gone to the devil; and when a
+man takes that little tour, if he furnish talk for a day he has had very
+distinguished and lengthened obsequies as friendship goes in this world.
+Now and then in the course of half-a-dozen years I remembered him, when
+I looked up at the head of a Royal over my mantelpiece, with thirteen
+points, that he had stalked once in Ayrshire and given to me; but nobody
+else gave a thought to the Killer. Time passed, and whether he had been
+killed fighting in Chili or Bolivia, shot himself at Homburg, become
+Mussulman and entered the Sultan's army, gone to fight with the Kabyles
+and Bedouins, turned brigand for the Neapolitan Bourbons, or sunk
+downward by the old well-worn stage, so sadly and so often travelled,
+into an adventurer living by the skill of his écarté and the dread
+surety of his shot, we did not know; we did not care. When society has
+given a man the sack, it matters uncommonly little whether he has given
+himself a shroud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seven or eight years after the name of Deadly Dash had ceased to be
+heard among cavalry men, and quoted on all things "horsey," whether of
+the flat or of the ridge and furrow, I was in the Confederate States, on
+leave for a six months' tour there. It was after Lee's raid across the
+border and the days of Gettysburgh. I had run the blockade in a
+fast-built clipper, and pushed on at once into the heart of Virginia, to
+be in the full heat of whatever should come on the cards; cutting the
+cities rather, and keeping as much as I could to the camps and the
+woods, for I wanted to see the real thing in the rough. In my relish for
+adventure, however, I was a trifle, as it proved, too foolhardy.
+
+Starting alone one day to cross the thirty miles or so that parted me
+from the encampment of some Virginian Horse, with no other companions
+than a very weedy-looking steel gray, and a brace of revolvers, I fairly
+"lost tracks," and had not a notion of my way out of a wilderness of
+morass and forest, all glowing with the scarlet and the green of the
+Indian summer. Here and there were beautiful wild pools and lakes shut
+in by dense vegetation, so dense, that at noon it was dark as twilight,
+and great tablelands of rock jutted out black and rugged in places; but
+chiefly as far as was to be seen stretched the deep entangled woodland,
+with nothing else to break it, brooding quietly over square leagues of
+swamp. The orioles were singing their sweetest, wildest music overhead;
+sign of war there was none, save to be sure, now and then when I came on
+a black, arid circle, where a few charred timbers showed where a hut had
+been burnt down and deserted, or my horse shied and snorted uneasily,
+and half stumbled over some shapeless log on the ground--a log that when
+you looked closer was the swollen shattered body of a man who had died
+hard, with the grasses wrenched up in his fingers that the ants had
+eaten bare, and the hollows of his eyes staring open where the carrion
+birds had plucked the eyeballs out. And near him there were sure to be,
+half sunk in swamp, or cleaned to skeletons by the eagles and hawks,
+five, or ten, or twenty more, lying nameless and unburied there, where
+they had fallen in some scuffle with pickets, or some stray cavalry
+skirmish, to be told off as "missing," and to be thought of no more.
+These groups I came upon more than once rotting among the rich Virginian
+soil, while the scarlet and purple weight of blossoming boughs swayed
+above, and the bright insect life fluttered humming around them; they
+were the only highway marks through the wooded wilderness.
+
+So lonely was it mile after mile, and so little notion had I of either
+the way in or the way out, that the _hallali!_ of a boar-hunt, or the
+sweet mellow tongues of the hounds when they have found in the coverts
+at home, were never brighter music to me than the sharp crack of rifles
+and the long sullen roll of musketry as they suddenly broke the silence,
+while I rode along, firing from the west that lay on my left. The gray,
+used to powder, pointed his ears and quickened his pace. Though a weedy,
+fiddle-headed beast, his speed was not bad, and I rattled him over the
+ground, crashing through undergrowth and wading through pools, with all
+my blood up at the tune of those ringing cheery shots; the roar growing
+louder and louder with every moment, and the sulphur scent of the smoke
+borne stronger and stronger down on the wind, till the horse broke
+_pêle-mêle_ through a network of parasites; dashed downward along a
+slope of dank herbage, slipping at every step, and with his hind legs
+tucked under him; and shot, like a run-in for a race, on to a green
+plateau, where the skirmish was going on in hot earnest.
+
+A glance told me how the land lay. A handful of Southern troopers held
+their own with tremendous difficulty against three divisions of Federal
+infantry, whom they had unexpectedly encountered, as the latter were
+marching across the plateau with some batteries of foot artillery,--the
+odds were probably scarcely less than five to one. The Southerners were
+fighting magnificently, as firm in their close square of four hundred as
+the Consular Guard at Marengo, but so surrounded by the Northern host,
+that they looked like a little island circled round by raging breakers.
+Glancing down on the plain as my horse scoured and slid along the
+incline, the nucleus of Southerners looked hopelessly lost amidst the
+belching fire and pressing columns of the enemy. The whole was
+surrounded and hidden by the whirling clouds of dust and smoke that
+swirled above in a white heavy mist; but through this the sabres
+flashed, the horses' heads reared, maddened and foam-covered, like so
+many bas-reliefs of Bucephalus, the lean rifle-barrels glittered, and
+for a moment I saw the Southern leader, steady as a rock in the centre,
+hewing like a trooper right and left, and with a gray heron's feather
+floating from his sombrero, a signal that seemed as well known and as
+closely followed as the snowy plume of Murat.
+
+To have looked on at this and not have taken a share in it, one would
+have been a stone, not a man, and much less a cavalry-man; I need not
+tell you that I smashed the gray across the plateau, hurled him into the
+thick of the mêlée, dashed _somehow_ through the Federal ranks, and was
+near the gray plume and fighting for the Old Dominion before you could
+have shouted a stave of "Dixie." I was a "non-combatant," I was a
+"neutral"--delicate Anglo-euphemism for coward, friend to neither and
+traitor to both!--I was on a tour of observation, and had no business to
+fire a shot for one or the other perhaps, but I forgot all that, and
+with the bridle in my teeth and a pistol in each hand, I rode down to
+give one blow the more for the weak side.
+
+How superbly that Gray Feather fought!--keeping his men well up round
+him, though saddle after saddle was emptied, and horse after horse tore
+riderless out of the ranks, or reeled over on their heads, spurting
+blood, he sat like a statue, he fought like a Titan, his sabre seemed
+flashing unceasingly in the air, so often was it raised to come down
+again like lightning through a sword-arm, or lay open a skull to the
+brains; the shots ploughed up the earth round him, and rattled like hail
+through the air, a score of balls were aimed at him alone, a score of
+sabres crossed his own; but he was cool as St. Lawrence ice, and laid
+the men dead in struggling heaps under his charger's hoofs; only to
+fight near the man was a glorious intoxication; you seemed to "breathe
+blood" till you got drunk with it.
+
+The four hundred had been mowed down to two; I did as good work as I
+could, having wrenched a sword out of some dead trooper's hand; but I
+was only one, and the Northerners counted by thousands. Come out of it
+alive I never expected to do; but I vow it was the happiest day of my
+life--the pace was so splendidly fast! The Gray Feather at last glanced
+anxiously around; his men stuck like death to him, ready to be hewed
+down one by one, and die game; his teeth were set tight, and his eyes
+had a flash in them like steel. "Charge! and cut through!" he shouted,
+his voice rolling out like a clarion, giving an order that it seemed
+could be followed by nothing short of supernatural aid. The Southrons
+thought otherwise; they only heard to obey; they closed up as steadily
+as though they were a squadron on parade, despite the great gaps between
+them of dying chargers, and of heaped-up killed and wounded, that broke
+their ranks like so much piled stones and timber; they halted a moment,
+the murderous fire raking them right and left, front and rear; then,
+with that dense mass of troops round them, they charged; shivered the
+first line that wedged them in; pierced by sheer force of impetus the
+columns that opened fire in their path; wrenched themselves through as
+through the steel jaws of a trap, and swept out on to the green level of
+the open plateau, with a wild rallying Virginian shout that rings in my
+ears now!
+
+I have been in a good many hot things in my time; but I never knew
+anything that for pace and long odds could be anything near to that.
+
+I had kept with them through the charge with no other scratch than a
+shoulder cut; and I had been close to their chief through it all. When
+we were clean out on the plains beyond pursuit--for the Union-men had
+not a squadron of cavalry, though their guns at long range belched a
+storm in our wake--he turned in his saddle without checking his mare's
+thundering gallop, and levelled his rifle that was slung at his aide.
+"I'll have the General, anyhow," he said, quietly taking aim--still
+without checking his speed--at the knot of staff-officers that now were
+scarce more than specks in a blurred mass of mist. He fired; and the
+centre figure in that indistinct and fast-vanishing group fell from the
+saddle, while the yell of fury that the wind faintly floated nearer told
+us that the shot had been deadly. The Gray Feather laughed, a careless
+airy laugh of triumph, while he swept on at topmost pace; a little more,
+and we should dive down into the dark aisles of grand forest-trees and
+cavernous ravines of timber roads, safe from all pursuit; a second, and
+we should reach the green core of the safe and silent woods, the cool
+shelter of mountain-backed lakes, the sure refuge of tangled coverts. It
+was a guinea to a shilling that we gained it; it was all but won; a
+moment's straight run-in, and we should have it! But that moment was not
+to be ours.
+
+Out of the narrow cleft of a valley on the left, all screened with
+hanging tumbled foliage, and dark as death, there poured suddenly across
+our front a dense body of Federal troopers and Horse Artillery, two
+thousand strong at the least, full gallop, to join the main army. We
+were surrounded in a second, in a second overpowered by sheer strength
+of numbers; only two hundred of us, many sorely wounded, and on mounts
+that were jaded and ridden out of all pace, let us fight as we would,
+what could we do against fresh and picked soldiers, swarming down on us
+like a swarm of hornets, while in our rear was the main body through
+which we had just cut our way? That the little desperate band "died
+hard," I need not say; but the vast weight of the fresh squadrons
+pressed our little knot in as if between the jaws of a trap, crushing it
+like grain between two iron weights. The Gray Feather fought like all
+the Knights of the Round Table merged in one, till he streamed with
+blood from head to foot, and his sabre was hacked and bent like an
+ash-stick, as did a man near him, a tall superb Virginian, handsome as
+any Vandyke or Velasquez picture. At last both the Gray Feather and he
+went down, not by death--it would not come to them--but literally hurled
+out of their stirrup-leathers by crowding scores who poured on them,
+hamstrung or shot their horses, and made them themselves prisoners--not,
+however, till the assailants lay heaped ten deep about their slaughtered
+chargers. For myself, a blow from a sabre, a second afterwards, felled
+me like so much wood. I saw a whirling blaze of sun, a confused circling
+eddy of dizzy color, forked flames, and flashes of light, and I knew no
+more, till I opened my eyes in a dark, square, unhealthy wooden chamber,
+with a dreamy but settled conviction that I was dead, and in the family
+vault, far away under the green old elms of Warwickshire, with the rooks
+cawing above my head.
+
+As the delusion dissipated and the mists cleared, I saw through the
+uncertain light a face that was strangely but vaguely familiar to me,
+connected somehow with incoherent memories of life at home, and yet
+unknown to me. It was bronzed deeply, bearded, with flakes of gray among
+the fairness of the hair, much aged, much worn, scarred and stained just
+now with the blood of undressed wounds and the dust of the combat, for
+there was no one merciful enough there to bring a stoup of water; it was
+rougher, darker, sterner, and yet, with it all, nobler, too, than the
+face that I had known. I lay and stared blankly at it: it was the face
+of the Southern Leader of the morning, who sat now, on a pile of straw,
+looking wearily out to the dying sun, one amongst a group of twenty,
+prisoners all, like myself. I moved, and he turned his eyes on me; they
+had laid me down there as a "gone 'coon," and were amazed to see me come
+to life again. As our eyes met I knew him--he was Deadly Dash.
+
+The old name left my lips with a shout as strong as a half-killed man
+can give. It seemed so strange to meet him there, captives together in
+the Unionists' hands! It struck him with a sharp shock. England and he
+had been divorced so long. I saw the blood leap to his forehead, and the
+light into his glance; then, with a single stride, he reached the straw
+I lay on, holding my hands in his, looking on me with the kindly eyes
+that had used to make me like the Killer, and greeting me with a warmth
+that was only damped and darkened by regret that my battle done for fair
+Virginia had laid me low, a prisoner with himself, and that we should
+meet thus, in so sharp an hour of adversity, with nothing before us but
+the Capitol, the Carroll prison, or worse. Yet thus we did meet once
+more and I knew at last what had been the fate of Deadly Dash, whom
+England had outlawed as a scoundrel, and the New World had found a hero.
+
+Though suffering almost equally himself, he tended me with the
+kindliest sympathy; he came out of his own care to ponder how possible
+it might be to get me eventual freedom as a tourist and a mere
+accidental sharer in the fray; he was interested to hear all that I
+would tell him of my own affairs and of his old friends in England, but
+of himself he would not speak; he simply said he had been fighting for
+the Confederacy ever since the war had begun; and I saw that he strove
+in vain to shake off a deep heart-broken gloom that seemed to have
+settled on him, doubtless, as I thought, from the cruel defeat of the
+noon, and the hopeless captivity into which he, the most restless and
+the most daring soldier that oversaw service, was now flung.
+
+I noticed, too, that every now and then while he sat beside me, talking
+low--for there were sentinels both in and out the rude outhouse of the
+farm that had been turned into our temporary prison--his eyes wandered
+to the gallant Virginian who had been felled down with himself, and who,
+covered like himself with blood and dust, and with his broken left arm
+hanging shattered, lay on the bare earth in a far-off corner motionless
+and silent, with his lips pressed tight under their long black
+moustaches, and such a mute unutterable agony in his eyes as I never saw
+in any human face, though I have seen deaths enough in the field and the
+sick-ward. The rest of the Confederate captives were more ordinary men
+(although from none was a single word of lament ever wrenched); but this
+superb Virginian excited my interest, and I asked his name, in that sort
+of languid curiosity at passing things which comes with weakness, of the
+Killer, whose glance so incessantly wandered towards him.
+
+"Stuart Lane," he answered, curtly, and added no more; but if I ever saw
+in this world hatred, passionate, ungovernable, and intense, I saw it in
+the Killer's look as his glance flashed once more on to the motionless
+form of the handsomest, bravest, and most dauntless officer of his
+gallant regiment that he had seen cut to pieces there on that accursed
+plateau.
+
+"A major of yours?" I asked him. "Ah, I thought so; he fought
+magnificently. How wretched he looks, though he is too proud to show
+it!"
+
+"He is thinking of--of his bride. He married three weeks ago."
+
+The words were simple enough, and spoken very quietly; but there was an
+unsteadiness, as of great effort, over them; and the heel of his heavy
+spurred jack-boot crashed into the dry mud with a grinding crush, as
+though it trod terrible memories down. Was it a woman who was between
+these two comrades in arms and companions in adversity? I wondered if it
+were so, even in that moment of keen and heavy anxiety for us all, as I
+looked at the face that bent very kindly over the straw to which a shot
+in the knee and a deep though not dangerous shoulder-wound bound me. It
+was very different to the face of eight or nine years before--browner,
+harder, graver far; and yet there was a look as if "sorrow had passed by
+there," and swept the old heartlessness and gay callousness away,
+burning them out in its fires.
+
+Silence fell over us in that wretched outshed where we were huddled
+together. I was hot with incipient fever, and growing light-headed
+enough, though I knew what passed before me, to speak to Dash once or
+twice in a dreamy idea that we were in the Shires watching the run-in
+for the "Soldiers' Blue Riband." The minutes dragged very drearily as
+the day wore itself away. There were the sullen monotonous tramp of the
+sentinels to and fro, and, from without, the neighing of horses, the
+bugle calls, the roll of the drums, the challenge of outposts--all the
+varied, endless sounds of a camp; for the farmhouse in whose shed we
+were thrown was the head-quarters _pro tem_. of the Federal General who
+commanded the Divisions that had cost the Killer's handful of Horse so
+fearfully dear. We were prisoners, and escape was impossible. All arms
+of course had been removed from us; most, like myself, were too disabled
+by wounds to have been able to avail ourselves of escape had it been
+possible; and the guard was doubled both in and out the shed; there was
+nothing before any of us but the certainty of imprisonment in all its
+horrors in some far-off fortress or obscure jail. There was the possible
+chance that, since certain officers on whom the Northerners set great
+store had lately fallen into Southern hands, an exchange might be
+effected; yet, on the other side, graver apprehensions still existed,
+since we knew that the General into whose camp we had been brought had
+proclaimed his deliberate purpose of shooting the three next
+Secessionist officers who fell into his power, in requital for three of
+his own officers who had been shot, or were said to have been shot, by a
+Southern raider. We knew very well that, the threat made, it would be
+executed; and each of us, as the sun sank gradually down through the hot
+skies that were purple and stormy after the burning day, knew, too, that
+it might never rise again to greet our sight. None of us would have
+heeded whether a ball would hit or miss us in the open, in a fair fight,
+in a man-to-man struggle; but the boldest and most careless amidst us
+felt it very bitter to die like dogs, to die as prisoners.
+
+Even Deadly Dash, coolest, most hardened, most devil-may-care of
+soldiers and of sinners, sat with his gaze fastened on the slowly
+sinking light in the west with the shadow of a great pain upon his face,
+while every now and then his glance wandered to Stuart Lane, and a
+quick, irrepressible shudder shook him whenever it did so. The Virginian
+never moved; no sign of any sort escaped him; but the passionate misery
+that looked out of his eyes I never saw equalled, except, perhaps, in
+the eyes of a stag that I once shot in Wallachia, and that looked up
+with just such a look before it died. He was thinking, no doubt, of the
+woman he loved--wooed amidst danger, won amidst calamity, scarcely
+possessed ere lost for ever;--thinking of her proud beauty, of her
+bridal caress, that would never again touch his lips, of her fair life
+that would perish with the destruction of his.
+
+Exhaustion from the loss of blood made everything pass dreamily, and yet
+with extraordinary clearness, before me, I felt in a wakening dream, and
+had no sense whatever of actual existence, and yet the whole scene was
+so intensely vital and vivid to me, that it seemed burned into my very
+brain itself. It was like the phantasmagoria of delirium, utterly
+impalpable, but yet intensely real. I had no power to act or resist, but
+I seemed to have ten times redoubled power to see and hear and feel; I
+was aware of all that passed, with a hundredfold more susceptibility to
+it than I ever felt in health. I remember a total impossibility that
+came on me to decide whether I was dreaming or was actually awake.
+Twilight fell, night came; there was a change of sentries, and a light,
+set up in a bottle, shed a flickering, feeble, yellow gleam over the
+interior of the shed, on the dark Rembrandt faces of the Southerners and
+on the steel of the guards' bayonets. And I recollect that the Killer,
+who sat by the tossed straw on which they had flung me, laughed the old,
+low, sweet, half-insolent laugh that I had known so well in early days.
+"_Il faut souffrir pour être beau!_ We are picturesque, at any rate,
+quite Salvatoresque! Little Dickey would make a good thing of us if he
+could paint us now. He is alive, I suppose?"
+
+I answered him I believe in the affirmative; but the name of that little
+Bohemian of the Brush, who had used to be our butt and _protégé_ in
+England, added a haze the more to my senses. By this time I had
+difficulty to hold together the thread of how, and when, and why I had
+thus met again the face that looked out on me so strangely familiarly in
+the dull, sickly trembling of the feeble light of this black, noisome
+shed in the heart of Federal Divisions.
+
+Through that haze I heard the challenge of the sentries; I saw a soldier
+prod with his bayonet a young lad who had fainted from hæmorrhage, and
+whom he swore at for shamming. I was conscious of the entrance of a
+group of officers, whom I knew afterwards to be the Northern General and
+his staff, who came to look at their captives. I knew, but only dreamily
+still, that these men were the holders of our fate, and would decide on
+it then and there. I felt a listless indifference, utter and opium-like,
+as to what became of me, and I remember that Stuart Lane, and Dash
+himself, rose together, and stood looking with a serene and haughty
+disdain down on the conquerors who held their lives in the
+balance--without a trace of pain upon their faces now. I remember how
+like they looked to stags that turn at bay; like the stags, outnumbered,
+hunted down, with the blood of open wounds and the dust of the long
+chase on them; but, like the deer, too, uncowed, and game to the finish.
+
+Very soon their doom was given. Seven were to be sent back with a flag
+of truce to be exchanged for the seven Federal officers they wanted out
+of the Southerners' hands, ten were to be transmitted to the prisons of
+the North,--three were to be shot at day-dawn in the reprisal before
+named. The chances of life and of death were to be drawn for by lottery,
+and at once.
+
+Not a sound escaped the Virginians, and not a muscle of their English
+Leader's face moved: the prisoners, to a man, heard impassively, with a
+grave and silent dignity, that they were to throw the die in hazard,
+with death for the croupier and life for the stake.
+
+The General and his staff waited to amuse themselves with personally
+watching the turns of this new _Rouge et Noir_; gambling in lives was a
+little refreshing change that sultry, dreary, dun-colored night, camped
+amongst burnt-out farms and wasted corn-lands.
+
+Slips of paper, with "exchange," "death," and "imprisonment" written on
+them in the numbers needed, were made ready, rolled up, and tossed into
+an empty canteen; each man was required to come forward and draw, I
+alone excepted because I was an officer of the British Army. I remember
+passionately arguing that they had no right to exempt me, since I had
+been in the fray, and had killed three men on my own hook, and would
+have killed thirty more had I had the chance; but I was perhaps
+incoherent in the fever that was fast seizing all my limbs from the rack
+of undressed wounds; at any rate, the Northerners took no heed, save to
+force me into silence, and the drawing began. As long as I live I shall
+see that night in remembrance with hideous distinctness: the low
+blackened shed with its foetid odors from the cattle lately foddered
+there; the yellow light flaring dully here and there; the glisten of the
+cruel rifles; the heaps of straw and hay soaked with clotted blood; the
+group of Union Officers standing near the doorway; and the war-worn
+indomitable faces of the Southerners, with the fairer head and slighter
+form of their English chief standing out slightly in front of all.
+
+The Conscription of Death commenced; a Federal private took the paper
+from each man as he drew it, and read the word of destiny aloud. Not one
+amongst them faltered or paused one moment; each went,--even those most
+exhausted, most in agony,--with a calm and steady step, as they would
+have marched up to take the Flag of the Stars and Bars from Lee or
+Longstreet. Not one waited a second's breath before he plunged his hand
+into the fatal lottery.
+
+Deadly Dash was the first called: there was not one shadow of anxiety
+upon his face; it was calm without effort, careless without bravado,
+simply, entirely indifferent. They took his paper and read the words of
+safety and of life--"Exchange." Then, for one instant, a glory of hope
+flashed like the sun into his eyes--to die the next; die utterly.
+
+Three followed him, and they all drew the fiat for detention; the fifth
+called was Stuart Lane.
+
+Let him have suffered as he would, he gave no sign of it now; he
+approached with his firm, bold cavalry step, and his head haughtily
+lifted; the proud, fiery, dauntless Cavalier of ideal and of romance.
+Without a tremor in his wrist he drew his paper out and gave it.
+
+One word alone fell distinct on the silence like the hiss of a shot
+through the night--"_Death!_"
+
+He bowed his head slightly as if in assent, and stepped backward--still
+without a sign.
+
+His English chief gave him one look,--it was that of merciless
+exultation, of brutal joy, of dark, Cain-like, murderous hate; but it
+passed, passed quickly: Dash's head sank on his chest, and on his face
+there was the shadow, I think, of a terrible struggle--the shadow, I
+know, of a great remorse. He strove with his longing greed for this
+man's destruction; he knew that he thirsted _to see him die_.
+
+The Virginian stood erect and silent: a single night and the strong and
+gallant life, the ardent passions, the chivalrous courage to do and
+dare, and the love that was in its first fond hours would all be
+quenched in him as though they had never been; but he was a soldier, and
+he gave no sign that his death-warrant was not as dear to him as his
+bridal-night had been. Even his conquerors cast one glance of admiration
+on him; it was only his leader who felt for him no pang of reverence and
+pity.
+
+The lottery continued; the hazard was played out; life and death were
+scattered at reckless chance amidst the twenty who were the playthings
+of that awful gaming; all had been done in perfect silence on the part
+of the condemned; not one seemed to think or to feel for himself, and
+in those who were sent out to their grave not a grudge lingered against
+their comrades of happier fortune. Deadly Dash, whose fate was release,
+alone stood with his head sunk, thoughtful and weary.
+
+The three condemned to execution were remanded to separate and solitary
+confinement, treated already as felons for that one short night which
+alone remained to them. As his guards removed him, Stuart Lane paused
+slightly, and signed to his chief to approach him; he held out his hand
+to Dash, and his voice was very low, though it came to my ear where they
+stood beside me: "We were rivals once, but we may be friends _now_. As
+you have loved her, be pitiful to her when you tell her of my
+death,--God knows it may be hers! As you have loved her, feel what it is
+to die without one last look on her face!"
+
+Then, and then only, his bronze cheek grew white as a woman's, and his
+whole frame shook with one great silent sob; his guard forced him on,
+and his listener had made him no promise, no farewell; neither had he
+taken his hand. He had heard in silence, with a dark and evil gloom
+alone upon him.
+
+The Federal General sharply summoned him from his musing, as the chief
+of those to be exchanged on the morrow under a white flag of parley;
+there were matters to be stated to and to be arranged with him.
+
+"I will only see you alone, General," he answered curtly.
+
+The Northerner stared startled, and casting a glance over the
+redoubtable leader of horse, whose gray feather had become known and
+dreaded, thought of possible assassination. Deadly Dash laughed his old
+light, ironic, contemptuous laugh.
+
+"A wounded unarmed man can scarcely kill you! Have as many of your
+staff about you as you please, but let none of my Virginians be present
+at our interview."
+
+The Northerners thought he intended to desert to them, or betray some
+movement of importance, and assented; and he went out with them from the
+cattle-shed into the hot, stormy night, and the Southerners who were
+condemned to death and detention looked after him with a long, wistful,
+dog-like look. They had been with him in so many spirit-stirring days
+and nights of peril, and they knew that never would they meet again. He
+had not given one of them a word of adieu; he had killed too many to be
+touched by his soldiers' loss. Who could expect pity from Deadly Dash?
+
+An hour passed; I was removed under a guard to a somewhat better lodging
+in the granary, where a surgeon hastily dressed my wounds, and left me
+on a rough pallet with a jug of water at my side, and the sentinel for
+my only watcher, bidding me "sleep." Sleep! I could not have slept for
+my ransom. Though life had hardened me, and made me sometimes, as I
+fear, callous enough, I could not forget those who were to die when the
+sun rose; specially, I could not forget that gallant Virginian to whom
+life was so precious, yet who gave himself with so calm a fortitude to
+his fate. The rivalry, I thought, must be deep and cruel, to make the
+man from whom he had won what they both loved turn from him in hatred,
+even in such extremity as his. On the brink of a comrade's grave, feud
+might surely have been forgotten?
+
+All that had just passed was reeling deliriously through my brain, and I
+was panting in the sheer irritation and exhaustion of gunshot wounds,
+when through the gloom Dash entered the granary, closely guarded, but
+allowed to be with me on account of our common country. Never was I more
+thankful to see a familiar face from home than to see his through the
+long watches of that burning, heavy, interminable night. He refused to
+rest; he sat by me, tending me as gently as a woman, though he was
+suffering acutely himself from the injuries received in the course of
+the day; he watched me unweariedly, though often and often his gaze and
+his thoughts wandered far from me, as he looked out through the open
+granary door, past the form of the sentinel, out to the starry solemn
+skies, the deep woods, and the dark silent land over which the stars
+were brooding, large and clear.
+
+Was he thinking of the Virginian whose life would die out for ever, with
+the fading of those stars, or of the woman whom he had lost, whose love
+was the doomed soldier's, and would never be his own, though the grave
+closed over his rival with the morrow's sun? Dreamily, half
+unconsciously, in the excitement of fever, I asked him of her of whom I
+knew nothing:
+
+"Did you love that woman so well?"
+
+His eyes were still fixed on the distant darkening skies, and he
+answered quietly, as though rather to his own thoughts than my
+words,--"Yes: I love her--as I never loved in that old life in England;
+as we never love but once, I think."
+
+"And she?"
+
+"And she--has but one thought in the world--_him_."
+
+His voice, as he answered, now grated with dull, dragging misery over
+the words.
+
+"Had she so much beauty that she touched you like this?"
+
+He smiled slightly, a faint, mournful smile, unutterably sad.
+
+"Yes; she is very lovely, but her beauty is the least rare charm. She is
+a woman for whom a man would live his greatest, and if he cannot live
+for her--may--die."
+
+The utterance was very slow, and seemed to lie on me like a hand on my
+lips compelling me to silence; he had forgotten all, except his memory
+of her, and where he sat with his eyes fixed outward on the drifting
+clouds that floated across the stars, I saw his lips quiver once, and I
+heard him murmur half aloud: "My darling! My darling! You will know how
+I loved you _then_----"
+
+And the silence was never broken between us, but he sat motionless thus
+all the hours through, looking out at the deep still woods, and the
+serene and lustrous skies, till the first beams of the sun shone over
+the hills in the east, and I shuddered, where I lay, at its light;--for
+I knew it was the signal of death.
+
+Then he arose, and bent towards me, and the kindly eyes of old looked
+down on mine.
+
+"Dear old fellow, the General expects me at dawn. I must leave you just
+now; say good-bye."
+
+His hand closed on mine, he looked on me one moment longer, a little
+lingeringly, a little wistfully, then he turned and went out with his
+guard; went out into the young day that was just breaking on the world.
+
+I watched his shadow as it faded, and I saw that the sun had risen
+wholly; and I thought of those who were to die with the morning light.
+
+All was very calm for a while; then the beat of a drum rolled through
+the quiet of the dawn, and the measured tramp of armed men sounded
+audibly; my heart stood still, my lips felt parched,--I knew the errand
+of that column marching so slowly across the parched turf. A little
+while longer yet, and I heard the sharp ring of the ramrods being
+withdrawn, and the dull echo of the charge being rammed down: with a
+single leap, as though the bullets were through me, I sprang, weak as I
+was, from my wretched pallet, and staggered to the open doorway, leaning
+there against the entrance powerless and spell-bound. I saw the file of
+soldiers loading; I saw the empty coffin-shells; I saw three men
+standing bound, their forms distinct against the clear, bright haze of
+morning, and the fresh foliage of the woods. Two of them were
+Virginians, but the third was not Stuart Lane With a great cry I sprang
+forward, but the guards seized my arms and held me, helpless as a woman,
+in their gripe. He whom we had called Deadly Dash heard, and looked up
+and smiled. His face was tranquil and full of light, as though the pure
+peace of the day shone there.
+
+The gripe of the sentinels held me as if in fetters of iron; the world
+seemed to rock and reel under me, a sea of blood seemed eddying before
+my eyes; the young day was dawning, and murder was done in its early
+hours, and I was held there to look on,--its witness, yet powerless to
+arrest it! I heard the formula--so hideous then!--"Make
+ready!"--"Present!"--"Fire!" I saw the long line of steel tubes belch
+out their smoke and flame. I heard the sullen echo of the report roll
+down from the mountains above. When the mist cleared away, the three
+figures stood no longer clear against the sunlight; they had fallen.
+
+With the mad violence of desperation I wrenched myself from my guards,
+and staggered to him where he lay; he was not quite dead yet; the balls
+had passed through his lungs, but he breathed still; his eyes were
+unclosed, and the gleam of a last farewell came in them. He smiled
+slightly, faintly once more.
+
+"She will know how I loved her now. Tell her I died for her," he said
+softly, while his gaze looked upwards to the golden sun-rays rising in
+the east.
+
+And with these words life passed away, the smile still lingering gently
+on his lips;--and I knew no more, for I fell like a man stunned down by
+him where he was stretched beside the grave that they had hewn for him
+ere he was yet dead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I knew when I saw him there, as well as I knew by detail long after,
+that he had offered his life for Stuart Lane's, and that it had been
+accepted; the Virginian, ignorant of the sacrifice made for him, had
+been sent to the Southern lines during the night, told by the
+Northerners that he was pardoned on his parole to return in his stead a
+distinguished Federal officer lately captured by him. He knew nothing,
+dreamt nothing, of the exchange by which his life was given back to the
+woman who loved him, when his English Leader died in his place as the
+sun rose over the fresh summer world, never again to rise for those
+whose death-shot rang sullen and shrill through its silence.
+
+So Deadly Dash died, and his grave is nameless and unknown there under
+the shadow of the great Virginian forests. He was outlawed, condemned,
+exiled, and the world would see no good in him; sins were on him
+heavily, and vices lay darkly at his door; but when I think of that
+grave in the South where the grass grows so rankly now, and only the
+wild deer pauses, I doubt if there was not that in him which may well
+shame the best amongst us. We never knew him justly till he perished
+there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And my friend who told me this said no more, but took up his
+_brûle-gueule_ regretfully. The story is given as he gave it, and the
+States could whisper from the depths of their silent woods many tales of
+sacrifice as generous, of fortitude as great. That when he had related
+it he was something ashamed of having felt it so much, is true; and you
+must refer the unusual weakness, as he did, to the fact that he told it
+on the off-day of the Derby, after having put a cracker on Wild Charley.
+A sufficient apology for any number of frailties!
+
+
+
+
+THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING·
+
+OR,
+
+COACHES AND COUSINSHIP.
+
+
+Where the devil shall I go this Long? Paris is too hot; the inside of my
+adorable Château des Fleurs would give one a lively idea of the feelings
+of eels in a frying-pan. Rome's only fit to melt down puffy cardinals,
+as jocks set themselves before the kitchen fire preparatory to the
+Spring Meetings. In Switzerland there's nothing fit to eat. Spain might
+be the ticket--the Andalusians are a good-looking lot, but they haven't
+a notion of beer. Scotland I daren't enter, because I know I should get
+married under their rascally laws. I'd go to the Bads, but the V. P.'s
+fillies say they mean to do 'em this summer, and I won't risk meeting
+them if I know it; the baits they set to catch the unsuspecting are
+quite frightful. Where the devil _shall_ I go?
+
+So spoke Sydenham Morton, whilom Captain of Eton, now, in due course,
+having passed up to Kings, discussing ham-pie and audit, devils and
+coffee, while the June sun streamed through the large oriel windows.
+
+"_To_ the devil, I fear, if you only find your proper fraternity," said
+a man, coming in. Oak was never sported by Sydie, except when he was
+rattling certain little squares of ivory in boxes lined with green felt.
+
+"Ah, Mr. Keane, is that you? Come in."
+
+The permission was needless, insomuch as Keane was already in and down
+on a rocking-chair.
+
+"One o'clock, and only just begun your breakfast! I have finished more
+than half my day's work."
+
+"I dare say," answered Sydie; "but one shining light like you,
+monseigneur, is enough for a college. Why should I exert myself? I swore
+I hadn't four marks a year, and I've my fellowship for telling the
+furbelow. We all go in for the dolce here except you, and you're such a
+patent machine for turning out Q. E. D.s by the dozen, that you can no
+more help working than the bed-maker can help taking my tea and saying
+the cat did it, and 'May she never be forgiven if she ever so much as
+looked at that there blessed lock.' I say, find a Q. E. D. for me, to
+the most vexatious problem, where I'm to go this Long?"
+
+"Go a quiet reading tour; mark out a regular plan, and travel somewhere
+rugged and lonely, with not a crinoline, or a trout-stream, or a pack of
+hounds within a hundred miles; the middle of Stonehenge, for example, or
+with the lighthouse men out at the Smalls or Eddystone. You'd do wonders
+when you came back, Sydie."
+
+Sydie shook his head and puffed gravely at his pipe.
+
+"Thank you, sir. Cramming's not my line. As for history, I don't see
+anything particularly interesting in the blackguardisms of men all dust
+and ashes and gelatine now; if I were the Prince of Wales, I might think
+it my duty to inquire into the characters of my grandfathers; but not
+being that individual, I find the Derby list much more suited to my
+genius. As for the classics, they won't help me to ask for my dinner at
+Tortoni's, nor to ingratiate myself with the women at the Maison Dorée;
+and I prefer following Ovid's counsels, and enjoying the Falernian of
+life represented in these days by milk-punch, to plodding through the De
+Officiis. As for mathematics, it _may_ be something very grand to draw
+triangles and circles till A meets B because C is as long as D; but I
+know, when I did the same operation in chalk when I was a small actor
+on the nursery floor, my nurse (who might have gone along with the
+barbarian who stuck Archimedes) called me an idle brat. Well, I say,
+about the Long? Where are _you_ going, most grave and reverent
+seignior?"
+
+"Where there are no impertinent boys, if there be such a paradise on
+earth," rejoined Keane, lighting his pipe. "I go to my moor, of course,
+for the 12th, but until then I haven't made up my mind. I think I shall
+scamper over South America; I want freshening up, and I've a great fancy
+to see those buried cities, not to mention a chance of buffalo hunting."
+
+"Travelling's such a bore," interrupted Sydie, stretching himself out
+like an india-rubber tube. "Talk of the cherub that's always sitting up
+aloft to watch over poor Jack, there are always ten thousand demons
+watching over the life of any luckless Æothen; there are the
+custom-house men, whose natural prey he becomes, and the hotel-keepers,
+who fasten on him to suck his life-blood, and there are the mosquitoes,
+and other things less minute but not less agonizing; and there are
+guides and muleteers, and waiters and ciceroni--oh, hang it!
+travelling's a dreadful bore, if it were only for the inevitable widow
+with four daughters whom you've danced with once at a charity ball, who
+rushes up to you on the Boulevards or a Rhine steamer, and tacks herself
+on to you, and whom it's well for you if you can shake off when you
+scatter the dust of the city from the sole of your foot."
+
+"You can't chatter, can you?"
+
+"Yes; my frænum was happily cut when I was a baby. Fancy what a loss the
+world would have endured if it hadn't been!" said Sydie, lazily shutting
+his half-closed blue eyes. "I say, the governor has been bothering my
+life out to go down to St. Crucis; he's an old brick, you know, and has
+the primest dry in the kingdom. I wish you'd come, will you? There's
+capital fishing and cricketing, and you'd keep me company. Do. You shall
+have the best mount in the kingdom, and the General will do you no end
+of good on Hippocrate's rule--contrarieties cure contrarieties."
+
+"I'll think about it; but you know I prefer solitude generally;
+misanthropical, I admit, but decidedly lucky for me, as my companions
+through life will always be my ink-stand, my terrier, and my papers. I
+have never wished for any other yet, and I hope I never shall. Are you
+going to smoke and drink audit on that sofa all day?"
+
+"No," answered Sydie, "I'm going to take a turn at beer and Brown's for
+a change. Well, I shall take you down with me on Tuesday, sir, so that's
+settled."
+
+Keane laughed, and after some few words on the business that had brought
+him thither, went across the quad to his own rooms to plunge into the
+intricacies of Fourrier and Laplace, or give the vigor of his brain to
+stuffing some young goose's empty head, or cramming some idle young dog
+with ballast enough to carry him through the shoals and quicksands of
+his Greats.
+
+Gerald Keane was a mathematical Coach, and had taken high honors--a rare
+thing for a Kingsman to do, for are they not, by their own confession,
+the laziest disciples of the dolce in the whole of Granta, invariably
+bumped and caught out, and from sheer idleness letting other men beat
+Lord's and shame the Oxford Eleven, and graduate with Double Firsts,
+while they lie perdus in the shades of Holy Henry? Keane, however, was
+the one exception to the rule. He was dreadfully wild, as ladies say,
+for his first term or two, though equally eloquent at the Union; then
+his family exulting in the accuracies of their prophecies regarding his
+worthlessness, and somebody else daring him to go in for honors, his
+pluck was put up, and he set himself to work to show them all what he
+could do if he chose. Once roused to put out his powers, he liked using
+them; the bother of the training over, it is no trouble to keep place as
+stroke-oar; and now men pointed him out in the Senate House, and at the
+Senior Fellows' table, and he bid fair to rank with the writer on Jasher
+and the author of the Inductive Sciences.
+
+People called him very cold. It was popularly averred that he had no
+more feeling than Roubilliac's or Thorwaldsen's statues; but as he was a
+great favorite with the under-grads, and always good-natured to them,
+there were a few men who doubted the theory, though _he_ never tried to
+refute or dispute it.
+
+Of all the young fellows, the one Keane liked the best, and to whom he
+was kindest, was Sydenham Morton--Sydie to everybody in Granta, from the
+little fleuriste opposite in King's Parade, to the V. P.'s wife, who
+petted him because his uncle was a millionnaire--the dearest fellow in
+the world, according to all the Cambridge young ladies--the darling of
+all the milliner and confectioner girls in Trumpington Street and Petty
+Cury--the best chap going among the kindred spirits, who got gated, and
+lectured, and rusticated for skying over to Newmarket, or pommelling
+bargees, or taking a lark over at Cherryhinton--the best-dressed,
+fastest, and most charming of Cantabs, as he himself would gravely
+assure you.
+
+They were totally dissimilar, and far asunder in position; but an affair
+on the slope of the Matterhorn, when the boy had saved the elder man's
+life, had riveted attachment between them, and bridged over the
+difference of their academical rank.
+
+The Commencement came and went, with its speeches, and its H.R.H.
+Chancellor, and its pretty women gliding among the elms of Neville's
+Court (poor Leslie Ellis's daily haunt), filling the grim benches of the
+Senate House, and flitting past the carved benches of King's Chapel.
+Granta was henceforth a desert to all Cambridge belles; they could walk
+down Trumpington Street without meeting a score of little straw hats,
+and Trumpington Street became as odious as Sahara; the "darling Backs"
+were free to them, and, of course, they who, by all relations, from
+those of Genesis to those of Vanity Fair, have never cared, save for
+_fruit défendu_, saw nothing to admire in the trees, and grass, and
+river, minus outriggers and collegians. There was a general exodus:
+Masters' red hoods, Fellows Commoners' gold-lace, Fellows' gown and
+mortar boards, morning chapel surplices, and under-grads' straw-hats and
+cutaway coats, all vanished from court and library, street and cloister.
+Cambridge was empty; the married Dons and their families went off to
+country-houses or Rhine steamers; Fellows went touring with views to
+mediæval architecture, Roman remains, Greek inscriptions, Paris laisser
+aller, or Norwegian fishing, according to their tastes and habits;
+under-grads scattered themselves over the face of the globe, and were to
+be found in knots of two or three calling for stout in Véfour's, kicking
+up a row with Austrian gendarmerie, chalking up effigies of Bomba on
+Italian walls, striding up every mountain from Skiddaw to the Pic du
+Midi, burrowing like rabbits in a warren for reading purposes on
+Dartmoor, kissing sunny-haired Gretchens in German hostelries, swinging
+through the Vaterland with knapsacks and sticks, doing a walking
+tour--in fact, swarming everywhere with their impossible French and
+hearty voices, and lithe English muscle, Granta marked on them as
+distinctly as an M.B. waistcoat marks an Anglican, or utter ignorance of
+modern politics a "great classic."
+
+Cambridge had emptied itself of the scores of naughty boys that lie in
+the arms of Mater, and on Tuesday Keane and Sydie were shaking and
+rattling over those dreadful nervous Eastern Counties tenders, through
+that picturesque and beautiful country that does permutations with such
+laudable perseverance on pollards, fens, and flats--flats, fens, and
+pollards--at the snail's pace that, according to the E.G.R., we must
+believe to be "express."
+
+"I wrote and told the governor you were coming down with me, sir," said
+Sydie, hanging up his hat. "I didn't tell him what a trouble I had to
+make you throw over South America for a fortnight, and come and taste
+his curry at the Beeches. You'll like the old boy; he's as hot and
+choleric, and as genial and good-hearted, as any old brick that ever
+walked. He was born as sweet-tempered and soft-mouthed as mamma when an
+eldest son waltzes twice with Adeliza, and the pepper's been put into
+him by the curry-powder, the gentlemanlike transportation, and the
+unlimited command over black devils, enjoyed by gentlemen of the
+H.E.I.C.S."
+
+"A nabob uncle," thought Keane. "Oh, I see, yellow, dyspeptic, always
+boring one with 'How to govern India,' and recollections of 'When I
+served with Napier.' What a fool I was to let Sydie persuade me to go. A
+month in Lima and the Pampas would be much pleasanter."
+
+"He came over last year," continued Sydie, in blissful ignorance, "and
+bought the Beeches, a very jolly place, only he's crammed it with
+everything anybody suggested, and tried anything that any farmer
+recommended, so that the house and the estate present a peculiar
+compendium of all theories of architecture, and a general exhibition of
+all sorts of tastes. He's his hobbies; pouncing on and apprehending
+small boys is one of 'em, for which practice he is endeared to the youth
+of St. Crucis as the 'old cove,' the 'Injian devil,' and like
+affectionate cognomens. But the General's weak point is me--me and
+little Fay."
+
+"His mare, I suppose?"
+
+"His mare!--bless my heart, no!--his mare!" And Sydie lay back, and
+laughed silently. "His mare! By George! what would she say? She's a good
+deal too lively a young lady to run in harness for anybody, though
+she's soft-mouthed enough when she's led. Mare! No, Fay's his niece--my
+cousin. Her father and my father went to glory when we were both smalls,
+and left us in legacy to the General, and a pretty pot of money the
+legacy has cost him."
+
+"Your cousin, indeed! The name's more like a mare's than a girl's,"
+answered Keane, thinking to himself. "A cousin! I just wish I'd known
+that. One of those Indian girls, I bet, tanned brown as a berry, flirts
+à outrance, has run the gauntlet of all the Calcutta balls, been engaged
+to men in all the Arms, talks horridly broad Anglo-Indian-English. I
+know the style."
+
+The engine screamed, and pulled up at the St. Crucis station, some
+seventy miles farther on, lying in the midst of Creswickian landscapes,
+with woodlands, and cottages, and sweet fresh stretches of meadow-land,
+such as do one's heart good after hard days and late nights in dust and
+gaslight.
+
+"Deuced fine points," said Sydie, taking the ribbons of a high-stepping
+bay that had brought one of the neatest possible traps to take him and
+Keane to the Beeches, and springing, in all his glory, to the box, than
+which no imperial throne could have offered to him one-half so
+delightful a seat. "Governor never keeps screws. What a crying shame
+we're not allowed to keep the sorriest hack at King's. That comes of
+gentlemen slipping into shoes that were meant for beggars. Hallo, there
+are the old beech-trees; I vow I can almost taste the curry and dry from
+looking at them."
+
+In dashed the bay through the park-gates, sending the shingle flying up
+in small simoons, and the rooks cawing in supreme surprise from their
+nests in the branches of the beech-trees.
+
+"Hallo, my ancient, how are you?" began Sydie to the butler, while that
+stately person expanded into a smile of welcome. "Down, dog, down! 'Pon
+my life, the old place looks very jolly. What have you hung all that
+armor up for;--to make believe our ancestors dwelt in these marble
+halls? How devilish dusty I am. Where's the General? Didn't know we were
+coming till next train. Fay! Fay! where are you? Ashton, where's Miss
+Morton?"
+
+"Here, Sydie dear," cried the young lady in question, rushing across the
+hall with the most ecstatic delight, and throwing herself into the
+Cantab's arms, who received her with no less cordiality, and kissed her
+straightway, regardless of the presence of Keane, the butler, and
+Harris.
+
+"Oh, Sydie," began the young lady, breathlessly, "I'm so delighted
+you're come. There's the archery fête, and a picnic at Shallowton, and
+an election ball over at Coverdale, and I want you to dance with me, and
+to try the new billiard-table, and to come and see my aviary, and to
+teach me pistol-shooting (because Julia Dupuis can shoot splendidly, and
+talks of joining the Rifles), and to show me how to do Euclid, and to
+amuse me, and to play with me, and to tell me which is the prettiest of
+Snowdrop's pups to be saved, and to----" She stopped suddenly, and
+dropped from enthusiastic tirade to subdued surprise, as she caught
+sight of Keane for the first time. "Oh, Sydie, why did you not introduce
+me to your friend? How rude I have been!"
+
+"Mr. Keane, my cousin, the torment of my existence, Miss Morton in
+public, Little Fay in private life. There, you know one another now. I
+can't say any more. Do tell me where the governor is."
+
+"Mr. Keane, what can you think of me?" cried Fay. "Any friend of
+Sydenham's is most welcome to the Beeches, and my uncle will scold me
+frightfully for giving you such a reception. Please do forgive me, I was
+so delighted to see my cousin."
+
+"Which I can fully enter into, having a weakness for Sydie myself,"
+smiled Keane. "I am sure he is very fortunate in being the cause of such
+an excuse."
+
+Keane said it _par complaisance_, but rather carelessly; young ladies,
+as a class, being one of his aversions. He looked at Fay Morton,
+however, and saw she was not an Indianized girl after all. She was not
+yellow, but, au contraire, had waving fair hair, long dark eyes, and a
+mischievous, sunny face--
+
+ A rosebud set with little wilful thorns,
+ And sweet as English air could make her.
+
+"Where's the governor, Fay?" reiterated Sydie.
+
+"Here, my dear boy. Thought of your old uncle the first thing, Sydie?
+God bless my soul, how well you look! Confound you, why didn't you tell
+me what train you were coming by? Devil take you, Ashton, why's there no
+fire in the hall? Thought it was warm, did you? Hum! more fool you
+then."
+
+"Uncle dear," said Miss Fay, "here is Sydie's friend, Mr. Keane; you are
+being as rude as I have been."
+
+The General, at this conjuration, swung sharp round, a stout, hale,
+handsome old fellow, with gray moustaches and a high color, holding a
+spade in his hand and clad in a linen coat.
+
+"Bless my soul, sir," cried the General, shaking Keane's hand with the
+greatest possible energy, "charmed to see you--delighted, 'pon my honor;
+only hope you're come to stay till Christmas; there are plenty of
+bachelors' dens. Devil take me! of what was I thinking? I was pleased
+to see that boy, I suppose. More fool I, you'll say, a lazy,
+good-for-nothing young dog like him. Don't let me keep you standing in
+the hall. Cursed cold, isn't it? and there's Little Fay in muslin!
+Ashton, send some hot water into the west room for Mr.--Mr.----Confound
+you, Sydie, why didn't you tell--I mean introduce me?--Mr. Keane.
+Luncheon will be on the table in ten minutes. Like curry, Mr. Keane?
+There, get along, Sydie, you foolish boy; you can talk to Fay after
+luncheon."
+
+"Sydie," whispered Fay, an hour before dinner, when she had teased the
+Cantab's life out of him till he had consented to pronounce judgment on
+the puppies, "what a splendid head that man has you brought with you;
+he'd do for Plato, with that grand calm brow and lofty unapproachable
+look. Who is he?"
+
+"The greatest philosopher of modern times," responded her cousin,
+solemnly. "A condensation of Solon, Thales, Plutarch, Seneca, Cicero,
+Lucullus, Bion, Theophrastes, and Co.; such a giant of mathematical
+knowledge, and all other knowledge, too, that every day, when he passes
+under Bacon's Gate, we are afraid the old legend will come to pass, and
+it will tumble down as flat as a pancake; a homage to him, but a loss to
+Cambridge."
+
+"Nonsense," said Miss Fay, impatiently. "(I like that sweet little thing
+with the black nose best, dear.) _Who_ is he? What is he? How old is he?
+What's his name? Where does he live?"
+
+"Gently, young woman," cried Sydie. "He is Tutor and Fellow of King's,
+and a great gun besides; he's some twenty-five years older than you. His
+name on the rolls is Gerald, I believe, and he dwells in the shadow of
+Mater, beyond the reach of my cornet; for which fact, not being
+musically inclined, he is barbarian enough to return thanks daily in
+chapel."
+
+"I am sorry he is come. It was stupid of you to bring him."
+
+"Wherefore, _ma cousine_? Are you afraid of him? You needn't be. Young
+ladies are too insignificant atoms of creation for him to criticise.
+He'll no more expect sense from you than from Snowdrop and her pups."
+
+"Afraid!" repeated Fay, with extreme indignation. "I should like to see
+any man of whom I should feel afraid! If he doesn't like fun and
+nonsense, I pity him; but if he despise me ever so much for it, I shall
+enjoy myself before him, and in spite of him. I was sorry you brought
+him, because he will take you away when I want you all to myself; and he
+looks so haughty, that----"
+
+"You _are_ afraid of him, Fay, and won't own it."
+
+"I am _not_," reiterated Fay, impetuously; "and I will smoke a cigar
+with him after dinner, to show you I am not one bit."
+
+"I bet you six pair of gloves you do no such thing, young lady."
+
+"Done. Do keep the one with a black nose, Sydie; and yet that little
+liver-colored darling is too pretty to be killed. Suppose we save them
+all? Snowdrop will be so pleased."
+
+Whereon Fay kissed all the little snub noses with the deepest affection,
+and was caught in the act by Keane and the General.
+
+"There's that child with her arms full of dogs," said the General,
+beaming with satisfaction at sight of his niece. "She's a little,
+spoilt, wilful thing. She's an old bachelor's pet, and you must make
+allowances. I call her the fairy of the Beeches, God bless her! She
+nursed me last winter, when I was at death's door from these cursed cold
+winds, sir, better than Miss Nightingale could have done. What a
+devilish climate it _is_; never two days alike. I don't wonder
+Englishwomen are such icicles, poor things; they're frostbitten from
+their cradle upwards."
+
+"India warms them up, General, doesn't it?"
+
+The General shook with laughter.
+
+"To be sure, to be sure; if prudery's the fashion, they'll wear it, sir,
+as they would patches or hair-powder; but they're always uncommonly glad
+to leave it off and lock it out of sight when they can. What do you
+think of the kennels? I say, Sydie, confound you, why did you bring down
+any traps with you? Haven't room for 'em, not for one. Couldn't cram a
+tilbury into the coach-house."
+
+"A trap, governor?" said Sydie, straightening his back after examination
+of the pups; "can't keep even a wall-eyed cab-horse; wish I could."
+
+"Where's your drag, then?" demanded the General.
+
+"My drag? Don't I just wish I had one, to offer my bosom friend the
+V. P. a seat on the box. Calvert, of Trinity, tooled us over in his to
+the Spring Meetings, and his grays are the sweetest pair of goers--the
+leaders especially--that ever you saw in harness. We came back 'cross
+country, to get in time for hall, and a pretty mess we made of it, for
+we broke the axle, and lamed the off-wheeler, and----"
+
+"But, God bless my soul," stormed the General, excited beyond measure,
+"you wrote me word you were going to bring a drag down with you, and of
+course I supposed you meant what you said, and I had Harris in about it,
+and he swore the coach-house was as full of traps as ever it could hold,
+so I had my tax-cart and Fay's phaeton turned into one of the stalls,
+and then, after all, it comes out you've never brought it! Devil take
+you, Sydie, why can't you be more thoughtful----"
+
+"But, my dear governor----"
+
+"Nonsense; don't talk to me!" cried the General, trying to work himself
+into a passion, and diving into the recesses of six separate pockets one
+after another. "Look here, sir, I suppose you'll believe your own words?
+Here it is in black and white.--'P. S. I shall bring _my Coach_ down
+with me.' There, what do you say now? Confound you, what are you
+laughing at? _I_ don't see anything to laugh at. In my day, young
+fellows didn't make fools of old men in this way. Bless my soul, why
+the devil don't you leave off laughing, and talk a little common sense?
+The thing's plain enough.--'P.S. _I shall bring my Coach down with
+me_.'"
+
+"So I have," said Sydie, screaming with laughter. "Look at him--he's a
+first-rate Coach, too! Wheels always oiled, and ready for any road;
+always going up hill, and never caught coming down; started at a devil
+of a pace, and now keeps ahead of all other vehicles on all highways. A
+first-class Coach, that will tool me through the tortuous lanes and
+treacherous pitfalls of the Greats with flying colors. My Coach! Bravo,
+General! that's the best bit of fun I've had since I dressed up like
+Sophonisba Briggs, and led the V. P. a dance all round the quad, every
+hair on his head standing erect in his virtuous indignation at the awful
+morals of his college."
+
+"Eh, what?" grunted the General, light beginning to dawn upon him. "Do
+you mean Mr. Keane? Hum! how's one to be up to all your confounded
+slang? How could I know? Devil take you, Sydie, why can't you write
+common English? You young fellows talk as bad jargon as Sepoys. You're
+sure I'm delighted to see you, Mr. Keane, though I did make the
+mistake."
+
+"Thank you, General," said Keane; "but it's rather cool of you, Master
+Sydie, to have forced me on to your uncle's hands without his wish or
+his leave."
+
+"Not at all, not at all," swore the General, with vehement cordiality.
+"I gave him carte blanche to ask whom he would, and unexpected guests
+are always most welcome; _not_ that you were unexpected though, for I'd
+told that boy to be sure and bring somebody down here----"
+
+"And have had the tax-cart and my phaeton turned out to make comfortable
+quarters for him," said Miss Fay, with a glance at The Coach to see how
+he took chaff, "and I only hope Mr. Keane may like his accommodation."
+
+"Perhaps, Miss Morton," said Keane, smiling, "I shall like it so well
+that you will have to say to me as poor Voltaire to his troublesome
+abbé, 'Don Quichotte prenait les auberges pour les châteaux, mais vous
+avez pris les châteaux pour les auberges.'"
+
+"Tiresome man," thought Fay. "I wish Sydie hadn't brought him here; but
+I shall do as I always do, however grand and supercilious he may look.
+He has lived among all those men and books till he has grown as cold as
+granite. What a pity it is people don't enjoy existence as I do!"
+
+"You are thinking, Miss Morton," said Keane, as he walked on beside her,
+with an amused glance at her face, which was expressive enough of her
+thoughts, "that if your uncle is glad to see me, you are not, and that
+Sydie was very stupid not to bring down one of his kindred spirits
+instead of----Don't disclaim it now; you should veil your face if you
+wish your thoughts not to be read."
+
+"I was not going to disclaim it," said Fay, quickly looking up at him
+with a rapid glance, half penitence, half irritation. "I always tell the
+truth; but I was _not_ thinking exactly that; I don't want any of
+Sydie's friends--I detest boys--but I certainly _was_ thinking that as
+you look down on everything that we all delight in, I fancied you and
+the Beeches will hardly agree. If I am rude, you must not be angry; you
+wanted me to tell you the truth."
+
+Keane smiled again.
+
+"Do I look down on the things you delight in? I hardly know enough of
+you, as we have only addressed about six syllables to each other, to be
+able to judge what you like and what you don't like; but certainly I
+must admit, that caressing the little round heads of those puppies
+yonder, which seemed to afford you such extreme rapture, would not be
+any source of remarkable gratification to me."
+
+Fay looked up at him and laughed.
+
+"Well, I am fond of animals as you are fond of books. Is it not an open
+question whether the live dog or sheepskin is not as good as the dead
+Morocco or Russian leather?"
+
+"Is it an open question, whether Macaulay's or Arago's brain weighs no
+more than a cat's or a puppy's?"
+
+"Brain!" said impudent little Fay; "are your great men always as honest
+and as faithful as my poor little Snowdrop? I have an idea that
+Sheridan's brains were often obscured by brandy; that Richelieu had the
+weakness to be prouder of his bad poems than his magnificent policies;
+and that Pope and Byron had the folly to be more tenacious of a glance
+at their physical defect than an onslaught on their noblest works. I
+could mention a good many other instances where brain was not always a
+voucher for corresponding strength of character."
+
+Keane was surprised to hear a sensible speech from this volatile little
+puss, and honored her by answering her seriously.
+
+"Say, rather, Miss Morton, that those to whom many temptations fall
+should have many excuses made. Where the brain preponderates, excelling
+in creative faculty and rapid thought, there will the sensibilities be
+proportionately acute. The vivacity and vigorous life which produced the
+rapid flow of Sheridan's eloquence led him into the dissipation which
+made him end his days in a spunging-house. Men of cooler minds and
+natures must not presume to judge him. They had not his temptation; they
+cannot judge of his fault. Richelieu, in all probability, amused himself
+with his verses as he amused himself with his white kitten and its cork,
+as a _délassement_; had he piqued himself upon his poetry, as they say,
+he would have turned poetaster instead of politician. As for the other
+two, you must remember that Pope's deformity made him a subject of
+ridicule to the woman he was fool enough to worship, and Byron, poor
+fellow, was over-susceptible on all points, or he would scarcely have
+allowed the venomed arrows from the Scotch Reviewers to wound him, nor
+would he have cared for the desertion of a wife who was to him like ice
+to fire. When you are older, you will learn that it is very dangerous
+and unjust to say this thing is right, that wrong, that feeling wise, or
+this foolish; for all temperaments are different, and the same
+circumstances may produce very different effects. Your puppies will grow
+up with dissimilar characters; how much more so, then, must men?"
+
+Miss Fay was quiet for a minute, then she flashed her mischievous eyes
+on him.
+
+"Certainly; but then, by your own admission, you have no right to decide
+that your love for mathematics is wise, and my love for Snowdrop
+foolish; it may be quite _au contraire_. Perhaps, after all, I may have
+'chosen the better part.'"
+
+"Fay, go in and dress for dinner," interrupted the General, trotting up;
+"your tongue would run on forever if nobody stopped it; you're no
+exception to your sex on that point. Is she?"
+
+Keane laughed.
+
+"Perhaps Miss Morton's frænum, like Sydie's, was cut too far in her
+infancy, and therefore she has been 'unbridled' ever since."
+
+"In all things!" cried little Fay. "Nobody has put the curb on me yet,
+and nobody ever shall."
+
+"Don't be too sure, Fay," cried Sydie. "Rarey does wonders with the
+wildest fillies. Somebody may bring you down on your knees yet."
+
+"You'll have to see to that, Sydie," laughed the General. "Come, get
+along, child, to your toilette. I never have my soup cold and my curry
+overdone. To wait for his dinner is a stretch of good nature, and
+patience that ought not to be expected of any man."
+
+The soup was not cold nor the curry overdone, and the dinner was
+pleasant enough, in the long dining-room, with the June sun streaming in
+through its bay-windows from out the brilliant-colored garden, and the
+walls echoing with the laughter of Sydie and his cousin, the young lady
+keeping true to her avowal of "not caring for Plato's presence."
+"Plato," however, listened quietly, peeling his peaches with tranquil
+amusement; for if the girl talked nonsense, it was clever nonsense, as
+rare, by the way, and quite as refreshing as true wit.
+
+"My gloves are safe; you're too afraid of him, Fay," whispered Sydie,
+bending forwards to give her some hautboys.
+
+"Am I?" cried Miss Fay, with a _moue_ of supreme contempt. Neither the
+whisper nor the _moue_ escaped Keane, as he talked with the governor on
+model drainage.
+
+"Where's my hookah, Fay?" asked the General, after dessert. "Get it,
+will you, my pet?"
+
+"Voilà!" cried Miss Fay, lifting the narghilé from the sideboard. Then
+taking some cigars off the mantelpiece, she put one in her own mouth,
+struck a fusee, and, handing the case to Keane, said, with a saucy smile
+in her soft bright eyes, though, to tell the truth, she was a little bit
+afraid of taking liberties with him:
+
+"If you are not above such a sublunary indulgence, will you have a cigar
+with me?"
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said Keane, with a grave bow; "and if you
+would like to further rival George Sand, I shall be very happy to give
+you the address of my tailor."
+
+"Thank you exceedingly; but as long as crinoline is the type of the sex
+that are a little lower than the angels, and ribbon-ties the seal of
+those but a trifle better than Mephistopheles, I don't think I will
+change it," responded Little Fay, contemptuously, as she threw herself
+down on a couch with an indignant defiant glance, and puffed at her
+Manilla.
+
+"I _hate_ him, Sydie," said the little lady, vehemently, that night.
+
+"Do you, dear?" answered the Cantab; "you see, you've never had anybody
+to be afraid of, or had any man neglect you before."
+
+"He may neglect me if he please, I am sure I do not care," rejoined Fay,
+disdainfully; "only I do wish, Sydie, that you had never brought him
+here to make us all uncomfortable."
+
+"He don't make me uncomfortable, quite otherwise; nor yet the governor;
+you're the only victim, Fay."
+
+Fay saw little enough of Keane for the next week or two. He was out all
+day with Sydie trout-fishing, or walking over his farms with the
+General, or sitting in the study reading, and writing his articles for
+the _Cambridge Journal_, _Leonville's Mathematical Journal_, or the
+_Westminster Review_. But when she was with him, there was no mischief
+within her reach that Miss Fay did not perpetrate. Keane, to tease her,
+would condemn--so seriously that she believed him--all that she loved
+the best; he would tell her that he admired quiet, domestic women; that
+he thought girls should be very subdued and retiring; that they should
+work well, and not care much for society; at all of which, being her
+extreme antipodes, Little Fay would be vehemently wrathful. She would
+get on her pony without any saddle in her evening dress, and ride him at
+the five-bar gate in the stable-yard; she would put on Sydie's
+smoking-cap, and look very pretty in it, and take a Queen's on the divan
+of the smoking-room, reading _Bell's Life_, and asking Keane how much he
+would bet on the October; she would spend all the morning making wreaths
+of roses, dressing herself and the puppies up in them, inquiring if it
+was not a laudable and industrious occupation. There was no nonsense or
+mischief Fay would not imagine and forthwith commit, and anything they
+wanted her not to do she would do straightway, even to the imperilling
+of her own life and limb. She tried hard to irritate or rouse "Plato,"
+as she called him, but Plato was not to be moved, and treated her as a
+spoilt child, whom he alone had sense enough to resist.
+
+"It will be great folly for you to attempt it, Miss Morton. Those horses
+are not fit to be driven by any one, much less by a woman," said Keane,
+quietly, one morning.
+
+They were in the stable-yard, and chanced to be alone when a new
+purchase of the governor's--two scarcely broken-in thorough-bred
+colts--were brought with a new mail-phaeton into the yard, and Miss Fay
+forthwith announced her resolution of driving them round the avenue. The
+groom that came with them told her they were almost more than he could
+manage, their own coachman begged and implored, Keane reasoned quietly,
+all to no purpose. The rosebud had put out its little wilful thorns;
+Keane's words added fuel to the fire. Up she sprang, looking the
+daintiest morsel imaginable perched up on that very exalted box-seat,
+told the horrified groom to mount behind, and started them off, lifting
+her hat with a graceful bow to "Plato," who stood watching the phaeton
+with his arms folded and his cigar in his mouth.
+
+Soon after, he started in the contrary direction, for the avenue circled
+the Beeches in an oval of four miles, and he knew he should meet her
+coming back. He strolled along under the pleasant shadow of the great
+trees, enjoying the sunset and the fresh air, and capable of enjoying
+them still more but for an inward misgiving. His presentiment was not
+without its grounds. He had walked about a mile and a half round the
+avenue, when a cloud of dust told him what was up, and in the distance
+came the thorough-breds, broken away as he had prophesied, tearing along
+with the bits between their teeth, Little Fay keeping gallantly hold of
+the ribbons, but as powerless over the colts now they had got their
+heads as the groom leaning from the back seat.
+
+On came the phaeton, bumping, rattling, oscillating, threatening every
+second to be turned over. Keane caught one glance of Fay's face,
+resolute and pale, and of her little hands grasping the ribbons, till
+they were cut and bleeding with the strain. There was nothing for it but
+to stand straight in the animals' path, catch their heads, and throw
+them back on their haunches. Luckily, his muscles were like
+iron--luckily, too, the colts had come a long way, and were not fresh.
+He stood like a rock, and checked them; running a very close risk of
+dislocating his arms with the shock, but saving little Fay from
+destruction. The colts stood trembling, the groom jumped out and caught
+the reins, Keane amused himself silently with the mingled penitence,
+vexation, shame, and rebellion visible in the little lady's face.
+
+"Well," said he, quietly, "as you were so desirous of breaking your
+neck, will you ever forgive me for defeating your purpose?"
+
+"Pray don't!" cried Fay, passionately. "I do thank you so much for
+saving my life; I think it so generous and brave of you to have rescued
+me at such risk to yourself. I feel that I can never be grateful enough
+to you, but don't talk in that way. I know it was silly and self-willed
+of me."
+
+"It was; that fact is obvious."
+
+"Then I shall make it more so," cried Miss Fay, with her old wilfulness.
+"I do feel very grateful, and I would tell you so, if you would let me;
+but if you think it has made me afraid, you are quite wrong, and so you
+shall see."
+
+And before he could interfere, or do more than mechanically spring up
+after her, she had caught the reins from the groom, and started the
+trembling colts off again. But Keane put his hand on the ribbons.
+
+"Foolish child; are you mad?" he said, so gravely yet so gently that Fay
+let them go, and let him drive her back to the stable-yard, where she
+sprang out, and rushed away to her own room, terrified the governor with
+a few vehement sentences, which gave him a vague idea that Keane was
+murdered and both Fay's legs broken, and then had a private cry all to
+herself, with her arms round Snowdrop's neck, curled up in one of the
+drawing-room windows, where she had not been long when the General and
+Keane passed through, not noticing her, hidden as she was, in curtains,
+cushions, and flowers.
+
+"She's a little wilful thing, Keane," the General was saying, "but you
+mustn't think the worse of her for that."
+
+"I don't. I am sick of those conventional young ladies who agree with
+everything one says to them--who keep all the frowns for mothers and
+servants, and are as serene as a cloudless sky abroad, smile blandly on
+all alike, and haven't an opinion of their own."
+
+"Fay's plenty of opinions of her own," chuckled the General; "and she
+tells 'em pretty freely, too. Bless the child, she's not ashamed of any
+of her thoughts and never will be."
+
+"I hope not. Your little niece can do things that no other young lady
+could and they are so pretty in her that it would be a thousand pities
+for her to grow one atom less natural and wilful. Grapes growing wild
+are charming--grapes trained to a stake are ruined. I assure you, if I
+were you, I would not scold her for driving those colts to-day. High
+spirits and love of fun led her on, and the courage and presence of mind
+she displayed are too rare among her sex for us to do right in checking
+them."
+
+"To be sure, to be sure," assented the governor, gleefully. "God bless
+the child, she's one among a thousand, sir. Cognac, not milk and water.
+There's the dinner-bell; confound it."
+
+Whereat the General made his exit, and Keane also; and Fay kissed the
+spaniel with even more passionate attachment than ordinary.
+
+"Ah, Snowdrop, I don't hate him any more; he is a darling!"
+
+One glowing August morning Keane was in the study pondering whether he
+would go to his moor or not. The General had besought him to stay. His
+gamekeeper wrote him that it was a horribly bad rainy season in
+Invernessshire; the trout and the rabbits were very good sport in a mild
+way here. Altogether, Keane felt half disposed to keep where he was,
+when a shadow fell across his paper; and, as he looked up, he saw in the
+open window the English rosebud.
+
+"Is it not one of the open questions, Mr. Keane," asked Fay, "whether it
+is very wise to spend all this glorious morning shut out of the sight of
+the sun-rays and the scent of the flowers?"
+
+"How have _you_ been spending it, then?"
+
+"Putting bouquets in all the rooms, cleaning my aviary, talking to the
+puppies, and reading Jocelyn under the limes in the shrubberies--all
+very puerile, but all very pleasant. Perhaps if you descended to a lazy
+day like that now and then, you might be none the worse!"
+
+"Is that a challenge? Will you take me under the limes?"
+
+"No, indeed! I do not admit men who despise them to my gardens of
+Armida, any more than you would admit me into your Schools. I have as
+great a scorn for a skeptic as you have for a tyro."
+
+"Pardon me. I have no scorn for a tyro. But you would not come to the
+Accademe; you dislike 'Plato' too much."
+
+Fay looked up at him half shyly, half mischievously.
+
+"Yes, I do dislike you, when you look down on me as Richelieu might have
+looked down on his kitten."
+
+"Liking to see its play?" said Keane, half sadly. "Contrasting its gay
+insouciance with his own toil and turmoil, regretting, perhaps, the time
+when trifles made his joy as they did his kitten's? If I were to look on
+you so, there would not be much to offend you."
+
+"You do not think so of me, or you would speak to me as if I were an
+intelligent being, not a silly little thing."
+
+"How do you know I think you silly?"
+
+"Because you think all women so."
+
+"Perhaps; but then you should rather try to redeem me from my error in
+doctrine. Come, let us sign a treaty of peace. Take me under the limes.
+I want some fresh air after writing all day; and in payment I will teach
+you Euclid, as you vainly beseeched your cousin to do yesterday."
+
+"Will you?" cried Fay, eagerly. Then she threw back her head. "I never
+am won by bribes."
+
+"Nor yet by threats? What a difficult young lady you are. Come, show me
+your shrubbery sanctum now you have invaded mine."
+
+The English rosebud laid aside its wilful thorns, and Fay, a little less
+afraid of her Plato, and therefore a little less defiant to him, led him
+over the grounds, filled his hands with flowers, showed him her aviary,
+read some of Jocelyn to him, to show him, she said, that Lamartine was
+better than the Oedipus in Coloneus, and thought, as she dressed for
+dinner, "I wonder if he does despise me--he has such a beautiful face,
+if he were not so haughty and cold!"
+
+The next day Keane gave her an hour of Euclid in the study. Certainly
+The Coach had never had such a pretty pupil; and he wished every dull
+head he had to cram was as intelligent as this fair-haired one. Fay was
+quick and clever; she was stimulated, moreover, by his decree concerning
+the stupidity of all women; she really worked as hard as any young man
+studying for degrees when they supposed her fast asleep in bed, and she
+got over the Pons Asinorum in a style that fairly astonished her tutor.
+
+The Coach did not dislike his occupation either; it did him good, after
+his life of solitude and study, something as the kitten and cork did
+Richelieu good after his cabinets and councils; and Little Fay, with her
+flowers and fun, mischief and impudence, and that winning wilfulness
+which it amused him gradually to tame down, unbent the chillness which
+had grown upon him. He was the better for it, as a man after hard study
+or practice is the better for some fresh sea-breezes, and some days of
+careless dolce.
+
+"Well, Fay, have you had another poor devil flinging himself at your
+feet by means of a postage-stamp?" said Sydie one morning at breakfast.
+"You can't disguise anything from me, your most interested, anxious, and
+near and dear relative. Whenever the governor looks particularly stormy
+I see the signs of the times, that if I do not forthwith remove your
+dangerously attractive person, all the bricks, spooneys, swells, and
+do-nothings in the county will speedily fill the Hanwell wards to
+overflowing."
+
+"Don't talk such nonsense, Sydie," said Fay, impatiently, with a glance
+at Keane, as she handed him his chocolate.
+
+"Ah! deuce take the fellows," chuckled the General. "Love, devotion,
+admiration! What a lot of stuff they do write. I wonder if Fay were a
+little beggar, how much of it all would stand the test? But we know a
+trick worth two of that. Try those sardines, Keane. House is let,
+Fay--eh? House is let; nobody need apply. Ha, ha!"
+
+And the General took some more curry, laughing till he was purple, while
+Fay blushed scarlet, a trick of which she was rarely guilty; Sydie
+smiled, and Keane picked out his sardines with calm deliberation.
+
+"Hallo! God bless my soul!" burst forth the General again. "Devil take
+me! I'll be hanged if I stand it! Confound 'em all! I do call it hard
+for a man not to be able to sit at his breakfast in peace. Good Heavens!
+what will come to the country, if all those little devils grow up to be
+food for Calcraft? He's actually pulling the bark off the trees, as I
+live! Excuse me, I _can't_ sit still and see it."
+
+Wherewith the General bolted from his chair, darted through the window,
+upsetting three dogs, two kittens, and a stand of flowers in his exit,
+and bolted breathlessly across the park with the poker in his hand.
+
+"Bless his old heart! Ain't he a brick?" shouted Sydie. "Do excuse me,
+Fay, I must go and hear him blow up that boy sky-high, and give him a
+shilling for tuck afterwards; it will be so rich."
+
+The Cantab made his exit, and Fay busied herself calming the kittens'
+minds, and restoring the dethroned geraniums. Keane read his _Times_ for
+ten minutes, then looked up.
+
+"Miss Morton, where is your tongue? I have not heard it for a quarter of
+an hour, a miracle that has never happened in the two months I have been
+at the Beeches."
+
+"You do not want to hear it."
+
+"What! am I in _mauvais odeur_ again?" smiled Keane. "I thought we were
+good friends. Have you found the Q. E. D. to the problem I gave you?"
+
+"To be sure!" cried Fay, exultantly. And kneeling down by him, she went
+through the whole thing in exceeding triumph.
+
+"You are a good child," said her tutor, smiling, in himself amazed at
+this volatile little thing's capacity for mathematics. "I think you will
+be able to take your degree, if you like. Come, do you hate me now,
+Fay?"
+
+"No," said Fay, a little shyly. "I never hated you, I always admired
+you; but I was afraid of you, though I would never confess it to Sydie."
+
+"Never be afraid of me," said Keane, putting his hand on hers as it lay
+on the arm of his chair. "You have no cause. You can do things few girls
+can; but they are pretty in you, where they might be--not so pretty in
+others. _I_ like them at the least. You are very fond of your cousin,
+are you not?"
+
+"Of Sydie? Oh, I love him dearly!"
+
+Keane took his hand away, and rose, as the General trotted in:
+
+"God bless my soul, Keane, how warm it is! Confoundedly hot without
+one's hat, I can tell you. Had my walk all for nothing, too. That cursed
+little idiot wasn't trespassing after all. Stephen had set him to spud
+out the daisies, and I'd thrashed the boy before I'd listen to him.
+Devil take him!"
+
+August went out and September came in, and Keane stayed on at the
+Beeches. They were pleasant days to them all, knocking over the
+partridges right and left, enjoying a cold luncheon under the luxuriant
+hedges, and going home for a dinner, full of laughter, and talk, and
+good cookery; and Fay's songs afterwards, as wild and sweet in their way
+as a goldfinch's on a hawthorn spray.
+
+"You like Little Fay, don't you, Keane?" said the General, as they went
+home one evening.
+
+Keane looked startled for a second.
+
+"Of course," he said, rather haughtily. "That Miss Morton is very
+charming every one must admit."
+
+"Bless her little heart! She's a wild little filly, Keane, but she'll go
+better and truer than your quiet broken-in ones, who wear the harness so
+respectably, and are so wicked and vicious in their own minds. And what
+do you think of my boy?" asked the General, pointing to Sydie, who was
+in front. "How does he stand at Cambridge?"
+
+"Sydie? Oh, he's a nice young fellow. He is a great favorite there, and
+he is--the best things he can be--generous, sweet-tempered, and
+honorable----"
+
+"To be sure," echoed the General, rubbing his hands. "He's a dear boy--a
+very dear boy. They're both exactly all I wished them to be, dear
+children; and I must say I am delighted to see 'em carrying out the plan
+I had always made for 'em from their childhood."
+
+"Being what, General, may I ask?"
+
+"Why, any one can see, as plain as a pikestaff, that they're in love
+with each other," said the General, glowing with satisfaction; "and I
+mean them to be married and happy. They dote on each other, Keane, and I
+sha'n't put any obstacles in their way. Youth's short enough, Heaven
+knows; let 'em enjoy it, say I, it don't come back again. Don't say
+anything to him about it; I want to have some fun with him. They've
+settled it all, of course, long ago; but he hasn't confided in me, the
+sly dog. Trust an old campaigner, though, for twigging an _affaire de
+coeur_. Bless them both, they make me feel a boy again. We'll have a gay
+wedding, Keane; mind you come down for it. I dare say it'll be at
+Christmas."
+
+Keane walked along, drawing his cap over his eyes. The sun was setting
+full in his face.
+
+"Well, what sport?" cried Fay, running up to them.
+
+"Pretty fair," said Keane, coldly, as he passed her.
+
+It was an hour before the dinner-bell rang. Then he came down cold and
+calm, particularly brilliant in conversation, more courteous, perhaps,
+to her than ever, but the frost had gathered round him that the sunny
+atmosphere of the Beeches had melted; and Fay, though she tried to
+tease, and to coax, and to win him, could not dissipate it. She felt him
+an immeasurable distance from her again. He was a learned, haughty,
+grave philosopher, and she a little naughty child.
+
+As Keane went up-stairs that night, he heard Sydie talking in the hall.
+
+"Yes, my worshipped Fay, I shall be intensely and utterly miserable away
+from the light of your eyes; but, nevertheless, I must go and see
+Kingslake from John's next Tuesday, because I've promised; and let one
+idolize your divine self ever so much, one can't give up one's larks,
+you know."
+
+Keane ground his teeth with a bitter sigh and a fierce oath.
+
+"Little Fay, I would have loved you more tenderly than that!"
+
+He went in and threw himself on his bed, not to sleep. For the first
+time for many years he could not summon sleep at his will. He had gone
+on petting her and amusing himself, thinking of her only as a winning,
+wayward child. Now he woke with a shock to discover, too late, that she
+had stolen from him unawares the heart he had so long refused to any
+woman. With his high intellect and calm philosophy, after his years
+spent in severe science and cold solitude, the hot well-springs of
+passion had broken loose again. He longed to take her bright life into
+his own grave and cheerless one; he longed to feel her warm young heart
+beat with his own, icebound for so many years; but Little Fay was never
+to be his.
+
+In the bedroom next to him the General sat, with his feet in his
+slippers and his dressing-gown round him, smoking his last cheroot
+before a roaring fire, chuckling complacently over his own thoughts.
+
+"To be sure, we'll have a very gay wedding, such as the county hasn't
+seen in all its blessed days," he muttered, with supreme satisfaction.
+"Sydie shall have this place. What do I want with a great town of a
+house like this, big enough for a barrack? I'll take that shooting-box
+that's to let four miles off; that'll be plenty large enough for me and
+my old chums to smoke in and chat over bygone times, and it will do our
+hearts good--freshen us up a bit to see those young things enjoying
+themselves. My Little Fay will be the prettiest bride that ever was
+seen. Silly young things to suppose I don't see through them. Trust an
+old soldier! However, love is blind, they say. How could they have
+helped falling in love with one another? and who'd have the heart to
+part 'em, I should like to know!"
+
+Keane stayed that day; the next, receiving a letter which afforded a
+true though a slight excuse to return to Cambridge, he went, the
+General, Fay, and Sydie believing him gone only for a few days, he
+knowing that he would never set foot in the Beeches again. He went back
+to his rooms, whose dark monastic gloom in the dull October day seemed
+to close round him like an iron shroud. Here, with his books, his
+papers, his treasures of intellect, science and art, his "mind a
+kingdom" to him, he had spent many a happy day, with his brain growing
+only clearer and clearer as he followed out a close reasoning or
+clenched a subtle analysis. Now, for the sake of a mischievous child but
+half his age, he shuddered as he entered.
+
+"Well, my dear boy," began the General one day after dinner, "I've seen
+your game, though you thought I didn't. How do you know, you young dog,
+that I shall give my consent?"
+
+"Oh, bother, governor, I know you will," cried Sydie, aghast; "because,
+you see, if you let me have a few cool hundreds I can give the men such
+slap-up wines--and it's my last year, General."
+
+"You sly dog!" chuckled the governor, "I'm not talking of your
+wine-merchant, and you know I'm not, Master Sydie. It's no good playing
+hide-and-seek with me; I can always see through a milestone when Cupid
+is behind it; and there's no need to beat round the bush with me, my
+boy. I never gave my assent to anything with greater delight in my life;
+I've always meant you to marry Fay, and----"
+
+"Marry Fay!" shouted Sydie. "Good Heavens! governor, what next?" And the
+Cantab threw himself back and laughed till he cried, and Snowdrop and
+her pups barked furiously in a concert of excited sympathy.
+
+"Why, sir, why?--why, because--devil take you, Sydie--I don't know what
+you are laughing at, do you?" cried the General, starting out of his
+chair.
+
+"Yes, I do, governor; you're laboring under a most delicious delusion."
+
+"Delusion!--eh?--what? Why, bless my soul, I don't think you know what
+you are saying, Sydie," stormed the General.
+
+"Yes I do; you've an idea--how you got it into your head Heaven knows,
+but there it is--you've an idea that Fay and I are in love with one
+another; and I assure you you were never more mistaken in your life."
+
+Seeing the General standing bolt upright staring at him, and looking
+decidedly apocleptic, Sydie made the matter a little clearer.
+
+"Fay and I would do a good deal to oblige you, my beloved governor, if
+we could get up the steam a little, but I'm afraid we really _cannot_.
+Love ain't in one's own hands, you see, but a skittish mare, that gets
+her head, and takes the bit between her teeth, and bolts off with you
+wherever she likes. Is it possible that two people who broke each
+other's toys, and teased each other's lives out, and caught the measles
+of each other, from their cradle upwards, should fall in love with each
+other when they grow up? Besides, I don't intend to marry for the next
+twenty years, if I can help it. I couldn't afford a milliner's bill to
+my tailor's, and I should be ruined for life if I merged my bright
+particular star of a self into a respectable, lark-shunning,
+bill-paying, shabby-hatted, family man. Good Heavens, what a train of
+horrors comes with the bare idea!"
+
+"Do you mean to say, sir, you won't marry your cousin?" shouted the
+General.
+
+"Bless your dear old heart, _no_, governor--ten times over, _no_! I
+wouldn't marry anybody, not for half the universe."
+
+"Then I've done with you, sir--I wash my hands of you!" shouted the
+General, tearing up and down the room in a quick march, more beneficial
+to his feelings than his carpet. "You are an ungrateful, unprincipled,
+shameless young man, and are no more worthy of the affection and the
+interest I've been fool enough to waste on you than a tom-cat. You're an
+abominably selfish, ungrateful, unnatural boy; and though you _are_ poor
+Phil's son, I will tell you my mind, sir; and I must say I think your
+conduct with your cousin, making love to her--desperate love to
+her--winning her affections, poor unhappy child, and then making a jest
+of her and treating it with a laugh, is disgraceful, sir--_disgraceful_,
+do you hear?"
+
+"Yes, I hear, General," cried Sydie, convulsed with laughter; "but Fay
+cares no more for me than for those geraniums. We are fond of one
+another, in a cool, cousinly sort of way, but----"
+
+"Hold your tongue!" stormed the General. "Don't dare to say another word
+to me about it. You know well enough that it has been the one delight of
+my life, and if you'd had any respect or right feeling in you, you'd
+marry her to-morrow."
+
+"She wouldn't be a party to that. Few women _are_ blind to my manifold
+attractions; but Fay's one of 'em. Look here, governor," said Sydie,
+laying his hand affectionately on the General's shoulder, "did it never
+occur to you that though the pretty castle's knocked down, there may be
+much nicer bricks left to build a new one? Can't you see that Fay
+doesn't care two buttons about me, but cares a good many diamond studs
+about somebody else?"
+
+"Nothing has occurred to me but that you and she are two heartless,
+selfish, ungrateful chits. Hold your tongue, sir!"
+
+"But, General----"
+
+"Hold your tongue, sir; don't talk to me, I tell you. In love with
+somebody else? I should like to see him show his face here. Somebody
+she's talked to for five minutes at a race-ball, and proposed to her in
+a corner, thinking to get some of my money. Some swindler, or Italian
+refugee, or blackleg, I'll be bound--taken her in, made her think him an
+angel, and will persuade her to run away with him. I'll set the police
+round the house--I'll send her to school in Paris. What fools men are to
+have anything to do with women at all! You seem in their confidence;
+who's the fellow?"
+
+"A man very like a swindler or a blackleg--Keane!"
+
+"Keane!" shouted the General, pausing in the middle of his frantic
+march.
+
+"Keane," responded Sydie.
+
+"Keane!" shouted the General again. "God bless my soul, she might as
+well have fallen in love with the man in the moon. Why couldn't she like
+the person I'd chosen for her?"
+
+"If one can't guide the mare one's self, 'tisn't likely the governors
+can for one," muttered Sydie.
+
+"Poor dear child! fallen in love with a man who don't care a button for
+her, eh? Humph!--that's always the way with women--lose the good
+chances, and fling themselves at a man's feet who cares no more for
+their tom-foolery of worship than he cares for the blacking on his
+boots. Devil take young people, what a torment they are! The ungrateful
+little jade, how dare she go and smash all my plans like that? and if I
+ever set my heart on anything, I set it on that match. Keane! he'll no
+more love anybody than the stone cherubs on the terrace. He's a splendid
+head, but his heart's every atom as cold as granite. Love her? Not a bit
+of it. When I told him you were going to marry her (I thought you would,
+and so you will, too, if you've the slightest particle of gratitude or
+common sense in either of you), he listened as quietly and as calmly as
+if he had been one of the men in armor in the hall. Love, indeed! To the
+devil with love, say I! It's the head and root of everything that's
+mischievous and bad."
+
+"Wait a bit, uncle," cried Sydie; "you told him all about your previous
+match-making, eh? And didn't he go off like a shot two days after, when
+we meant him to stay on a month longer? Can't you put two and two
+together, my once wide-awake governor? 'Tisn't such a difficult
+operation."
+
+"No, I can't," shouted the General: "I don't know anything, I don't see
+anything, I don't believe in anything, I hate everybody and everything,
+I tell you; and I'm a great fool for having ever set my heart on any
+plan that wanted a woman's concurrence--
+
+ For if she will she will, you may depend on't,
+ And if she won't she won't, and there's an end on't."
+
+Wherewith the General stuck his wide-awake on fiercely, and darted out
+of the bay-window to cool himself. Half way across the lawn, he turned
+sharp round, and came back again.
+
+"Sydie, do you fancy Keane cares a straw for that child?"
+
+"I can't say. It's possible."
+
+"Humph! Well, can't you go and see? That's come of those mathematical
+lessons. What a fool I was to allow her to be so much with him!" growled
+the General, with many grunts and half-audible oaths, swinging round
+again, and trotting through the window as hot and peppery as his own
+idolized curry.
+
+Keane was sitting writing in his rooms at King's some few days after.
+The backs looked dismal with their leafless, sepia-colored trees; the
+streets were full of sloppy mud and dripping under-grads' umbrellas; his
+own room looked sombre and dark, without any sunshine on its heavy oak
+bookcases, and massive library-table, and dark bronzes. His pen moved
+quickly, his head was bent over the paper, his mouth sternly set, and
+his forehead paler and more severe than ever. The gloom in his chambers
+had gathered round him himself, when his door was burst open, and Sydie
+dashed in and threw himself down in a green leather arm-chair.
+
+"Well, sir, here am I back again. Just met the V. P. in the quad, and he
+was so enchanted at seeing me, that he kissed me on both cheeks, flung
+off his gown, tossed up his cap, and performed a _pas d'extase_ on the
+spot. Isn't it delightful to be so beloved? Granta looks very delicious
+to-day, I must say--about as refreshing and lively as an acidulated
+spinster going district-visiting in a snow-storm. And how are you, most
+noble lord?"
+
+"Pretty well."
+
+"Only that? Thought you were all muscle and iron. I say. What _do_ you
+think the governor has been saying to me?"
+
+"How can I tell?"
+
+"Tell! No, I should not have guessed it if I'd tried for a hundred
+years! By George! nothing less than that I should marry Fay. What do you
+think of that, sir?"
+
+Keane traced Greek unconsciously on the margin of his _Times_. For the
+life of him, with all his self-command, he could not have answered.
+
+"Marry Fay! _I!_" shouted Sydie. "Ye gods, what an idea! I never was so
+astonished in all my days. Marry Little Fay!--the governor must be mad,
+you know."
+
+"You will not marry your cousin?" asked Keane, tranquilly, though the
+rapid glance and involuntary start did not escape Sydie's quick eyes.
+
+"Marry! I! By George, no! She wouldn't have me, and I'm sure I wouldn't
+have her. She is a dear little monkey, and I'm very fond of her, but I
+wouldn't put the halter round my neck for any woman going. I don't like
+vexing the General, but it would be really too great a sacrifice merely
+to oblige him."
+
+"She cares nothing for you, then?"
+
+"Nothing? Well, I don't know. Yes, in a measure, she does. If I should
+be taken home on a hurdle one fine morning, she'd shed some cousinly
+tears over my inanimate body; but as for _the other thing_, not one bit
+of it. 'Tisn't likely. We're a great deal too like one another, too full
+of devilry and carelessness, to assimilate. Isn't it the delicious
+contrast and fiz of the sparkling acid of divine lemons with the
+contrariety of the fiery spirit of beloved rum that makes the delectable
+union known and worshipped in our symposia under the blissful name of
+PUNCH? Marry Little Fay! By Jove, if all the governor's match-making was
+founded on no better reasons for success, it is a small marvel that he's
+a bachelor now! By George, it's time for hall!"
+
+And the Cantab took himself off, congratulating himself on the adroit
+manner in which he had cut the Gordian knot that the General had muddled
+up so inexplicably in his unpropitious match-making.
+
+Keane lay back in his chair some minutes, very still; then he rose to
+dine in hall, pushing away his books and papers, as if throwing aside
+with them a dull and heavy weight. The robins sang in the leafless
+backs, the sun shone out on the sloppy streets; the youth he thought
+gone for ever was come back to him. Oh, strange stale story of Hercules
+and Omphale, old as the hills, and as eternal! Hercules goes on in his
+strength slaying his hydra and his Laomedon for many years, but he
+comes at last, whether he like it or not, to his Omphale, at whose feet
+he is content to sit and spin long golden threads of pleasure and of
+passion, while his lion's skin is motheaten and his club rots away.
+
+Little Fay sat curled up on the study hearth-rug, reading a book her
+late guest had left behind him--a very light and entertaining volume,
+being Delolme "On the Constitution," but which she preferred, I suppose,
+to "What Will He Do With It?" or the "Feuilles d'Automne," for the sake
+of that clear autograph, "Gerald Keane, King's Coll.," on its fly-leaf.
+A pretty picture she made, with her handsome spaniels; and she was so
+intent on what she was reading--the fly-leaf, by the way--that she never
+heard the opening of the door, till a hand drew away her book. Then Fay
+started up, oversetting the puppies one over another, radiant and
+breathless.
+
+Keane took her hands and drew her near him.
+
+"You do not hate me now, then?"
+
+Fay put her head on one side with her old wilfulness.
+
+"Yes, I do--when you go away without any notice, and hardly bid me
+good-bye. You would not have left one of your men pupils so
+unceremoniously."
+
+Keane smiled involuntarily, and drew her closer.
+
+"If you do not hate me, will you go a step farther--and love me? Little
+Fay, my own darling, will you come and brighten my life? It has been a
+saddened and a stern one, but it shall never throw a shade on yours."
+
+The wild little filly was conquered--at last, she came to hand docile
+and subdued, and acknowledged her master. She loved him, and told him so
+with that frankness and fondness which would have covered faults far
+more glaring and weighty than Little Fay's.
+
+"But you must never be afraid of me," whispered Keane, some time after.
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+"And you do not wish Sydie had never brought me here to make you all
+uncomfortable?"
+
+"Oh, please don't!" cried Fay, plaintively. "I was a child then, and I
+did not know what I said."
+
+"'Then,' being three months ago, may I ask what you are now?"
+
+"A child still in knowledge, but _your_ child," whispered Fay, lifting
+her face to his, "to be petted and spoiled, and never found fault with,
+remember!"
+
+"My little darling, who would have the heart to find fault with you,
+whatever your sins?"
+
+"God bless my soul, what's this?" cried a voice in the doorway.
+
+There stood the General in wide-awake and shooting-coat, with a spade in
+one hand and a watering-pot in the other, too astonished to keep his
+amazement to himself. Fay would fain have turned and fled, but Keane
+smiled, kept one arm round her, and stretched out his hand to the
+governor.
+
+"General, I came once uninvited, and I am come again. Will you forgive
+me? I have a great deal to say to you, but I must ask you one question
+first of all. Will you give me your treasure?"
+
+"Eh! humph! What? Well--I suppose--yes," ejaculated the General,
+breathless from the combined effects of amazement and excessive and
+vehement gardening. "But, bless my soul, Keane, I should as soon have
+thought of one of the stone cherubs, or that bronze Milton. Never mind,
+one lives and learns. Mind? Devil take me, what am I talking about? I
+don't mind at all; I'm very happy, only I'd set my heart on--you know
+what. More fool I. Fay, you little imp, come here. Are you fairly broken
+in by Keane, then?"
+
+"Yes," said Miss Fay, with her old mischief, but a new blush, "as he has
+promised never to use the curb."
+
+"God bless you, then, my little pet," cried the General, kissing her
+some fifty times. Then he laughed till he cried, and dried his eyes and
+laughed again, and grunted, and growled, and shook both Keane's hands
+vehemently. "I was a great fool, sir, and I dare say you've managed much
+better. I _did_ set my heart on the boy, you know, but it can't be
+helped now, and I don't wish it should. Be kind to her, that's all; for
+though she mayn't bear the curb, the whip from anybody she cares about
+would break her heart. She's a dear child, Keane--a very dear child. Be
+kind to her, that's all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the evening of January 13th, beginning the Lent Term, Mr. Sydenham
+Morton sat in his own rooms with half a dozen spirits like himself, a
+delicious aroma surrounding them of Maryland and rum-punch, and a rapid
+flow of talk making its way through the dense atmosphere.
+
+"To think of Granite Keane being caught!" shouted one young fellow. "I
+should as soon have thought of the Pyramids walking over to the Sphinx,
+and marrying her."
+
+"Poor devil! I pity him," sneered Henley of Trinity, aged nineteen.
+
+"He don't require much pity, my dear fellow; I think he's pretty
+comfortable," rejoined Sydie. "He did, to be sure, when he was trying to
+beat sense into your brain-box, but that's over for the present."
+
+"Come, tell us about the wedding," said Somerset of King's. "I was sorry
+I couldn't go down."
+
+"Well," began Sydie, stretching his legs and putting down his pipe,
+"she--_the_ she was dressed in white tulle and----"
+
+"Bother the dress. Go ahead!"
+
+"The dress was no bother, it was the one subject in life to the women.
+You must listen to the dress, because I asked the prettiest girl there
+for the description of it to enlighten your minds, and it was harder to
+learn than six books of Horace. The bridesmaids wore tarlatane à la
+Princesse Stéphanie, trois jupes bouillonnées, jupe desous de soie
+glacée, guirlandes couleur dea yeux impériaux d'Eugénie, corsets
+décolletés garnis de ruches de ruban du----"
+
+"For Heaven's sake, hold your tongue!" cried Somerset. "That jargon's
+worse than the Yahoos'. The dead languages are bad enough to learn, but
+women's living language of fashion is ten hundred times worse. The
+twelve girls were dressed in blue and white, and thought themselves
+angels--we understand. Cut along."
+
+"Gunter was prime," continued Sydie, "and the governor was prime,
+too--splendid old buck; only when he gave her away he was very near
+saying, 'Devil take it!' which might have had a novel, but hardly a
+solemn, effect. Little Fay was delightful--for all the world like a bit
+of incarnated sunshine. Keane was granite all over, except his eyes, and
+they were lava; if we hadn't, for our own preservation, let him put her
+in a carriage and started 'em off, he might have become dangerous, after
+the manner of Etna, ice outside and red-hot coals within. The
+bridesmaids tears must have washed the church for a week, and made it
+rather a damp affair. One would scarcely think women were so anxious to
+marry, to judge from the amount of grief they get up at a friend's
+sacrifice. It looks uncommonly like envy; but it _isn't_, we're sure!
+The ball was like most other balls: alternate waltzing and flirtation, a
+vast lot of nonsense talked, and a vast lot of champagne drunk--Cupid
+running about in every direction, and a tremendous run on all the
+amatory poets--Browning and Tennyson being worked as hard as cab-horses,
+and used up pretty much as those quadrupeds--dandies suffering
+self-inflicted torture from tight boots, and saying, like Cranmer, when
+he held his hand in the fire, that it was rather agreeable than
+otherwise, considering it drew admiration--spurs getting entangled in
+ladies' dresses, and ladies making use thereof for a display of
+amiability, which the dragoons are very much mistaken if they fancied
+continued into private life--girls believing all the pretty things said
+to them--men going home and laughing at them all--wallflowers very
+black, women engaged ten deep very sunshiny--the governor very glorious,
+and my noble self very fascinating. And now," said Sydie, taking up his
+pipe, "pass the punch, old boy, and never say I can't talk!"
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD;
+
+OR,
+
+A DOUBLED-DOWN LEAF IN A MAN'S LIFE.
+
+
+I was dining with a friend, in his house on the Lung' Arno (he fills,
+never mind what, post in the British Legation), where I was passing an
+autumn month. The night was oppressively hot; a still, sultry sky
+brooded over the city, and the stars shining out from a purple mist on
+to the Campanile near, and the slopes of Bellosguardo in the distance.
+It was intensely hot; not all the iced wines on his table could remove
+the oppressive warmth of the evening air, which made both him and me
+think of evenings we had spent together in the voluptuous lassitude of
+the East, in days gone by, when we had travelled there, fresh to life,
+to new impressions, to all that gives "greenness to the grass, and glory
+to the flower."
+
+The Arno ran on under its bridge, and we leaned out of the balcony where
+we were sitting and smoking, while I tossed over, without thinking much
+of what I was doing, a portfolio of his sketches. Position has lost for
+art many good artists since Sir George Beaumont: my friend is one of
+them; his sketches are masterly; and had he been a vagrant Bohemian
+instead of an English peer, there might have been pictures on the walls
+of the R. A. to console one for the meretricious daubs and pet
+vulgarities of nursery episodes, hideous babies, and third-class
+carriage interiors, which make one's accustomed annual visit to the
+rooms that once saw the beauties of Reynolds, and Wilson, and Lawrence,
+a positive martyrdom to anybody of decent refinement and educated taste.
+The portfolio stood near me, and I took out a sketch or two now and then
+between the pauses of our conversation, looking lazily up the river,
+while the moonlight shone on Dante's city, that so long forgot, and has,
+so late, remembered him.
+
+"Ah! what a pretty face this is! Who's the original?" I asked him,
+drawing out a female head, done with great finish in pastel, under which
+was written, in his own hand, "Florelle." It was a face of great beauty,
+with a low Greek brow and bronze-dark hair, and those large, soft,
+liquid eyes that you only see in a Southern, and that looked at you from
+the sketch with an earnest, wistful regard, half childlike, half
+impassioned. He looked up, glanced at the sketch, and stretched out his
+hand hastily, but I held it away from him. "I want to look at it; it is
+a beautiful head; I wish we had the original here now. Who is she?"
+
+As I spoke--holding the sketch up where the light from the room within
+fell on what I had no doubt was a likeness of some fair face that had
+beguiled his time in days gone by, a souvenir of one of his loves more
+lasting than souvenirs of such episodes in one's life often are, if
+merely trusted to that inconstant capricieuse, Memory,--I might have hit
+him with a bullet rather than asked him about a mere etude à deux
+crayons, for he shuddered, and drank off some white Hermitage quickly.
+
+"I had forgotten that was in the portfolio," he said, hurriedly, as he
+took it from me and put it behind him, with its face against the wall,
+as though it had been the sketch of a Medusa.
+
+"What do you take it away for? I had not half done looking at it. Who is
+the original?"
+
+"One I don't care to mention."
+
+"Because?"
+
+"Because the sight of that picture gives me a twinge of what I ought to
+be hardened against--regret."
+
+"Regret! Is any woman worth that?"
+
+"She was."
+
+"I don't believe it; and I fancied you and I thought alike on such
+points. Of all the women for whom we feel twinges of conscience or
+self-reproach in melancholy moments, how many _loved us_? Moralists and
+poets sentimentalize over it, and make it a stalking-horse whereby to
+magnify our sins and consign us more utterly to perdition, while they do
+for themselves a little bit of poetic morality cheaply; but in reality
+there are uncommonly few women who can love, to begin with, and in the
+second, vanity, avarice, jealousy, desires for pretty toilettes, one or
+other, or all combined, have quite as much to do with their 'sacrifice'
+for us as anything."
+
+"Quite true; but--there are women and women, perhaps, and it was not of
+that sort of regret that I spoke."
+
+"Of what sort, then?"
+
+He made me no reply: he broke the ash off his Manilla, and smoked
+silently some moments, leaning over the balcony and watching the
+monotonous flow of the Arno, with deeper gloom on his face than I
+remembered to have seen there any time before. I was sorry I had chanced
+to light upon a sketch that had brought him back such painful
+recollections of whatever kind they might be, and I smoked too, sending
+the perfumed tobacco out into the still sultry night that was brooding
+over Florence.
+
+"Of what sort?" said he, abruptly, after some minutes' pause. "Shall I
+tell you? Then you can tell _me_ whether I was a fool who made one grand
+mistake, or a sensible man of the world who kept himself from a grand
+folly. I have been often in doubt myself."
+
+He leaned back, his face in shadow, so that I could not see it, while
+the Arno's ebb and flow was making mournful river-music under our
+windows,--while the purple glories of the summer night deepened round
+Giotto's Tower, where, in centuries past, the Immortal of Florence had
+sat dreaming of the Paradiso, the mortals passing by whispering him as
+"the man who had seen hell," and the light within the room shone on the
+olives and grapes, the cut-glass and silver claret-jugs, the crimson
+Montepulciano and the white Hermitage, on the table, as he told me the
+story of the head in crayons.
+
+"Two years ago I went into the south of France. I was chargé d'Affaires
+at ---- then, you remember, and the climate had told upon me. I was not
+over-well, and somebody recommended me the waters of Eaux Bonnes. The
+waters I put little faith in, but in the air of the Pyrenees, in the
+change from diplomacy to a life _en rase campagne_, I put much, and I
+went to Eaux Bonnes accordingly, for July and August, with a vow to
+forswear any society I might find at the baths--I had had only too much
+of society as it was--and to spend my days in the mountains with my
+sketching-block and my gun. But I did not like Eaux Bonnes; it was
+intensely warm. There were several people who knew me really; no end of
+others who got hold of my name, and wanted me to join their
+riding-parties, and balls, and picnics. That was not what I wanted, so I
+left the place and went on to Luz, hoping to find solitude there. That
+valley of Luz--you know it?--is it not as lovely as any artist's dream
+of Arcadia, in the evening, when the sunset light has passed off the
+meadows and corn-lands of the lower valley, and just lingers golden and
+rosy on the crests of the mountains, while the glow-worms are coming out
+among the grasses, and the lights are being lit in the little homesteads
+nestling among their orchards one above another on the hill-sides, and
+its hundred streams are rushing down the mountains and under the trees,
+foaming, and tumbling, and rejoicing on their way! When I have had my
+fill of ambition and of pleasure, I shall go and live at Luz, I think.
+
+"_When!_ Well! you are quite right to repeat it ironically; that time
+will never come, I dare say, and why should it? I am not the stuff to
+cogitate away my years in country solitudes. If prizes are worth
+winning, they are worth working for till one's death; a man should never
+give up the field while he has life left in him. Well! I went to Luz,
+and spent a pleasant week or so there, knocking over a few chamois or
+izards, or sketching on the sides of the Pic du Midi, or Tourmalet, but
+chiefly lying about under the great beech-trees in the shade, listening
+to the tinkle of the sheep-bells, like an idle fellow, as I meant to be
+for the time I had allotted myself. One day----"
+
+He stopped and blew some whiffs from his Manilla into the air. He seemed
+to linger over the prelude to his story, and shrink from going on with
+the story itself, I thought; and he smothered a sigh as he raised
+himself.
+
+"How warm the night is; we shall have a tempest. Reach me that wine,
+there's a good fellow. No, not the Amontillado, the Château Margaux,
+please; one can't drink hot dry wines such a night as this. But to
+satisfy your curiosity about this crayon study.--One day I thought I
+would go to Gavarnie. I had heard a good deal, of course, about the
+great marble wall, and the mighty waterfalls, the rocks of Marboré, and
+the Brêche de Roland, but, as it chanced, I had never been up to the
+Cercle, nor, indeed, in that part of the Midi at all, so I went. The
+gods favored me, I remember; there were no mists, the sun was brilliant,
+and the great amphitheatre was for once unobscured; the white marble
+flashing brown and purple, rose and golden, in the light; the cascades
+tumbling and leaping down into the gigantic basin; the vast plains of
+snow glittering in the sunshine; the twin rocks standing in the clear
+air, straight and fluted as any two Corinthian columns hewn and
+chiselled by man. Good Heaven! before a scene like Gavarnie, what true
+artist must not fling away his colors and his brushes in despair and
+disgust with his own puerility and impotence? What can be transferred to
+canvas of such a scene as that? What does the best beauty of Claude, the
+grandest sublimity of Salvator, the greatest power of Poussin, look
+beside Nature when she reigns as she reigns at Gavarnie? I am an art
+worshipper, as you know: but there are times in my life, places on
+earth, that make me ready to renounce art for ever!
+
+"The day was beautiful, and thinking I knew the country pretty well, I
+took no guides. I hate them when I can possibly dispense with them. But
+the mist soon swooped down over the Cercle, and I began to wish I had
+had one when I turned my horse's head back again. You know the route, of
+course? Through the Chaos--Heaven knows it is deserving of its
+name;--down the break-neck little bridle-path, along the Gave, and over
+the Scia bridge to St. Sauveur. You know it? Then you know that it is
+much easier to break your neck down it than to find your way by it,
+though by some hazard I did not break my neck, nor the animal's knees
+either, but managed to get over the bridge without falling into the
+torrent, and to pick my way safely down into more level ground; once
+there, I thought I should easily enough find my way to St. Sauveur, but
+I was mistaken: the mists had spread over the valley, a heavy storm had
+come up, and, somehow or other, I lost the way, and could not tell where
+I was, whether St. Sauveur was to the left or the right, behind me or in
+front of me. The horse, a miserable little Pyrenean beast, was too
+frightened by the lightning to take the matter into his hands as he had
+done on the road through the Chaos, and I saw nothing for it but to
+surrender and come to grief in any way the elements best pleased;
+swearing at myself for not having stayed at the inn at Gavarnie or
+Gedre; wishing myself at the vilest mountain auberge that ever sheltered
+men and mules pêle-mêle; and calling myself hard names for not having
+listened to my landlady's dissuasions of that morning as I left her
+door, from my project of going to Gavarnie without a guide, which seemed
+to her the acme of all she had ever known or heard of English strangers'
+fooleries. The storm only increased, the great black rocks echoing the
+roll of the thunder, and the Gave lashing itself into fury in its narrow
+bed; happily I was on decently level ground, and the horse being, I
+suppose, tolerably used to storms like it, I pushed him on at last, by
+dint of blows and conjurations combined, to where, in the flashes of the
+lightning, I saw what looked to me like the outline of a homestead: it
+stood in a cleft between two shelving sides of rock, and a narrow
+bridle-path led up to it, through high yews and a tangled wilderness of
+rhododendrons, boxwood, and birch--one of those green slopes so common
+in the Pyrenees, that look in full sunlight doubly bright and
+Arcadian-like, from the contrast of the dark, bare, perpendicular rocks
+that shut them in. I could see but little of its beauty then in the fog
+that shrouded both it and me, but I saw the shape and semblance of a
+house, and urging the horse up the ascent, thundered on its gate-panels
+with my whip-handle till the rocks round echoed.
+
+"There was no answer, and I knocked a little louder, if possible, than
+before. I was wet to the skin with that wretched storm, and swore not
+mildly at the inhospitable roof that would not admit me under it. I
+knocked again, inclined to pick up a piece of granite and beat the panel
+in; and at last a face--an old woman's weather-beaten face, but with
+black southern eyes that had lost little of their fire with age--looked
+through a grating at me and asked me what I wanted.
+
+"'I want shelter if you can give it me,' I answered her. 'I have lost
+my way coming from Gavarnie, and am drenched through. I will pay you
+liberally if you will give me an asylum till the weather clears.'
+
+"Her eyes blazed like coals through the little grille.
+
+"'M'sieu, we take no money here--have you mistaken it for an inn? Come
+in if you want shelter, in Heaven's name! The Holy Virgin forbid we
+should refuse refuge to any!'
+
+"And she crossed herself and uttered some conjurations to Mary to
+protect them from all wolves in sheep's clothing, and guard their
+dwelling from all harm, by which I suppose she thought I spoke fairly
+and looked harmless, but might possibly be a thief or an assassin, or
+both in one. She unlocked the gate, and calling to a boy to take my
+horse into a shed, admitted me under a covered passageway into the
+house, which looked like part, and a very ruined part, too, of what had
+probably been, in the times of Henri-Quatre and his grandfather, a
+feudal chateâu fenced in by natural ramparts from the rocks that
+surrounded it, shutting in the green slope on which it stood, with only
+one egress, the path through which I had ascended, into the level plain
+below. She marshalled me through this covered way into an interior
+passage, dark and vaulted, cheerless enough, and opened a low oak door,
+ushering me into a chamber, bare, gloomy, yet with something of lost
+grandeur and past state lingering about its great hearth, its massive
+walls, its stained windows, and its ragged tapestry hangings. The woman
+went up to one of the windows and spoke with a gentleness to which I
+should have never thought her voice could have been attuned with its
+harsh patois.
+
+"'Mon enfant, v'là un m'sieu étranger qui vient chercher un abri pour un
+petit peu. Veux-tu lui parler?'
+
+"The young girl she spoke to turned, rose, and, coming forward, bade me
+welcome with the grace, simplicity, and the naïve freedom from
+embarrassment of a child, looking up in my face with her soft clear
+eyes. She was like----No matter! you have seen that crayon-head, it is
+but a portrayal of a face whose expression Raphael and Sassoferrato
+themselves would have failed to render in its earnest, innocent,
+elevated regard. She was very young--
+
+ Standing with reluctant feet
+ Where the brook and river meet--
+ Womanhood and childhood fleet.
+
+Good Heavens, I am quoting poetry! what will you think of me, to have
+gone back to the Wertherian and Tennysonian days so far as to repeat a
+triplet of Longfellow's? No man quotes _those_ poets after his salad
+days, except in a moment of weakness. Caramba! why _has_ one any
+weaknesses at all? we ought not to have any; we live in an atmosphere
+that would kill them all if they were not as obstinate and
+indestructible as all other weeds whose seeds will linger and peer up
+and spoil the ground, let one root them out ever so! I owed you an
+apology for that lapse into Longfellow, and I have made it. Am I to go
+on with this story?"
+
+He laughed as he spoke, and his laugh was by no means heartfelt. I told
+him to go on, and he lighted another Manilla and obeyed me, while the
+Arno murmured on its way, and the dusky, sultry clouds brooded nearer
+the earth, and the lights were lit in the distant windows of the palace
+of the Marchese Acqua d'Oro, that fairest of Florentines, who rouges so
+indiscriminately and flirts her fan so inimitably, to one of whose balls
+we were going that night.
+
+He settled himself back in his chair, with his face darkened again by
+the shadow cast on it from the pillar of the balcony; and took his cigar
+out of his mouth.
+
+"She looked incongruous in that bare and gloomy room, out of place with
+it, and out of keeping with the old woman--a French peasant-woman,
+weather-beaten and bronzed, such as you see any day by the score riding
+to market or sitting knitting at their cottage-doors. It was impossible
+that the girl could be either daughter or grand-daughter, or any
+relation at all to her. In that room she looked more as one of these
+myrtles might do, set down in the stifling gloomy horrors of a London
+street than anything else, save that in certain traces about the
+chamber, as I told you, there were relics of a faded grandeur which
+harmonized better with her. I can see her now, as she stood there with a
+strange foreign grace, an indescribable patrician delicacy mingled with
+extreme youthfulness and naïveté, like an old picture in costume, like
+one of Raphael's child-angels in face--poor little Florelle!
+
+"'You would stay till the storm is over, monsieur? you are welcome to
+shelter if you will,' she said, coming forward to me timidly yet
+frankly. 'Cazot tells me you are a stranger, and our mountain storms are
+dangerous if you have no guide.'
+
+"I did not know who Cazot was, but I presumed her to be the old woman,
+who seemed to be portress, mistress, domestic, cameriste, and all else
+in her single person, but I thanked her for her permitted shelter, and
+accepted her invitation to remain till the weather had cleared, as you
+can imagine. When you have lost your way, any asylum is grateful,
+however desolate and tumble-down. They made me welcome, she and the old
+peasant-woman, with that simple, unstrained, and unostentatious
+hospitality which is, after all, the true essence of good breeding, and
+of which your parvenu knows nothing, when he keeps you waiting, and
+shows you that you are come at an inapropos moment, in his fussy fear
+lest everything should not be _comme il faut_ to do due credit to _him_.
+Old Cazot set before me some simple refreshment, a _grillade de
+châtaignes_, some maize and milk, and a dish of trout just caught in the
+Gave below, while I looked at my châtelaine, marvelling how that young
+and delicate creature could come to be shut up with an old peasant on a
+remote hill-side. I did my best to draw her out and learn her history;
+she was shy at first of a complete stranger, as was but natural, but I
+spoke of Garvarnie, of the beauty of the Pyrenees, or Tourmalet, and the
+Lac Bleu, and, warming with enthusiasm for her birthplace, the girl
+forgot that I was a foreign tourist, unknown to her, and indebted to her
+for an hour's shelter, and before my impromptu supper was over I had
+drawn from her, by a few questions which she was too much of a child and
+had too little to conceal not to answer with a child's ingenuousness,
+the whole of her short history, and the explanation of her anomalous
+position. Her name was Florelle de l'Heris, a name once powerful enough
+among the nobles of the Midi, and the old woman, Madame Cazot, was her
+father's foster-sister. Of her family, beggared in common with the best
+aristocracy of France, none were now left; they had dwindled and fallen
+away, till of the once great house of L'Heris this child remained alone
+its representative: her mother had died in her infancy, and her father,
+either too idle or too broken-hearted to care to retrieve his fortunes,
+lived the life of a hermit among these ruins where I now found his
+daughter, educating her himself till his death, which occurred when she
+was only twelve years old, leaving her to poverty and obscurity, and
+such protection and companionship as her old nurse Cazot could afford
+her. Such was the story Florelle de l'Heris told me as I sat there that
+evening waiting till the clouds should clear and the mists roll off
+enough to let me go to St. Sauveur--a story told simply and
+pathetically, and which Cazot, sitting knitting in a corner, added to by
+a hundred gesticulations, expletives, appeals to the Virgin, and prolix
+addenda, glad, I dare say, of any new confident, and disposed to regard
+me with gratitude for my sincere praises of her fried trout. It was a
+story which seemed to me to suit the delicate beauty of the flower I
+had found in the wilderness, and read more like a chapter of some
+versified novelette, like 'Lucille,' than a _bonâ fide_ page out of the
+book of one's actual life, especially in a life like mine, of
+essentially material pleasures and emphatically substantial and palpable
+ambitions. But there _are_ odd stories in real life!--strange pathetic
+ones, too--stranger, often, than those that found the plot and underplot
+of a novel or the basis of a poem; but when such men as I come across
+them they startle us, they look bizarre and unlike all the other leaves
+of the book that glitter with worldly aphorisms, philosophical maxims,
+and pungent egotisms, and we would fain cut them out; they have the ring
+of that Arcadia whose golden gates shut on us when we outgrew boyhood,
+and in which, _en revanche_, we have sworn ever since to
+disbelieve--keeping our word sometimes, perhaps to our own
+hindrance--Heaven knows!
+
+"I stayed as long as I could that evening, till the weather had cleared
+up so long, and the sun was shining again so indisputably, that I had no
+longer any excuse to linger in the dark-tapestried room, with the
+chestnuts sputtering among the wood-ashes, and Madame Cazot's needles
+clicking one continual refrain, and the soft gazelle eyes of my young
+châtelaine glancing from my sketches to me with that mixture of shyness
+and fearlessness, innocence and candor, which gave so great a charm to
+her manner. She was a new study to me, both for my palette and my
+mind--a pretty fresh toy to amuse me while I should stay in the Midi. I
+was not going to leave without making sure of a permission to return. I
+wanted to have that face among my pastels, and when I had thanked her
+for her shelter and her welcome, I told her my name, and asked her leave
+to come again where I had been so kindly received.
+
+"'Come again, monsieur? Certainly, if you care to come. But you will
+find it a long way from Luz, I fear,' she said, naïvely, looking up at
+me with her large clear fawn-like eyes--eyes so cloudless and untroubled
+_then_--as she let me take her hand, and bade me adieu et bonsoir.
+
+"I reassured her on that score, you can fancy, and left her standing in
+the deep-embrasured window, a great stag-hound at her feet, and the
+setting sun, all the brighter for its past eclipse, bathing her in
+light. I can always see her in memory as I saw her then, poor
+child!----Faugh! How hot the night is! Can't we get more air anyhow?
+
+"'If you come again up here, m'sieu, you will be the first visitor the
+Nid de l'Aigle has seen for four years,' said old Cazot, as she showed
+me out through the dusky-vaulted passage. She was a cheerful, garrulous
+old woman, strong in her devotion to the De l'Heris of the bygone past;
+stronger even yet in her love for their single orphan representative of
+the beggared present. 'Visitors! Is it likely we should have any,
+m'sieu? Those that would suit me would be bad company for Ma'amselle
+Florelle, and those that should seek her never do. I recollect the time,
+m'sieu, when the highest in all the departments were glad to come to the
+bidding of a De l'Heris; but generations have gone since then, and lands
+and gold gone too, and, if you cannot feast them, what care people for
+you? That is true in the Pyrenees, m'sieu, as well as in the rest of the
+world. I have not lived eighty years without finding out that. If my
+child yonder were the heiress of the De l'Heris, there would be plenty
+to court and seek her; but she lives in these poor broken-down ruins
+with me, an old peasant woman, to care for her as best I can, and not a
+soul takes heed of her save the holy women at the convent, where, maybe,
+she will seek refuge at last!'
+
+"She let me out at the gate where I had thundered for admittance two
+hours before, and, giving her my thanks for her hospitality--money she
+would not take--I wished her good day, and rode down the bridle-path to
+St. Sauveur, and onwards to Luz, thinking at intervals of that fair
+young life that had just sprung up, and was already destined to wither
+away its bloom in a convent. Any destiny would be better to proffer to
+her than that. She interested me already by her childlike loveliness and
+her strange solitude of position, and I thought she would while away
+some of the long summer hours during my stay in the Midi when I was
+tired of chamois and palette, and my lazy dolce under the beech-wood
+shades. At any rate, she was newer and more charming than the belles of
+Eaux Bonnes.
+
+"The next morning I remembered her permission and my promise, and I rode
+out through the town again, up the mountain-road, to the Nid de l'Aigle;
+glad of anything that gave me an amusement and a pursuit. I never wholly
+appreciate the far niente, I think; perhaps I have lived too entirely in
+the world--and a world ultra-cold and courtly, too--to retain much
+patience for the meditative life, the life of trees and woods, sermons
+in stones, and monologues in mountains. I am a restless, ambitious man;
+I must have a _pursuit_, be it of a great aim or a small, or I grow
+weary, and my time hangs heavily on hand. Already having found Florelle
+de l'Heris among these hills reconciled me more to my _pro tempo_
+banishment from society, excitement, and pleasure, and I thanked my good
+fortune for having lighted upon her. She was very lovely, and I always
+care more for the physical than the intellectual charms of any woman. I
+do not share some men's visionary requirements on their mental score; I
+ask but material beauty, and am content with it.
+
+"I rode up to the Nid de l'Aigle: by a clearer light it stood on a spot
+of great picturesqueness, and before the fury of the revolutionary
+peasantry had destroyed what was the then habitable and stately château,
+must have been a place of considerable extent and beauty, and in the
+feudal times, fenced in by the natural ramparts of its shelving rocks,
+no doubt all but impregnable. There were but a few ruins now that held
+together and had a roof over them--the part where Madame Cazot and the
+last of the De l'Heris lived; it was perfectly solitary; there was
+nothing to be heard round it but the foaming of the river, the music of
+the sheep-bells from the flocks that fed in the clefts and on the slopes
+of grass-land, and the shout of some shepherd-boy from the path below;
+but it was as beautiful a spot as any in the Pyrenees, with its
+overhanging beech-woods, its wilderness of wild-flowers, its rocks
+covered with that soft gray moss whose tint defies one to repeat it in
+oil or water colors, and its larches and beeches drooping over into the
+waters of the Gave. In such a home, with no companions save her father,
+old Cazot, and her great stag-hound, and, occasionally, the quiet
+recluses of St. Marie Purificatrice, with everything to feed her native
+poetry and susceptibility, and nothing to teach her anything of the
+actual and ordinary world, it were inevitable that the character of
+Florelle should take its coloring from the scenes around her, and that
+she should grow up singularly childlike, imaginative, and innocent of
+all that in any other life she would unavoidably have known. Well
+educated she was, through her father and the nuns, but it was a
+semi-religious and peculiar education, of which the chief literature had
+been the legendary and sacred poetry of France and Spain, the chief
+amusement copying the illuminated missals lent her by the nuns, or
+joining in the choral services of the convent; an education that taught
+her nothing of the world from which she was shut out, and encouraged all
+that was self-devoted, visionary, and fervid in her nature, leaving her
+at seventeen as unconscious of evil as the youngest child. I despair of
+making you imagine what Florelle then was. Had I never met her, I should
+have believed in her as little as yourself, and would have discredited
+the existence of so poetic a creation out of the world of fiction; her
+ethereal delicacy, her sunny gayety when anything amused her, her
+intense sensitiveness, pained in a moment by a harsh word, pleased as
+soon by a kind one, her innocence of all the blots and cruelties,
+artifices and evils, of that world beyond her Nid de l'Aigle, made a
+character strangely new to me, and strangely winning, but which to you I
+despair of portraying: I could not have _imagined_ it. Had I never seen
+her, and had I met with it in the pages of a novel, I should have put it
+aside as a graceful but impossible conception of romance.
+
+"I went up that day to the Nid de l'Aigle, and Florelle received me with
+pleasure; perhaps Madame Cazot had instilled into her some scepticism
+that 'a grand seigneur,' as the woman was pleased to term me, would
+trouble himself to ride up the mountains from Luz merely to repeat his
+thanks for an hour's shelter and a supper of roasted chestnuts. She was
+a simple-minded, good-hearted old woman, who had lived all her life
+among the rocks and rivers of the Hautes-Pyrenées, her longest excursion
+a market-day to Luz or Bagnères. She looked on her young mistress and
+charge as a child--in truth, Florelle was but little more--and thought
+my visit paid simply from gratitude and courtesy, never dreaming of
+attributing it to 'cette beauté héréditaire des L'Heris,' which she was
+proud of boasting was an inalienable heirloom to the family.
+
+"I often repeated my visits; so often, that in a week or so the old
+ruined château grew a natural resort in the long summer days, and
+Florelle watched for my coming from the deep-arched window where I had
+seen her first, or from under the boughs of the great copper beech that
+grew before the gate, and looked for me as regularly as though I were to
+spend my lifetime in the valley of Luz. Poor child! I never told her my
+title, but I taught her to call me by my christian name. It used to
+sound very pretty when she said it, with her long Southern
+pronunciation--prettier than it ever sounds now from the lips of
+Beatrice Acqua d'Oro yonder, in her softest moments, when she plays at
+sentiment. She had great natural talent for art, hitherto uncultivated,
+of course, save by such instructions as one of the women at the convent,
+skilful at illuminating, had occasionally given her. I amused myself
+with teaching her to transfer to paper and canvas the scenery she loved
+so passionately. I spent many hours training this talent of hers that
+was of very unusual calibre, and, with due culture, might have ranked
+her with Elisabetta Sirani or Rosa Bonheur. Sitting with her in the old
+room, or under the beech-trees, or by the side of the torrents that tore
+down the rocks into the Gave, it pleased me to draw out her unsullied
+thoughts, to spread her mind out before me like a book--a pure book
+enough, God knows, with not even a stain of the world upon it--to make
+her eyes glisten and glow and dilate, to fill them with tears or
+laughter at my will, to wake up her young life from its unconscious,
+untroubled, childish repose to a new happiness, a new pain, which she
+felt but could not translate, which dawned in her face for me, but never
+spoke in its true language to her, ignorant then of its very name--it
+amused me. Bah! our amusements are cruel sometimes, and costly too!
+
+"It was at that time I took the head in pastels which you have seen, and
+she asked me, in innocent admiration of its loveliness, if she was
+_indeed_ like that?--This night is awfully oppressive. Is there water in
+that carafe? Is it iced? Push it to me. Thank you.
+
+"I was always welcome at the Nid de l'Aigle. Old Cazot, with the
+instinct of servants who have lived with people of birth till they are
+as proud of their master's heraldry as though it were their own,
+discerned that I was of the same rank as her adored House of De
+l'Heris--if indeed she admitted any equal to them--and with all the
+cheery familiarity of a Frenchwoman treated me with punctilious
+deference, being as thoroughly imbued with respect and adoration for the
+aristocracy as any of those who died for the white lilies in the Place
+de la Révolution. And Florelle--Florelle watched for me, and counted her
+hours by those I spent with her. You are sure I had not read and played
+with women's hearts so long--women, too, with a thousand veils and
+evasions and artifices, of which she was in pure ignorance even of the
+existence--without having this heart, young, unworn, and unoccupied,
+under my power at once, plastic to mould as wax, ready to receive any
+impressions at my hands, and moulded easily to my will. Florelle had
+read no love stories to help her to translate this new life to which I
+awoke her, or to put her on her guard against it. I went there often,
+every day at last, teaching my pupil the art which she was only too glad
+and too eager to learn, stirring her vivid imagination with descriptions
+of that brilliant outside world, of whose pleasures, gayeties and
+pursuits she was as ignorant as any little gentian flower on the rocks;
+keeping her spell-bound with glimpses of its life, which looked to her
+like fairyland, bizarre bal masqué though it be to us; and pleasing
+myself with awakening new thoughts, new impressions, new emotions, which
+swept over her tell-tale face like the lights and shades over
+meadow-land as the sun fades on and off it. She was a new study, a new
+amusement to me, after the women of our world, and I beguiled my time
+with her, not thoughtlessly, as I might have done, not too hastily, as I
+_should_ have done ten years before, but pleased with my new amusement,
+and more charmed with Florelle than I at first knew, though I confess I
+soon wished to make her love me, and soon tried my best to make her do
+so--an easy task when one has had some practice in the rose-hued
+atmosphere of the boudoir, among the most difficile and the most
+brilliant coquettes of Europe! Florelle, with a nature singularly
+loving, and a mind singularly imaginative, with no rival for me even in
+her fancy, soon lavished on me all the love of which her impassioned and
+poetic character was capable. She did not know it, but I did. She loved
+me, poor child!--love more pure, unselfish, and fond than I ever won
+before, than I shall ever win again.
+
+"Basta! why need you have lighted on that crayon-head, and make me rake
+up this story? I loathe looking at the past. What good ever comes of it?
+A wise man lives only in his present. 'La vita è appunto una memoria,
+una speranza, un punto,' writes the fool of a poet, as though the bygone
+memories and the unrealized hopes were worth a straw! It is that very
+present 'instant' that he despises which is available, and in which,
+when we are in our senses, we absorb ourselves, knowing that that alone
+will yield a fruit worth having. What are the fruits of the others? only
+Dead Sea apples that crumble into ash.
+
+"I knew that Florelle loved me; that I, and I alone, filled both her
+imagination and her heart. I would not precipitately startle her into
+any avowal of it. I liked to see it dawn in her face and gleam in her
+eyes, guilelessly and unconsciously. It was a new pleasure to me, a new
+charm in that book of Woman of which I had thought I knew every phase,
+and had exhausted every reading. I taught Florelle to love me, but I
+would not give her a name to my teaching till she found it herself. I
+returned it? O yes, I loved her, selfishly, as most people, men or
+women, do love, let them say what they will; _very_ selfishly,
+perhaps--a love that was beneath her--a love for which, had she seen
+into my heart, she might have disdained and hated me, if her soft nature
+could have been moved to so fierce a thing as hate--a love that sought
+its own gratification, and thought nothing of her welfare--a love _not_
+worthy of her, as I sometimes felt then, as I believe now.
+
+"I had been about six weeks in the Pyrenees since the day I lost myself
+en route from Gavarnie; most of the days I had spent three or four
+hours, often more, at the Nid de l'Aigle, giving my painting lessons to
+Florelle, or being guided by her among the beech-wooded and mountain
+passes near her home. The dreariest fens and flats might have gathered
+interest from such a guide, and the glorious beauties of the Midi, well
+suited to her, gained additional poetry from her impassioned love for
+them, and her fond knowledge of all their legends, superstitions,
+histories, and associated memories, gathered from the oral lore of the
+peasantry, the cradle songs of Madame Cazot, and the stories of the old
+chronicles of the South. Heavens! what a wealth of imagination, talent,
+genius, lay in her if _I_ had not destroyed it!
+
+"At length the time drew near when my so-called sojourn at the Baths
+must end. One day Florelle and I were out sketching, as usual; she sat
+under one of the great beeches, within a few feet of one of the cascades
+that fell into the Gave du Pau, and I lay on the grass by her, looking
+into those clear gazelle eyes that met mine so brightly and trustfully,
+watching the progress of her brush, and throwing twigs and stones into
+the spray of the torrent. I can remember the place as though it were
+yesterday, the splash of the foam over the rocks, the tinkle of the
+sheep-bells from the hills, the scent of the wild flowers growing round,
+the glowing golden light that spread over the woodlands, touching even
+the distant crest of Mount Aigu and the Pic du Midi. Strange how some
+scenes will stamp themselves on the camera of the brain never to be
+effaced, let one try all that one may.
+
+"There, that morning, I, for the first time since we had met, spoke of
+leaving Luz, and of going back to that life which I had so often amused
+her by describing. Happy in her present, ignorant of how soon the scenes
+so familiar and dear to her would tire and pall on me, and infinitely
+too much of a child to have looked beyond, or speculated upon anything
+which I had not spoken of to her, it had not presented itself to her
+that this sort of life could not go on for ever; that even she would not
+reconcile me long to the banishment from my own world, and that in the
+nature of things we must either become more to each other than we were
+now, or part as strangers, whom chance had thrown together for a little
+time. She loved me, but, as I say, so innocently and uncalculatingly,
+that she never knew it till I spoke of leaving her; then she grew very
+pale, her eyes filled with tears, and shunned mine for the first time,
+and, as an anatomist watches the quiver of pain in his victim, so I
+watched the suffering of mine. It was her first taste of the bitterness
+of life, and while I inflicted the pain I smiled at it, pleased in my
+egotism to see the power I had over her. It was cruel, I grant it, but
+in confessing it I only confess to what nine out of ten men have felt,
+though they may conceal or deny it.
+
+"'You will miss me, Florelle?' I asked her. She looked at me
+reproachfully, wistfully, piteously, the sort of look I have seen in the
+eyes of a dying deer; too bewildered by this sudden mention of my
+departure to answer in words. No answer was needed with eyes so eloquent
+as hers, but I repeated it again. I knew I gave pain, but I knew, too, I
+should soon console her. Her lips quivered, and the tears gathered in
+her eyes; she had not known enough of sorrow to have learnt to dissemble
+it. I asked her if she loved me so much that she was unwilling to bid me
+farewell. For the first time her eyes sank beneath mine, and a hot
+painful color flushed over her face. Poor child! if ever I have been
+loved by any woman, I was loved by her. Then I woke her heart from its
+innocent peaceful rest, with words that spoke a language utterly new to
+her. I sketched to her a life with me that made her cheeks glow, and her
+lips quiver, and her eyes grow dark. She was lovelier in those moments
+than any art could ever attempt to picture! She loved me, and I made
+her tell me so over and over again. She put her fate unhesitatingly into
+my hands, and rejoiced in the passion I vowed her, little understanding
+how selfishly I sought her, little thinking, in her ignorance of the
+evil of the world, that while she rejoiced in the fondness I lavished on
+her, and worshipped me as though I were some superior unerring godlike
+being, she was to me only a new toy, only a pursuit of the hour, a
+plaything, too, of which I foresaw I should tire! Isn't it Benjamin
+Constant who says,'Malheureux l'homme qui, dans le commencement d'un
+amour, prévoit avec une précision cruelle l'heure où il en sera lassé'?
+
+"As it happened, I had made that morning an appointment in Luz with some
+men I knew, who happened to be passing through it, and had stopped there
+that day to go up the Pic du Midi the next, so that I could spend only
+an hour or two with Florelle. I took her to her home, parted with her
+for a few hours, and went down the path. I remember how she stood
+looking after me under the heavy gray stone-work of the gateway, the
+tendrils of the ivy hanging down and touching her hair that glistened in
+the sunshine as she smiled me her adieux. My words had translated, for
+the first time, all the newly-dawned emotions that had lately stirred in
+her heart, while she knew not their name.
+
+"I soon lost sight of her through a sharp turn of the bridle-path round
+the rocks, and went on my way thinking of my new love, of how completely
+I held the threads of her fate in my hands, and how entirely it lay in
+my power to touch the chords of her young heart into acute pain or into
+as acute pleasure with one word of mine--of how utterly I could mould
+her character, her life, her fate, whether for happiness or misery, at
+my will. I loved her well enough, if only for her unusual beauty, to
+feel triumph at my entire power, and to feel a tinge of her own poetry
+and tenderness of feeling stirring in me as I went on under the green,
+drooping, fanlike boughs of the pines, thinking of Florelle de l'Heris.
+
+"'M'sieu! permettez-moi vous parle un p'tit mot?'
+
+"Madame Cazot's patois made me look up, almost startled for the moment,
+though there was nothing astonishing in her appearance there, in her
+accustomed spot under the shade of a mountain-ash and a great boulder of
+rock, occupied at her usual task, washing linen in the Gave, as it
+foamed and rushed over its stones. She raised herself from her work and
+looked up at me, shading her eyes from the light--a sunburnt, wrinkled,
+hardy old woman, with her scarlet capulet, her blue cloth jacket, and
+her brown woollen petticoat, so strange a contrast to the figure I had
+lately left under the gateway of the Nid de l'Aigle, that it was
+difficult to believe them even of the same sex or country.
+
+"She spoke with extreme deference, as she always did, but so earnestly,
+that I looked at her in surprise, and stopped to hear what it might be
+she had to say. She was but a peasant woman, but she had a certain
+dignity of manner for all that, caught, no doubt, from her long service
+with, and her pride in, the De l'Heris.
+
+"'M'sieu, I have no right, perhaps, to address you; you are a grand
+seigneur, and I but a poor peasant woman. Nevertheless, I must speak. I
+have a charge to which I shall have to answer in the other world to God
+and to my master. M'sieu, pardon me what I say, but you love Ma'amselle
+Florelle?'
+
+"I stared at the woman, astonished at her interference and annoyed at
+her presumption, and motioned her aside with my stick. But she placed
+herself in the path--a narrow path--on which two people could not have
+stood without one or other going into the Gave, and stopped me
+resolutely and respectfully, shading her eyes from the sun, and looking
+steadily at my face.
+
+"'M'sieu, a little while ago, in the gateway yonder, when you parted
+with Ma'amselle Florelle, I was coming out behind you to bring my linen
+to the river, and I saw you take her in your arms and kiss her many
+times, and whisper to her that you would come again "ce soir!" Then,
+m'sieu, I knew that you must love my little lady, or, at least, must
+have made her love you. I have thought her--living always with her--but
+a beautiful child still; but you have found her a beautiful woman, and
+loved her, or taught her love, m'sieu. Pardon me if I wrong your honor,
+but my master left her in my charge, and I am an ignorant old peasant,
+ill fitted for such a trust; but is this love of yours such as the Sieur
+de l'Heris, were he now on earth, would put his hand in your own and
+thank you for, or is it such that he would wash out its insult in your
+blood or his?'
+
+"Her words amazed me for a moment, first at the presumption of an
+interference of which I had never dreamt, next at the iron firmness with
+which this old woman, nothing daunted, spoke as though the blood of a
+race of kings ran in her veins. I laughed a little at the absurdity of
+this cross-questioning from her to me, and not choosing to bandy words
+with her, bade her move aside; but her eyes blazed like fire; she stood
+firm as the earth itself.
+
+"'M'sieu, answer me! You love Ma'amselle Florelle--you have asked her in
+marriage?'
+
+"I smiled involuntarily:
+
+"'My good woman, men of my class don't marry every pretty face they
+meet; we are not so fond of the institution. You mean well, I know; at
+the same time, you are deucedly impertinent, and I am not accustomed to
+interference. Have the goodness to let me pass, if you please.'
+
+"But she would not move. She folded her arms across her chest, quivering
+from head to foot with passion, her deep-set eyes flashing like coals
+under her bushy eyebrows.
+
+"'M'sieu, I understand you well enough. The house of the L'Heris is
+fallen, ruined, and beggared, and you deem dishonor may approach it
+unrebuked and unrevenged. Listen to me, m'sieu; I am but a woman, it is
+true, and old, but I swore by Heaven and Our Lady to the Sieur de
+l'Heris, when he lay dying yonder, years ago, that I would serve the
+child he left, as my forefathers had served his in peace and war for
+centuries, and keep and guard her as best I might dearer than my own
+heart's blood. Listen to me. Before this love of yours shall breathe
+another word into her ear to scorch and sully it; before your lips shall
+ever meet hers again; before you say again to a De l'Heris poor and
+powerless, what you would never have dared to say to a De l'Heris rich
+and powerful, I will defend her as the eagles by the Nid de l'Aigle
+defend their young. You shall only reach her across my dead body!'
+
+"She spoke with the vehemence and passionate gesticulation of a
+Southern; in her patois, it is true, and with rude eloquence, but there
+was an odd _timbre_ of pathos in her voice, harsh though it was, and a
+certain wild dignity about her through the very earnestness and passion
+that inspired her. I told her she was mad, and would have put her out of
+my path, but, planting herself before me, she laid hold of my arm so
+firmly that I could not have pushed forwards without violence, which I
+would not have used to a woman, and a woman, moreover, as old as she
+was.
+
+"'Listen to one word more, m'sieu. I know not what title you may bear in
+your own country, but I saw a coronet upon your handkerchief the other
+day, and I can tell you are a grand seigneur--you have the air of it,
+the manner. M'sieu, you can have many women to love you; cannot you
+spare this one? you must have many pleasures, pursuits, enjoyments in
+your world, can you not leave me this single treasure? Think, m'sieu! If
+Ma'amselle Florelle loves you now, she will love you only the dearer as
+years go on; and _you_, you will tire of her, weary of her, want change,
+fresh beauty, new excitement--you must know that you will, or why should
+you shrink from the bondage of marriage?--you will weary of her; you
+will neglect her first and desert her afterwards; what will be the
+child's life _then_? Think! You have done her cruel harm enough now with
+your wooing words, why will you do her more? What is your love beside
+hers? If you have heart or conscience, you cannot dare to contrast them
+together; _she_ would give up everything for you, and _you_ would give
+up nothing! M'sieu, Florelle is not like the women of your world; she is
+innocent of evil as the holy saints; those who meet her should guard her
+from the knowledge, and not lead her to it. Were the Sieur De l'Heris
+living now, were her House powerful as I have known them, would you have
+dared or dreamt of seeking her as you do now? M'sieu, he who wrongs
+trust, betrays hospitality, and takes advantage of that very purity,
+guilelessness, and want of due protection which should be the best and
+strongest appeal to every man of chivalry and honor--he, whoever he be,
+the De l'Heris would have held, as what he is, a coward! Will you not
+now have pity upon the child, and let her go?'
+
+"I have seldom been moved in, never been swayed from, any pursuit or any
+purpose, whether of love, or pleasure, or ambition; but something in old
+Cazot's words stirred me strangely, more strangely still from the daring
+and singularity of the speaker. Her intense love for her young charge
+gave her pathos, eloquence, and even a certain rude majesty, as she
+spoke; her bronzed wrinkled features worked with emotions she could not
+repress, and hot tears fell over her hard cheeks. I felt that what she
+said was true; that as surely as the night follows the day would
+weariness of it succeed to my love for Florelle, that to the hospitality
+I had so readily received I had, in truth, given but an ill return, and
+that I had deliberately taken advantage of the very ignorance of the
+world and faith in me which should have most appealed to my honor. I
+knew that what she said was true, and this epithet of 'coward' hit me
+harder from the lips of a woman, on whom her sex would not let me avenge
+it, with whom my conscience would not let me dispute it, than it would
+have done from any man. _I_ called a coward by an old peasant woman!
+absurd idea enough, wasn't it? It is a more absurd one still that I
+could not listen to her unmoved, that her words touched me--how or why I
+could not have told--stirred up in me something of weakness,
+unselfishness, or chivalrousness--I know not what exactly--that prompted
+me for once to give up my own egotistical evanescent passions and act to
+Florelle as though all the males of her house were on earth to make me
+render account of my acts. At old Cazot's words I shrank for once from
+my own motives and my own desires, shrank from classing Florelle with
+the _cocottes_ of my world, from bringing her down to their level and
+their life.
+
+"'You will have pity on her, m'sieu, and go?' asked old Cazot, more
+softly, as she looked in my face.
+
+"I did not answer her, but put her aside out of my way, went down the
+mountain-path to where my horse was left cropping the grass on the level
+ground beneath a plane-tree, and rode at a gallop into Luz without
+looking back at the gray-turreted ruins of the Nid de l'Aigle.
+
+"And I left Luz that night without seeing Florelle de l'Heris again--a
+tardy kindness--one, perhaps, as cruel as the cruelty from which old
+Cazot had protected her. Don't you think I was a fool, indeed, for once
+in my life, to listen to an old woman's prating? Call me so if you like,
+I shall not dispute it; we hardly know when we are fools, and when wise
+men! Well! I have not been much given to such weaknesses.
+
+"I left Luz, sending a letter to Florelle, in which I bade her farewell,
+and entreated her to forget me--an entreaty which, while I made it, I
+felt would not be obeyed--one which, in the selfishness of my heart, I
+dare say, I hoped might not be. I went back to my old diplomatic and
+social life, to my customary pursuits, amusements, and ambitions,
+turning over the leaf of my life that contained my sojourn in the
+Pyrenees, as you turn over the page of a romance to which you will never
+recur. I led the same life, occupied myself with my old ambitions, and
+enjoyed my old pleasures; but I could not forget Florelle as wholly as I
+wished and tried to do. I had not usually been troubled with such
+memories; if unwelcome, I could generally thrust them aside; but
+Florelle I did not forget; the more I saw of other women the sweeter and
+brighter seemed by contrast her sensitive, delicate nature, unsullied by
+the world, and unstained by artifice and falsehood. The longer time went
+on, the more I regretted having given her up--perhaps on no better
+principle than that on which a child cares most for the toy he cannot
+have; perhaps because, away from her, I realized I had lost the purest
+and the strongest love I had ever won. In the whirl of my customary life
+I sometimes wondered how she had received my letter, and how far the
+iron had burnt into her young heart--wondered if she had joined the
+Sisters of Sainte Marie Purificatrice, or still led her solitary life
+among the rocks and beech-woods of Nid de l'Aigle. I often thought of
+her, little as the life I led was conducive to regretful or romantic
+thoughts. At length my desire to see her again grew ungovernable. I had
+never been in the habit of refusing myself what I wished; a man is a
+fool who does, if his wishes are in any degree attainable. And at the
+end of the season I went over to Paris, and down again once more into
+the Midi. I reached Luz, lying in the warm golden Pyrenean light as I
+had left it, and took once more the old familiar road up the hills to
+the Nid de l'Aigle. There had been no outward change from the year that
+had flown by; there drooped the fan-like branches of the pines; there
+rushed the Gave over its rocky bed; there came the silvery sheep-bell
+chimes down the mountain-sides; there, over hill and wood, streamed the
+mellow glories of the Southern sunlight. There is something unutterably
+painful in the sight of any place after one's lengthened absence,
+wearing the same smile, lying in the same sunlight. I rode on, picturing
+the flush of gladness that would dawn in Florelle's face at the sight of
+me, thinking that Mme. Cazot should not part me from her again, even, I
+thought, as I saw the old gray turrets above the beech-woods, if I paid
+old Cazot's exacted penalty of marriage! I loved Florelle more deeply
+than I had done twelve months before. 'L'absence allument les grandes
+passions et éteignent les petites,' they say. It had been the reverse
+with me.
+
+"I rode up the bridle-path and passed through the old gateway. There was
+an unusual stillness about the place; nothing but the roar of the
+torrent near, and the songs of the birds in the branches speaking in the
+summer air. My impatience to see Florelle, or to hear her, grew
+ungovernable. The door stood open. I groped my way through the passage
+and pushed open the door of the old room. Under the oriel window, where
+I had seen her first, she lay on a little couch. I saw her again--but
+_how_! My God! to the day of my death I shall never forget her face as I
+saw it then; it was turned from me, and her hair streamed over her
+pillows, but as the sunlight fell upon it, I knew well enough what was
+written there. Old Cazot, sitting by the bed with her head on her arms,
+looked up, and came towards me, forcing me back.
+
+"'You are come at last, to see her die. Look on your work--look well at
+it--and then go; with my curse upon you!'
+
+"I shook off her grasp, and forcing my way towards the window, threw
+myself down by Florelle's bed; till then I never knew how well I loved
+her. My voice awoke her from her sleep, and, with a wild cry of joy, she
+started up, weak as she was, and threw her arms round my neck, clinging
+to me with her little hands, and crying to me deliriously not to leave
+her while she lived--to stay with her till death should take her; where
+had I been so long? why had I come so late? _So late!_--those piteous
+words! As I held her in my arms, unconscious from the shock, and saw the
+pitiless marks that disease, the most hopeless and the most cruel, had
+made on the face that I had left fair, bright, and full of life as any
+child's, I felt the full bitterness of that piteous reproach, 'Why had I
+come so late?'
+
+"What need to tell you more. Florelle de l'Heris was dying, and I had
+killed her. The child that I had loved so selfishly had loved me with
+all the concentrated tenderness of her isolated and impassioned nature;
+the letter I wrote bidding her farewell had given her her death-blow.
+They told me that from the day she received that letter everything lost
+its interest for her. She would sit for hours looking down the road to
+Luz, as though watching wearily for one who never came, or kneeling
+before the pictures I had left as before some altar, praying to Heaven
+to take care of me, and bless me, and let her see me once again before
+she died. Consumption had killed her mother in her youth; during the
+chill winter at the Nid de l'Aigle the hereditary disease settled upon
+her. When I found her she was dying fast. All the medical aid, all the
+alleviations, luxuries, resources, that money could procure, to ward off
+the death I would have given twenty years of my life to avert, I
+lavished on her, but they were useless; for my consolation they told me
+that, used a few months earlier, they would have saved her! She lingered
+three weeks, fading away like a flower gathered before its fullest
+bloom. Each day was torture to me. I knew enough of the disease to know
+from the first there was no hope for her or me. Those long terrible
+night-hours, when she lay with her head upon my shoulder, and her little
+hot thin hands in mine, while I listened, uncertain whether every breath
+was not the last, or whether life was not already fled! By God! I cannot
+think of them!
+
+One of those long summer nights Florelle died; happy with me, loving and
+forgiving me to the last; speaking to the last of that reunion in which
+_she_, in her innocent faith, believed and hoped, according to the
+promise of her creed!--died with her hands clasped round my neck, and
+her eyes looking up to mine, till the last ray of light was quenched in
+them--died while the morning dawn rose in the east and cast a golden
+radiance on her face, the herald of a day to which she never awoke!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a dead silence between us; the Arno splashed against the wall
+below, murmuring its eternal song beneath its bridge, while the dark
+heavy clouds drifted over the sky with a sullen roll of thunder. He lay
+back in his chair, the deep shadow of the balcony pillar hiding his face
+from me, and his voice quivered painfully as he spoke the last words of
+his story. He was silent for many minutes, and so was I, regretting that
+my careless question had unfolded a page out of his life's history
+written in characters so painful to him. Such skeletons dwell in the
+hearts of most; hands need be tender that disentomb them and drag out to
+daylight ashes so mournful and so grievous, guarded so tenaciously,
+hidden so jealously. Each of us is tender over his own, but who does not
+think his brother's fit subject for jest, for gibe, for mocking dance
+of death?
+
+He raised himself with a laugh, but his lips looked white as death as he
+drank down a draught of the Hermitage.
+
+"Well! what say you: is the maxim right, _y-a-t-il femmes et femmes_?
+Caramba! why need you have pitched upon that portfolio?--There are the
+lights in the Acqua d'Oro's palace; we must go, or we shall get into
+disgrace."
+
+We went, and Beatrice Acqua d'Oro talked very ardent Italian to him, and
+the Comtesse Bois de Sandal remarked to me what a brilliant and
+successful man Lord ---- was, but how unimpressionable!--as cold and as
+glittering as ice. Nothing had ever made him _feel_, she was quite
+certain, pretty complimentary nonsense though he often talked. What
+would the Marchesa and the Comtesse have said, I wonder, had I told them
+of that little grave under the Pyrenean beech-woods? So much does the
+world know of any of us! In the lives of all men are doubled-down pages
+written on in secret, folded out of sight, forgotten as they make other
+entries in the diary, and never read by their fellows, only glanced at
+by themselves in some midnight hour of solitude.
+
+Basta! they are painful reading, my friends. Don't you find them so? Let
+us leave the skeletons in the closet, the pictures in the portfolio, the
+doubled-down pages in the locked diary, and go to Beatrice Acqua
+d'Oro's, where the lights are burning gayly. What is Madame Bois de
+Sandal, _née_ Dashwood, singing in the music room?
+
+ The tender grace of a day that is dead
+ Will never come back to me!
+
+That is the burden of many songs sung in this world, for some dead
+flowers strew most paths, and grass grows over myriad graves, and many
+leaves are folded down in many lives, I fear. And--retrospection is very
+idle, my good fellow, and regret is as bad as the tic, and flirting is
+deucedly pleasant; the white Hermitage we drank to-night is gone, we
+know, but are there no other bottles left of wine every whit as good?
+Shall we waste our time sighing after spilt lees? Surely not. And
+yet--ah me!--the dead fragrance of those vines that yielded us the
+golden nectar of our youth!
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR;
+
+OR,
+
+"NOT AT ALL A PROPER PERSON."
+
+
+Bon ami, do you consider the possession of sisters an agreeable addition
+to anybody's existence? _I_ hold it very intensely the reverse. Who pats
+a man down so spitefully as his sisters? Who refuses so obstinately to
+see any good in the Nazarene they have known from their nurseries? Who
+snubs him so contumaciously, when he's a little chap in jackets and they
+young ladies already out? Who worries him so pertinaciously to marry
+their pet friend, "who has ten thousand a year, dear! Red hair? I'm sure
+she has not! It's the most lovely auburn! But you never see any beauty
+in _refined_ women!" Who, if you incline towards a pretty little
+ineligible, rakes up so laboriously every scrap of gossip detrimental to
+her, and pours into your ear the delightful intelligence that she has
+been engaged to Powell of the Grays, is a shocking flirt, wears false
+teeth, is full five years older than she says she is, and has most
+objectionable connections? Who, I should like to know, does any and all
+of these things, my good fellow, so amiably and unremittingly as your
+sisters? till--some day of grace, perhaps--you make a telling speech at
+St. Stephen's, and fling a second-hand aroma of distinction upon them;
+or marry a co-heiress and lady-in-her-own-right, and they _raffolent_ of
+that charming creature, speculating on the desirability of being
+invited to your house when the men are down for September. Then, what a
+dear fellow you become! they always _were_ so fond of you! a little
+wild! oh, yes! but they are _so_ glad you are changed, and think more
+seriously now! it was only from a _real_ interest in your welfare that
+they used to grieve, &c., &c.
+
+My sisters were my natural enemies, I remember, when I was in the daisy
+age and exposed to their thraldom; they were so blandly superior, so
+ineffably condescending, and wielded, with such smiling dexterity, that
+feminine power of torture known familiarly as "nagging!" Now, of course,
+they leave me in peace; but from my earliest to my emancipated years
+they were my natural enemies. I might occasionally excite the enmity, it
+is possible. I remember, when I was aged eight, covering Constance, a
+stately brunette, with a mortifying amount of confusion, by asking her,
+as she welcomed a visitor with effusion, why she said she was delighted
+to see her when she had cried "There's that odious woman again!" as we
+saw the carriage drive up. I have a criminal recollection of taking
+Gwendolina's fan, fresh from Howell and James's, and stripping it of its
+gold-powdered down before her face ere she could rush to its rescue, as
+an invaluable medium in the manufacture of mayflies. I also have a dim
+and guilty recollection of saying to the Hon. George Cursitt, standing
+then in the interesting position of my prospective brother-in-law, "Mr.
+Cursitt, Agneta doesn't care one straw for you. I heard her saying so
+last night to Con; and that if you weren't so near the title, she would
+never have accepted you;" which revelation inopportunely brought that
+desirable alliance to an end, and Olympian thunders on my culprit's
+head.
+
+I had my sins, doubtless, but they were more than avenged on me; my
+sisters were my natural enemies, and I never knew of any man's who
+weren't so, more or less. Ah! my good sirs, those domesticities are all
+of them horrid bores, and how any man, happily and thrice blessedly
+free from them, can take the very worst of them voluntarily on his head
+by the Gate of Marriage (which differs thus remarkably from a certain
+Gate at Jerusalem, that at the one the camels kneel down to be lightened
+of all _their_ burdens ere they can pass through it; at the other, the
+poor human animal kneels down to be loaded with all _his_ ere he is
+permitted to enter), does pass my comprehension, I confess. I might
+amply avenge the injuries of my boyhood received from _mesdemoiselles
+mes soeurs_. Could I not tell Gwendolina of the pot of money dropped by
+her caro sposo over the Cesarewitch Stakes? Could I not intimate to
+Agneta where her Right Honorable lord and master spent the small hours
+last night, when popularly supposed to be nodding on the Treasury
+benches in the service of the state? Could I not rend the pride of
+Constance, by casually asking monsieur her husband, as I sip her coffee
+in her drawing-room this evening, who was that very pretty blonde with
+him at the Crystal Palace yesterday? the blonde being as well known
+about town as any other star of the demi-monde. Of course I could: but I
+am magnanimous; I can too thoroughly sympathize with those poor fellows.
+My vengeance would recoil on innocent heads, so I am magnanimous and
+silent.
+
+My sisters have long ceased to be mesdemoiselles, they have become
+mesdames, in that transforming crucible of marriage in which, assuredly,
+all that glitters is not gold, but in which much is swamped, and
+crushed, and fused with uncongenial metal, and from which the elixir of
+happiness but rarely exhales, whatever feminine alchemists, who
+patronize the hymeneal furnace, may choose to assure us to the contrary.
+My sisters are indisputably very fine women, and develop in full bloom
+all those essential qualities which their moral and mental trainers
+sedulously instilled into them when they were limited to the
+school-room and thorough-bass, Garcia and an "expurgated" Shakespeare,
+the society of Mademoiselle Colletmonté and Fräulein von Engel, and the
+occasional refection of a mild, religious, respectably-twaddling fiction
+of the milk-and-water, pious-tendency, nursery-chronicling, and
+grammar-disregarding class, nowadays indited for the mental improvement
+of a commonplace generation in general, and growing young ladies in
+particular. My sisters are women of the world to perfection; indeed, for
+talent in refrigerating with a glance; in expressing disdain of a
+toilette or a ton by an upraised eyebrow; in assuming a various
+impenetrable plaît-il? expression at a moment's notice; in sweeping past
+intimate friends with a charming unconsciousness of their existence,
+when such unconsciousness is expedient or desirable; in reducing an
+unwished-for intruder into an instantaneous and agonizing sense of his
+own de trop-ism and insignificance--in all such accomplishments and
+acquirements necessary to existence in all proper worlds, I think they
+may be matched with the best-bred lady to be found any day, from April
+to August, between Berkeley Square and Wilton Crescent. Constance, now
+Lady Maréchale, is of a saintly turn, and touched with fashionable
+fanaticism, pets evangelical bishops and ragged school-boys, drives to
+special services, and is called our noble and Christian patroness by
+physicians and hon. secs., holds doctrinal points and strong tracts,
+mixed together in equal proportion, an infallible chloride of lime for
+the disinfectance of our polluted globe, and appears to receive
+celestial telegrams of indisputable veracity and charming acrimony
+concerning the destiny of the vengeful contents of the Seven Vials.
+Agneta, now Mrs. Albany Protocol, is a Cabinet Ministress, and a second
+Duchesse de Longueville (in her own estimation at the least); is
+"strengthening her party" when she issues her dinner invitations,
+whispers awfully of a "crisis" when even penny-paper leaders can't get
+up a breeze, and spends her existence in "pushing" poor Protocol, who,
+thorough Englishman that he is, considers it a point of honor to stand
+still in all paths with praiseworthy Britannic obstinacy and opticism.
+Gwendolina, now Lady Frederic Farniente, is a butterfly of fashion, has
+delicate health, affects dilettanteism, is interested by nothing, has
+many other charming minauderies, and lives in an exclusive circle--so
+tremendously exclusive, indeed, that it is possible she may at last draw
+the _cordon sanitaire_ so _very_ tight, that she will be left alone with
+the pretty woman her mirrors reflect.
+
+They have each of them attained to what the world calls a "good
+position"--an eminence the world dearly reveres; if you can climb to it,
+_do_; never mind what dirt may cling to your feet, or what you may
+chance to pull down in your ascent, so questions will be asked you at
+the top, when you wave your flag victoriously from a plateau at a good
+elevation. They haven't all their ambitions--who has? If a fresh
+Alexander conquered the world he would fret out his life for a
+standing-place to be able to try Archimedes' little experiment on his
+newly-won globe. Lady Maréchale dies for entrance to certain salons
+which are closed to her; she is but a Baronet's wife, and, though so
+heavenly-minded, has _some_ weaknesses of earth. Mrs. Protocol grieves
+because she thinks a grateful country ought to wreathe her lord's brow
+with laurels--_Anglicè_, strawberry-leaves--and the country remains
+ungrateful, and the brows bare. Lady Frederic frets because her foe and
+rival, Lady Maria Fitz-Sachet, has footmen an inch taller than her own.
+They haven't all their ambitions satisfied. We are too occupied with
+kicking our dear friends and neighbors down off the rounds of the social
+ladder to advance ourselves always perhaps as entirely as we otherwise
+might do. But still they occupy "unexceptionable positions," and from
+those fortified and impregnable citadels are very severe upon those who
+are not, and very jealous of those who are, similarly favored by
+fortune. When St. Peter lets ladies through the celestial portals, he'll
+never please them unless he locks out all their acquaintance, and
+indulges them with a gratifying peep at the rejected candidates.
+
+The triad regard each other after the manner of ladies; that is to say,
+Lady Maréchale holds Mrs. Protocol and Lady Frederic "frivolous and
+worldly;" Lady Frederic gives them both one little supercilious
+expressive epithet, "_précieuses_;" Mrs. Protocol considers Lady
+Maréchale a "pharisee," and Lady Frederic a "butterfly;"--in a word,
+there is that charming family love to one another which ladies so
+delight to evince, that I suppose we must excuse them for it on the plea
+that
+
+ 'Tis their nature to!
+
+which Dr. Watts puts forward so amiably and grammatically in excuse for
+the bellicose propensities of the canine race, but which is never
+remembered by priest or layman in extenuation of the human.
+
+They dislike one another--relatives always do--still, the three Arms
+will combine their Horse, Line, and Field Batteries in a common cause
+and against a common enemy; the Saint, the Politician, and the Butterfly
+have several rallying-points in common, and when it comes to the
+question of extinguishing an ineligible, of combining a sneer with a
+smile, of blending the unexceptionably-courteous with the
+indescribably-contemptuous, of calmly shutting their doors to those who
+won't aggrandize them, and blandly throwing them open to those who will,
+it would be an invidious task to give the golden apple, and decide which
+of the three ladies most distinguishes herself in such social prowess.
+
+Need I say that I _don't_ see very much of them?--severe strictures on
+society in general, with moral platitudes, over the luncheon wines at
+Lady Maréchale's; discourse redolent of blue-books, with vindictive
+hits at Protocol and myself for our disinclination to accept a
+"mission," and our levity of life and opinions at "a period so full of
+social revolutions and wide-spread agitation as the present," through
+the soup and fish at Agneta's; softly hissed acerbities and languidly
+yawned satires on the prettiest women of my acquaintance, over the
+coffee at Lady Frederic's; are none of them particularly inviting or
+alluring. And as they or similar conversational confections are
+invariably included in each of the three ladies' entertainments _en
+petit comité_, it isn't wonderful if I forswear their drawing-rooms.
+Chères dames, you complain, and your chosen defenders for you, that men
+don't affect your society nowadays save and except when making love to
+you. It isn't _our_ fault, indeed: you bore us, and--what can we do?--we
+shrink as naturally and pardonably from voluntary boredom as from any
+other voluntary suffering, and shirk an air redolent of ennui from the
+same principle as we do an air redolent of diphtheria. Self-preservation
+is a law of nature, and female society consists too exclusively of
+milk-and-water, dashed here and there with citric acid of malice, to be
+either a recherché or refreshing beverage to palates that have tasted
+warmer spices or more wholesome tonics.
+
+So I don't see much of my triad of sisters unless accidentally, but last
+August I encountered them by chance at Vicq d'Azyr. Do you know Vicq
+d'Azyr? No? All right? when it is known universally it will be spoilt;
+it will soon be fashionable, dyspeptic, artificial, like the crowds that
+will flock to it; its warm, bubbling springs will be gathered into long
+upright glasses, and quaffed by yellow-visaged groups; brass bands will
+bray where now the thrushes, orioles, and nightingales have the
+woodlands to themselves; cavalcades of hired hacks will cut up its
+thyme-covered turf, and young ladies will sketch in tortured outline and
+miserable washes the glorious sweep of its mountains, the crimson tints
+of its forests, the rush of its tumbling torrents, the golden gleam of
+its southern sun. Vicq d'Azyr will be a Spa, and will be spoilt;
+dyspepsia and bronchia, vanities and flirtations, cares and conquests,
+physicians and intrigantes, real marchionesses puffing under asthma,
+fictitious marquises strewing chaff for pigeons, monde and demi-monde,
+grandes dames and dames d'industrie will float into it, a mighty army of
+butterflies with a locust power of destruction: Vicq d'Azyr will be no
+more, and in its stead we shall have--a Fashionable Bath. Vicq d'Azyr,
+however, is free _yet_ from the hand of the spoiler, and is
+charming--its vine-clad hills stretching up in sunny slopes; its little
+homesteads nestling on the mountains' sides among the pines that load
+the air with their rich heavy perfume; its torrents foaming down the
+ravines, flinging their snowy spray far over the bows of arbutus and
+mountain-ash that bend across the brinks of their rushing courses; its
+dark-eyed peasant girls that dance at sunset under the linden-trees like
+living incarnations of Florian's pastorals; its sultry brilliant summer
+nights, when all is still, when the birds are sleeping among the
+ilex-leaves, and the wind barely stirs the tangled boughs of the
+woodland; when night is down on the mountains, wrapping hill and valley,
+crag and forest in one soft purple mist, and the silence around is only
+broken by the mystic music of the rushing waters, the soft whirr of the
+night-birds' wings, or the distant chime of a village clock faintly
+tolling through the air:----Caramba, messieurs! I beg your pardon! I
+don't know why I poetize on Vicq d'Azyr. _I_ went there to slay, not to
+sketch, with a rifle, not with a stylus, to kill izzards and chamois,
+not to indite a poem à la mode, with double-barrelled adjectives, no
+metre, and a "purpose;" nor to add my quota to the luckless loaded walls
+of the Academy by a pre-Raphaelite landscape of arsenical green, with
+the effete trammels of perspective gallantry disregarded, and trees
+like Dr. Syntax's wife, "roundabout and rather squat," with just
+two-dozen-and-seven leaves apiece for liberal allowance. I went to Vicq
+d'Azyr, amongst other places, last August, for chamois-hunting with
+Dunbar, of the Queen's Bays, taking up our abode at the Toison d'Or,
+whither all artists, tourists, men who come for the sport, women who
+come for its scenery, or invalids who come for its waters (whose
+properties, _miserabile dictu!_ are just being discovered as a panacea
+for every human ill--from a migraine to an "incurable pulmonary
+affliction"), seek accommodation if they can have it, since it is the
+only hotel in the place, though a very good one; is adorned with a
+balcony running round the house, twined and buried in honeysuckle and
+wild clematis, which enchants young ladies into instant promotion of it
+into their sketch-books; and gives you, what is of rather more
+importance, and what makes you ready to admire the clematis when, under
+gastronomic exasperation, you might swear at it as a harbor for
+tarantule--an omelette, I assure you, wellnigh as well cooked as you
+have it at Mivart's or Meurice's.
+
+At the Toison d'Or we took up our abode, and at the Toison d'Or we
+encountered my two elder sisters, Constance and Agneta, travelling for
+once on the same road, as they had left Paris together, and were
+together going on to the fashionable capital of a fashionable little toy
+duchy on the other side of the Rhine, when they should have finished
+with the wilder beauties and more unknown charms of Vicq d'Azyr and its
+environs. Each lady had her little train of husband, courier, valet,
+lady's-maid, small dog, and giant jewel-box. I have put the list in the
+inverse ratio of their importance, I believe. Your husband _versus_ your
+jewel-box? Of course, my dear madam; absurd! What's the value of a
+little simple gold ring against a dozen glittering circlets of diamonds,
+emeralds, rubies, and garnets?
+
+Each lady was bent on recruiting herself at Vicq d'Azyr after the toils
+of the season, and of shining _après_ with all the brilliance that a
+fair share of beauty, good positions, and money, fairly entitled
+them to expect, at the little Court of--we will call it
+Lemongenseidlitz--denominated by its charming Duchess, Princess Hélène
+of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz, the loveliest and most volage of all
+minor royalties. Each lady was strongly opposed to whatever the other
+wished; each thought the weather "sultry" when the other thought it
+"chilly," and _vice versâ_. Each considered her own ailments "unheard-of
+suffering, dear!--I could never make any one feel!" &c. &c.--and assured
+you, with mild disdain, that the other's malady was "purely nervous,
+entirely exaggerated, but she _will_ dwell on it so much, poor darling!"
+Each related to you how admirably they would have travelled if _her_
+counsel had been followed, and described how the other _would_ take the
+direction of everything, _would_ confuse poor Chanderlos, the courier,
+till he hardly knew where he was, and _would_ take the night express out
+of pure unkindness, just because she knew how ill it always made her
+(the speaker) feel to be torn across any country the whole night at that
+dreadful pace; each was dissatisfied with everything, pleased with
+nothing, and bored, as became ladies of good degree; each found the sun
+too hot or the wind too cold, the mists too damp or the air too dry, and
+both combined their forces to worry their ladies'-maids, find fault with
+the viands, drive their lords to the registering of an oath never to
+travel with women again, welcome us benignly, since they thought we
+might amuse them, and smile their sunniest on Dunbar--he's
+heir-prospective to the Gwynne Marquisate, and Lady Marqueterie, the
+Saint, is not above keeping one eye open for worldly distinctions, while
+Mrs. Albany Protocol, though a Radical, is, like certain others of the
+ultra-Liberal party, not above a personal kow-towing before those
+"ridiculous and ought-to-be exploded conservative institutions"--Rank
+and Title.
+
+At the Toison d'Or, I say, when, after knocking over izzards _ad
+libitum_ in another part of the district, we descended one evening into
+the valley where Vicq d'Azyr lies nestled in the sunset light, with the
+pretty vendangeuses trooping down from the sloping vineyards, and the
+cattle winding homewards down the hill-side paths, and the vesper-bells
+softly chiming from the convent-tower rising yonder above its woods of
+linden and acacia--at the Toison d'Or, just alighting with the
+respective suites aforesaid, and all those portable embarrassments of
+books, tiger-skin rugs, flacons of bouquet, travelling-bags warranted to
+carry any and everything that the most fastidious can require en route
+from Piccadilly to Peru, with which ladies do love to encumber and
+embitter their own persons and their companions' lives, we met, as I
+have told you, mesdames mes soeurs.
+
+"What! Dear me, how very singular! Never should have dreamt of meeting
+_you_; so much too quiet a place, I should have thought. No Kursaal
+_here_? Come for sport--oh! Take Spes, will you! Poor little dear, he's
+been barking the whole way because he couldn't see out of the window.
+Ah, Major Dunbar, charmed to see you! What an amusing rencontre, is it
+not?" And Lady Maréchale, slightly out of temper for so eminent a
+Christian at the commencement of her greeting, smoothed down her ruffled
+feathers and turned smilingly on Dunbar. I have said he will be one day
+Marquis of Gwynne.
+
+"By George, old fellow! _you_ in this out-of-the-way place! That's all
+right. Sport good, here? Glad to hear it. The deuce take me, if ever I
+am lured into travelling in a _partie carrée_ again."
+
+And Maréchale raised his eyebrows, and whispered confidentially to me
+stronger language than I may commit to print, though, considering his
+provocation, it was surely as pardonable as Uncle Toby's.
+
+"The thing I dislike in this sort of hotels and places is the admixture
+of people with whom one is obliged to come in contact," said Constance,
+putting up her glass as she entered the long low room where the humble
+table d'hôte of the Toison d'Or was spread. Lady Maréchale talks sweetly
+of the equality of persons in the sight of Heaven, but I never heard her
+recognize the same upon the soil of earth.
+
+"Exactly! One may encounter such very objectionable characters! _I_
+wished to dine in our own apartments, but Albany said no; and he is so
+positive, you know! This place seems miserably primitive," responded
+Agneta. Mrs. Protocol pets Rouges and Republicans of every country,
+talks liberalism like a feminine Sièyes or John Bright, projects a
+Reform Bill that shall bear the strongest possible family resemblance to
+the Décrets du 4 Août, and considers "social distinctions _odious_
+between man and man;" but her practice is scarcely consistent with her
+theory, seeing that she is about as tenacious and resentful of
+objectionable contact as a sea-anemone.
+
+"Who is that, I wonder?" whispered Lady Maréchale, acidulating herself
+in readiness, after the custom of English ladies when catching sight of
+a stranger whom they "don't know."
+
+"I wonder! All alone--how very queer!" echoed Mrs. Protocol, drawing her
+black lace shawl around her, with that peculiar movement which announces
+a woman's prescience of something antagonistic to her, that is to be
+repelled _d'avance_, as surely as a hedgehog's transfer of itself into a
+prickly ball denotes a sense of a coming enemy, and a need of caution
+and self-protection.
+
+"Who is that deucedly handsome woman?" whispered Maréchale to me.
+
+"What a charming creature!" echoed Dunbar.
+
+The person referred to was the only woman at the table d'hôte besides my
+sisters--a sister-tourist, probably; a handsome--nay more, a beautiful
+woman, about eight-and-twenty, distinguished-looking, brilliant, with a
+figure voluptuously perfect as was ever the Princess Borghese's. To say
+a woman looks a lady, means nothing in our day. "That young lady will
+wait on you, sir," says the shopman, referring to the shopwoman who will
+show you your gloves. "Hand the 'errings to that lady, Joe," you hear a
+fishmonger cry, as you pass his shop-door, referring by his epithet to
+some Mrs. Gamp or Betsy Priggs in search of that piscatory cheer at his
+stall. Heaven forbid we should give the abused and degenerate title to
+any woman deserving of the name! Generalize a thing, and it is vulgar.
+"A gentleman of my acquaintance," says Spriggs, an auctioneer and
+house-agent, to Smith, a collector of the water-rate. "A man I know,"
+says Pursang, one of the Cabinet, to Greville Tempest, who is heir to a
+Dukedom, and has intermarried with a royal house. The reason is plain
+enough. Spriggs thinks it necessary to inform Smith, who otherwise might
+remain ignorant of so signal a fact, that he actually does know a
+gentleman, or rather what he terms such. Pursang knows that Tempest
+would never suspect him of being _lié_ with men who were anything else;
+the one is proud of the fine English, the other is content with the
+simple phrase! Heaven forbid, I say, we should, nowadays, call any woman
+a lady who is veritably such; let us fall back on the dignified,
+definitive, courtly last-century-name of gentlewoman. I should be glad
+to see that name revived; it draws a line that snobbissimi cannot pass,
+and has a grand simplicity about it that will not attract Spriggs,
+Smith, and Spark, and Mesdames S., leurs femmes!
+
+Our sister-tourist, then, at the Toison d'Or, looked, to my eyes at the
+least, much more than a "lady," she looked an _aristocrate jusqu'au bout
+des ongles_, a beautiful, brilliant, dazzling brunette, with lovely
+hazel eyes, flashing like a tartaret falcon's under their arched
+pencilled eyebrows, quite an unhoped godsend in Vicq d'Azyr, where only
+stragglers resort as yet, though--alas for my Arcadia--my sister's pet
+physician, who sent them thither, is about, I believe, to publish a
+work, entitled "The Water-Spring in the Wilderness; or, A Scamper
+through Spots Unknown," which will do a little advertising of himself
+opportunely, and send hundreds next season to invade the wild woodlands
+and sunny valleys he inhumanly drags forth into the gas-glare of the
+world.
+
+The brilliant hazel eyes were opposite to me at dinner, and were, I
+confess, more attractive to me than the stewed pigeons, the crisp
+frog-legs, and the other viands prepared by the (considering we were in
+the heart of one of the most remote provinces) really not bad cook of
+the Toison d'Or. Lady Maréchale and Mrs. Protocol honored her with that
+stare by which one woman knows so well how to destroy the reputation of
+another without speech; they had taken her measurement by some method of
+feminine geometry unknown to us, and the result was apparently not
+favorable to her, for over the countenances of the two ladies gathered
+that expression of stiff dignity and virtuous disdain, in the assuming
+of which, as I have observed before, they are inimitable proficients.
+"Evidently not a proper person!" was written on every one of their
+lineaments. Constance and Agneta had made up their minds with celerity
+and decision as to her social status, with, it is to be presumed, that
+unerring instinct which leads their sex to a conclusion so
+instantaneously, that, according to a philosopher, a woman will be at
+the top of the staircase of Reasoning by a single spring, while a man is
+toiling slowly up the first few steps.
+
+"You are intending to remain here some days, madame?" asked the fair
+stranger, with a charming smile, of Lady Maréchale--a pleasant little
+overture to chance ephemeral acquaintance, such as a table d'hôte
+surely well warrants.
+
+But the pleasant little overture was one to which Lady Maréchale was far
+too English to respond. With that inimitable breeding for which our
+countrymen and women are continentally renowned, she bent her head with
+stately stiffness, indulged herself with a haughty stare at the
+offender, and turned to Agneta, to murmur in English her disgust with
+the _cuisine_ of the really unoffending Toison d'Or.
+
+"Poor Spes would eat nothing. Fenton must make him some panada. But
+perhaps there was nothing better than goat's milk in the house! What
+could Dr. Berkeley be thinking of? He described the place quite as
+though it were a second Meurice's or Badischer Hof!"
+
+A look of amusement glanced into the sparkling, yet languid eyes of my
+opposite neighbor.
+
+"English!" she murmured to herself, with an almost imperceptible but
+sufficiently scornful elevation of her arched eyebrows, and a slight
+smile, just showing her white teeth, as I addressed her in French; and
+she answered me with the ease, the aplomb, the ever suave courtesy of a
+woman of the world, with that polish which gives the most common
+subjects a brilliance never their own, and that vivacity which confers
+on the merest trifles a spell to amuse and to charm. She was certainly a
+very lovely creature, and a very charming one, too; frank, animated,
+witty, with the tone of a woman who has seen the world and knows it.
+Dunbar adored her, at first sight; he is an inflammable fellow, and has
+been ignited a thousand times at far less provocation. Maréchale
+prepared for himself fifty conjugal orations by the recklessness with
+which, under the very eyes of madame, he devoted himself to another
+woman. Even Albany Protocol, dull, somnolent, and superior to such
+weaknesses, as becomes a president of many boards and a chairman of
+many committees, opened his eyes and glanced at her; and some young
+Cantabs and artists at the other end of the table stopped their own
+conversation, envying Dunbar and myself, I believe, for our
+juxtaposition with the _belle inconnue_; while my sisters sat trifling
+with the wing of a pigeon, in voluntary starvation (they would have had
+nothing to complain of, you see, if they had suffered themselves to dine
+well!), with strong disapprobation marked upon their lineaments, of this
+lovely vivacious unknown, whoever she might be, talking exclusively to
+each other, with a certain expression of sarcastic disdain and offended
+virtue, hinting far more forcibly than words that they thought already
+the "very worst" of her.
+
+So severe, indeed, did they look, that Dunbar, who is a good-natured
+fellow, and thinks--and thinks justly--that Constance and Agneta are
+very fine women, left me to discuss, Hoffmann, Heine, and the rest of
+Germany's satirical poets, with my opposite neighbor, and endeavored to
+thaw my sisters; a very difficult matter when once those ladies are
+iced. He tried Paris, but only elicited a monosyllabic remark concerning
+its weather; he tried Vicq d'Azyr, and was rewarded for his trouble by a
+withering sarcasm on the unlucky Toison d'Or; he tried chit-chat on
+mutual acquaintances, and the unhappy people he chanced to name were
+severally dismissed with a cutting satire appended to each. Lady
+Maréchale and Mrs. Protocol were in one of those freezing and
+unassailable moods in which they sealed a truce with one another, and,
+combining their forces against a common foe, dealt out sharp, spherical,
+hard-hitting little bullets of speech from behind the abatis in which
+they intrenched themselves.
+
+At last he, in despair, tried Lemongenseidlitz, and the ladies thawed
+slightly--their anticipations from that fashionable little quarter were
+couleur de rose. They would meet their people of the best _monde_, all
+their dearest--that is of course their most fashionable--friends; the
+dear Duchess of Frangipane, the Millamonts those charming people,
+M. le Marquis de Croix-et-Cordon, Sir Henry Pullinger, Mrs.
+Merivale-Delafield, were all there; that delightful person, too, the
+Graf von Rosenläu, who amused them so much at Baden last year, was, as
+of course Dunbar knew, Master of the Horse to the Prince of
+Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz; they would be well received at the
+Court. Which last thing, however, they did not _say_, though they might
+imply, and assuredly fully thought it; since Lady Maréchale already
+pictured herself gently awakening his Serene Highness to the spiritual
+darkness of his soul in legitimatizing gaming-tables in his duchy, and
+Mrs. Protocol already beheld herself closeted with his First Minister,
+giving that venerable Metternich lessons in political economy, and
+developing to him a system for filling his beggared treasury to
+overflowing, without taxing the people a kreutzer--a problem which,
+though it might have perplexed Kaunitz, Colbert, Pitt, Malesherbes,
+Talleyrand, and Palmerston put together, offered not the slightest
+difficulty to _her_ enterprising intellect. Have I not said that
+Sherlock states women are at the top of the staircase while we are
+toiling up the first few steps?
+
+"The Duchess--Princess Hélène is a lovely woman, I think. Winton saw her
+at the Tuileries last winter, and raved about her beauty," said Dunbar,
+finding he had hit at last on an acceptable subject, and pursuing it
+with more zeal than discretion; for if there be one thing, I take it,
+more indiscreet than another, it is to praise woman to woman.
+
+Constance coughed and Agneta smiled, and both assented. "Oh yes--very
+lovely, they believed!"
+
+"And very lively--up to everything, I think I have heard," went on
+Dunbar, blandly, unconscious of the meaning of cough, smile, and
+assent.
+
+"Very lively!" sighed the Saint.
+
+"_Very_ lively!" smiled the Politician.
+
+"As gay a woman as Marie Antoinette," continued Dunbar, too intent on
+the truffles to pay en même temps much heed to the subject he was
+discussing. "She's copied the Trianon, hasn't she?--has fêtes and
+pastorals there, acts in comedies herself, shakes off etiquette and
+ceremonial as much as she can, and all that sort of thing, I believe?"
+
+Lady Maréchale leaned back in her chair, the severe virtue and dignified
+censure of a British matron and a modern Lucretia expressed in both
+attitude and countenance.
+
+"A second Marie Antoinette?--too truly and unfortunately so, I have
+heard! Levity in _any_ station sufficiently reprehensible, but when
+exhibited in the persons of those whom a higher power has placed in
+exalted positions, it is most deeply to be deplored. The evil and
+contagion of its example become incalculable; and even when, which I
+believe her excusers are wont to assert of Princess Hélène, it is merely
+traceable to an over-gayety of spirit and an over-carelessness of
+comment and censure, it should be remembered that we are enjoined to
+abstain from every _appearance_ of evil!"
+
+With which Constance shook out her phylacteries, represented by the
+thirty-guinea bracade-silk folds of her skirt (a dress I heard her
+describe as "very plain!--serviceable for travelling"), and glanced at
+my opposite neighbor with a look which said, "You are evidently not a
+proper person, but you hear for once what a proper person thinks!"
+
+Our charming companion did hear it, for she apparently understood
+English very well. She laughed a little--a sweet, low, ringing laugh--(I
+was rather in love with her, I must say--I am still)--and spoke with a
+slight pretty accent.
+
+"True, madame! but ah! what a pity your St. Paul did not advise, too,
+that people should not go by appearances, and think evil where evil is
+not!"
+
+Lady Maréchale gave stare number two with a curl of her lip, and bent
+her head stiffly.
+
+"What a very strange person!" she observed to Agneta, in a murmur,
+meant, like a stage aside, to be duly heard and appreciated by the
+audience. And yet my sisters are thought very admirably bred women, too!
+But then, a woman alone--a foreigner, a stranger--surely no one would
+exact courtesy to such, from "ladies of position?"
+
+"Have you ever seen Princess Hélène, the Duchess of Lemongenseidlitz,
+may I ask?" Maréchale inquired, hastily, to cover his wife's sneer. He's
+a very good fellow, and finds the constant and inevitable society of a
+saint slightly trying, and a very heavy chastisement for a few words
+sillily said one morning in St. George's.
+
+"I have seen her, monsieur--yes!"
+
+"And is she a second Marie Antoinette?"
+
+She laughed gayly, showing her beautiful white teeth.
+
+"Ah, bah, monsieur! many would say that is a great deal too good a
+comparison for her! A second Louise de Savoie--a second Duchesse de
+Chevreuse--nay, a second Lucrezia Borgia, some would tell you. She likes
+pleasure--who does not, though, except those with whom 'les raisins sont
+trop verts et bons pour des goujats?'"
+
+"What an insufferably bold person!" murmured Constance.
+
+"Very disagreeable to meet this style of people!" returned Agneta.
+
+And both stiffened themselves with a little more starch; and we know
+that British wheats produce the stiffest starch in the world!
+
+"Who, indeed!" cried Maréchale, regardless of madame's frown. "You know
+this for truth, then, of Princess Hélène?"
+
+"Ah, bah, monsieur! who knows anything for truth?" laughed the lovely
+brunette. "The world dislikes truth so much, it is obliged to hide
+itself in out-of-the-way corners, and very rarely comes to light. Nobody
+knows the truth about her. Some think her, as you say, a second Marie
+Antoinette, who is surrendered to dissipation and levity, cares for
+nothing, and would dance and laugh over the dead bodies of the people.
+Others judge her as others judged Marie Antoinette; discredit the
+gossip, and think she is but a lively woman, who laughs at forms, likes
+to amuse herself, and does not see why a court should be a prison! The
+world likes the darker picture best; let it have it! I do not suppose it
+will break her heart!"
+
+And the fair stranger laughed so sweetly, that every man at the
+dinner-table fell in love with her on the spot; and Lady Maréchale and
+Mrs. Protocol sat throughout the remainder of the meal in frozen dignity
+and unbreakable silence, while the lovely brunette talked with and
+smiled on us all with enchanting gayety, wit, and abandon, chatting on
+all sorts of topics of the day.
+
+Dinner over, she was the first to rise from the table, and bowed to us
+with exquisite grace and that charming smile of hers, of which the
+sweetest rays fell upon _me_, I swear, whether you consider the oath an
+emanation of personal vanity or not, my good sir. My sisters returned
+her bow and her good evening to them with that pointed stare which says
+so plainly, "You are not my equal, how dare you insult me by a
+courtesy?"
+
+And scarcely had we begun to sip our coffee up-stairs in the apartments
+Chanderlos had secured for the miladies Anglaises, than the duo upon her
+began as the two ladies sat with Spes between them on a sofa beside one
+of the windows opening on the balcony that ran round the house. A chance
+inadvertent assent of Dunbar's, à propos of--oh, sin unpardonable!--the
+beauty of the incognita's eyes, touched the valve and unloosened the
+hot springs that were seething below in silence. "A handsome woman!--oh
+yes, a gentleman's beauty, I dare say!--but a very odd person!"
+commenced Mrs. Protocol. "A very strange person!" assented Mrs.
+Maréchale. "Very free manners!" added Agneta. "Quite French!" chorused
+Constance. "She has diamond rings--paste, no doubt!" said the
+Politician. "And rouges--the color's much too lovely to be natural!"
+sneered the Saint. "Paints her eyebrows, too!" "Not a doubt--and tints
+her lashes!" "An adventuress, I should say!" "Or worse!" "Evidently not
+a proper person!" "Certainly not!"
+
+Through the soft mellow air, hushed into evening silence, the words
+reached me, as I walked through the window on to the balcony, and stood
+sipping my coffee and looking lazily over the landscape wrapped in
+sunset haze, over the valley where the twilight shadows were deepening,
+and the mountains that were steeped yet in a rose-hued golden radiance
+from the rays that had sunk behind them.
+
+"My dear ladies," I cried, involuntarily, "can't you find anything a
+little more kindly to say of a stranger who has never done you any harm,
+and who, fifty to one, will never cross your path again?"
+
+"Bravo!" echoed Maréchale, who has never gone as quietly in the
+matrimonial break as Protocol, and indeed will never be thoroughly
+broken in--"bravo! women are always studying to make themselves
+attractive; it's a pity they don't put down among the items a trifle of
+generosity and charity, it would embellish them wonderfully."
+
+Lady Maréchale beat an injured tattoo with the spoon on her saucer, and
+leaned back with the air of a martyr, and drawing in her lips with a
+smile, whose inimitable sneer any lady might have envied--it was quite
+priceless!
+
+"It is the first time, Sir George, I should presume, that a husband and
+a brother were ever heard to unite in upbraiding a wife and a sister
+with her disinclination to associate with, or her averseness to
+countenance, an improper person!"
+
+"An improper person!" I cried. "But, my dear Constance, who ever told
+you that this lady you are so desperately bitter upon has any fault at
+all, save the worst fault in her own sex's eyes--that of beauty? I see
+nothing in her; her manners are perfect; her tone----"
+
+"You must pardon me if I decline taking your verdict on so delicate a
+question," interrupted Lady Maréchale, with withering satire. "Very
+possibly you see nothing objectionable in her--nothing, at least, that
+_you_ would call so! Your views and mine are sufficiently different on
+every subject, and the women with whom I believe you have chiefly
+associated are not those who are calculated to give you very much
+appreciation for the more refined classes of our sex! Very possibly the
+person in question is what _you_, and Sir George too, perhaps, find
+charming; but you must excuse me if I really cannot, to oblige you,
+stoop to countenance any one whom my intuition and my knowledge of the
+world both declare so very evidently what she should not be. She will
+endeavor, most probably, if she remain here, to push herself into our
+acquaintance, but if you and my husband should choose to insult us by
+favoring her efforts, Agneta and I, happily, can guard ourselves from
+the objectionable companionship into which those who _should_ be our
+protectors would wish to force us!"
+
+With which Lady Maréchale, with a little more martyrdom and an air of
+extreme dignity, had recourse to her _flacon_ of Viola Montana, and sank
+among the sofa cushions, a model of outraged and Spartan virtue. I set
+down my coffee-cup, and lounged out again to the peace of the balcony;
+Maréchale shrugged his shoulders, rose, and followed me. Lo! on the
+part of the balcony that ran under _her_ windows, leaning on its
+balustrade, her white hand, white as the flowers, playing with the
+clematis tendrils, the "paste" diamond flashing in the last rays of the
+setting sun, stood our "dame d'industrie--or worse!" She was but a few
+feet farther on; she must have heard Lady Maréchale's and Mrs.
+Protocol's duo on her demerits; she _had_ heard it, without doubt, for
+she was laughing gayly and joyously, laughter that sparkled all over her
+_riante_ face and flashed in her bright falcon eyes. Laughing still, she
+signed me to her. I need not say that the sign was obeyed.
+
+"Chivalrous knight, I thank you! You are a Bayard of chivalry; you
+defend the absent! What a miracle, mon Dieu! Tell your friends from me
+not to speak so loudly when their windows are open; and, for yourself,
+rest assured your words of this evening will not be forgotten."
+
+"I am happy, indeed, if I have been fortunate enough to obtain a chance
+remembrance, but do not give me too much praise for so simple a service;
+the clumsiest Cimon would be stirred into chivalry under such
+inspiration as I had----"
+
+The beautiful hazel eyes flashed smilingly on me under their lashes.
+(_Those_ lashes tinted! Heaven forgive the malice of women!) She broke
+off a sprig of the clematis, with its long slender leaves and fragrant
+starry flowers, and gave it to me.
+
+"_Tenez, mon ami_, if ever you see me again, show me that faded flower,
+and I shall remember this evening at Vicq d'Azyr. Nay, do not flatter
+yourself--do not thrust it in your breast; it is no gage d'amour! it is
+only a reward for loyal service, and a souvenir to refresh my own
+memory, which is treacherous sometimes, though not in gratitude to those
+who serve me. Adieu, mon Bayard--et bonsoir!"
+
+But I retained the hand that had given me my clematis-spray.
+
+"Meet you again! But will not that be to-morrow? If I am not to see you,
+as your words threaten, till the clematis be faded and myself forgotten,
+let me at least, I beseech you, know where, who, by what name----"
+
+She drew her hand away with something of a proud, surprised gesture;
+then she laughed again that sweet, ringing, mocking laugh:
+
+"No, no, Bayard, it is too much to ask! Leave the future to hazard; it
+is always the best philosophy. Au revoir! Adieu--perhaps for a day,
+perhaps for a century!"
+
+And the bewitching mystery floated away from me and through the open
+window of her room. You will imagine that my "intuition" did not lead me
+to the conclusion to which Lady Maréchale's led her, or assuredly should
+I have followed the donor of the clematis, despite her prohibition. Even
+with my "intuition" pointing where it did, I am not sure what I might
+have done if, in her salon, I had not caught sight of a valet and a
+lady's maid in waiting with her coffee, and they are not such spectators
+as one generally selects.
+
+The servants closed her windows and drew down their Venetian blinds, and
+I returned to my coffee. Whether the two ladies within had overheard her
+conversation as she had heard theirs, I cannot say, but they looked
+trebly refrigerated, had congealed themselves into the chilliest human
+ice that is imaginable, and comported themselves towards me fully as
+distantly as though I had brought a dozen ballet-girls in to dinner with
+them, or introduced them to my choicest acquaintance from the Château
+des Fleurs.
+
+"A man's taste is so pitiably low!" remarked Lady Maréchale, in her
+favorite stage aside to Mrs. Protocol; to which that other lady
+responded, "Disgracefully so!"
+
+Who _was_ my lovely unknown with the bright falcon eyes and the charming
+laugh, with her strange freedom that yet was _not_, somehow, free, and
+her strange fascination? I bade my man ask Chanderlos her
+name--couriers know everything generally--but neither Mills nor
+Chanderlos gave me any information. The people of the house did not
+know, or said they did not; they only knew she had servants in
+attendance who came with her, who revealed nothing, and paid any price
+for the best of everything. Are impertinent questions ever asked where
+money is plentiful?
+
+I was dressing the next morning something later than usual, when I heard
+the roll of a carriage in the courtyard below. I looked through the
+half-open persiennes with a semi-presentiment that it was my sweet
+foreigner who was leaving ere I could presume on my clematis or improve
+our acquaintance. True enough, she it was, leaving Vicq d'Azyr in a
+travelling-carriage, with handsome roans and servants in imperial-blue
+liveries. Who the deuce could she be?
+
+"Well, Constance," said I, as I bade Lady Maréchale good morning, "your
+_bête noire_ won't 'press herself into your acquaintance,' as you were
+dreading last night, and won't excite Maréchale and me to any more high
+treason. Won't you chant a Te Deum? She left this morning."
+
+"So I perceived," answered Lady Maréchale, frigidly; by which I suppose
+_she_ had not been above the weakness of looking through _her_
+persiennes.
+
+"What a pity you and Agneta agitated yourselves with such unnecessary
+alarm! It must have cost you a great deal of eau-de-Cologne and
+sal-volatile, I am afraid, last night. Do you think she contaminated the
+air of the salle-à-manger, because I will order Mills to throw some
+disinfectant about before you go down?"
+
+"I have no inclination to jest upon a person of that stamp," rejoined
+Lady Maréchale, with immense dignity, settling her turquoise
+wristband-studs.
+
+"'That stamp of persons!' What! Do you think she is an adventuress, an
+intrigante, 'or worse' still, then? I hoped her dashing equipage might
+have done something towards cleansing her character. Wealth _is_ a
+universal purifier generally."
+
+"Flippant impertinence!" murmured Lady Maréchale, disgustedly, to Mrs.
+Protocol, as she swept onwards down the staircase, not deigning me a
+glance, much less a response, stiffening herself with a little extra
+starch of Lucretian virtue and British-matronly dignity, which did not
+grow limp again throughout breakfast, while she found fault with the
+chocolate, considered the _petits pains_ execrable, condemned the
+sardines as uneatable, petted Spes, kept Maréchale and me at Coventry,
+and sighed over their enforced incarceration, by Dr. Berkeley's orders,
+in Vicq d'Azyr, that kept them in this stupid place away from
+Lemongenseidlitz.
+
+Their anticipations from Lemongenseidlitz were charmingly golden and
+rose-tinted. They looked forward to consolidating their friendship with
+the dear Duchess in its balmy air, to improving a passing acquaintance
+into an intimate one with that charming person the Baroness
+Liebenfrauenmilch, Mistress of the Robes to Princess Hélène, and to
+being very intimate at the Court, while the Pullingers (their
+bosom-friends and very dear rivals) would be simply presented, and
+remain in chagrin, uninvited to the state balls and palace festivities.
+And what more delightful than that last clause? for what sauce invented,
+from Carême to Soyer, flavors our own _plats_ so deliciously, I should
+like to know, as thinking that our beloved next-door neighbor is doomed
+to a very dry cutlet?
+
+As Pérette, in a humbler fashion, built visions from the pot of milk, so
+mesdames mes soeurs, from the glittering court and capital of
+Lemongenseidlitz, erected brilliant châteaux en Espagne of all their
+sayings and doings in that fashionable little city whither they were
+bound, and into which they had so many invaluable passports. They were
+impatient to be journeying from our humble, solitary valley, and after
+a month of Vicq d'Azyr, they departed for their golden land, and I went
+with them, as I had slain izzards almost _ad nauseam_, and Dunbar's
+expiration of leave had taken him back to Dublin.
+
+It was five o'clock when we reached its Reidenscher Hof, nine when we
+had finished dinner. It was stupid work yawning over coffee and
+_Galignani_. What was to be done? Maréchale proposed the Opera, and for
+the first time in his life was unopposed by his wife. Constance was in a
+suave, benignant mood; she was thinking of her Graf von Rosenläu, of the
+Pullingers, and of the sweet, adroit manner in which she would--when she
+had captivated him and could proffer such hints--awaken his Serene
+Highness to a sense of his moral guilt in not bringing to instant
+capital punishment every agent in those Satanus-farmed banks that throve
+throughout his duchy. Lady Maréchale and Mrs. Protocol assented, and to
+the little miniature gayly-decorated Opera House we drove. They were in
+the middle of the second act of "Ernani." "Ernani" was stale to us all,
+and we naturally lorgné'd the boxes in lieu of the stage. I had turned
+my glass on the left-hand stage-box, and was going steadily round, when
+a faint cry of dismay, alarm, amazement, horror, broke, muffled and low,
+from mesdames mes soeurs. Their lorgnons were riveted on one spot; their
+cheeks were blanched; their hands were tremulous; if they had beheld a
+spiritual visitant, no consternation more profound, more intense, could
+have seized both with its iron hand. _My_ sisters too! the chilliest,
+the calmest, the most impenetrable, the most unassailable of mortals!
+
+"And we called her, in her hearing, not a proper person?" gasped Lady
+Maréchale.
+
+"We thought her a lorette! an intrigante! a dame d'industrie!" echoed
+Mrs. Protocol.
+
+"Who wore paste jewels!"
+
+"Who came from the Rue Bréda!"
+
+"Who wanted to know us!"
+
+"Whom we wouldn't know!"
+
+I turned my Voightlander where their Voightlanders turned; there, in the
+royal box, leaning back in the fauteuil that marked her rank, there,
+with her lovely hazel eyes, her witching smile, her radiant beauty,
+matchless as the pearls gleaming above her brow, there sat the
+"adventuress--or worse!" of Vicq d'Azyr; the "evidently a not proper
+person" of my discerning sisters--H.S.H. Princess Hélène, Grand-Duchess
+of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz! Great Heavens! how had we never
+guessed her before? How had we never divined her identity? How had we
+never remembered all we had heard of her love of laisser-aller, her
+taste for adventure, her delight in travelling, when she could,
+unattended and incognita? How had we never put this and that together,
+and penetrated the metamorphosis?
+
+"_And I called her not a proper person!_" gasped Lady Maréchale, again
+shrinking back behind the azure curtains; the projectiles she had shot
+with such vindictive severity, such delighted acrimony, from the
+murderous mortar of malice, recoiling back upon her head for once, and
+crushing her to powder. What reception would they have _now_ at the
+Court? Von Rosenläu would be powerless; the Pullingers themselves would
+be better off! Pérette's pot of milk was smashed and spilt! "Adieu,
+veau, vache, cochon, couvée!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the pitcher lies shivered into fragments, and the milk is spilt,
+you know, poor Pérette's dreams are shivered and spilt with them. "I
+have not seen you at the palace yet?" asked her Grace of Frangipane. "We
+do not see you at the Court, mesdames?" asked M. de la Croix-et-Cordons.
+"How did it happen you were not at the Duchess's ball last night?" asked
+"those odious Pullingers." And what had my sister to say in reply? My
+clematis secured _me_ a charming reception--how charming I don't feel
+called upon to reveal--but Princess Hélène, with that calm dignity which
+easily replaced, when she chose, her witching _abandon_, turned the
+tables upon her detractors, and taught them how dangerous it may be to
+speak ill--of the wrong people.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUATORZE:
+
+PENDANT TO A PORTRAIT BY MIGNARD.
+
+
+She was surpassingly fair, Madame la Marquise. Mignard's portraits of
+her may fully rival his far-famed Portrait aux Amours. One of them has
+her painted as Venus Victrix, in the fashion of the day; one of them, as
+herself, as Léontine Opportune de Vivonne de Rennecourt, Marquise de la
+Rivière, with her crève-coeurs, and her diamonds, and her gay smile,
+showing her teeth, white and gleaming as the pearls mingled with her
+curls à la mode Montespan. Not Louise de la Beaume-le-Blanc, when the
+elm-boughs of St. Germain first flung their shadow on her golden head,
+before it bent for the Carmelite veil before the altar in the Rue St.
+Jacques; not Henriette d'Angleterre, when she listened to the trouvères'
+romances sung under her balcony at St. Cloud, before her young life was
+quenched by the hand of Morel and the order of Monsieur; not Athénaïs de
+Mortemart, when the liveries of lapis lazuli blue dashed through the
+streets of Paris, and the outriders cleared her path with their whips,
+before the game was lost, and the iron spikes were fastened inside the
+Montespan bracelets;--none of them, her contemporaries and
+acquaintances, eclipsed in loveliness Madame la Marquise. Had she but
+been fair instead of dark, the brown Bourbon eyes would have fallen on
+her of a surety; she would have outshone the lapis lazuli liveries with
+a royal guard of scarlet and gold, and her friend Athénaïs would have
+hated her as that fair lady hated "la sotte Fontanges" and "Saint
+Maintenon;" for their sex, in all ages, have remembered the sage's
+precept, "Love as though you will one day hate," and invariably carry
+about with them, ready for need, a little essence of the acid of Malice,
+to sour in an instant the sugared cream of their loves and their
+friendships if occasion rise up and the storm-cloud of rivalry loom in
+the horizon.
+
+She was a beauty, Madame la Marquise, and she knew it, as she leaned out
+over the balcony of her château of Petite Forêt, that lay close to
+Clagny, under the shadow of the wood of Ville d'Avrée, outside the gates
+of Versailles, looking down on her bosquets, gardens, and terraces
+designed by Le Nôtre; for though she was alone, and there was nothing
+but her little dog Osmin to admire her white skin, and her dark eyes,
+and her beautiful hands and arms, and her diamond pendants that
+glittered in the moonlight, she smiled, her flashing triumphant smile,
+as she whispered to herself, "He is mine--mine! Bah! how can he help
+himself?" and pressed the ruby agraffe on her bosom with the look of a
+woman who knew no resistance, and brooked no reluctance to worship at
+her shrine.
+
+Nothing ever opposed Madame la Marquise, and life went smoothly on with
+her. If Bossuet ever reproved her, it was in those _anathèmes cachés
+sous des fleurs d'oranger_ in which that politic priest knew how to deal
+when expedient, however haughty and relentless to the world in general.
+M. le Marquis was not a savage eccentricity like M. de Pardaillon de
+Gondran, would never have dreamt of imitating the eccentricity of going
+into mourning, but if the Bourbon eye _had_ fallen on his wife, would
+have said, like a loyal peer of France, that all his household treasures
+were the King's. Disagreeables fled before the scintillations of her
+smiles, as the crowd fled before her gilded carriage and her Flanders
+horses; and if ever a little fit of piety once in a while came over her,
+and Conscience whispered a mal à propos word in her delicate ear, she
+would give an enamelled lamp to Sainte Marie Réparatrice, by the advice
+of the Comtesse de Soubise and the Princesse de Monaco (who did such
+expiatory things themselves, and knew the comfort they afforded), and
+emerge from her repentance one of the most radiant of all the brilliant
+butterflies that fluttered their gorgeous wings in the Jardin de Flore
+under the sunny skies of Versailles.
+
+The moonlight glittered on the fountains, falling with measured splash
+into their marble basins; the lime-leaves, faintly stirred by the sultry
+breezes, perfumed the night with their voluptuous fragrance, and the
+roses, twining round the carved and gilded balustrade, shook off their
+bowed head drops of dew, that gleamed brightly as the diamonds among the
+curls of the woman who leaned above, resting her delicate rouged cheek
+on her jewelled hand, alone--a very rare circumstance with the Marquise
+de la Rivière. Osmin did not admire the rare solitude, for he rattled
+his silver bells and barked--an Italian greyhound's shrill, fretful
+bark--as his quick ears caught the distant sound of steps coming swiftly
+over the turf below, and his mistress smiled as she patted his head:
+
+"Ah, Osmin!--here he is?"
+
+A man came out from under the heavy shadow of lime sand chestnuts, whose
+darkness the moon's rays had no power to pierce, crossed the lawn just
+under the balcony, and, coming up the terrace-steps, stood near her--a
+man, young, fair, handsome, whose age and form the uniform of a Captain
+of the Guards would have suited far better than the dark robes of a
+priest, which he wore; his lips were pressed closely together, and his
+face was pale with a pallor that consorted painfully with the warm
+passionate gleam of his eyes.
+
+"So! You are late in obeying my commands, monsieur!"
+
+Surely no other man in France would have stood silent beside her, under
+the spell of her dazzling glances, with such a picture before him as
+Madame la Marquise, in her azure silk and her point d'Angleterre, with
+her diamond pendants shaking among her hair, and her arched eyebrows
+lifted imperiously! But he did; his lips pressed closer, his eyes
+gleaming brighter. She changed her tone; it was soft, seductive,
+reproachful, and the smile on her lips was tender--as tender as it ever
+could be with the mockery that always lay under it; and it broke at last
+the spell that bound him, as she whispered, "Ah! Gaston, you love me no
+longer!"
+
+"Not love you? O God!"
+
+They were but five words, but they told Madame la Marquise of a passion
+such as she had never roused, despite all her fascinations and
+intrigues, in the lovers that crowded round her in the salons within, or
+at Versailles, over the trees yonder, where love was gallantry, and all
+was light comedy, with nothing so foolish as tragedy known.
+
+He clasped her hands so closely that the sharp points of the diamond
+rings cut his own, though he felt them not.
+
+"Not love you? Great Heaven! Not love you? Near you, I forget my oath,
+my vows, my God!--I forget all, save you, whom I adore, as, till I met
+you, I adored my Church. Torture endured with you were dearer than
+Paradise won alone! Once with you, I have no strength, you bow me to
+your will as the wind bows the lime-leaf. Oh! woman, woman! could you
+have no mercy, that with crowds round you daily worshipping your
+slightest smile, you must needs bow _me_ down before your glance, as you
+bow those who have no oaths to bind them, no need to scourge themselves
+in midnight solitude for the mere crime of Thought? Had you no mercy,
+that with all hearts yours, you must have mine to sear it and destroy
+it? Have you not lives enough vowed to you, that you seek to blast mine
+for ever? I was content, untroubled, till I met you; no woman's glance
+stirred my heart, no woman's eyes haunted my vigils, no woman's voice
+came in memory between my soul and prayer! What devil tempted you to
+throw your spells over me--could you not leave _one_ man in peace?"
+
+"Ah bah! the tempted love the game of temptation generally full as well
+as the tempters!" thought Madame la Marquise, with an inward laugh.
+
+Why did she allow such language to go unrebuked? Why did she, to whom
+none dared to breathe any but words the most polished, and love vows the
+most honeyed, permit herself to be addressed in such a strain? Possibly
+it was very new to her, such energy as this, and such an outbreak of
+passion amused her. At any rate she only drew her hands away, and her
+brilliant brown eyes filled with tears;--tears _were_ to be had at
+Versailles when needed, even her friend Montespan knew how to use them
+as the worst weapons against the artillery of the Evêque de Comdom--and
+her heart heaved under the filmy lace.
+
+"Ah, Gaston! what words! 'What devil tempted me?' I know scarcely
+whether love be angel or devil; he seems either or both! But you love me
+little, unless in that name you recognize a plea for every madness and
+every thought!"
+
+The scarlet blood flushed over his face, and his eyes shone and gleamed
+like fire, while he clenched his hands in a mortal anguish.
+
+"Angel or devil? Ay! which, indeed! The one when it comes to us, the
+other when it leaves us! You have roused love in me I shall bear to my
+grave; but what gage have I that you give it me back? How do I know but
+that even now you are trifling with me, mocking at me, smiling at the
+beardless priest who is unlearned in all the gay gallantries of
+libertine churchmen and soldierly courtiers? My Heaven! how know, as I
+stand beside you, whether you pity or disdain me, love or scorn me?"
+
+The passionate words broke in a torrent from his lips, stirred the
+stillness of the summer eve with a fiery anguish little akin to it.
+
+"Do I not love you?"
+
+Her answer was simple; but as Léontine de Rennecourt spoke it, leaning
+her cheek against his breast, with her eyes dazzling as the diamonds in
+her hair, looking up into his by the light of the stars, they had an
+eloquence far more dangerous than speech, and delirious to the senses as
+magician's perfumes. His lips lingered on hers, and felt the loud fast
+throbs of the heart she had won as he bent over her, pressing her closer
+and closer to him--vanquished and conquered, as men in all ages and of
+all creeds have been vanquished and conquered by women, all other
+thoughts fleeing away into oblivion, all fears dying out, all vows
+forgotten in the warm, living life of passion and of joy, that, for the
+first time in a brief life, flooded his heart with its golden voluptuous
+light.
+
+"You love me? So be it," he murmured; "but beware what you do, my life
+lies in your hands, and you must be mine till death part us!"
+
+"Till my fancy change rather!" thought Madame la Marquise, as she put
+her jewelled hand on his lips, her hair softly brushing his cheek, with
+a touch as soft, and an odor as sweet, as the leaves of one of the roses
+twining below.
+
+Two men strolling below under the limes of Petite Forêt--discussing the
+last scandals of Versailles, talking of the ascendency of La Fontanges,
+of the Spanish dress his Majesty had reassumed to please her, of the
+Brinvilliers' Poudre de Succession, of the new château given to Père de
+la Chaise, of D'Aubigny's last extravagance and Lauzun's last mot, and
+the last gossip about Bossuet and Mademoiselle de Mauléon, and all the
+chit-chat of that varied day, glittering with wit and prolific of
+poison--glanced up to the balcony by the light of the stars.
+
+"That cursed priest!" muttered the younger, le Vicomte de Saint-Elix, as
+he struck the head off a lily with his delicate cane.
+
+"In a fool's paradise! Ah-ha! Madame la Marquise!" laughed the
+other--the old Duc de Clos-Vougeot--taking a chocolate sweetmeat out of
+his emerald-studded bonbonnière as they walked on, while the
+lime-blossoms shook off in the summer night wind and dropped dead on the
+grass beneath, laughing at the story of the box D'Artagnan had found in
+Lauzun's rooms when he seized his papers, containing the portraits of
+sixty women of high degree who had worshipped the resistless Captain of
+the Guard, with critical and historical notices penned under each;
+notices D'Artagnan and his aide could not help indiscreetly retailing,
+in despite of the Bourbon command of secrecy--secrecy so necessary where
+sixty beauties and saints were involved!
+
+"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc de Clos-Vougeot, tapping his
+bonbonnière, enamelled by Petitot: the Duc was old, and knew women well,
+and knew the value and length of a paradise dependent on that most
+fickle of butterflies--female fidelity; he had heard Ninon de Lenclos
+try to persuade Scarron's wife to become a coquette, and Scarron's wife
+in turn beseech Ninon to discontinue her coquetteries; had seen that,
+however different their theories and practice, the result was the same;
+and already guessed right, that if Paris had been universally won by the
+one, its monarch would eventually be won by the other.
+
+"A fool's paradise!"
+
+The courtier was right, but the priest, had he heard him, would never
+have believed; _his_ heaven shone in those dazzling eyes: till the eyes
+closed in death, his heaven was safe! He had never loved, he had seen
+nothing of women; he had come straight from the monastic gloom of a
+Dominican abbey, in the very heart of the South, down in Languedoc,
+where costly missals were his only idol, and rigid pietists, profoundly
+ignorant of the ways and thoughts of their brethren of Paris, had reared
+him up in anchorite rigidity, and scourged his mind with iron
+philosophies and stoic-like doctrines of self-mortification that would
+have repudiated the sophistries and ingenuities of Sanchez, Escobar, and
+Mascarenhas, as suggestions of the very Master of Evil himself. From the
+ascetic gloom of that Languedoc convent he had been brought straight, by
+superior will, into the glare of the life at Versailles, that brilliant,
+gorgeous, sparkling, bizarre life, scintillating with wit, brimful of
+intrigue, crowded with the men and women who formed the Court of that
+age and the History of the next; where he found every churchman an _abbé
+galant_, and heard those who performed the mass jest at it with those
+who attended it; where he found no lines marked of right and wrong, but
+saw them all fused in a gay, tangled web of two court colors--Expediency
+and Pleasure. A life that dazzled and tired his eyes, as the glitter of
+lights in a room dazzles and tires the eyes of a man who comes suddenly
+in from the dark night air, till he grew giddy and sick, and in the
+midst of the gilded salons, or soft confessions of titled sinners, would
+ask himself if indeed he could be the same man who had sat calm and
+grave with the mellow sun streaming in on his missal-page in the
+monastic gloom of the Languedoc abbey but so few brief months before,
+when all this world of Versailles was unknown? The same man? Truly
+not--never again the same, since Madame la Marquise had bent her brown
+eyes upon him, been amused with his singular difference from all those
+around her, had loved him as women loved at Versailles, and bowed him
+down to her feet, before he guessed the name of the forbidden language
+that stirred in his heart and rushed to his lips, untaught and unbidden.
+
+"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc, sagaciously tapping his gold
+bonbonnière. But many a paradise like it has dawned and faded, before
+and since the Versailles of Louis Quatorze.
+
+He loved, and Madame la Marquise loved him. Through one brief tumult of
+struggle he passed: struggle between the creed of the Dominican abbey,
+where no sin would have been held so thrice accursed, so unpardonable,
+so deserving of the scourge and the stake as this--and the creed of the
+Bourbon Court, where churchmen's gallantries were every-day gossip;
+where the Abbé de Rancé, ere he founded the saintly gloom of La Trappe,
+scandalized town and court as much as Lauzun; where the Père de la
+Chaise smiled complacently on La Fontanges' ascendancy; where three
+nobles rushed to pick up the handkerchief of that royal confessor, who
+washed out with holy water the royal indiscretions, as you wash off
+grains of dust with perfumed water; where the great and saintly Bishop
+of Condom could be checked in a rebuking harangue, and have the tables
+turned on him by a mischievous reference to Mademoiselle de Mauléon;
+where life was intrigue for churchmen and laymen alike, and where the
+abbé's rochet and the cardinal's scarlet covered the same vices as were
+openly blazoned on the gold aiglettes of the Garde du Corps and the
+costly lace of the Chambellan du Roi. A storm, brief and violent as the
+summer storms that raged over Versailles, was roused between the
+conflicting thoughts at war within him, between the principles deeply
+rooted from long habit and stern belief, and the passions sprung up
+unbidden with the sudden growth and gorgeous glow of a tropical
+flower--a storm, brief and violent, a struggle, ended that night, when
+he stood on the balcony with the woman he loved, felt her lips upon
+his, and bowed down to her feet delirious and strengthless.
+
+"I have won my wager with Adeline; I have vanquished _mon beau_ De
+Launay," thought Madame la Marquise, smiling, two days after, as she
+sat, en negligé, in her broidered chair, pulling Osmin's ears, and
+stirring the frothy chocolate handed to her by her negro, Azor, brought
+over in the suite of the African embassy from Ardra, full of monkeyish
+espièglerie, and covered with gems--a priceless dwarf, black as ink, and
+but two feet high, who could match any day with the Queen's little Moor.
+"He amuses me with his vows of eternal love. Eternal love?--how _de
+trop_ we should find it, here in Versailles! But it is amusing enough to
+play at for a season. No, that is not half enough--he adores! This poor
+Gaston!"
+
+So in the salons of Versailles, and in the world, where Ninon reigned,
+by the Court ladies, while they loitered in the new-made gardens of
+Marly, among other similar things jested of was this new amour of Madame
+de la Rivière for the young Père de Launay. "She was always eccentric,
+and he _was_ very handsome, and would have charming manners if he were
+not so grave and so silent," the women averred; while the young nobles
+swore that these meddling churchmen had always the best luck, whether in
+amatory conquest, or on fat lands and rich revenues. What the Priest of
+Languedoc thought a love that would outlast life, and repay him for
+peace of conscience and heaven both lost, was only one of the passing
+bubbles of gossip and scandal floating for an hour, amidst myriads like
+it, on the glittering, fast-rushing, diamond-bright waters of life at
+Versailles!
+
+A new existence had dawned for him; far away in the dim dusky vista of
+forgotten things, though in reality barely distant a few short months,
+lay the old life in Languedoc, vague and unremembered as a passed
+dream; with its calm routine, its monastic silence, its unvarying
+alternations of study and prayer, its iron-bound thoughts, its rigid
+creed. It had sunk away as the peaceful gray twilight of a summer's
+night sinks away before the fiery burst of an artificial illumination,
+and a new life had dawned for him, radiant, tumultuous, conflicting,
+delicious--that dazzled his eyes with the magnificence of boundless
+riches and unrestricted extravagance; that charmed his intellect with
+the witty coruscations, the polished esprit, of an age unsurpassed for
+genius, grace, and wit; and that swayed alike his heart, his
+imagination, and his passions with the subtle intoxication of this syren
+of Love, whose forbidden song had never before, in faintest echo, fallen
+on his ear.
+
+Far away in the dim, lifeless, pulseless past, sank the memory of the
+old Dominican abbey, of all it had taught him, of all it had exacted, in
+its iron, stoical, merciless creed. A new life had arisen for him, and
+Gaston de Launay, waking from the semi-slumber of the living death he
+had endured in Languedoc, and liked because he knew no other, was
+happy--happy as a prisoner is in the wild delight with which he welcomes
+the sunlight after lengthened imprisonment, happy as an opium-eater is
+in the delicious delirium that succeeds the lulling softness of the
+opiate.
+
+"He loves me, poor Gaston! Bah! But how strangely he talks! If love were
+this fiery, changeless, earnest thing with us that it is with him, what
+in the world should we do with it? We should have to get a lettre de
+cachet for it, and forbid it the Court; send it in exile to Pignerol, as
+they have just done Lauzun. Love in earnest? We should lose the best
+spice for our wine, the best toy for our games, and, mon Dieu! what
+embroilments there would be! Love in earnest? Bagatell! Louise de la
+Vallière shows us the folly of that; but for its Quixotisms she would
+now be at Vaujours, instead of buried alive in that Rue St. Jacques,
+with nothing to do but to weep for 'Louison,' count her beads, and
+listen to M. de Condom's merciless eloquence! Like the king,
+
+ J'aime qu'on m'aime, mais avec de l'esprit.
+
+People have no right to reproach each other with inconstancy; one's
+caprices are not in one's own keeping; and one can no more help where
+one's fancy blows, than that lime-leaf can help where the breeze chooses
+to waft it. But poor Gaston! how make _him_ comprehend that?" thought
+Madame la Marquise, as she turned, and smiled, and held out her warm,
+jewelled hands, and listened once again to the words of the man who was
+in her power as utterly as the bird in the power of the snake when it
+has once looked up into the fatal eyes that lure it on to its doom.
+
+"You will love me ever?" he would ask, resting his lips on her white low
+brow.
+
+"Ever!" would softly answer Madame la Marquise.
+
+And her lover believed her: should his deity lie? He believed her! What
+did he, fresh from the solitude of his monastery, gloomy and severe as
+that of the Trappist abbey, with its perpetual silence, its lowered
+glances, its shrouded faces, its ever-present "memento mori," know of
+women's faith, of women's love, of the sense in which _they_ meant that
+vow "for ever"? He believed her, and never asked what would be at the
+end of a path strewn with such odorous flowers. Alone, it is true, in
+moments when he paused to think, he stood aghast at the abyss into which
+he had fallen, at the sin into which, a few months before, haughty and
+stern in virtue against the temptation that had never entered his path,
+he would have defied devils in legion to have lured him, yet into which
+he had now plunged at the mere smile of a woman! Out of her presence,
+out of her spells, standing by himself under the same skies that had
+blooded over his days of peace in Languedoc, back on his heart, with a
+sickening anguish, would come the weight of his sin; the burden of his
+broken oaths, the scorch of that curse eternal which, by his creed, he
+held drawn down on him here and hereafter; and Gaston de Launay would
+struggle again against this idolatrous passion, which had come with its
+fell delusion betwixt him and his God; struggle--vainly, idly--struggle,
+only to hug closer the sin he loved while he loathed; only to drink
+deeper of the draught whose voluptuous perfume was poison; only to
+forget all, forsake all, dare all, at one whisper of her voice, one
+glance of her eyes, one touch of the lips whose caress he held would be
+bought by a curse through eternity.
+
+Few women love aught "for ever," save, perchance, diamonds, lace, and
+their own beauty, and Madame la Marquise was not one of those few;
+certainly not--she had no desire to make herself singular in her
+generation, and could set fashions much more likely to find disciples,
+without reverting to anything so eccentric, plebeian, and out of date.
+Love _one_ for ever! She would have thought it as terrible waste of her
+fascinations, as for a jewel to shine in the solitude of its case,
+looked on by only one pair of eyes, or for a priceless enamel, by
+Petitot, to be only worn next the heart, shrouded away from the light of
+day, hidden under the folds of linen and lace.
+
+"Love one for ever?"--Madame la Marquise laughed at the thought, as she
+stood dressed for a ball, after assisting at the representation of a
+certain tragedy, called "Bérénice" (in which Mesdames Deshoulières and
+De Sévigné, despite their esprit, alone of all Paris and the Court could
+see no beauty), and glanced in the mirror at her radiant face, her
+delicate skin, her raven curls, with their pendants shaking, her
+snow-white arms, and her costly dress of the newest mode, its stomacher
+gleaming one mass of gems. "Love one for ever? The droll idea! Is it
+not enough that I have loved him once?"
+
+It was more than enough for his rivals, who bitterly envied him; courtly
+abbés, with polished smiles, and young chanoines, with scented curls and
+velvet toques, courtiers, who piqued themselves on reputations only
+second to Lauzun's, and men of the world, who laughed at this new
+caprice of Madame la Marquise, alike bore no good will to this Languedoc
+priest, and gave him a significant sneer, or a compliment that roused
+his blood to fire, and stung him far worse than more open insult, when
+they met in the salons, or crossed in the corridors, at Versailles or
+Petite Forêt.
+
+"Those men! those men! Should he ever lose her to any one of them?" he
+would think over and over again, clenching his hand, in impotent agony
+of passion that he had not the sword and the license of a soldier to
+strike them on the lips with his glove for the smile with which they
+dared to speak her name; to make them wash out in blood under the trees,
+before the sun was up, the laugh, the mot, the delicate satire, which
+were worse to bear than a blow to the man who could not avenge them.
+
+"Pardieu! Madame must be very unusually faithful to her handsome Priest;
+she has smiled on no other for two months! What unparalleled fidelity!"
+said the Vicomte de Saint-Elix, with petulant irritation.
+
+"Jealous, Léonce?" laughed the old Duc, whom he spoke to, tapping the
+medallion portrait on his bonbonnière. "Take comfort: when the weather
+has been so long fixed, it is always near a change. Ah! M. de Launay
+overhears! He looks as if he would slay us. Very unchristian in a
+priest!"
+
+Gaston de Launay overheard, as he stood by a _croisée_ at Petite Forêt,
+playing with Osmin--he liked even the dog, since the hand he loved so
+often lay on its slender neck, and toyed with its silver chain. And,
+sworn as he was to the service of his Church, sole mistress as his
+Church had been, till Léontine de Rennecourt's eyes had lured him to his
+desertion of her, apostate in his own eyes as such a thought confessed
+him to have grown, he now loathed the garb of a priest, that bound his
+hands from vengeance, and made him powerless before insult as a woman.
+Fierce, ruthless longing for revenge upon these men seized on him;
+devilish desires, the germ of which till that hour he never dreamt
+slumbered within him, woke up into dangerous, vigorous life. Had he
+lived in the world, its politic reserve, its courtly sneer, its light
+gallantries, that passed the time and flattered amour-propre, its
+dissimulated hate that smiled while plotting, and killed with poisoned
+bonbons, would never have been learnt by him; and having long lived out
+of it, having been suddenly plunged into its whirl, not guessing its
+springs, ignorant of its diplomacies, its suave lies, termed good
+breeding, its légères philosophies, he knew nothing of the wisdom with
+which its wise men forsook their loves and concealed their hatreds. Both
+passions now sprung up in him at one birth, both the stronger for the
+long years in which a chill, artificial, but unbroken calm, had chained
+his very nature down, and fettered into an iron monotony, an unnatural
+and colorless tranquillity, a character originally impetuous and vivid,
+as the frosts of a winter chill into one cold, even, glassy surface, the
+rapids of a tumultuous river. With the same force and strength with
+which, in the old days in Languedoc, he had idolized and served his
+Church, sparing himself no mortification, believing every iota of her
+creed, carrying out her slightest rule with merciless self-examination,
+so--the tide once turned the other way--so the priest now loved, so he
+now hated.
+
+"He is growing exigeant, jealous, presuming; he amuses me no longer--he
+wearies. I must give him his congé," thought Madame la Marquise. "This
+play at eternal passion is very amusing for a while, but, like all
+things, gets tiresome when it has lasted some time. What does not? Poor
+Gaston, it is his provincial ideas, but he will soon rub such off, and
+find, like us all, that sincerity is troublesome, ever de trop, and
+never profitable. He loves me--but bah! so does Saint-Elix, so do they
+all, and a jealous husband like M. de Nesmond, _le drôle!_ could
+scarcely be worse than my young De Launay is growing!"
+
+And Madame la Marquise glanced at her face in the mirror, and wished she
+knew Madame de Maintenon's secret for the Breuvage Indien; wished she
+had one of the _clefs de faveur_ to admit her to the Grande Salle du
+Parlement; wished she had the _couronne d'Agrippine_ her friend Athénaïs
+had just shown her; wished Le Brun were not now occupied on the ceiling
+of the King's Grande Galerie, and were free to paint the frescoes of her
+own new-built chapel; wished a thousand unattainable things, as spoilt
+children of fortune will do, and swept down her château staircase a
+little out of temper--she could not have told why--to receive her guests
+at a fête given in honor of the marriage of Mademoiselle de Blois and
+the Prince de Conti.
+
+There was the young Comte de Vermandois, who would recognize in the
+Dauphin no superiority save that of his "_frère aine_;" there was "_le
+petit bossu_," Prince Eugene, then soliciting the rochet of a Bishop,
+and equally ridiculed when he sought a post in the army; there was M. de
+Louvois, who had just signed the order for the Dragonades; there was the
+Palatine de Bavière, with her German brusquerie, who had just clumsily
+tried to insult Madame de Montespan by coming into the salon with a
+great turnspit, led by a similar ribbon and called by the same name, in
+ridicule of the pet Montespan poodle; there was La Montespan herself,
+with her lovely gold hair, her dove's eyes, and her serpent's tongue;
+there was Madame de Sévigné and Madame de Grignan the Duchesse de
+Richelieu and the Duchesse de Lesdiguières; there was Bussy Rabutin and
+Hamilton. Who was there not that was brilliant, that was distinguished,
+that was high in rank and famed in wit at the fête of Madame la
+Marquise?--Madame la Marquise, who floated through the crowd that
+glittered in her salon and gardens, who laughed and smiled, showing her
+dazzling white teeth, who had a little Cupid gleaming with jewels
+(emblematic enough of Cupid as he was known at Versailles) to present
+the Princesse de Conti with a bridal bouquet whose flowers were of
+pearls and whose leaves were of emeralds; who piqued herself that the
+magnificence of her fête was scarcely eclipsed by His Majesty himself;
+who yielded the palm neither to La Vallière's lovely daughter, nor to
+her friend Athénaïs, nor to any one of the beauties who shone with them,
+and whose likeness by Mignard laughed down from the wall where it hung,
+matchless double of her own matchless self.
+
+The Priest of Languedoc watched her, the relentless fangs of passion
+gnawing his heart, as the wolf the Spartan. For the first time he was
+forgotten! His idol passed him carelessly, gave him no glance, no smile,
+but lavished a thousand coquetries on Saint-Elix, on De Rohan-Soubise,
+on the boy Vermandois,--on any who sought them. Once he addressed her.
+Madame la Marquise shrugged her snow-white shoulders, and arched her
+eyebrows with petulant irritation, and turned to laugh gayly at
+Saint-Elix, who was amusing her, and La Montespan, and Madame de
+Thianges, with some gay mischievous scandal concerning Madame de
+Lesdiguières and the Archbishop of Paris; for scandals, if not wholly
+new are ever diverting when concerning an enemy, especially when dressed
+and served up with the piquant sauce of wit.
+
+"I no longer then, madame, lead a dog's life in jealousy of this
+priest?" whispered Saint-Elix, after other whispers, in the ear of
+Madame la Marquise. The Vicomte adored her, not truly in Languedoc
+fashion, but very warmly--à la mode de Versailles.
+
+The Marquise laughed.
+
+"Perhaps not! You know I bet Mme. de Montevreau that I would conquer
+him. I have won now. Hush! He is close. There will be a tragedy, _mon
+ami_!"
+
+"M. le Vicomte, if you have the honor of a noble, the heart of a man,
+you fight me to-night. I seek no shelter under my cloth!"
+
+Saint-Elix turned as he heard the words, laughed scornfully, and signed
+the speaker away with an insolent sneer:
+
+"Bah! _Révérend Père!_ we do not fight with women and churchmen!"
+
+The fête was ended at last, the lights that had gleamed among the limes
+and chestnuts had died out, the gardens and salons were emptied and
+silent, the little Cupid had laid aside his weighty jewelled wings, the
+carriages with their gorgeous liveries, their outriders, and their
+guards of honor, had rolled from the gates of Petite Forêt to the Palace
+of Versailles. Madame la Marquise stood alone once more in the balcony
+of her salons, leaning her white arms on its gilded balustrade, looking
+down on to the gardens beneath, silvered with the breaking light of the
+dawn, smiling, her white teeth gleaming between her parted rose-hued
+lips, and thinking--of what? Who shall say?
+
+Still, still as death lay the gardens below, that an hour ago had been
+peopled with a glittering crowd, re-echoing with music, laughter, witty
+response, words of intrigue. Where the lights had shone on diamonds and
+pearl-broidered trains, on softly rouged cheeks, and gold-laced coats,
+on jewelled swords and broideries of gold, the gray hue of the breaking
+day now only fell on the silvered leaves of the limes, the turf wet
+with dew, he drooped heads of the Provence roses; and Madame la
+Marquise, standing alone, started as a step through the salon within
+broke the silence.
+
+"Madame, will you permit me a word _now_?"
+
+Gaston de Launay took her hands off the balustrade, and held them tight
+in his, while his voice sounded, even in his own ears, strangely calm,
+yet strangely harsh:
+
+"Madame, you love me no longer?"
+
+"Monsieur, I do not answer questions put to me in such a manner."
+
+She would have drawn her hands away, but he held them in a fierce grasp
+till her rings cut his skin, as they had done once before.
+
+"No trifling! Answer--yes or no!"
+
+"Well! 'no,' then, monsieur. Since you _will_ have the truth, do not
+blame me if you find it uncomplimentary and unacceptable."
+
+He let go her hands and reeled back, staggered, as if struck by a shot.
+
+"Mon Dieu! it is true--you love me no longer! And you tell it me
+_thus_!"
+
+Madame la Marquise, for an instant, was silenced and touched; for the
+words were uttered with the faint cry of a man in agony, and she saw,
+even by the dim twilight of dawn, how livid his lips turned, how ashy
+gray grew the hue of his face. But she smiled, playing with Osmin's new
+collar of pearls and coral.
+
+"Tell it you 'thus'? I would not have told it you 'thus,' monsieur, if
+you had been content with a hint, and had not evinced so strong a desire
+for candor undisguised; but if people will not comprehend a delicate
+suggestion, they must be wounded by plainer truths--it is their own
+fault. Did you think I was like a little shepherdess in a pastoral, to
+play the childish game of constancy without variations? Had you
+presumption enough to fancy you could amuse me for ever----"
+
+He stopped her, his voice broken and hoarse, as he gasped for breath.
+
+"Silence! Woman, have you no mercy? For you--for such as you--I have
+flung away heaven, steeped myself in sin, lost my church, my peace, my
+all--forfeited all right to the reverence of my fellows, all hope for
+the smile of my God! For you--for such as you--I have become a traitor,
+a hypocrite, an apostate, whose prayers are insults, whose professions
+are lies, whose oaths are perjury! At your smile, I have flung away
+eternity; for your kiss, I have risked my life here, my life hereafter;
+for your love, I held no price too vast to pay; weighed with it, honor,
+faith, heaven, all seemed valueless--all were forgotten! You lured me
+from tranquil calm, you broke in on the days of peace which but for you
+were unbroken still, you haunted my prayers, you placed yourself between
+Heaven and me, you planned to conquer my anchorite's pride, you wagered
+you would lure me from my priestly vows, and yet you have so little
+mercy, that when your bet is won, when your amusement grows stale, when
+the victory grows valueless, you can turn on me with words like these
+without one self-reproach?"
+
+"Ma foi, monsieur! it is you who may reproach yourself, not I," cried
+his hearer, insolently. "Are you so very provincial still, that you are
+ignorant that when a lover has ceased to please he has to blame his own
+lack of power to retain any love he may have won, and is far too
+well-bred to utter a complaint? Your language is very new to me. Most
+men, monsieur, would be grateful for my slightest preference; I permit
+none to rebuke me for either giving or withdrawing it."
+
+The eyes of Madame la Marquise sparkled angrily, and the smile on her
+lips was a deadly one, full of irony, full of malice. As he beheld it,
+the scales fell at last from the eyes of Gaston de Launay, and he saw
+what this woman was whom he had worshipped with such mad, blind,
+idolatrous passion.
+
+He bowed his head with a low, broken moan, as a man stunned by a mortal
+blow; while Madame la Marquise stood playing with the pearl-and-coral
+chain, and smiling the malicious and mischievous smile that showed her
+white teeth, as they are shown in the portrait by Mignard.
+
+"_Comme les hommes sont fous!_" laughed Madame la Marquise.
+
+He lifted his eyes, and looked at her as she stood in the faint light of
+the dawn, with her rich dress, her gleaming diamonds, her wicked smile,
+her matchless beauty; and the passion in him broke out in a bitter cry:
+
+"God help me! My sin has brought home its curse!"
+
+He bent over her, his burning lips scorching her own like fire, holding
+her in one last embrace, that clasped her in a vice of iron she had no
+power to break.
+
+"Angel! devil! temptress! _This_ for what I have deemed thee--_that_ for
+what thou art!"
+
+He flung her from him with unconscious violence, and left her--lying
+where she fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The gray silvery dawn rose, and broke into the warmth and sunlight of a
+summer day; the deer nestled in their couches under the chequered
+shadows of the woodlands round, and the morning chimes were rung in
+musical carillons from the campanile of the château; the Provence roses
+tossed their delicate heads, joyously shaking the dew off their scented
+petals; the blossoms of the limes fell in a fragrant shower on the turf
+below, and the boughs, swayed softly by the wind, brushed their leaves
+against the sparkling waters of the fountains; the woods and gardens of
+Petite Forêt lay, bright and laughing, in the mellow sunlight of the
+new day to which the world was waking. And with his face turned up to
+the sky, clasped in his hand a medallion enamel on which was painted the
+head of a woman, the grass and ferns where he had fallen stained crimson
+with his life-blood, lay a dead man, while in his bosom nestled a little
+dog, moaning piteous, plaintive cries, and vainly seeking its best to
+wake him to the day that for him would never dawn.
+
+When her household, trembling, spread the news that the dead priest had
+been found lying under the limes, slain by his own hand, and it reached
+Madame la Marquise in her private chambers, she was startled, shocked,
+wept, hiding her radiant eyes in her broidered handkerchief, and called
+Azor, and bade him bring her her flask of scented waters, and bathed her
+eyes, and turned them dazzling bright on Saint-Elix, and stirred her
+chocolate and asked the news. "_On peut être êmue aux larmes et
+aimer le chocolat_," thought Madame la Marquise, with her friend
+Montespan;--while, without, under the waving shadow of the
+linden-boughs, with the sunlight streaming round him, the little dog
+nestling in his breast, refusing to be comforted, lay the man whom she
+had murdered.
+
+The portrait of Mignard still hangs on the walls of the château, and in
+its radiant colors Madame la Marquise still lives, fair type of her age,
+smiling her victorious smile, with the diamonds shining among her hair,
+and her brilliant eyes flashing defiance, irony, and coquetry as of
+yore, when she reigned amidst the beauties of Versailles;--and in the
+gardens beyond in the summer nights, the lime-boughs softly shake their
+fragrant flowers on the turf, and the moonlight falls in hushed and
+mournful calm, streaming through the network of the boughs on to the
+tangled mass of violets and ferns that has grown up in rank luxuriance
+over the spot where Gaston de Launay died.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
+
+
+Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired.
+
+A few obvious errors in original printing have also been repaired:
+
+ Page 82, first paragraph: "out of the Cara di Fiori" corrected to
+ "out of the Casa di Fiori".
+
+ Page 145, last paragraph: "Lady Hautton has just" corrected to
+ "Lady Hautton had just".
+
+ Page 167, 4th paragraph: "anything put a pleasant" corrected to
+ "anything but a pleasant".
+
+ Page 167, last paragraph: "nor even when he went that" corrected to
+ "nor even when he went on that".
+
+ Page 173, 4th paragraph: et C^{ie} is an abbreviation for the
+ French word "compagnie".
+
+ Page 224, last paragraph: "Helvetius" corrected to "Helvétius".
+
+Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in
+spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady
+Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida.
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's
+Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: August 23, 2011 [EBook #37178]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Katherine Becker and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<h1>CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,</h1>
+
+<h2>LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES,</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>AND</div>
+
+<h2>OTHER STORIES.</h2>
+
+<h2><span class="smcap">By</span> "OUIDA,"</h2>
+
+<h6>AUTHOR OF "IDALIA," "STRATHMORE," "CHANDOS," "GRANVILLE
+DE VIGNE," ETC.</h6>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc001.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'>PHILADELPHIA:<br />
+J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.<br />
+1900.</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc003a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<h2>CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,</h2>
+
+<h3>AND OTHER STORIES.</h3>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc003b.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<h2>ADVERTISEMENT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The Publishers have the pleasure of offering to
+the many admirers of the writings of "Ouida," the
+present volume of Contributions, which have appeared
+from time to time in the leading Journals of Europe,
+and which have recently been collected and revised by
+the author, for publication in book-form.</p>
+
+<p>They have also in press, to be speedily published,
+another similar volume of tales, from the same pen,
+together with an unpublished romance entitled
+"<span class="smcap">Under Two Flags</span>."</p>
+
+<p>Our editions of Ouida's Works are published by
+express arrangement with the author; and any other
+editions that may appear in the American market will
+be issued in violation of the courtesies usually extended
+both to authors and publishers.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Philadelphia, May, 1867.</span><br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc007.png" alt="CONTENTS" title="CONTENTS" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CECIL_CASTLEMAINES_GAGE">CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE; <span class="smcap">or, The Story of a Broidered Shield</span></a></td><td align="right">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#LITTLE_GRAND_AND_THE_MARCHIONESS">LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS; <span class="smcap">or, Our Maltese Peerage</span></a></td><td align="right">37</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES; <span class="smcap">or, The Worries a Chaperone</span>.&mdash;<i>In Three Seasons:</i>&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp; <a href="#FIRST">Season the First.&mdash;The Eligible</a></td><td align="right">84</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp; <a href="#SECOND">Season the Second.&mdash;The Ogre</a></td><td align="right">121</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp; <a href="#THIRD">Season the Third.&mdash;The Climax</a></td><td align="right">164</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUINZE">A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUINZE; <span class="smcap">or, Pendant to a Pastel by La Tour</span></a></td><td align="right">211</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <a href="#FIRSTM">I. The First Morning</a></td><td align="right">212</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="#SECONDM">II. The Second Morning</a></td><td align="right">218</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp; &nbsp; <a href="#MIDNIGHT">III. Midnight</a></td><td align="right">227</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#DEADLY_DASH">"DEADLY DASH." <span class="smcap">A Story told on the Off Day</span></a></td><td align="right">235</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#THE_GENERALS_MATCH-MAKING">THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING; <span class="smcap">or, Coaches And Cousinship</span></a></td><td align="right">265</td><td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#THE_STORY_OF_A_CRAYON-HEAD">THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD; <span class="smcap">or, A Doubled-down Leaf in a Man's Life</span></a></td><td align="right">306</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#THE_BEAUTY_OF_VICQ_DAZYR">THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR; <span class="smcap">or, Not at All A Proper Person</span></a></td><td align="right">339</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUATORZE">A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUATORZE: <span class="smcap">Pendant To a Portrait By Mignard</span></a></td><td align="right">368</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc008.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc009a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<h2><a name="CECIL_CASTLEMAINES_GAGE" id="CECIL_CASTLEMAINES_GAGE"></a>CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>THE STORY OF A BROIDERED SHIELD.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of her
+county and her line, the handsomest of all the
+handsome women that had graced her race, when
+she moved, a century and a half ago, down the stately
+staircase, and through the gilded and tapestried halls of
+Lilliesford. The Town had run mad after her, and her
+face levelled politics, and was cited as admiringly by the
+Whigs at St. James's as by the Tories at the Cocoa-tree,
+by the beaux and Mohocks at Garraway's as by the
+alumni at the Grecian, by the wits at Will's as by the
+fops at Ozinda's.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever she went, whether to the Haymarket or the
+Opera, to the 'Change for a fan or the palace for a state
+ball, to Drury Lane to see Pastoral Philips's dreary
+dilution of Racine, or to some fair chief of her faction
+for basset and ombre, she was surrounded by the best
+men of her time, and hated by Whig beauties with virulent
+wrath, for she was a Tory to the backbone, indeed a
+Jacobite at heart; worshipped Bolingbroke, detested
+Marlborough and Eugene, believed in all the horrors of
+the programme said to have been plotted by the Whigs
+for the anniversary show of 1711, and was thought to
+have prompted the satire on those fair politicians who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+are disguised as <i>Rosalinda</i> and <i>Nigranilla</i> in the 81st
+paper of the <i>Spectator</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine was the greatest beauty of her day,
+lovelier still at four-and-twenty than she had been at seventeen,
+unwedded, though the highest coronets in the land
+had been offered to her; far above the coquetteries and
+minauderies of her friends, far above imitation of the affectations
+of "Lady Betty Modley's skuttle," or need of practising
+the Fan exercise; haughty, peerless, radiant, unwon&mdash;nay,
+more&mdash;untouched; for the finest gentleman on the
+town could not flatter himself that he had ever stirred the
+slightest trace of interest in her, nor boast, as he stood in
+the inner circle at the Chocolate-house (unless, indeed, he
+lied more impudently than Tom Wharton himself), that he
+had ever been honored by a glance of encouragement from
+the Earl's daughter. She was too proud to cheapen herself
+with coquetry, too fastidious to care for her conquests
+over those who whispered to her through Nicolini's song,
+vied to have the privilege of carrying her fan, drove past
+her windows in Soho Square, crowded about her in St.
+James's Park, paid court even to her little spaniel Indamara,
+and, to catch but a glimpse of her brocaded train
+as it swept a ball-room floor, would leave even their play
+at the Groom Porter's, Mrs. Oldfield in the green-room,
+a night hunt with Mohun and their brother Mohocks, a
+circle of wits gathered "within the steam of the coffeepot"
+at Will's, a dinner at Halifax's, a supper at Bolingbroke's,&mdash;whatever,
+according to their several tastes, made
+their best entertainment and was hardest to quit.</p>
+
+<p>The highest suitors of the day sought her smile and
+sued for her hand; men left the Court and the Mall to
+join the Flanders army before the lines at Bouchain less
+for loyal love of England than hopeless love of Cecil
+Castlemaine. Her father vainly urged her not to fling
+away offers that all the women at St. James's envied her.
+She was untouched and unwon, and when her friends, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+court beauties, the fine ladies, the coquettes of quality,
+rallied her on her coldness (envying her her conquests),
+she would smile her slight proud smile and bow her
+stately head. "Perhaps she was cold; she might be;
+they were personnable men? Oh yes! she had nothing
+to say against them. His Grace of Belamour?&mdash;A pretty
+wit, without doubt. Lord Millamont?&mdash;Diverting, but
+a coxcomb. He had beautiful hands; it was a pity he
+was always thinking of them! Sir Gage Rivers?&mdash;As
+obsequious a lover as the man in the 'Way of the World,'
+but she had heard he was very boastful and facetious at
+women over his chocolate at Ozinda's. The Earl of
+Argent?&mdash;A gallant soldier, surely, but whatever he
+might protest, no mistress would ever rival with him the
+dice at the Groom Porter's. Lord Philip Bellairs?&mdash;A
+proper gentleman; no fault in him; a bel esprit and an
+elegant courtier; pleased many, no doubt, but he did not
+please her overmuch. Perhaps her taste was too finical,
+or her character too cold, as they said. She preferred it
+should be so. When you were content it were folly to
+seek a change. For her part, she failed to comprehend
+how women could stoop to flutter their fans and choose
+their ribbons, and rack their tirewomen's brains for new
+pulvillios, and lappets, and devices, and practise their
+curtsy and recovery before their pier-glass, for no better
+aim or stake than to draw the glance and win the praise
+of men for whom they cared nothing. A woman who
+had the eloquence of beauty and a true pride should
+be above heed for such affectations, pleasure in such
+applause!"</p>
+
+<p>So she would put them all aside and turn the tables on
+her friends, and go on her own way, proud, peerless, Cecil
+Castlemaine, conquering and unconquered; and Steele
+must have had her name in his thoughts, and honored it
+heartily and sincerely, when he wrote one Tuesday, on
+the 21st of October, under the domino of his Church Coquette,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+"I say I do honor to those who <i>can be coquettes
+and are not such</i>, but I despise all who would be so, and,
+in despair of arriving at it themselves, hate and vilify all
+those who can." A definition justly drawn by his keen,
+quick graver, though doubtless it only excited the ire of,
+and was entirely lost upon, those who read the paper over
+their dish of bohea, or over their toilette, while they
+shifted a patch for an hour before they could determine
+it, or regretted the loss of ten guineas at crimp.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of the Town: when
+she sat at Drury Lane on the Tory side of the house, the
+devoutest admirer of Oldfield or Mrs. Porter scarcely
+heard a word of the <i>Heroic Daughter</i>, or the <i>Amorous
+Widow</i>, and the "beau fullest of his own dear self" forgot
+his silver-fringed gloves, his medallion snuff-box, his
+knotted cravat, his clouded cane, the slaughter that he
+planned to do, from gazing at her where she sat as though
+she were reigning sovereign at St. James's, the Castlemaine
+diamond's flashing crescent-like above her brow.
+At church and court, at park and assembly, there were
+none who could eclipse that haughty gentlewoman; therefore
+her fond women friends who had caressed her so
+warmly and so gracefully, and pulled her to pieces behind
+her back, if they could, so eagerly over their dainty cups
+of tea in an afternoon visit, were glad, one and all, when
+on "Barnabybright," Anglicè, the 22d (then the 11th)
+of June, the great Castlemaine chariot, with its three
+herons blazoned on its coroneted panels, its laced liveries
+and gilded harness, rolled over the heavy, ill-made roads
+down into the country in almost princely pomp, the peasants
+pouring out from the wayside cottages to stare at my
+lord's coach.</p>
+
+<p>It was said in the town that a portly divine, who wore
+his scarf as one of the chaplains to the Earl of Castlemaine,
+had prattled somewhat indiscreetly at Child's of
+his patron's politics; that certain cipher letters had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+passed the Channel enclosed in chocolate-cakes as soon as
+French goods were again imported after the peace of
+Utrecht; that gentlemen in high places were strongly
+suspected of mischievous designs against the tranquillity
+of the country and government; that the Earl had,
+among others, received a friendly hint from a relative in
+power to absent himself for a while from the court where he
+was not best trusted, and the town where an incautious
+word might be picked up and lead to Tower Hill, and
+amuse himself at his goodly castle of Lilliesford, where
+the red deer would not spy upon him, and the dark beech-woods
+would tell no tales. And the ladies of quality, her
+dear friends and sisters, were glad when they heard it as
+they punted at basset and fluttered their fans complacently.
+They would have the field for themselves, for a
+season, while Cecil Castlemaine was immured in her
+manor of Lilliesford; would be free of her beauty to
+eclipse them at the next birthday, be quit of their most
+dreaded rival, their most omnipotent leader of fashion;
+and they rejoiced at the whisper of the cipher letter, the
+damaging gossipry of the Whig coffee-houses, the bad
+repute into which my Lord Earl had grown at St.
+James's, at the misfortune of their friend, in a word, as
+human nature, masculine or feminine, will ever do&mdash;to
+its shame be it spoken&mdash;unless the <i>fomes peccati</i> be more
+completely wrung out of it than it ever has been since the
+angel Gabriel performed that work of purification on the
+infant Mahomet.</p>
+
+<p>It was the June of the year '15, and the coming disaffection
+was seething and boiling secretly among the
+Tories; the impeachment of Ormond and Bolingbroke
+had strengthened the distaste to the new-come Hanoverian
+pack, their attainder had been the blast of air needed
+to excite the smouldering wood to flame, the gentlemen
+of that party in the South began to grow impatient of the
+intrusion of the distant German branch, to think lovingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+of the old legitimate line, and to feel something of the
+chafing irritation of the gentlemen of the North, who
+were fretting like stag-hounds held in leash.</p>
+
+<p>Envoys passed to and fro between St. Germain, and
+Jacobite nobles, priests of the church that had fallen out
+of favor and was typified as the Scarlet Woman by a
+rival who, though successful, was still bitter, plotted with
+ecclesiastical relish in the task; letters were conveyed in
+rolls of innocent lace, plans were forwarded in frosted
+confections, messages were passed in invisible cipher that
+defied investigation. The times were dangerous; full of
+plot and counterplot, of risk and danger, of fomenting
+projects and hidden disaffection&mdash;times in which men,
+living habitually over mines, learned to like the uncertainty,
+and to think life flavorless without the chance of
+losing it any hour; and things being in this state, the
+Earl of Castlemaine deemed it prudent to take the counsel
+of his friend in power, and retire from London for a
+while, perhaps for the safety of his own person, perhaps
+for the advancement of his cause, either of which were
+easier insured at his seat in the western counties than
+amidst the Whigs of the capital.</p>
+
+<p>The castle of Lilliesford was bowered in the thick
+woods of the western counties, a giant pile built by Norman
+masons. Troops of deer herded under the gold-green
+beechen boughs, the sunlight glistened through the
+aisles of the trees, and quivered down on to the thick
+moss, and ferns, and tangled grass that grew under the
+park woodlands; the water-lilies clustered on the river,
+and the swans "floated double, swan and shadow," under
+the leaves that swept into the water; then, when Cecil
+Castlemaine came down to share her father's retirement,
+as now, when her name and titles on the gold plate of a
+coffin that lies with others of her race in the mausoleum
+across the park, where winter snows and sumer sun-rays
+are alike to those who sleep within, is all that tells<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+at Lilliesford of the loveliest woman of her time who once
+reigned there as mistress.</p>
+
+<p>The country was in its glad green midsummer beauty,
+and the musk-rosebuds bloomed in profuse luxuriance
+over the chill marble of the terraces, and scattered their
+delicate odorous petals in fragrant showers on the sward
+of the lawns, when Cecil Castlemaine came down to what
+she termed her exile. The morning was fair and cloudless,
+its sunbeams piercing through the darkest glades in
+the woodlands, the thickest shroud of the ivy, the deepest-hued
+pane of the mullioned windows, as she passed
+down the great staircase where lords and gentlewomen of
+her race gazed on her from the canvas of Lely and Jamesone,
+Bourdain and Vandyke, crossed the hall with her
+dainty step, so stately yet so light, and standing by the
+window of her own bower-room, was lured out on to the
+terrace overlooking the west side of the park.</p>
+
+<p>She made such a picture as Vandyke would have liked
+to paint, with her golden glow upon her, and the musk-roses
+clustering about her round the pilasters of marble&mdash;the
+white chill marble to which Belamour and many other
+of her lovers of the court and town had often likened her.
+Vandyke would have lingered lovingly on the hand that
+rested on her stag-hound's head, would have caught her
+air of court-like grace and dignity, would have painted
+with delighted fidelity her deep azure eyes, her proud
+brow, her delicate lips arched haughtily like a cupid's
+bow, would have picked out every fold of her sweeping
+train, every play of light on her silken skirts, every dainty
+tracery of her point-lace. Yet even painted by Sir Anthony,
+that perfect master of art and of elegance, though
+more finished it could have hardly been more faithful,
+more instinct with grace, and life, and dignity, than a
+sketch drawn of her shortly after that time by one who
+loved her well, which is still hanging in the gallery at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+Lilliesford, lighted up by the afternoon sun when it
+streams in through the western windows.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine stood on the terrace looking over the
+lawns and gardens through the opening vistas of meeting
+boughs and interlaced leaves to the woods and hills beyond,
+fused in a soft mist of green and purple, with her
+hand lying carelessly on her hound's broad head. She
+was a zealous Tory, a skilled politician, and her thoughts
+were busy with the hopes and fears, the chances for and
+against, of a cause that lay near her heart, but whose
+plans were yet immature, whose first blow was yet unstruck,
+and whose well-wishers were sanguine of a success
+they had not yet hazarded, though they hardly ventured
+to whisper to each other their previous designs and desires.
+Her thoughts were far away, and she hardly heeded the
+beauty round her, musing on schemes and projects dear
+to her party, that would imperil the Castlemaine coronet
+but would serve the only royal house the Castlemaine line
+had ever in their hearts acknowledged.</p>
+
+<p>She had regretted leaving the Town, moreover; a
+leader of the mode, a wit, a woman of the world, she
+missed her accustomed sphere; she was no pastoral
+Phyllis, no country-born Mistress Fiddy, to pass her time
+in provincial pleasures, in making cordial waters, in
+tending her beau-pots, in preserving her fallen rose-leaves,
+in inspecting the confections in the still-room; as
+little was she able, like many fine ladies when in similar
+exile, to while it away by scolding her tirewomen, and
+sorting a suit of ribbons, in ordering a set of gilded leather
+hangings from Chelsea for the state chambers, and yawning
+over chocolate in her bed till mid-day. She regretted
+leaving the Town, not for Belamour, nor Argent, nor any,
+of those who vainly hoped, as they glanced at the little
+mirror in the lids of their snuff-boxes, that they might
+have graven themselves, were it ever so faintly, in her
+thoughts; but for the wits, the pleasures, the choice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+clique, the accustomed circle to which she was so used,
+the courtly, brilliant town-life where she was wont to
+reign.</p>
+
+<p>So she stood on the terrace the first morning of her
+exile, her thoughts far away, with the loyal gentlemen of
+the North, and the banished court at St. Germain, the
+lids drooping proudly over her haughty eyes, and her lips
+half parted with a faint smile of triumph in the visions
+limned by ambition and imagination, while the wind
+softly stirred the rich lace of her bodice, and her fingers
+lay lightly, yet firmly, on the head of her stag-hound.
+She looked up at last as she heard the ring of a horse's
+hoofs, and saw a sorrel, covered with dust and foam, spurred
+up the avenue, which, rounding past the terrace, swept
+on to the front entrance; the sorrel looked wellnigh
+spent, and his rider somewhat worn and languid, as a
+man might do with justice who had been in boot and
+saddle twenty-four hours at the stretch, scarce stopping
+for a stoup of wine; but he lifted his hat, and bowed
+down to his saddle-bow as he passed her.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it the long-looked-for messenger with definite
+news from St. Germain?" wondered Lady Cecil, as her
+hound gave out a deep-tongued bay of anger at the
+stranger. She went back into her bower-room, and toyed
+absently with her flowered handkerchief, broidering a
+stalk to a violet-leaf, and wondering what additional
+hope the horseman might have brought to strengthen the
+good Cause, till her servants brought word that his Lordship
+prayed the pleasure of her presence in the octagon-room.
+Whereat she rose, and swept through the long
+corridors, entered the octagon-room, the sunbeams gathering
+about her rich dress as they passed through the
+stained-glass oriels, and saluted the new-comer, when her
+father presented him to her as their trusty and welcome
+friend and envoy, Sir Fulke Ravensworth, with her careless
+dignity and queenly grace, that nameless air which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+was too highly bred to be condescension, but markedly
+and proudly repelled familiarity, and signed a pale of
+distance beyond which none must intrude.</p>
+
+<p>The new-comer was a tall and handsome man, of noble
+presence, bronzed by foreign suns, pale and jaded just
+now with hard riding, while his dark silver-laced suit
+was splashed and covered with dust; but as he bowed low
+to her, critical Cecil Castlemaine saw that not Belamour
+himself could have better grace, not my Lord Millamont
+courtlier mien nor whiter hands, and listened with gracious
+air to what her father unfolded to her of his mission
+from St. Germain, whither he had come, at great
+personal risk, in many disguises, and at breathless speed,
+to place in their hands a precious letter in cipher from
+James Stuart to his well-beloved and loyal subject Herbert
+George, Earl of Castlemaine. A letter spoken of
+with closed doors and in low whispers, loyal as was the
+household, supreme as the Earl ruled over his domains
+of Lilliesford, for these were times when men mistrusted
+those of their own blood, and when the very figure on
+the tapestry seemed instinct with life to spy and betray&mdash;when
+they almost feared the silk that tied a missive
+should babble of its contents, and the hound that slept
+beside them should read and tell their thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>To leave Lilliesford would be danger to the Envoy and
+danger to the Cause; to stay as guest was to disarm suspicion.
+The messenger who had brought such priceless
+news must rest within the shelter of his roof; too much
+were risked by returning to the French coast yet awhile,
+or even by joining Mar or Derwentwater, so the Earl enforced
+his will upon the Envoy, and the Envoy thanked
+him and accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Perchance the beauty, whose eyes he had seen lighten
+and proud brow flush as she read the royal greeting and
+injunction, made a sojourn near her presence not distasteful;
+perchance he cared little where he stayed till the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+dawning time of action and of rising should arrive, when
+he should take the field and fight till life or death for the
+"White Rose and the long heads of hair." He was a
+soldier of fortune, a poor gentleman with no patrimony
+but his name, no chance of distinction save by his sword;
+sworn to a cause whose star was set forever; for many
+years his life had been of changing adventure and shifting
+chances, now fighting with Berwick at Almanza, now
+risking his life in some delicate and dangerous errand for
+James Stuart that could not have been trusted so well to
+any other officer about St. Germain; gallant to rashness,
+yet with much of the acumen of the diplomatist, he was
+invaluable to his Court and Cause, but, Stuart-like, men-like,
+they hastened to employ, but ever forgot to reward!</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil missed her town-life, and did not over-favor
+her exile in the western counties. To note down on her
+Mather's tablets the drowsy homilies droned out by the
+chaplain on a Sabbath noon, to play at crambo, to talk
+with her tirewomen of new washes for the skin, to pass her
+hours away in knotting?&mdash;she, whom Steele might have
+writ of when he drew his character of <i>Eudoxia</i>, could
+wile her exile with none of these inanities; neither could
+she consort with gentry who seemed to her little better
+than the boors of a country wake, who had never heard
+of Mr. Spectator and knew nothing of Mr. Cowley,
+countrywomen whose ambition was in their cowslip
+wines, fox-hunters more ignorant and uncouth than the
+dumb brutes they followed.</p>
+
+<p>Who was there for miles around with whom she could
+stoop to associate, with whom she cared to exchange a
+word? Madam from the vicarage, in her grogram, learned
+in syrups, salves, and possets? Country Lady Bountifuls,
+with gossip of the village and the poultry-yard? Provincial
+Peeresses, who had never been to London since Queen
+Anne's coronation? A squirearchy, who knew of no
+music save the concert of their stop-hounds, no court save<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+the court of the county assize, no literature unless by
+miracle 't were Tarleton's Jests? None such as these could
+cross the inlaid oak parquet of Lilliesford, and be ushered
+into the presence of Cecil Castlemaine.</p>
+
+<p>So the presence of the Chevalier's messenger was not
+altogether unwelcome and distasteful to her. She saw him
+but little, merely conversing at table with him with that
+distant and dignified courtesy which marked her out from
+the light, free, inconsequent manners in vogue with other
+women of quality of her time; the air which had chilled
+half the softest things even on Belamour's lips, and kept
+the vainest coxcomb hesitating and abashed.</p>
+
+<p>But by degrees she observed that the Envoy was a man
+who had lived in many countries and in many courts, was
+well versed in the tongues of France and Italy and Spain&mdash;in
+their belles-lettres too, moreover&mdash;and had served his
+apprenticeship to good company in the salons of Versailles,
+in the audience-room of the Vatican, at the receptions of
+the Duchess du Maine, and with the banished family at
+St. Germain. He spoke with a high and sanguine spirit
+of the troublous times approaching and the beloved
+Cause whose crisis was at hand, which chimed in with
+her humor better than the flippancies of Belamour, the
+airy nothings of Millamont. He was but a soldier of
+fortune, a poor gentleman who, named to her in the
+town, would have had never a word, and would have been
+unnoted amidst the crowding beaux who clustered round
+to hold her fan and hear how she had been pleasured
+with the drolleries of <i>Grief à la Mode</i>. But down in the
+western counties she deigned to listen to the Prince's
+officer, to smile&mdash;a smile beautiful when it came on her
+proud lips, as the play of light on the opals of her jewelled
+stomacher&mdash;nay, even to be amused when he spoke of the
+women of foreign courts, to be interested when he told,
+which was but reluctantly, of his own perils, escapes, and
+adventures, to discourse with him, riding home under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+beech avenues from hawking, or standing on the western
+terrace at curfew to watch the sunset, of many things on
+which the nobles of the Mall and the gentlemen about St.
+James's had never been allowed to share her opinions. For
+Lady Cecil was deeply read (unusually deeply for her day,
+since fine ladies of her rank and fashion mostly contented
+themselves with skimming a romance of Scuderi's, or an
+act of <i>Aurungzebe</i>); but she rarely spoke of those things,
+save perchance now and then to Mr. Addison.</p>
+
+<p>Fulke Ravensworth never flattered her, moreover, and
+flattery was a honeyed confection of which she had long
+been cloyed; he even praised boldly before her other
+women of beauty and grace whom he had seen at Versailles,
+at Sceaux, and at St. Germain; neither did he defer
+to her perpetually, but where he differed would combat her
+sentiments courteously but firmly. Though a soldier and
+a man of action, he had an admirable skill at the limner's
+art; could read to her the Divina Commedia, or the
+comedies of Lope da' Vega, and transfer crabbed Latin
+and abstruse Greek into elegant English for her pleasures
+and though a beggared gentleman of most precarious fortunes,
+he would speak of life and its chances, of the Cause
+and its perils, with a daring which she found preferable
+to the lisped languor of the men of the town, who had no
+better campaigns than laying siege to a prude, cared for
+no other weapons than their toilettes and snuff-boxes, and
+sought no other excitement than a <i>coup d'éclat</i> with the
+lion-tumblers.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, through these long midsummer days,
+Lady Cecil found the Envoy from St. Germain a companion
+that did not suit her ill, sought less the solitude of
+her bower-room, and listened graciously to him in the long
+twilight hours, while the evening dews gathered in the
+cups of the musk-roses, and the star-rays began to quiver
+on the water-lilies floating on the river below, that murmured
+along, with endless song, under the beechen-boughs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+A certain softness stole over her, relaxing the cold hauteur
+of which Belamour had so often complained, giving a
+nameless charm, supplying a nameless something, lacking
+before, in the beauty of The Castlemaine.</p>
+
+<p>She would stroke, half sadly, the smooth feathers of her
+tartaret falcon Gabrielle when Fulke Ravensworth brought
+her the bird from the ostreger's wrist, with its azure velvet
+hood, and silver bells and jesses. She would wonder, as
+she glanced through Corneille or Congreve, Philips or
+Petrarca, what it was, this passion of love, of which they
+all treated, on which they all turned, no matter how different
+their strain. And now and then would come over
+her cheek and brow a faint fitful wavering flush, delicate
+and changing as the flush from the rose-hued reflexions
+of western clouds on a statue of Pharos marble, and then
+she would start and rouse herself, and wonder what she
+ailed, and grow once more haughty, calm, stately, dazzling,
+but chill as the Castlemaine diamonds that she wore.</p>
+
+<p>So the summer-time passed, and the autumn came, the
+corn-lands brown with harvest, the hazel-copses strewn
+with fallen nuts, the beech-leaves turning into reddened
+gold. As the wheat ripened but to meet the sickle, as the
+nuts grew but to fall, as the leaves turned to gold but to
+wither, so the sanguine hopes, the fond ambitions of men,
+strengthened and matured only to fade into disappointment
+and destruction! Four months had sped by since
+the Prince's messenger had come to Lilliesford&mdash;months
+that had gone swiftly with him as some sweet delicious
+dream; and the time had come when he had orders to
+ride north, secretly and swiftly, speak with Mr. Forster
+and other gentlemen concerned in the meditated rising,
+and convey despatches and instructions to the Earl of
+Mar; for Prince James was projecting soon to join his
+loyal adherents in Scotland, and the critical moment was
+close at hand, the moment when, to Fulke Ravensworth's
+high and sanguine courage, victory seemed certain; failure,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+if no treachery marred, no dissension weakened, impossible;
+the moment to which he looked for honor, success,
+distinction, that should give him claim and title to
+aspire&mdash;<i>where</i>? Strong man, cool soldier though he was,
+he shrank from drawing his fancied future out from the
+golden haze of immature hope, lest he should see it wither
+upon closer sight. He was but a landless adventurer,
+with nothing but his sword and his honor, and kings he
+knew were slow to pay back benefits, or recollect the
+hands that hewed them free passage to their thrones.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine stood within the window of her
+bower-room, the red light of the October sun glittering
+on her gold-broidered skirt and her corsage sewn with
+opals and emeralds; her hand was pressed lightly on her
+bosom, as though some pain were throbbing there; it was
+new this unrest, this weariness, this vague weight that
+hung upon her; it was the perils of their Cause, she told
+herself; the risks her father ran: it was weak, childish,
+unworthy a Castlemaine! Still the pain throbbed there.</p>
+
+<p>Her hound, asleep beside her, raised his head with a
+low growl as a step intruded on the sanctity of the bower-room,
+then composed himself again to slumber, satisfied it
+was no foe. His mistress turned slowly; she knew the
+horses waited; she had shunned this ceremony of farewell,
+and never thought any would be bold enough to
+venture here without permission sought and gained.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Cecil, I could not go upon my way without one
+word of parting. Pardon me if I have been too rash to
+seek it here."</p>
+
+<p>Why was it that his brief frank words ever pleased her
+better than Belamour's most honeyed phrases, Millamont's
+suavest periods? She scarcely could have told, save that
+there were in them an earnestness and truth new and rare
+to her ear and to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>She pressed her hand closer on the opals&mdash;the jewels
+of calamity&mdash;and smiled:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly I wish you God speed, Sir Fulke, and safe
+issue from all perils."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed low; then raised himself to his fullest height,
+and stood beside her, watching the light play upon the
+opals:</p>
+
+<p>"That is all you vouchsafe me?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>All?</i> It is as much as you would claim, sir, is it not?
+It is more than I would say to many."</p>
+
+<p>"Your pardon&mdash;it <i>is</i> more than I should claim if prudence
+were ever by, if reason always ruled! I have no
+right to ask for, seek for, even wish for, more; such petitions
+may only be addressed by men of wealth and of
+high title; a landless soldier should have no pride to
+sting, no heart to wound; they are the prerogative of a
+happier fortune."</p>
+
+<p>Her lips turned white, but she answered haughtily; the
+crimson light flashing in her jewels, heirlooms priceless
+and hereditary, like her beauty and her pride:</p>
+
+<p>"This is strange language, sir! I fail to apprehend
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"You have never thought that I ran a danger deadlier
+than that which I have ever risked on any field? You
+have never guessed that I have had the madness, the presumption,
+the crime&mdash;it may be in your eyes&mdash;to love
+you."</p>
+
+<p>The color flushed to her face, crimsoning even her brow,
+and then fled back. Her first instinct was insulted pride&mdash;a
+beggared gentleman, a landless soldier, spoke to her
+of love!&mdash;of love!&mdash;which Belamour had barely had
+courage to whisper of; which none had dared to sue of
+her in return. He had ventured to feel this for her! he
+had ventured to speak of this to her!</p>
+
+<p>The Envoy saw the rising resentment, the pride spoken
+in every line of her delicate face, and stopped her as she
+would have spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"Wait! I know all you would reply. You think it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+infinite daring, presumption that merits highest reproof&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Since you divined so justly, it were pity you subjected
+yourself and me to this most useless, most unexpected
+interview. Why&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Why?</i> Because, perchance, in this life you will see
+my face no more, and you will think gently, mercifully
+of my offence (if offence it be to love you more than life,
+and only less than honor), when you know that I have
+fallen for the Cause, with your name in my heart, held
+only the dearer because never on my lips! Sincere love
+can be no insult to whomsoever proffered; Elizabeth
+Stuart saw no shame to her in the devotion of William
+Craven!"</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine stood in the crimson glory of the
+autumn sunset, her head erect, her pride unshaken, but
+her heart stirred strangely and unwontedly. It smote
+the one with bitter pain, to think a penniless exile should
+thus dare to speak of what princes and dukes had almost
+feared to whisper; what had she done&mdash;what had she
+said, to give him license for such liberty? It stirred the
+other with a tremulous warmth, a vague, sweet pleasure,
+that were never visitants there before; but that she
+scouted instantly as weakness, folly, debasement, in the
+Last of the Castlemaines.</p>
+
+<p>He saw well enough what passed within her, what made
+her eyes so troubled, yet her brow and lips so proudly set,
+and he bent nearer towards her, the great love that was
+in him trembling in his voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Cecil, hear me! If in the coming struggle I
+win distinction, honor, rank&mdash;if victory come to us, and
+the King we serve remember me in his prosperity as he
+does now in his adversity&mdash;if I can meet you hereafter
+with tidings of triumph and success, my name made one
+which England breathes with praise and pride, honors
+gained such as even you will deem worthy of your line&mdash;then&mdash;then&mdash;will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+you let me speak of what you refuse
+to hearken to now&mdash;then may I come to you, and seek
+a gentler answer?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked for a moment upon his face, as it bent towards
+her in the radiance of the sunset light, the hope
+that hopes all things glistening in his eyes, the high-souled
+daring of a gallant and sanguine spirit flushing his forehead,
+the loud throbs of his heart audible in the stillness
+around; and her proud eyes grew softer, her lips quivered
+for an instant.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned towards him with queenly grace:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Yes!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>It was spoken with stately dignity, though scarce above
+her breath; but the hue that wavered in her cheek was
+but the lovelier, for the pride that would not let her eyes
+droop nor her tears rise, would not let her utter one softer
+word. That one word cost her much. That single utterance
+was much from Cecil Castlemaine.</p>
+
+<p>Her handkerchief lay at her feet, a delicate, costly toy
+of lace, embroidered with her shield and chiffre; he
+stooped and raised it, and thrust it in his breast to
+treasure it there.</p>
+
+<p>"If I fail, I send this back in token that I renounce
+all hope; if I can come to you with honor and with fame,
+this shall be my gage that I may speak, that you will
+listen?"</p>
+
+<p>She bowed her noble head, ever held haughtily, as
+though every crown of Europe had a right to circle it;
+his hot lips lingered for a moment on her hand; then
+Cecil Castlemaine stood alone in the window of her bower-room,
+her hand pressed again upon the opals under which
+her heart was beating with a dull, weary pain, looking
+out over the landscape, where the golden leaves were
+falling fast, and the river, tossing sadly dead branches
+on its waves, was bemoaning in plaintive language the
+summer days gone by.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Two months came and went, the beech-boughs, black
+and sear, creaked in the bleak December winds that
+sighed through frozen ferns and over the couches of shivering
+deer, the snow drifted up on the marble terrace, and
+icedrops clung where the warm rosy petals of the musk-rosebuds
+had nestled. Across the country came terrible
+whispers that struck the hearts of men of loyal faith to
+the White Rose with a bolt of ice-cold terror and despair.
+Messengers riding in hot haste, open-mouthed peasants
+gossiping by the village forge, horsemen who tarried for
+a breathless rest at alehouse-doors, Whig divines who
+returned thanks for God's most gracious mercy in vouchsafing
+victory to the strong, all told the tale, all spread
+the news of the drawn battle of Sheriff-Muir, of the surrender
+under Preston walls, of the flight of Prince James.
+The tidings came one by one to Lilliesford, where my
+Lord Earl was holding himself in readiness to co-operate
+with the gentlemen of the North to set up the royal
+standard, broidered by his daughter's hands, in the western
+counties, and proclaim James III. "sovereign lord
+and king of the realms of Great Britain and Ireland."
+The tidings came to Lilliesford, and Cecil Castlemaine
+clenched her white jewelled hands in passionate anguish
+that a Stuart should have fled before the traitor of Argyll,
+instead of dying with his face towards the rebel crew;
+that men had lived who could choose surrender instead
+of heroic death; that <i>she</i> had not been there, at Preston,
+to shame them with a woman's reading of courage and of
+loyalty, and show them how to fall with a doomed city
+rather than yield captive to a foe!</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps amidst her grief for her Prince and for his
+Cause mingled&mdash;as the deadliest thought of all&mdash;a
+memory of a bright proud face, that had bent towards
+her with tender love and touching grace a month before,
+and that might now be lying pale and cold, turned
+upwards to the winter stars, on the field of Sheriff-Muir.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A year rolled by. Twelve months had fled since the
+gilded carriage of the Castlemaines, with the lordly blazonment
+upon its panels, its princely retinue and stately
+pomp, had come down into the western counties. The
+bones were crumbling white in the coffins in the Tower,
+and the skulls over Temple-bar had bleached white in
+winter snows and spring-tide suns; Kenmuir had gone to
+a sleep that knew no wakening, and Derwentwater had
+laid his fair young head down for a thankless cause; the
+heather bloomed over the mounds of dead on the plains
+of Sheriff-Muir, and the yellow gorse blossomed under
+the city walls of Preston.</p>
+
+<p>Another summer had dawned, bright and laughing,
+over England; none the less fair for human lives laid
+down, for human hopes crushed out; daisies powdering
+the turf sodden with human blood, birds carolling their
+song over graves of heaped-up dead. The musk-roses
+tossed their delicate heads again amidst the marble pilasters,
+and the hawthorn-boughs shook their fragrant buds
+into the river at Lilliesford, the purple hills lay wrapped
+in sunny mist, and hyacinth-bells mingled with the tangled
+grass and fern under the woodland shades, where the
+red deer nestled happily. Herons plumed their silvery
+wings down by the water-side, swallows circled in sultry
+air above the great bell-tower, and wood-pigeons cooed
+with soft love-notes among the leafy branches. Yet the
+Countess of Castlemaine, last of her race, sole owner of
+the lands that spread around her, stood on the rose-terrace,
+finding no joy in the sunlight about her, no melody
+in the song of the birds.</p>
+
+<p>She was the last of her name; her father, broken-hearted
+at the news from Dumblain and Preston, had
+died the very day after his lodgment in the Tower. There
+was no heir male of his line, and the title had passed to
+his daughter; there had been thoughts of confiscation
+and attainder, but others, unknown to her, solicited what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+she scorned to ask for herself, and the greed of the hungry
+"Hanoverian pack" spared the lands and the revenues of
+Lilliesford. In haughty pride, in lonely mourning, the
+fairest beauty of the Court and Town withdrew again to
+the solitude of her western counties, and tarried there,
+dwelling amidst her women and her almost regal household,
+in the sacred solitude of grief, wherein none might
+intrude. Proud Cecil Castlemaine was yet prouder than
+of yore; alone, sorrowing for her ruined Cause and exiled
+King, she would hold converse with none of those who
+had had a hand in drawing down the disastrous fate she
+mourned, and only her staghound could have seen the
+weariness upon her face when she bent down to him, or
+Gabrielle the falcon felt her hand tremble when it stroked
+her folded wings. She stood on the terrace, looking over
+her spreading lands, not the water-lilies on the river below
+whiter than her lips, pressed painfully together. Perhaps
+she repented of certain words, spoken to one whom now
+she would never again behold&mdash;perhaps she thought of
+that delicate toy that was to have been brought back in
+victory and hope, that now might lie stained and stiffened
+with blood next a lifeless heart, for never a word in the
+twelve months gone by had there come to Lilliesford as
+tidings of Fulke Ravensworth.</p>
+
+<p>Her pride was dear to her, dearer than aught else; she
+had spoken as was her right to speak, she had done what
+became a Castlemaine; it would have been weakness to
+have acted otherwise; what was he&mdash;a landless soldier&mdash;that
+he should have dared as he had dared? Yet the
+sables she wore were not solely for the dead Earl, not
+solely for the lost Stuarts the hot mist that would blind
+the eyes of Cecil Castlemaine, as hours swelled to days,
+and days to months, and she&mdash;the flattered beauty of the
+Court and Town&mdash;stayed in self-chosen solitude in her
+halls of Lilliesford, still unwedded and unwon.</p>
+
+<p>The noon-hours chimed from the bell-tower, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+sunny beauty of the morning but weighed with heavier
+sadness on her heart; the song of the birds, the busy hum
+of the gnats, the joyous ring of the silver bell round her
+pet fawn's neck, as it darted from her side under the
+drooping boughs&mdash;none touched an answering chord of
+gladness in her. She stood looking over her stretching
+woodlands in deep thought, so deep that she heard no
+step over the lawn beneath, nor saw the frightened rush
+of the deer, as a boy, crouching among the tangled ferns,
+sprang up from his hiding-place under the beechen
+branches, and stood on the terrace before her, craving her
+pardon in childish, yet fearless tones. She turned, bending
+on him that glance which had made the over-bold
+glance of princes fall abashed. The boy was but a little
+tatterdemalion to have ventured thus abruptly into the
+presence of the Countess of Castlemaine; still it was with
+some touch of a page's grace that he bowed before her.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady, I crave your pardon, but my master bade me
+watch for you, though I watched till midnight."</p>
+
+<p>"Your master?"</p>
+
+<p>A flush, warm as that on the leaves of the musk-roses,
+rose to her face for an instant, then faded as suddenly.
+The boy did not notice her words, but went on in an eager
+whisper, glancing anxiously round, as a hare would glance
+fearing the hunters.</p>
+
+<p>"And told me when I saw you not to speak his name,
+but only to give you this as his gage, that though all else
+is lost he has not forgot <i>his</i> honor nor <i>your</i> will."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine spoke no word, but she stretched out
+her hand and took it&mdash;her own costly toy of cambric and
+lace, with her broidered shield and coronet.</p>
+
+<p>"Your master! Then&mdash;he lives?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lady, he bade me say no more. You have his message;
+I must tell no further."</p>
+
+<p>She laid her hand upon his shoulder, a light, snow-white
+hand, yet one that held him now in a clasp of steel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Child! answer me at your peril! Tell me of him
+whom you call your master. Tell me all&mdash;quick&mdash;quick!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are his friend?"</p>
+
+<p>"His friend? My Heaven! Speak on!"</p>
+
+<p>"He bade me tell no more on peril of his heaviest
+anger; but if you <i>are</i> his friend, I sure may speak what
+you should know without me. It is a poor friend, lady,
+who has need to ask whether another be dead or living!"</p>
+
+<p>The scarlet blood flamed in the Countess's blanched
+face, she signed him on with impetuous command; she
+was unused to disobedience, and the child's words cut her
+to the quick.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir Fulke sails for the French coast to-morrow night,"
+the boy went on, in tremulous haste. "He was left for
+dead&mdash;our men ran one way, and Argyll's men the other&mdash;on
+the field of Sheriff-Muir; and sure if he had not
+been strong indeed, he would have died that awful night,
+untended, on the bleak moor, with the winds roaring
+round him, and his life ebbing away. He was not one of
+those who <i>fled</i>; you know that of him if you know aught.
+We got him away before dawn, Donald and I, and hid
+him in a shieling; he was in the fever then, and knew
+nothing that was done to him, only he kept that bit of
+lace in his hand for weeks and weeks, and would not let
+us stir it from his grasp. What magic there was in it we
+wondered often, but 'twas a magic, mayhap, that got him
+well at last; it was an even chance but that he'd died,
+God bless him! though we did what best we could. We've
+been wandering in the Highlands all the year, hiding
+here and tarrying there. Sir Fulke sets no count upon
+his life. Sure I think he thanks us little for getting him
+through the fever of the wounds, but he could not have
+borne to be pinioned, you know, lady, like a thief, and
+hung up by the brutes of Whigs, as a butcher hangs sheep
+in the shambles! The worst of the danger's over&mdash;they've<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+had their fill of the slaughter; but we sail to-morrow
+night for the French coast&mdash;England's no place
+for my master."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine let go her hold upon the boy, and
+her hand closed convulsively upon the dainty handkerchief&mdash;her
+gage sent so faithfully back to her!</p>
+
+<p>The child looked upon her face; perchance, in his master's
+delirium, he had caught some knowledge of the story
+that hung to that broidered toy.</p>
+
+<p>"If you <i>are</i> his friend, madame, doubtless you have
+some last word to send him?"</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Castlemaine, whom nothing moved, whom nothing
+softened, bowed her head at the simple question, her heart
+wrestling sorely, her lips set together in unswerving pride,
+a mist before her haughty eyes, the broidered shield upon
+her handkerchief&mdash;the shield of her stately and unyielding
+race&mdash;pressed close against her breast.</p>
+
+<p>"You have no word for him, lady?"</p>
+
+<p>Her lips parted; she signed him away. Was this child
+to see her yielding to such weakness? Had she, Countess
+of Castlemaine, no better pride, no better strength, no
+better power of resolve, than this?</p>
+
+<p>The boy lingered.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell Sir Fulke then, lady, that the ruined have
+no friends?"</p>
+
+<p>Whiter and prouder still grew the delicate beauty of
+her face; she raised her stately head, haughtily as she
+had used to glance over a glittering Court, where each
+voice murmured praise of her loveliness and reproach of
+her coldness; and placed the fragile toy of lace back in
+the boy's hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Go, seek your master, and give him this in gage that
+their calamity makes friends more dear to us than their
+success. Go, he will know its meaning!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>In place of the noon chimes the curfew was ringing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+from the bell-tower, the swallows were gone to roost
+amidst the ivy, and the herons slept with their heads
+under their silvery wings among the rushes by the riverside,
+the ferns and wild hyacinths were damp with evening
+dew, and the summer starlight glistened amidst the
+quivering woodland leaves. There was the silence of
+coming night over the vast forest glades, and no sound
+broke the stillness, save the song of the grasshopper stirring
+the tangled grasses, or the sweet low sigh of the west
+wind fanning the bells of the flowers. Cecil Castlemaine
+stood once more on the rose-terrace, shrouded in the dense
+twilight shade flung from above by the beech-boughs,
+waiting, listening, catching every rustle of the leaves,
+every tremor of the heads of the roses, yet hearing nothing
+in the stillness around but the quick, uncertain throbs
+of her heart beating like the wing of a caged bird under
+its costly lace. Pride was forgotten at length, and she
+only remembered&mdash;fear and love.</p>
+
+<p>In the silence and the solitude came a step that she
+knew, came a presence that she felt. She bowed her head
+upon her hands; it was new to her this weakness, this
+terror, this anguish of joy; she sought to calm herself, to
+steel herself, to summon back her pride, her strength; she
+scorned herself for it all!</p>
+
+<p>His hand touched her, his voice fell on her ear once
+more, eager, breathless, broken.</p>
+
+<p>"Cecil! Cecil! is this true? Is my ruin thrice blessed,
+or am I mad, and dream of heaven?"</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her head and looked at him with her old
+proud glance, her lips trembling with words that all her
+pride could not summon into speech; then her eyes filled
+with warm, blinding tears, and softened to new beauty;&mdash;scarce
+louder than the sigh of the wind among the
+flower-bells came her words to Fulke Ravensworth's ear,
+as her royal head bowed on his breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Stay, stay! Or, if you fly, your exile shall be my
+exile, your danger my danger!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The kerchief is a treasured heirloom to her descendants
+now, and fair women of her race, who inherit from
+her her azure eyes and her queenly grace, will recall how
+the proudest Countess of their Line loved a ruined gentleman
+so well that she was wedded to him at even, in
+her private chapel, at the hour of his greatest peril, his
+lowest fortune, and went with him across the seas till
+friendly intercession in high places gained them royal
+permission to dwell again at Lilliesford unmolested. And
+how it was ever noticeable to those who murmured at her
+coldness and her pride, that Cecil Castlemaine, cold and
+negligent as of yore to all the world beside, would seek
+her husband's smile, and love to meet his eyes, and cherish
+her beauty for his sake, and be restless in his absence,
+even for the short span of a day, with a softer and more
+clinging tenderness than was found in many weaker,
+many humbler women.</p>
+
+<p>They are gone now the men and women of that generation,
+and their voices come only to us through the faint
+echo of their written words. In summer nights the old
+beech-trees toss their leaves in the silvery light of the
+stars, and the river flows on unchanged, with the ceaseless,
+mournful burden of its mystic song, the same now
+as in the midsummer of a century and a half ago. The
+cobweb handkerchief lies before me with its broidered
+shield; the same now as long years since, when it was
+treasured close in a soldier's breast, and held by him
+dearer than all save his honor and his word. So, things
+pulseless and passionless endure, and human life passes
+away as swiftly as a song dies off from the air&mdash;as quickly
+succeeded, and as quickly forgot! Ronsard's refrain is
+the refrain of our lives:</p>
+
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Le temps s'en va, le temps s'en va, ma dame!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Las! le temps, non; mais <i>nous</i> nous, en allons!</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc035a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="LITTLE_GRAND_AND_THE_MARCHIONESS" id="LITTLE_GRAND_AND_THE_MARCHIONESS"></a>LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>OUR MALTESE PEERAGE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>All first things are voted the best: first kisses,
+first <i>toga virilis</i>, first hair of the first whisker;
+first speeches are often so superior that members
+subside after making them, fearful of eclipsing themselves;
+first money won at play must always be best, as
+always the dearest bought; and first wives are always
+so super-excellent, that, if a man lose one, he is generally
+as fearful of hazarding a second as a trout of biting
+twice.</p>
+
+<p>But of all first things commend me to one's first uniform.
+No matter that we get sick of harness, and get
+into mufti as soon as we can now; there is no more exquisite
+pleasure than the first sight of one's self in shako
+and sabretasche. How we survey ourselves in the glass,
+and ring for hot water, that the handsome housemaid
+may see us in all our glory, and lounge accidentally into
+our sisters' schoolroom, that the governess, who is nice
+looking and rather flirty, may go down on the spot before
+us and our scarlet and gold, chains and buttons! One's
+first uniform! Oh! the exquisite sensation locked up for
+us in that first box from Sagnarelli, or Bond Street!</p>
+
+<p>I remember <i>my</i> first uniform. I was eighteen&mdash;as raw
+a young cub as you could want to see. I had not been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+licked into shape by a public school, whose tongue may
+be rough, but cleans off grievances and nonsense better
+than anything else. I had been in that hotbed of effeminacy,
+Church principles and weak tea, a Private Tutor's,
+where mamma's darlings are wrapped up, and stuffed with
+a little Terence and Horace to show grand at home; and
+upon my life I do believe my sister Julia, aged thirteen,
+was more wide awake and up to life than I was, when
+the governor, an old rector, who always put me in mind
+of the Vicar of Wakefield, got me gazetted to as crack a
+corps as any in the Line.</p>
+
+<p>The &mdash;&mdash;th (familiarly known in the Service as the
+"Dare Devils," from old Peninsular deeds) were just then
+at Malta, and with, among other trifles, a chest protector
+from my father, and a recipe for milk-arrowroot from
+my Aunt Matilda who lived in a constant state of catarrh
+and of cure for the same, tumbled across the Bay of Biscay,
+and found myself in Byron's confounded "little
+military hot-house," where most military men, some time
+or other, have roasted themselves to death, climbing its
+hilly streets, flirting with its Valetta belles, drinking Bass
+in its hot verandas, yawning with ennui in its palace,
+cursing its sirocco, and being done by its Jew sharpers.</p>
+
+<p>From a private tutor's to a crack mess at Malta!&mdash;from
+a convent to a casino could hardly be a greater
+change. Just at first I was as much astray as a young
+pup taken into a stubble-field, and wondering what the
+deuce he is to do there; but as it is a pup's nature to
+sniff at birds and start them, so is it a boy's nature to
+snatch at the champagne of life as soon as he catches
+sight of it, though you may have brought him up on
+water from his cradle. I took to it, at least, like a retriever
+to water-ducks, though I was green enough to be
+a first-rate butt for many a day, and the practical jokes
+I had passed on me would have furnished the <i>Times</i> with
+food for crushers on "The Shocking State of the Army"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+for a twelvemonth. My chief friend and ally, tormentor
+and initiator, was a little fellow, Cosmo Grandison; in
+Ours he was "Little Grand" to everybody, from the
+Colonel to the baggage-women. He was seventeen, and
+had joined about a year. What a pretty boy he was,
+too! All the fair ones in Valetta, from his Excellency's
+wife to our washerwomen, admired that boy, and spoilt
+him and petted him, and I do not believe there was a man
+of Ours who would have had heart to sit in court-martial
+on Little Grand if he had broken every one of the
+Queen's regulations, and set every General Order at defiance.
+I think I see him now&mdash;he was new to Malta as
+I, having just landed with the Dare Devils, <i>en route</i> from
+India to Portsmouth&mdash;as he sat one day on the table in
+the mess-room as cool as a cucumber, in spite of the broiling
+sun, smoking, and swinging his legs, and settling his
+forage-cap on one side of his head, as pretty-looking,
+plucky, impudent a young monkey as ever piqued himself
+on being an old hand, and a knowing bird not to be
+caught by any chaff however ingeniously prepared.</p>
+
+<p>"Simon," began Little Grand (my "St. John," first
+barbarized by Mr. Pope for the convenience of his dactyles
+and hexameters into Sinjin, being further barbarized
+by this little imp into Simon)&mdash;"Simon, do you want to
+see the finest woman in this confounded little pepper-box?
+You're no judge of a woman, though, you muff&mdash;taste
+been warped, perhaps, by constant contemplation of that
+virgin Aunt Minerva&mdash;Matilda, is it? all the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Hang your chaff," said I; "you'd make one out a
+fool."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely, my dear Simon; just what you are!" responded
+Little Grand, pleasantly, "Bless your heart,
+I've been engaged to half a dozen women since I joined.
+A man can hardly help it, you see; they've such a way
+of drawing you on, you don't like to disappoint them,
+poor little dears, and so you compromise yourself out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+sheer benevolence. There's such a run on a handsome
+man&mdash;it's a great bore. Sometimes I think I shall shave
+my head, or do something to disfigure myself, as Spurina
+did. Poor fellow, I feel for him! Well, Simon, you
+don't seem curious to know who my beauty is?"</p>
+
+<p>"One of those Mitchell girls of the Twenty-first? You
+waltzed with 'em all night; but they're too tall for you,
+Grand."</p>
+
+<p>"The Mitchell girls!" ejaculated he, with supreme
+scorn. "Great maypoles! they go about with the Fusiliers
+like a pair of colors. On every ball-room battlefield
+one's safe to see <i>them</i> flaunting away, and as everybody
+has a shot at 'em, their hearts must be pretty well
+riddled into holes by this time. No, mine's rather higher
+game than that. My mother's brother-in-law's aunt's
+sister's cousin's cousin once removed was Viscount Twaddle,
+and I don't go anything lower than the Peerage."</p>
+
+<p>"What, is it somebody you've met at his Excellency's?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong again, beloved Simon. It's nobody I've met
+at old Stars and Garters', though his lady-wife could no
+more do without me than without her sal volatile and
+flirtations. No, <i>she</i> don't go there; she's too high for that
+sort of thing&mdash;sick of it. After all the European
+Courts, Malta must be rather small and slow. I was
+introduced to her yesterday, and," continued Little
+Grand, more solemnly than was his wont, "I do assure
+you she's superb, divine; and I'm not very easy to
+please."</p>
+
+<p>"What's her name?" I asked, rather impressed with
+this view of a lady too high for old Stars and Garters, as
+we irreverently termed her Majesty's representative in
+her island of Malta.</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand took his pipe out of his lips to correct me
+with more dignity.</p>
+
+<p>"Her <i>title</i>, my dear Simon, is the Marchioness St.
+Julian."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Is that an English peerage, Grand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hum! What! Oh yes, of course! What else
+should it be, you owl!"</p>
+
+<p>Not being in a condition to decide this point, I was
+silent, and he went on, growing more impressive at each
+phrase:</p>
+
+<p>"She is splendid, really! And I'm a very <i>difficile</i>
+fellow, you know; but such hair, such eyes, one doesn't
+see every day in those sun-dried Mitchells or those little
+pink Bovilliers. Well, yesterday, after that confounded
+luncheon (how I hate all those complimentary affairs!&mdash;one
+can't enjoy the truffles for talking to the ladies, nor
+enjoy the ladies for discussing the truffles), I went for a
+ride with Conran out to Villa Neponte. I left him there,
+and went down to see the overland steamers come in.
+While I was waiting, I got into talk, somehow or other,
+with a very agreeable, gentleman-like fellow, who asked
+me if I'd only just come to Malta, and all that sort of
+thing&mdash;you know the introductory style of action&mdash;till
+we got quite good friends, and he told me he was living
+outside this wretched little hole at the Casa di Fiori, and
+said&mdash;wasn't it civil of him?&mdash;said he should be very
+happy to see me if I'd call any time. He gave me his
+card&mdash;Lord Adolphus Fitzhervey&mdash;and a man with him
+called him 'Dolph.' As good luck had it, my weed went
+out just while we were talking, and Fitzhervey was monstrously
+pleasant, searched all over him for a fusee,
+couldn't find one, and asked me to go up with him to the
+Casa di Fiori and get a light. Of course I did, and he
+and I and Guatamara had some sherbet and a smoke
+together, and then he introduced me to the Marchioness
+St. Julian, his sister&mdash;by Jove! such a magnificent
+woman, Simon, <i>you</i> never saw one like her, I'll wager.
+She was uncommonly agreeable, too, and <i>such</i> a smile, my
+boy! She seemed to like me wonderfully&mdash;not rare that,
+though, you'll say&mdash;and asked me to go and take coffee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+there to-night after mess, and bring one of my chums
+with me; and as I like to show you life, young one, and
+your taste wants improving after Aunt Minerva, you may
+come, if you like. Hallo! there's Conran. I say, don't
+tell <i>him</i>. I don't want any poaching on my manor."</p>
+
+<p>Conran came in at that minute; he was then a Brevet-Major
+and Captain in Ours, and one of the older men
+who spoilt Little Grand in one way, as much as the
+women did in another. He was a fine, powerful fellow,
+with eyes like an eagle's, and pluck like a lion's; he had a
+grave look, and had been of late more silent and self-reticent
+than the other roistering, débonnair, light-hearted
+"Dare Devils;" but though, perhaps, tired of the wild
+escapades which reputation had once attributed to him,
+was always the most lenient to the boy's monkey tricks,
+and always the one to whom he went if his larks had cost
+him too dear, or if he was in a scrape from which he saw
+no exit. Conran had recently come in for a good deal
+of money, and there were few bright eyes in Malta that
+would not have smiled kindly on him; but he did not
+care much for any of them. There was some talk of a
+love-affair before he went to India, that was the cause of
+his hard-heartedness, though I must say he did not look
+much like a victim to the <i>grande passion</i>, in my ideas,
+which were drawn from valentines and odes in the "Woman,
+thou fond and fair deceiver" style; in love that
+turned its collars down and let its hair go uncut and
+refused to eat, and recovered with a rapidity proportionate
+to its ostentation; and I did not know that, if a man has
+lost his treasure, he <i>may</i> mourn it so deeply that he may
+refuse to run about like Harpagon, crying for his <i>cassette</i>
+to an audience that only laughs at his miseries.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, young ones," said Conran, as he came in and
+threw down his cap and whip, "here you are, spending
+your hours in pipes and bad wine. What a blessing it is
+to have a palate that isn't blasé, and that will swallow all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+wine just because it <i>is</i> wine! That South African goes
+down with better relish, Little Grand, than you'll find in
+Château Margaux ten years hence. As soon as one begins
+to want touching up with olives, one's real gusto is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"Hang olives, sir! they're beastly," said Little Grand;
+"and I don't care who pretends they're not. Olives are
+like sermons and wives, everybody makes a wry face, and
+would rather be excused 'em, Major; but it's the custom
+to call 'em good things, and so men bolt 'em in complaisance,
+and while they hate the salt-water flavor, descant
+on the delicious rose taste!"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite true, Little Grand! but one takes olives to
+enhance the wine; and so, perhaps, other men's sermons
+make one enjoy one's racier novel, and other men's wives
+make one appreciate one's liberty still better. Don't
+abuse olives; you'll want them figuratively and literally
+before you've done either drinking or living!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! confound it, Major," cried Little Grand, "I do
+hope and trust a spent ball may have the kindness to
+double me up and finish me off before then."</p>
+
+<p>"You're not philosophic, my boy."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Heaven, no!" ejaculated Little Grand, piously.
+"I've an uncle, a very great philosopher, beats all the
+sages hollow, from Bion to Buckle, and writes in the
+Metaphysical Quarterly, but I'll be shot if he don't spend
+so much time in trying to puzzle out what life is, that all
+his has slipped away without his having <i>lived</i> one bit.
+When I was staying with him one Christmas, he began
+boring me with a frightful theory on the non-existence of
+matter. I couldn't stand that, so I cut him short, and
+set him down to the luncheon-table; and while he was
+full swing with a Strasbourg pâté and Comet hock, I
+stopped him and asked him if, with them in his mouth,
+he believed in matter or not? He was shut up, of course;
+bless your soul, those theorists always are, if you're down
+upon 'em with a little fact!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Such as a Strasbourg pâté?&mdash;that <i>is</i> an unanswerable
+argument with most men, I believe," said Conran, who
+liked to hear the boy chatter. "What are you going to
+do with yourself to-night, Grand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to&mdash;ar&mdash;hum&mdash;to a friend of mine,"
+said Little Grand, less glibly than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; I only asked, because I would have taken
+you to Mrs. Fortescue's with me; they're having some
+acting proverbs (horrible exertion in this oven of a place,
+with the thermometer at a hundred and twenty degrees);
+but if you've better sport it's no matter. Take care what
+friends you make, though, Grand; you'll find some Maltese
+acquaintances very costly."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. I should say I can take care of myself,"
+replied Little Grand, with immeasurable scorn and
+dignity.</p>
+
+<p>Conran laughed, struck him across the shoulders with
+his whip, stroked his own moustaches, and went out again,
+whistling one of Verdi's airs.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want him bothering, you know," explained
+Little Grand; "she's such a deuced magnificent woman!"</p>
+
+<p>She was a magnificent woman, this Eudoxia Adelaida,
+Marchioness St. Julian; and proud enough Little Grand
+and I felt when we had that soft, jewelled hand held out
+to us, and that bewitching smile beamed upon us, and
+that joyous presence dazzling in our eyes, as we sat in
+the drawing-room of that Casa di Fiori. She was about
+thirty-five, I should say (boys always worship those who
+might have been schoolfellows of their mothers), tall and
+stately, and imposing, with the most beautiful pink and
+white skin, with a fine set of teeth, raven hair, and eyes
+tinted most exquisitely. Oh! she was magnificent, our
+Marchioness St. Julian! Into what unutterable insignificance,
+what miserable, washed-out shadows sank
+Stars and Garters' lady, and the Mitchell girls, and all
+the belles of La Valetta, whom we hadn't thought so very
+bad-looking before.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was a young creature sitting a little out of the
+radiance of light, reading; but we had no eyes for anybody
+except the Marchioness St. Julian. We were in
+such high society, too; there was her brother, Lord
+Adolphus, and his bosom Pylades, the Baron Guatamara;
+and there was a big fellow, with hooked nose and very
+curly hair, who was introduced to us as the Prince of
+Orangia Magnolia; and a little wiry fellow, with bits of
+red and blue ribbon, and a star or two in his button-hole,
+who was M. le Due de Saint-Jeu. We were quite dazzled
+with the coruscations of so much aristocracy, especially
+when they talked across to each other&mdash;so familiarly,
+too&mdash;of Johnnie (that we Lord Russell), and Pam, and
+"old Buck" (my godfather Buckingham, Lord Adolphus
+explained to us), and Montpensier and old Joinville;
+and chatted of when they dined at the Tuileries,
+and stayed at Compiègne, and hunted at Belvoir, and
+spent Christmas at Holcombe or Longleat. We were in
+such high society! How contemptible appeared Mrs.
+Maberly's and the Fortescue soirées; how infinitesimally
+small grew Charlie Ruthven, and Harry Villiers, and
+Grey and Albany, and all the other young fellows who
+thought it such great guns to be <i>au mieux</i> with little
+Graziella, or invited to Sir George Dashaway's. <i>We</i>
+were a cut above those things now&mdash;rather!</p>
+
+<p>That splendid Marchioness! There was a head for a
+coronet, if you like! And how benign she was! Grand
+sat on the couch beside her, and I on an ottoman on her
+left, and she leaned back in her magnificent toilette,
+flirting her fan like a Castilian, and flashing upon us her
+superb eyes from behind it; not speaking very much, but
+showing her white teeth in scores of heavenly smiles, till
+Little Grand, the <i>blasé</i> man of seventeen, and I the raw
+Moses of private tutelage, both felt that we had never
+come across anything like this; never, in fact, seen a
+woman worth a glance before.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>She listened to us&mdash;or rather to him; I was too awestruck
+to advance much beyond monosyllables&mdash;and
+laughed at him, and smiled encouragingly on my <i>gaucherie</i>
+(and when a boy is <i>gauche</i>, how ready he is to worship
+such a helping hand!), and beamed upon us both with
+an effulgence compared with which the radiance of Helen,
+Galatea, [OE]none, Messalina, Laïs, and all the legendary
+beauties one reads about, must have been what the railway
+night-lamps that <i>never</i> burn are to the prismatic
+luminaries of Cremorne. They were all uncommonly
+pleasant, all except the girl who was reading, whom they
+introduced as the Signorina da' Guari, a Tuscan, and
+daughter to Orangia Magnolia, with one of those marvellously
+beautiful faces that one sees in the most splendid
+painters' models of the Campagna, who never lifted her
+head scarcely, though Guatamara and Saint-Jeu did their
+best to make her. But all the others were wonderfully
+agreeable, and quite <i>fête'd</i> Little Grand and me, at which,
+they, being more than double our age, and seemingly at
+home alike with Belgravia and Newmarket, the Faubourg
+and the Pytchley, we felt to grow at least a foot
+each in the aroma of this Casa di Fiori.</p>
+
+<p>"This is rather stupid, Doxie," began Lord Adolphus,
+addressing his sister; "not much entertainment for our
+guests. What do you say to a game of vingt-et-un, eh,
+Mr. Grandison?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand fixed his blue eyes on the Marchioness, and
+said he should be very happy, but, as for entertainment&mdash;<i>he</i>
+wanted no other.</p>
+
+<p>"No compliments, <i>petit ami</i>," laughed the Marchioness,
+with a dainty blow of her fan. "Yes, Dolph, have vingt-et-un,
+or music, or anything you like. Sing us something,
+Lucrezia."</p>
+
+<p>The Italian girl thus addressed looked up with a passionate,
+haughty flush, and answered, with wonderfully
+little courtesy I considered, "I shall not sing to-night."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Are you unwell, fairest friend?" asked the Duc de
+Saint-Jeu, bending his little wiry figure over her.</p>
+
+<p>She shrank away from him, and drew back, a hot color
+in her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Signore, I did not address <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The Marchioness looked angry, if those divine eyes
+could look anything so mortal. However, she shrugged
+her shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my dear Lucrezia, we can't make you sing, of
+course, if you won't. I, for my part, always do any little
+thing I can to amuse anybody; if I fail, I fail; I have
+done my best, and my friends will appreciate the effort,
+if not the result. No, my dear Prince, do not tease her,"
+said the Marchioness to Orangia Magnolia, who was arguing,
+I thought, somewhat imperatively for such a well-bred
+and courtly man, with Lucrezia; "we will have vingt-et-un,
+and Lucrezia will give us the delight of her voice
+some other evening, I dare say."</p>
+
+<p>We had vingt-et-un; the Marchioness would not play,
+but she sat in her rose velvet arm-chair, just behind Little
+Grand, putting in pretty little speeches, and questions,
+and bagatelles, and calling attention to the gambols of
+her darling greyhound Cupidon, and tapping Little Grand
+with her fan, till, I believe, he neither knew how the
+game went, nor what money he lost; and I, gazing at her,
+and cursing him for his facile tongue, never noticed my
+naturels, couldn't have said what the maximum was if
+you had paid me for it, and might, for anything I knew
+to the contrary, have been seeing my life slip away with
+each card as Balzac's hero with the Peau de Chagrin.
+Then we had sherbet, and wine, and cognac for those
+who preferred it; and the Marchioness gave us permission
+to smoke, and took a dainty hookah with an amber
+mouthpiece for her own use (divine she did look, too,
+with that hookah between her ruby lips!); and the
+smoke, and the cognac, and the smiles, unloosed our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+tongues, and we spake like very great donkeys, I dare
+say, but I'm sure with not a tenth part the wisdom that
+Balaam's ass developed in his brief and pithy conversation.</p>
+
+<p>However great the bosh we talked, though, we found
+very lenient auditors. Fitzhervey and Guatamara
+laughed at all our witticisms; the Prince of Orangia
+Magnolia joined in with a "Per Baccho!" and a "Bravo!"
+and little Saint-Jeu wheezed, and gave a faint echo of
+"Mon Dieu!" and "Très bien, très bien, vraiment!" and
+the Marchioness St. Julian laughed too, and joined in our
+nonsense, and, what was much more, bent a willing ear
+to our compliments, no matter how florid; and Saint-Jeu
+told us a story or two, more amusing than <i>comme il faut</i>,
+at which the Marchioness tried to look grave, and <i>did</i>
+look shocked, but laughed for all that behind her fan;
+and Lucrezia da' Guari sat in shadow, as still and as
+silent as the Parian Euphrosyne on the console, though
+her passionate eyes and expressive face looked the very
+antipodes of silence and statuetteism, as she flashed half-shy,
+half-scornful, looks upon us.</p>
+
+<p>If the first part of the evening had been delightful,
+this was something like Paradise! It was such high
+society! and with just dash enough of Mabille and coulisses
+laisseraller to give it piquancy. How different was
+the pleasantry and freedom of these <i>real</i> aristos, after the
+humdrum dinners and horrid bores of dances that those
+snobs of Maberlys, and Fortescues, and Mitchells, made
+believe to call Society!</p>
+
+<p>What with the wine, and the smoke, and the smiles, I
+wasn't quite clear as to whether I saw twenty horses' heads
+or one when I was fairly into saddle, and riding back to
+the town, just as the first dawn was rising, Aphrodite-like,
+from the far blue waves of the Mediterranean.
+Little Grand was better seasoned, but even he was dizzy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+with the parting words of the Marchioness, which had
+softly breathed the delicious passport, "Come to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jupiter!" swore Little Grand, obliged to give
+relief to his feelings&mdash;"by Jupiter, Simon! did you ever
+see such a glorious, enchanting, divine, delicious, adorable
+creature? Faugh! who could look at those Mitchell
+girls after her? Such eyes! such a smile! such a figure!
+Talk of a coronet! no imperial crown would be half good
+enough for her! And how pleasant those fellows are! I
+like that little chaffy chap, the Duke; what a slap-up
+story that was about the bal de l'Opéra. And Fitzhervey,
+too; there's something uncommonly thorough-bred
+about him, ain't there? And Guatamara's an immensely
+jolly fellow. Ah, myboy! that's something like society;
+all the ease and freedom of real rank; no nonsense about
+them, as there is about snobs. I say, what wouldn't the
+other fellows give to be in our luck? I think even Conran
+would warm up about her. But, Simon, she's deucedly
+taken with me&mdash;she is, upon my word; and she knows
+how to show it you, too! By George! one could die for
+a woman like that&mdash;eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Die!" I echoed, while my horse stumbled along up
+the hilly road, and I swayed forward, pretty nearly over
+his head, while poetry rushed to my lips, and electric
+sparks danced before my eyes:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"To die for those we love! oh, there is power</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">In the true heart, and pride, and joy, for this</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">It is to live without the vanished light</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That strength is needed!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"But I'll be shot if it shall be vanished light," returned
+Little Grand; "it don't look much like it yet.
+The light's only just lit, 'tisn't likely it's going out again
+directly; but she is a stunner! and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A stunner!" I shouted; "she's much more than that&mdash;she's
+an angel, and I'll be much obliged to you to call<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+her by her right name, sir. She's a beautiful, noble,
+loving woman; the most perfect of all Nature's masterworks.
+She is divine, sir, and you and I are not worthy
+merely to kiss the hem of her garment."</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't we, though? I don't care much about kissing
+her dress; it's silk, and I don't know that I should derive
+much pleasure from pressing my lips on its texture; but
+her cheek&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Her cheek is like the Catherine pear,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The side that's next the sun!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I shouted, as my horse went down in a rut. "She's like
+Venus rising from the sea-shell; she's like Aurora, when
+she came down on the first ray of the dawn to Tithonus;
+she's like Briseis&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Bother classics! she's like herself, and beats 'em all
+hollow. She's the finest creature ever seen on earth, and
+I should like to see the man who'd dare to say she wasn't.
+And&mdash;I say, Simon&mdash;<i>how much did you lose to-night</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>From sublimest heights I tumbled straight to bathos.
+The cold water of Grand's query quenched my poetry,
+extinguished my electric lights, and sobered me like a
+douche bath.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," I answered, with a sense of awe and
+horror stealing over me; "but I had a pony in my waistcoat-pocket
+that the governor had just sent me; Guatamara
+changed it for me, and&mdash;<i>I've only sixpence left</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Old boy," said Little Grand to me, the next morning,
+after early parade, "come in my room, and let's make up
+some despatches to the governors. You see," he continued,
+five minutes after,&mdash;"you see, we're both of us
+pretty well cleared out; I've only got half a pony, and
+you haven't a couple of fivers left. Now you know they
+evidently play rather high at the Casa di Fiori; do everything
+<i>en prince</i>, like nobs who've Barclays at their back;
+and one mustn't hang fire; horrid shabby that would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+look. Besides, fancy seeming mean before <i>her</i>! So I've
+been thinking that, though governors are a screwy lot
+generally, if we put it to 'em clearly the sort of set we've
+got into, and show 'em that we can't help, now that we
+are at Rome, doing as the Romans do, I should say they
+could hardly help bleeding a little&mdash;eh? Now, listen
+how I've put it. My old boy has a weakness for titles;
+he married my mother on the relationship to Viscount
+Twaddles (who doesn't know of her existence; but who
+does to talk about as 'our cousin'), and he'd eat up miles
+of dirt for a chance of coming to a strawberry-leaf; so I
+think this will touch him up beautifully. Listen! ain't
+I sublimely respectful? 'I'm sure, my dear father, you
+wilt be delighted to learn, that by wonderful luck, or
+rather I ought to say Providence, I have fallen on my
+feet in Malta, and got introduced to the very highest'
+(wait! let me stick a dash under very)&mdash;'the <i>very</i> highest
+society here. They are quite tip-top. To show you what
+style, I need only mention Lord A. Fitzhervey, the Baron
+Guatamara, and the Marchioness St. Julian, as among
+my kindest friends. They have been yachting in the
+Levant, and are now staying in Malta: they are all most
+kind to me; and I know you will appreciate the intellectual
+advantages that such contact must afford me; at the
+same time you will understand that I can hardly enter
+such circles as a snob, and you will wish your son to comport
+himself as a gentleman; but gentlemanizing comes
+uncommon dear, I can tell you, with all the care in the
+world: and if you <i>could</i> let me have another couple of
+hundred, I should vote you'&mdash;a what, Simon?&mdash;'an out-and-out
+brick' is the sensible style, but I suppose 'the
+best and kindest of parents' is the filial dodge, eh?
+There! 'With fond love to mamma and Florie, ever
+your affectionate son, <span class="smcap">Cosmo Grandison</span>.' Bravo! that's
+prime; that'll bring the yellows down, I take it. Here,
+old fellow, copy it to your governor; you couldn't have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+a more stunning effusion&mdash;short, and to the purpose, as
+cabinet councils ought to be, and ain't. Fire away, my
+juvenile."</p>
+
+<p>I did fire away; only I, of a more impressionable and
+poetic nature than Little Grand, gave a certain vent to
+my feelings in expatiating on the beauty, grace, condescension,
+&amp;c., &amp;c., of the Marchioness to my mother; I
+did <i>not</i> mention the grivois stories, the brandy, and the
+hookah: I was quite sure they were the sign of that delirious
+ease and disregard of snobbish etiquette and convenances
+peculiar to the "Upper Ten," but I thought the
+poor people at home, in vicarage seclusion, would be too
+out of the world to fully appreciate such revelations of
+our <i>crême de la crême</i>; besides, my governor had James's
+own detestation of the divine weed, and considered that
+men who "made chimneys of their mouths" might just
+as well have the mark of the Beast at once.</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand and I were hard-up for cash, and <i>en attendant</i>
+the governors' replies and remittances, we had
+recourse to the tender mercies and leather bags of napoleons,
+ducats, florins, and doubloons of a certain Spanish
+Jew, one Balthazar Miraflores, a shrivelled-skinned,
+weezing old cove, who was "most happy to lent anytink
+to his tear young shentlesmen, but, by Got! he was as
+poor as Job, he was indeed!" Whether Job ever lent
+money out on interest or not, I can't say; perhaps he did,
+as in the finish he ended with having quadrupled his
+cattle and lands, and all his goods&mdash;a knack usurers
+preserve in full force to this day; but all I can say is,
+that if he was not poorer than Mr. Miraflores, he was not
+much to be pitied, for he, miserly old shark, lived in his
+dark, dirty hole, like a crocodile embedded in Nile mud,
+and crushed the bones of all unwary adventurers who
+came within range of his great bristling jaws.</p>
+
+<p>Money, however, Little Grand and I got out of him in
+plenty, only for a little bit of paper in exchange; and at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+that time we didn't know that though the paper tax
+would be repealed at last, there would remain, as long as
+youths are green and old birds cunning, a heavy and a
+bitter tax on certain bits of paper to which one's hand is
+put, which Mr. Gladstone, though he achieve the herculean
+task of making draymen take kindly to vin ordinaire,
+and the popping of champagne corks a familiar
+sound by cottage-hearths, will never be able to include in
+his budgets, to come among the Taxes that are Repealed!</p>
+
+<p>Well, we had our money from old Balthazar that
+morning, and we played with it again that night up at
+the Casa di Fiori. Loo this time, by way of change.
+Saint-Jeu said he always thought it well to change your
+game as you change your loves: constancy, whether to
+cards or women, was most fatiguing. We liked Saint-Jeu
+very much, we thought him such a funny fellow. They
+said they did not care to play much&mdash;of course they
+didn't, when Guatamara had had écarté with the Grand-Duke
+of Chaffsandlarkstein at half a million a side, and
+Lord Dolph had broken the bank at Homburg "just for
+fun&mdash;no fun to old Blanc, who farms it, though, you
+know." But the Marchioness, who was doubly gracious
+that night, told them they must play, because it amused
+her <i>chers petits amis</i>. Besides, she said, in her pretty,
+imperious way, she liked to see it&mdash;it amused her. After
+that, of course, there was no more hesitation; down we
+sat, and young Heavystone with us.</p>
+
+<p>The evening before we had happened to mention him,
+said he was a fellow of no end of tin, though as stupid an
+owl as ever spelt his own name wrong when he passed a
+military examination, and the Marchioness, recalling the
+name, said she remembered his father, and asked us to
+bring him to see her; which we did, fearing no rival in
+"old Heavy."</p>
+
+<p>So down we three sat, and had the evening before over
+again, with the cards, and the smiles, and wiles of our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+divinity, and Saint-Jeu's stories and Fitzhervey's cognac
+and cigars; with this difference, that we found loo more
+exciting than vingt-et-un. They played it so fast, too, it
+was like a breathless heat for the Goodwood Cup, and the
+Marchioness watched it, leaning alternately over Grand's,
+and Heavy's, and my chair, and saying, with such na&iuml;ve
+delight, "Oh, do take miss, Cosmo; I would risk it if I
+were you, Mr. Heavystone; <i>pray</i> don't let my naughty
+brother win everything," that I'd have defied the stiffest
+of the Stagyrites or the chilliest of Calvinists to have
+kept their head cool with that syren voice in their ear.</p>
+
+<p>And La Lucrezia sat, as she had sat the night before,
+by the open window, still and silent, the Cape jasmines
+and Southern creepers framing her in a soft moonlight
+picture, contrast enough to the brilliantly lighted room,
+echoing with laughter at Saint-Jeu's stories, perfumed
+with Cubas and narghilés, and shrining the magnificent,
+full-blown, jewelled beauty of our Marchioness St. Julian,
+with which we were as rapidly, as madly, as unreasoningly,
+and as sentimentally in love as any boys of seventeen
+or eighteen ever could be. What greater latitude,
+you will exclaim, recalling certain buried-away episodes
+of <i>your</i> hobbedehoyism, when you addressed Latin distichs
+to that hazel-eyed Hebe who presided over oyster
+patties and water ices at the pastrycook's in Eton; or
+ruined your governor's young plantations cutting the
+name of Adeliza Mary, your cousin, at this day a portly
+person in velvet and point, whom you can now call, with
+a thanksgiving in the stead of the olden tremor, Mrs.
+Hector M'Cutchin? Yes, we were in love in a couple of
+evenings, Little Grand vehemently and unpoetically, I
+shyly and sentimentally, according to our temperament,
+and as the fair Emily stirred feud between the two Noble
+Kinsmen, so the Marchioness St. Julian began to sow
+seeds of jealousy and detestation between us, sworn allies
+as we were. But "<i>le véritable amant ne connaît point</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+<i>d'amis</i>," and as soon as we began to grow jealous of each
+other, Little Grand could have kicked me to the devil,
+and I could have kicked <i>him</i> with the greatest pleasure
+in life.</p>
+
+<p>But I was shy, Little Grand was blessed with all the
+audacity imaginable; the consequence was, that when our
+horses came round, and the Maltese who acted as cherub
+was going to close the gates of Paradise upon us, he managed
+to slip into the Marchioness's boudoir to get a tête-à-tête
+farewell, while I strode up and down the veranda,
+not heeding Saint-Jeu, who was telling me a tale, to
+which, in any other saner moments, I should have listened
+greedily, but longing to execute on Little Grand
+some fierce and terrible vengeance, to which the vendetta
+should be baby's play. Saint-Jeu left me to put his arm
+over Heavy's shoulder, and tell him if ever he came to
+Paris he should be transported to receive him at the
+Hôtel de Millefleurs, and present him at the Tuileries;
+and I stood swearing to myself, and breaking off sprays
+of the veranda creepers, when I heard somebody say,
+very softly and low,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Signore, come here a moment."</p>
+
+<p>It was that sweetly pretty mute whom we had barely
+noticed, absorbed as we were in the worship of our maturer
+idol, leaning out of the window, her cheeks flushed,
+her lips parted, her eyes sad and anxious. Of course I
+went to her, surprised at her waking up so suddenly to
+any interest in me. She put her hand on my coat-sleeve,
+and drew me down towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to me a moment. I hardly know how to warn
+you, and yet I must. I cannot sit quietly by and see you
+and your young friends being deceived as so many have
+been before you. Do not come here again&mdash;-do not&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Figlia mia! are you not afraid of the night-air?"
+said the Prince of Orangia Magnolia, just behind us.</p>
+
+<p>His words were kind, but there was a nasty glitter in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+his eyes. Lucrezia answered him in passionate Italian&mdash;of
+which I had no knowledge&mdash;with such fire in her
+eyes, such haughty gesticulation, and such a torrent of
+words, that I really began to think, pretty soft little dear
+as she looked, that she must positively be a trifle out of
+her mind, her silence before, and her queer speech to me,
+seemed such odd behavior for a young lady in such high
+society. She was turning to me again when Little Grand
+came out into the veranda, looking flushed, proud, and
+self-complaisant, as such a winner and slayer of women
+would do. My hand clenched on the jasmine, I thirsted
+to spring on him as he stood there with his provoking,
+self-contented smile, and his confounded coxcombical air,
+and his cursed fair curls&mdash;<i>my</i> hair was dust-colored and
+as rebellious as porcupine-quills&mdash;and wash out in his
+blood or mine&mdash;&mdash;A touch of a soft hand thrilled through
+my every nerve and fibre: the Marchioness was there,
+and signed me to her. Lucrezia, Little Grand, and all
+the rest of the universe vanished from my mind at the
+lightning of that angel smile and the rustle of that
+moire-antique dress. She beckoned me to her into the
+empty drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>"Augustus" (I never thought my name could sound so
+sweet before), "tell me, what was my niece Lucrezia saying
+to you just now?"</p>
+
+<p>Now I had a sad habit of telling the truth; it was an
+out-of-the-world custom taught me, among other old-fashioned
+things, at home, though I soon found how inconvenient
+a <i>bêtise</i> modern society considers it; and I
+blurted the truth out here, not distinctly or gracefully,
+though, as Little Grand would have done, for I was in
+that state of exaltation ordinarily expressed as not knowing
+whether one is standing in one's Wellingtons or not.</p>
+
+<p>The Marchioness sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, did she say that? Poor dear girl! She dislikes
+me so much, it is quite an hallucination, and yet, O<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+Augustus, I have been to her like an elder sister, like a
+mother. Imagine how it grieves me," and the Marchioness
+shed some tears&mdash;pearls of price, thought I, worthy
+to drop from angel eyes&mdash;"it is a bitter sorrow to me,
+but, poor darling! she is not responsible."</p>
+
+<p>She touched her veiny temple significantly as she spoke,
+and I understood, and felt tremendously shocked at it,
+that the young, fair Italian girl was a fierce and cruel
+maniac, who had the heart (oh! most extraordinary madness
+did it seem to me; if <i>I</i> had lost my senses I could
+never have harmed <i>her</i>!) to hate, absolutely hate, the
+noblest, tenderest, most beautiful of women!</p>
+
+<p>"I never alluded to it to any one," continued the Marchioness.
+"Guatamara and Saint-Jeu, though such intimate
+friends, are ignorant of it. I would rather have
+any one think ever so badly of me, than reveal to them
+the cruel misfortune of my sweet Lucrezia&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>How noble she looked as she spoke!</p>
+
+<p>"But you, Augustus, you," and she smiled upon me till
+I grew as dizzy as after my first taste of milk-punch, "I
+have not the courage to let <i>you</i> go off with any bad impression
+of me. I have known you a very little while, it
+is true&mdash;but a few hours, indeed&mdash;yet there are affinities
+of heart and soul which overstep the bounds of time, and,
+laughing at the chill ties of ordinary custom, make strangers
+dearer than old friends&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The room revolved round me, the lights danced up and
+down, my heart beat like Thor's hammer, and my pulse
+went as fast as a favorite saving the distance. <i>She</i> speaking
+so to me! My senses whirled round and round like
+fifty thousand witches on a Walpurgis Night, and down
+I went on my knees before my magnificent idol, raving
+away I couldn't tell you what now&mdash;the essence of
+everything I'd ever read, from Ovid to Alexander Smith.
+It must have been something frightful to hear, though
+Heaven knows I meant it earnestly enough. Suddenly I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+was pulled up with a jerk, as one throws an unbroken colt
+back on his haunches in the middle of his first start. <i>I
+thought I heard a laugh.</i></p>
+
+<p>She started up too. "Hush! another time! We may
+be overheard." And drawing her dress from my hands,
+which grasped it as agonisingly as a cockney grasps his
+saddle-bow, holding on for dear life over the Burton or
+Tedworth country, she stooped kindly over me, and
+floated away before <i>I</i> was recovered from the exquisite
+delirium of my ecstatic trance.</p>
+
+<p>She loved me! This superb creature loved me! There
+was not a doubt of it; and how I got back to the barracks
+that night in my heavenly state of mind I could
+never have told. All I know is, that Grand and I never
+spoke a word, by tacit consent, all the way back; that I
+felt a fiendish delight when I saw his proud triumphant
+air, and thought how little he guessed, poor fellow!&mdash;&mdash;And
+that Dream of One Fair Woman was as superior
+in rapture to the "Dream of Fair Women" as Tokay to
+the "Fine Fruity Port" that results from damsons and a
+decoction of sloes!</p>
+
+<p>The next day there was a grand affair in Malta to receive
+some foreign Prince, whose name I do not remember
+now, who called on us <i>en route</i> to England. Of
+course all the troops turned out, and there was an inspection
+of us, and a grand luncheon and dinner, and ball,
+and all that sort of thing, which a month before I should
+have considered prime fun, but which now, as it kept me
+out of my paradise, I thought the most miserable bore
+that could possibly have chanced.</p>
+
+<p>"I say," said Heavy to me as I was getting into harness&mdash;"I
+say, don't you wonder Fitzhervey and the Marchioness
+ain't coming to the palace to-day? One would
+have thought Old Stars and Garters would have been
+sure to ask them."</p>
+
+<p>"Ask them? I should say so," I returned, with immeasurable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+disdain. "Of course he asked them; but she
+told me she shouldn't come, last night. She is so tired
+of such things. She came yachting with Fitzhervey
+solely to try and have a little quiet. She says people
+never give her a moment's rest when she is in Paris or
+London. She was sorry to disappoint Stars and Garters,
+but I don't think she likes his wife much: she don't consider
+her good ton."</p>
+
+<p>On which information Heavy lapsed into a state of profoundest
+awe and wonderment, it having been one of his
+articles of faith, for the month that we had been in Malta,
+that the palace people were exalted demigods, whom it
+was only permissible to worship from a distance, and a
+very respectful distance too. Heavy had lost some twenty
+odd pounds the night before&mdash;of course we lost, young
+hands as we were, unaccustomed to the society of that
+entertaining gentleman, Pam&mdash;and had grumbled not a
+little at the loss of his gold bobs. But now I could see
+that such a contemptibly pecuniary matter was clean
+gone from his memory, and that he would have thought
+the world well lost for the honor of playing cards with
+people who could afford to disappoint Old Stars and
+Garters.</p>
+
+<p>The inspection was over at last; and if any other than
+Conran had been my senior officer, I should have come
+off badly, in all probability, for the abominable manner
+in which I went through my evolutions. The day came
+to an end somehow or other, though I began to think it
+never would, the luncheon was ended, the bigwigs were
+taking their sieste, or otherwise occupied, and I, trusting
+to my absence not being noticed, tore off as hard as man
+can who has Cupid for his Pegasus. With a bouquet as
+large as a drum-head, clasped round with a bracelet,
+about which I had many doubts as to the propriety of
+offering to the possessor of such jewelry as the Marchioness
+must have, yet on which I thought I might venture after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+the scene of last night, I was soon on the veranda of the
+Casa di Fiori, and my natural shyness being stimulated
+into a distant resemblance of Little Grand's enviable
+brass, seeing the windows of the drawing-room open, I
+pushed aside the green venetians and entered noiselessly.
+The room did not look a quarter so inviting as the night
+before, though it was left in precisely a similar state. I
+do not know how it was, but those cards lying about on
+the floor, those sconces with the wax run down and dripping
+over them, those emptied caraffes that had diffused an
+odor not yet dissipated, those tables and velvet couches
+all <i>à tort et à travers</i>, did not look so very inviting after
+all, and even to my unsophisticated senses, scarcely
+seemed fit for a Peeress.</p>
+
+<p>There was nobody in the room, and I walked through
+it towards the boudoir; from the open door I saw Fitzhervey,
+Guatamara, and my Marchioness&mdash;but oh! what
+horror unutterable! doing&mdash;<i>que pensez-vous?</i> Drinking
+bottled porter!&mdash;and drinking bottled porter in a <i>peignoir</i>
+not of the cleanliest, and with raven tresses not of the
+neatest!</p>
+
+<p>Only fancy! she, that divine, <i>spirituelle</i> creature, who
+had talked but a few hours before of the affinity of souls,
+to have come down, like any ordinary woman, to Guinness's
+stout, and a checked dressing-gown and unbrushed
+locks! To find your prophet without his silver veil, or
+your Leila dead drowned in a sack, or your Guinevere
+flown over with Sir Lancelot to Boulogne, or your long-esteemed
+Griselda gone off with your cockaded Jeames,
+is nothing to the torture, the unutterable anguish, of seeing
+your angel, your divinity, your bright particular star,
+your hallowed Arabian rose, come down to&mdash;Bottled
+Porter! Do not talk to me of Doré, sir, or Mr. Martin's
+pictures; their horrors dwindle into insignificance compared
+with the horror of finding an intimate liaison between
+one's first love and Bottled Porter!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In my first dim, unutterable anguish, I should have
+turned and fled; but my syren's voice had not lost all its
+power, despite the stout and dirty dressing-gown, for
+she was a very handsome woman, and could stand such
+things as well as anybody. She came towards me, with
+her softest smile, glancing at the bracelet on the bouquet,
+apologizing slightly for her négligé:&mdash;"I am so indolent.
+I only dress for those I care to please&mdash;and I never hoped
+to see <i>you</i> to-day." In short, magnetizing me over again,
+and smoothing down my outraged sensibilities, till I
+ended by becoming almost blind (<i>quite</i> I could not manage)
+to the checked <i>robe de chambre</i> and the unbrushed
+bandeaux, by offering her my braceleted bouquet, which
+was very graciously accepted, and even by sharing the
+atrocious London porter, "that horrid stuff," she called
+it, "how I hate it! but it is the only thing Sir Benjamin
+Brodie allows me, I am so very delicate, you know, my
+sensibilities so frightfully acute!"</p>
+
+<p>I had not twenty minutes to stay, having to be back at
+the barracks, or risk a reprimand, which, happily, the
+checked <i>peignoir</i> had cooled me sufficiently to enable me
+to recollect. So I took my farewell&mdash;one not unlike
+Medora's and Conrad's, Fitzhervey and Guatamara having
+kindly withdrawn as soon as the bottled porter was
+finished&mdash;and I went out of the house in a very blissful
+state, despite Guinness and the unwelcome demi-toilette,
+which did not accord with Eugène Sue's and the Parlor
+Library's description of the general getting-up and stunning
+appearance of heroines and peeresses, "reclining, in
+robes of cloud-like tissue and folds of the richest lace, on
+a cabriole couch of amber velvet, while the air was
+filled with the voluptuous perfume of the flower-children
+of the South, and music from unseen choristers lulled the
+senses with its divinest harmony," &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Bottled porter and a checked dressing-gown! Say
+what you like, sirs, it takes a very strong passion to overcome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+<i>those</i>. I have heard men ascribe the waning of their
+affections after the honeymoon to the constant sight of
+their wives&mdash;whom before they had only seen making
+papa's coffee with an angelic air and a toilette <i>tirée à
+quatre épingles</i>&mdash;everlastingly coming down too late for
+breakfast in a dressing-gown; and, upon my soul, if ever
+I marry, which Heaven in pitiful mercy forfend! and my
+wife make her appearance in one of those confounded
+<i>peignoirs</i>, I will give that much-run-after and deeply-to-be-pitied
+public character, the Divorce Judge, some more
+work to do&mdash;I will, upon my honor.</p>
+
+<p>However, the <i>peignoir</i> had not iced me enough that
+time to prevent my tumbling out of the house in as delicious
+an ecstasy as if I had been eating some of Monte
+Cristo's "hatchis." As I went out, not looking before
+me, I came bang against the chest of somebody else, who,
+not admiring the rencontre, hit my cap over my eyes, and
+exclaimed, in not the most courtly manner you will acknowledge,
+"You cursed owl, take that, then! What
+are you doing here, I should like to know?"</p>
+
+<p>"Confound your impudence!" I retorted, as soon as
+my ocular powers were restored, and I saw the blue eyes,
+fair curls, and smart figure of my ancient Iolaüs, now my
+bitterest foe&mdash;"confound your impertinence! what are
+<i>you</i> doing here? you mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Take care, and don't ask questions about what doesn't
+concern you," returned Little Grand, with a laugh&mdash;a
+most irritating laugh. There are times when such cachinnations
+sting one's ears more than a volley of oaths.
+"Go home and mind your own business, my chicken.
+You are a green bird, and nobody minds you, but still
+you'll find it as well not to come poaching on other men's
+manors."</p>
+
+<p>"Other men's manors! Mine, if you please," I shouted,
+so mad with him I could have floored him where he stood.</p>
+
+<p>"Phew!" laughed Little Grand, screwing up his lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+into a contemptuous whistle, "you've been drinking too
+much Bass, my daisy; 'tis n't good for young heads&mdash;can't
+stand it. Go home, innocent."</p>
+
+<p>The insult, the disdainful tone, froze my blood. My
+heart swelled with a sense of outraged dignity and injured
+manhood. With a conviction of my immeasurable superiority
+of position, as the beloved of that divine creature,
+I emancipated myself from the certain sort of slavery I
+was generally in to Little Grand, and spoke as I conceived
+it to be the habit of gentlemen whose honor had
+been wounded to speak.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Grandison, you will pay for this insult. I shall
+expect satisfaction."</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand laughed again&mdash;absolutely grinned, the
+audacious young imp&mdash;and he twelve months younger
+than I, too!</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, sir. If you wish to be made a target of, I
+shall be delighted to oblige you. I can't keep ladies
+waiting. It is always Place aux dames! with me; so, for
+the present, good morning!"</p>
+
+<p>And off went the young coxcomb into the Casa di
+Fiori, and I, only consoled by the reflection of the different
+reception he would receive to what mine had been
+(<i>he</i> had a braceleted bouquet, too, the young pretentious
+puppy!), started off again, assuaging my lacerated feelings
+with the delicious word of Satisfaction. I felt myself
+immeasurably raised above the heads of every other
+man in Malta&mdash;a perfect hero of romance; in fact, fit to
+figure in my beloved Alexandre's most highly-wrought
+yellow-papered <i>roman</i>, with a duel on my hands, and the
+love of a magnificent creature like my Eudoxia Adelaida.
+She had become Eudoxia Adelaida to me now, and I had
+forgiven, if not forgotten, the dirty dressing-gown: the
+bottled porter lay, of course, at Brodie's door. If he
+would condemn spiritual forms of life and light to the
+common realistic aliments of horrible barmaids and draymen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+she could not help it, nor I either. If angels come
+down to earth, and are separated from their natural nourishment
+of manna and nectar, they must take what they
+can get, even though it be so coarse and sublunary a
+thing as Guinness's XXX, must they not, sir? Yes, I
+felt very <i>exalté</i> with my affair of honor and my affair of
+the heart, Little Grand for my foe, and my Marchioness,
+for a love. I never stopped to remember that I might be
+smashing with frightful recklessness the Sixth and the
+Seventh Commandments. If Little Grand got shot, he
+must thank himself; he should not have insulted me;
+and if there was a Marquis St. Julian, why&mdash;I pitied
+him, poor fellow! that was all.</p>
+
+<p>Full of these sublime sensations&mdash;grown at least three
+feet in my varnished boots&mdash;I lounged into the ball-room,
+feeling supreme pity for ensigns who were chattering
+round the door, admiring those poor, pale garrison girls.
+<i>They</i> had not a duel and a Marchioness; <i>they</i> did not
+know what beauty meant&mdash;what life was!</p>
+
+<p>I did not dance&mdash;I was above that sort of thing now&mdash;there
+was not a woman worth the trouble in the room;
+and about the second waltz I saw my would-be rival
+talking to Ruthven, a fellow in Ours. Little Grand did
+not look glum or dispirited, as he ought to have done
+after the interview he must have had; but probably that
+was the boy's brass. He would never look beaten if you
+had hit him till he was black and blue. Presently Ruthven
+came up to me. He was not over-used to his business,
+for he began the opening chapter in rather school-boy
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, Gus! so you and Little Grand have been falling
+out. Why don't you settle it with a little mill? A
+vast deal better than pistols. Duels always seem to me
+no fun. Two men stand up like fools, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Ruthven," said I, very haughtily, "if your principal
+desires to apologize&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Apologize! Bless your soul, no! But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said I, cutting him uncommonly short indeed,
+"you can have no necessity to address yourself to me, and
+I beg to refer you to my friend and second, Mr. Heavystone."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith I bowed, turned on my heel, and left him.</p>
+
+<p>I did not sleep that night, though I tried hard, because
+I thought it the correct thing for heroes to sleep sweetly
+till the clock strikes the hour of their duel, execution,
+&amp;c., or whatever it may hap. Egmont slept, Argyle
+slept, Philippe Egalité, scores of them, but I could not.
+Not that I funked it, thank Heaven&mdash;I never had a
+touch of that&mdash;but because I was in such a delicious
+state of excitement, self-admiration, and heroism, which
+had not cooled when I found myself walking down to the
+appointed place by the beach with poor old Heavy, who
+was intensely impressed by being charged with about five
+quires of the best cream-laid, to be given to the Marchioness
+in case I fell. Little Grand and Ruthven came
+on the ground at almost the same moment, Little Grand
+eminently jaunty and most <i>confoundedly</i> handsome. We
+took off our caps with distant ceremony; the Castilian
+hidalgos were never more stately; but, then, what Knights
+of the Round Table ever splintered spears for such a
+woman?</p>
+
+<p>The paces were measured, the pistols taken out of their
+case. We were just placed, and Ruthven, with a handkerchief
+in his hand, had just enumerated, in awful
+accents, "One! two!"&mdash;the "three!" yet hovered on his
+lips, when we heard a laugh&mdash;the third laugh that had
+chilled my blood in twenty-four hours. Somebody's hand
+was laid on Little Grand's shoulder, and Conran's voice
+interrupted the whole thing.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, young ones! what farce is this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Farce, sir!" retorted Little Grand, hotly&mdash;"farce!
+It is no farce. It is an affair of honor, and&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Don't make me laugh, my dear boy," smiled Conran;
+"it is so much too warm for such an exertion. Pray, why
+are you and your once sworn friend making popinjays of
+each other?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Grandison has grossly insulted me," I began,
+"and I demand satisfaction. I will not stir from the
+ground without it, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>sha'n't</i>," shouted Little Grand. "Do you dare
+to pretend I want to funk, you little contemptible&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Though it was too warm, Conran went off into a fit of
+laughter.</p>
+
+<p>I dare say our sublimity had a comic touch in it of
+which we never dreamt. "My dear boys, pray don't, it
+is too fatiguing. Come, Grand, what is it all about?"</p>
+
+<p>"I deny your right to question me, Major," retorted
+Little Grand, in a fury. "What have you to do with it?
+I mean to punish that young owl yonder&mdash;who didn't
+know how to drink anything but milk-and-water, didn't
+know how to say bo! to a goose, till I taught him&mdash;for
+very abominable impertinence, and I'll&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My impertinence! I like that!" I shouted. "It is
+your unwarrantable, overbearing self-conceit, that makes
+you the laughing-stock of all the mess, which&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Silence!" said Conran's still stern voice, which subdued
+us into involuntary respect. "No more of this nonsense!
+Put up those pistols, Ruthven. You are two hot-headed,
+silly boys, who don't know for what you are quarrelling.
+Live a few years longer, and you won't be so
+eager to get into hot water, and put cartridges into your
+best friends. No, I shall not hear any more about it. If
+you do not instantly give me your words of honor not to
+attempt to repeat this folly, as your senior officer I shall
+put you under arrest for six weeks."</p>
+
+<p>O Alexandra Dumas!&mdash;O Monte Cristo!&mdash;O heroes
+of yellow paper and pluck invincible! I ask pardon of
+your shades; I must record the fact, lowering and melancholy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+as it is, that before our senior officer our heroism
+melted like Vanille ice in the sun, our glories tumbled
+to the ground like twelfth-cake ornaments under children's
+fingers, and before the threat of arrest the lions lay down
+like lambs.</p>
+
+<p>Conran sent us back, humbled, sulky, and crestfallen,
+and resumed his solitary patrol upon the beach, where, before
+the sun was fairly up, he was having a shot at curlews.
+But if he was a little stern, he was no less kind-hearted;
+and in the afternoon of that day, while he lay, after his
+siesta, smoking on his little bed, I unburdened myself to
+him. He did not laugh at me, though I saw a quizzical
+smile under his black moustaches.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your divinity's name?" he asked, when I had
+finished.</p>
+
+<p>"Eudoxia Adelaida, Marchioness St. Julian."</p>
+
+<p>"The Marchioness St. Julian! Oh!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know her?" I inquired, somewhat perplexed
+by his tone.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled straight out this time.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know <i>her</i>, but there are a good many Peeresses
+in Malta and Gibraltar, and along the line of the Pacific,
+as my brother Ned, in the <i>Belisarius</i>, will tell you. I
+could count two score such of my acquaintance off at this
+minute."</p>
+
+<p>I wondered what he meant. I dare say he knew all
+the Peerage; but that had nothing to do with me, and I
+thought it strange that all the Duchesses, and Countesses,
+and Baronesses should quit their country-seats and town-houses
+to locate themselves along the line of the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>"She's a fine woman, St. John?" he went on.</p>
+
+<p>"Fine!" I reiterated, bursting into a panegyric, with
+which I won't bore you as I bored him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you're going there to-night, you say; take me
+with you, and we'll see what I think of your Marchioness."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at his fine figure and features, recalled certain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+tales of his conquests, remembered that he knew French,
+Italian, German, and Spanish, but, not being very able to
+refuse, acquiesced with a reluctance I could not entirely
+conceal. Conran, however, did not perceive it, and after
+mess took his cap, and went with me to the Casa di Fiori.</p>
+
+<p>The rooms were all right again, my Marchioness was
+<i>en grande tenue</i>, amber silk, black lace, diamonds, and all
+that sort of style. Fitzhervey and the other men were in
+evening dress, drinking coffee; there was not a trace of
+bottled porter anywhere, and it was all very brilliant and
+presentable. The Marchioness St. Julian rose with the
+warmest effusion, her dazzling white teeth showing in the
+sunniest of smiles, and both hands outstretched.</p>
+
+<p>"Augustus, <i>bien aimé</i>, you are rather&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Late," I suppose she was going to say, but she stopped
+dead short, her teeth remained parted in a stereotyped
+smile, a blankness of dismay came over her luminous eyes.
+She caught sight of Conran, and I imagined I heard a very
+low-breathed "Curse the fellow!" from courteous Lord
+Dolph. Conran came forward, however, as if he did not
+notice it; there was only that queer smile lurking under
+his moustaches. I introduced him to them, and the
+Marchioness smiled again, and Fitzhervey almost resumed
+his wonted extreme urbanity. But they were somehow or
+other wonderfully ill at ease&mdash;wonderfully, for people in
+such high society; and I was ill at ease too, from being
+only able to attribute Eudoxia Adelaida's evident consternation
+at the sight of Conran to his having been some
+time or other an old love of hers. "Ah!" thought I,
+grinding my teeth, "that comes of loving a woman older
+than one's self."</p>
+
+<p>The Major, however, seemed the only one who enjoyed
+himself. The Marchioness was beaming on him graciously,
+though her ruffled feathers were not quite smoothed down,
+and he was sitting by her with an intense amusement in
+his eyes, alternately talking to her about Stars and Garters,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+whom, by her answers, she did not seem to know so
+very intimately after all, and chatting with Fitzhervey
+about hunting, who, for a man that had hunted over every
+country, according to his own account, seemed to confuse
+Tom Edge with Tom Smith, the Burton with the Tedworth,
+a bullfinch with an ox-rail, in queer style, under Conran's
+cross-questioning. We had been in the room about ten
+minutes, when a voice, rich, low, sweet, rang out from
+some inner room, singing the glorious "Inflammatus."
+How strange it sounded in the Casa di Fiori!</p>
+
+<p>Conran started, the dark blood rose over the clear
+bronze of his cheek. He turned sharply on to the Marchioness.
+"Good Heaven! whose voice is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"My niece's," she answered, staring at him, and touching
+a hand-bell. "I will ask her to come and sing to us
+nearer. She has really a lovely voice."</p>
+
+<p>Conran grew pale again, and sat watching the door with
+the most extraordinary anxiety. Some minutes went by;
+then Lucrezia entered, with the same haughty reserve
+which her soft young face always wore when with her aunt.
+It changed, though, when her glance fell on Conran, into
+the wildest rapture I ever saw on any countenance. He
+fixed his eyes on her with the look Little Grand says he's
+seen him wear in battle&mdash;a contemptuous smile quivering
+on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Sing us something, Lucrezia dear," began the Marchioness.
+"You shouldn't be like the nightingales, and
+give your music only to night and solitude."</p>
+
+<p>Lucrezia seemed not to hear her. She had never taken
+her eyes off Conran, and she went, as dreamily as that
+dear little <i>Amina</i> in the "Sonnambula," to her seat under
+the jasmines in the window. For a few minutes Conran,
+who didn't seem to care two straws what the society in
+general thought of him, took his leave, to the relief, apparently,
+of Fitzhervey and Guatamara.</p>
+
+<p>As he went across the veranda&mdash;that memorable veranda!&mdash;I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+sitting in dudgeon near the other window,
+while Fitzhervey was proposing écarté to Heavy, whom
+we had found there on our entrance, and the Marchioness
+had vanished into her boudoir for a moment, I saw the
+Roman girl spring out after him, and catch hold of his
+arm:</p>
+
+<p>"Victor! Victor! for pity's sake!&mdash;I never thought
+we should meet like this!"</p>
+
+<p>"Nor did I."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! hush! you will kill me. In mercy, say some
+kinder words!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can say nothing that it would be courteous to you
+to say."</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't have been as inflexible, whatever her sins
+might have been, with her hands clasped on me, and her
+face raised so close to mine. Lucrezia's voice changed to
+a piteous wail:</p>
+
+<p>"You love me no longer, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love!" said Conran, fiercely&mdash;"love! How dare
+you speak to me of love? I held you to be fond, innocent,
+true as Heaven; as such, you were dearer to me than
+life&mdash;as dear as honor. I loved you with as deep a passion
+as ever a man knew&mdash;Heaven help me! I love you
+now! How am I rewarded? By finding you the companion
+of blackguards, the associate of swindlers, one of
+the arch-intrigantes who lead on youths to ruin with base
+smiles and devilish arts. Then you dare talk to me of
+love!"</p>
+
+<p>With those passionate words he threw her off him. She
+fell at his feet with a low moan. He either did not hear,
+or did not heed it; and I, bewildered by what I heard,
+mechanically went and lifted her from the ground. Lucrezia
+had not fainted, but she looked so wild, that I believed
+the Marchioness, and set her down as mad; but
+then Conran must be mad as well, which seemed too incredible
+a thing for me to swallow&mdash;our cool Major mad!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Where does he live?" asked Lucrezia of me, in a
+breathless whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"He? Who?"</p>
+
+<p>"Victor&mdash;your officer&mdash;Signor Conran."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he lives in Valetta, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Can I find him there?"</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say, if you want him."</p>
+
+<p>"Want him! Oh, Santa Maria! is not his absence
+death? Can I find him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes, I dare say. Anybody will show you Conran's
+rooms."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you."</p>
+
+<p>With that, this mysterious young lady left me, and I
+turned in through the window again. Heavy and the
+men were playing at lansquenet, that most perilous, rapid,
+and bewitching of all the resistless Card Circes. There
+was no Marchioness, and having done it once with impunity,
+I thought I might do it again, and lifted the amber
+curtain that divided the boudoir from the drawing-room.
+What did I behold? Oh! torture unexampled!
+Oh! fiendish agony! There was Little Grand&mdash;self-conceited,
+insulting, impertinent, abominable, unendurable
+Little Grand&mdash;on the amber satin couch, with the Marchioness
+leaning her head on his shoulder, and looking up
+in his thrice-confounded face with her most adorable
+smile, <i>my</i> smile, that had beamed, and, as I thought,
+beamed only upon me!</p>
+
+<p>If Mephistopheles had been by to tempt me, I would
+have sold my soul to have wreaked vengeance on them
+both. Neither saw me, thank Heaven! and I had self-possession
+enough not to give them the cruel triumph of
+witnessing my anguish. I withdrew in silence, dropped
+the curtain, and rushed to bury my wrongs and sorrows
+in the friendly bosom of the gentle night. It was my first
+love, and I had made a fool of myself. The two are
+synonymous.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>How I reached the barracks I never knew. All the
+night long I sat watching the stars out, raving to them
+of Eudoxia Adelaida, and cursing in plentiful anathemas
+my late Orestes. How should I bear his impudent grin
+every mortal night of my life across the mess-table? I
+tore up into shreds about a ream of paper, inscribed with
+tender sonnets to my faithless idol. I trampled into fifty
+thousand shreds a rosette off her dress, for which, fool-like,
+I had begged the day before. I smashed the looking-glass,
+which could only show me the image of a pitiful
+donkey. I called on Heaven to redress my wrongs. Oh!
+curse it! never was a fellow at once so utterly done for
+and so utterly done brown!</p>
+
+<p>And in the vicarage, as I learnt afterwards, when my
+letter was received at home, there was great glorification
+and pleasure. My mother and the girls were enraptured
+at the high society darling Gussy was moving in; "but
+then, you know, mamma, dear Gussy's manners are so
+gentle, so gentleman-like, they are sure to please wherever
+he goes!" Wherewith my mother cried, and dried her
+eyes, and cried again, over that abominable letter copied
+from Little Grand's, and smelling of vilest tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Then entered a rectoress of a neighboring parish, to
+whom my mother and the girls related with innocent exultation
+of my grand friends at Malta; how Lord A.
+Fitzhervey was my sworn ally, and the Marchioness St.
+Julian had quite taken me under her wing. And the
+rectoress, having a son of her own, who was not doing
+anything so grand at Cambridge, but principally sotting
+beer at a Cherryhinton public, smiled and was wrathful,
+and said to her lord at dinner:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, did you ever hear of a Marchioness St.
+Julian?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my love, I believe not&mdash;never."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there one in the peerage?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't say, my dear. Look in Burke."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So the rectoress got Burke and closed it, after deliberate
+inspection, with malignant satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought not. How ridiculous those St. Johns are
+about that ugly boy Augustus. As if Tom were not
+worth a hundred of him!"</p>
+
+<p>I was too occupied with my own miseries then to think
+about Conran and Lucrezia, though some time after I
+heard all about it. It seems, that, a year before, Conran
+was on leave in Rome, and at Rome, loitering about the
+Campagna one day, he made a chance acquaintance with
+an Italian girl, by getting some flowers for her she had
+tried to reach and could not. She was young, enthusiastic,
+intensely interesting, and had only an old Roman
+nurse, deaf as a post and purblind, with her. The girl
+was Lucrezia da Guari, and Lucrezia was lovely as one
+of her own myrtle or orange flowers. Somehow or other
+Conran went there the next day, and the next, and the
+next, and so on for a good many days, and always found
+Lucrezia. Now, Conran had at bottom a touch of unstirred
+romance, and, moreover, his own idea of what
+sort of woman he could love. Something in this untrained
+yet winning Campagna flower answered to both.
+He was old to trust his own discernment, and,
+after a month or two's walks and talks, Conran, one of
+the proudest men going, offered himself and his name to
+a Roman girl of whom he knew nothing, except that she
+seemed to care for him as he had had a fancy to be cared
+for all his life. It was a deucedly romantic thing&mdash;however,
+he did it! Lucrezia had told him her father was a
+military officer, but somehow or other this father never
+came to light, and when he called at their house&mdash;or
+rather rooms&mdash;Conran always found him out, which he
+thought queer, but, on the whole, rather providential, and
+he set the accident down to a foreigner's roaming habits.</p>
+
+<p>The day Conran had really gone the length of offering
+to make an unknown Italian his wife, he went, for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+first time in the evening, to Da Guari's house. The servant
+showed him in unannounced to a brightly-lighted
+chamber, reeking with wine and smoke, where a dozen
+men were playing trente et quarante at an amateur bank,
+and two or three others were gathered round what he had
+believed his own fair and pure Campagna flower. He
+understood it all; he turned away with a curse upon him.
+He wanted love and innocence; adventuresses he could
+have by the score, and he was sick to death of them. From
+that hour he never saw her again till he met her at the
+Casa di Fiori.</p>
+
+<p>The next day I went to Conran while he was breakfasting,
+and unburdened my mind to him. He looked ill
+and haggard, but he listened to me very kindly, though he
+spoke of the people at the Casa di Fiori in a hard, brief,
+curious manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty have been taken in like you, Gus," he said
+"I was, years ago, in my youth, when I joined the Army.
+There are scores of such women, as I told you, down the
+line of the Pacific, and about here; anywhere, in fact,
+where the army and navy give them fresh pigeons to be
+gulled. They take titles that sound grand in boys' ears,
+and fascinate them till they've won all their money, and
+then&mdash;send them to the dogs. Your Marchioness St.
+Julian's real name is Sarah Briggs."</p>
+
+<p>I gave an involuntary shriek. Sarah Briggs finished
+me. It was the death-stroke, that could never be got
+over.</p>
+
+<p>"She was a ballet-girl in London," continued Conran;
+"then, when she was sixteen, married that Fitzhervey,
+<i>alias</i> Briggs, <i>alias</i> Smith, <i>alias</i> what you please, and set
+up in her present more lucrative employment with her
+three or four confederates. Saint-Jeu was expelled from
+Paris for keeping a hell in the Chaussée d'Antin, Fitzhervey
+was a leg at Newmarket, Orangia Magnolia a
+lawyer's clerk, who was had up for forgery, Guatamara is&mdash;by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+another name&mdash;a scoundrel of Rome. There is
+the history of your Maltese Peerage, Gussy. Well,
+you'll be wider awake next time. Wait, there is somebody
+at my door. Stay here a moment, I'll come back
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, I stayed in his bedroom, where I had
+found him writing, and he went into his sitting-room, of
+which, from the diminutiveness of his domicile, I commanded
+a full view, sit where I would. What was my
+astonishment to see Lucrezia! I went to his bedroom
+door; it was locked from the outside, so I perforce remained
+where I was, to, <i>nolens volens</i>, witness the finish
+of last night's interview.</p>
+
+<p>Stern to the last extent and deadly pale, Conran stood,
+too surprised to speak, and most probably at a loss for
+words.</p>
+
+<p>Lucrezia came up to him nevertheless with the abandonment
+of youth and southern blood.</p>
+
+<p>"Victor! Victor! let me speak to you. You shall
+listen; you shall not judge me unheard."</p>
+
+<p>"Signorina, I have judged you by only too ample
+evidence."</p>
+
+<p>He had recovered himself now, and was as cool as
+needs be.</p>
+
+<p>"I deny it. But you love me still?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love you? More shame on me! A laugh, a compliment,
+a caress, a cashmere, is as much as such women
+as you are worth. Love becomes ridiculous named in
+the same breath with you."</p>
+
+<p>She caught hold of his hand and crushed it in both her
+own.</p>
+
+<p>"Kill me you will. Death would have no sting
+from your hand, but never speak such words to <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>His voice trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I choose but speak them? You know that
+I believed you in Italy, and how on that belief I offered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+you my name&mdash;a name never yet stained, never yet held
+unworthy. I lost you, to find you in society which
+stamped you for ever. A lovely fiend, holding raw boys
+enchained, that your associates might rifle their purses
+with marked cards and cogged dice. I hoped to have
+found a diamond, without spot or flaw. I discovered my
+error too late; it was only glass, which all men were free
+to pick up and trample on at their pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>He tried to wrench his hand away, but she would not
+let it go.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! hush! listen to me first. If you once thought
+me worthy of your love, you may, surely, now accord me
+pity. I shall not trouble you long. After this, you need
+see me no more. I am going back to my old convent.
+You and the world will soon forget me, but I shall remember
+you, and pray for you, as dearer than my own
+soul."</p>
+
+<p>Conran's head was bent down now, and his voice was
+thick, as he answered briefly,</p>
+
+<p>"Go on."</p>
+
+<p>This scene half consoled me for Eudoxia Adelaida&mdash;(I
+mean, O Heavens, Sarah Briggs!)&mdash;it was so exquisitely
+romantic, and Conran and Lucrezia wouldn't have
+done at all badly for Monte Cristo and that dear little
+Haidee. I was fearfully poetic in those days.</p>
+
+<p>"When I met you in Rome," Lucrezia went on, in
+obedience to his injunction, "two years ago, you remember
+I had only left my convent and lived with my father
+but a month or two. I told you he was an officer. I
+only said what I had been told, and I knew no more than
+you that he was the keeper of a gambling house."</p>
+
+<p>She shuddered as she paused, and leaned her forehead
+on Conran's hand. He did not repulse her, and she continued,
+in her broken, simple English:</p>
+
+<p>"The evening you promised me what I should have
+needed to have been an angel to be worthy of&mdash;your love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+and your name&mdash;that very evening, when I reached
+home, my father bade me dress for a soirée he was going
+to give. I obeyed him, of course. I knew nothing but
+what he told me, and I went down, to find a dozen young
+nobles and a few Englishmen drinking and playing on a
+table covered with green cloth. Some few of them came
+up to me, but I felt frightened; their looks, their tones,
+their florid compliments, were so different to yours. But
+my father kept his eye on me, and would not let me
+leave. While they were leaning over my chair, and
+whispering in my ear, <i>you</i> came to the door of the salon,
+and I went towards you, and you looked cold, and harsh,
+as I had never seen you before, and put me aside, and
+turned away without a word. Oh, Victor! why did you
+not kill me then? Death would have been kindness.
+Your Othello was kinder to Desdemona; he slew her&mdash;he
+did not <i>leave</i> her. From that hour I never saw you,
+and from that hour my father persecuted me because I
+would never join in his schemes, nor enter his vile gaming-rooms.
+Yet I have lived with him, because I could not
+get away. I have been too carefully watched. We
+Italians are not free, like your happy English girls. A
+few weeks ago we were compelled to leave Rome, the
+young Contino di Firenze had been stilettoed leaving my
+father's rooms, and he could stay in Italy no longer. We
+came here, and joined that hateful woman, who calls herself
+Marchioness St. Julian; and, because she could not
+bend me to her will, gives out that I am her niece, and
+mad! I wonder I am <i>not</i> mad, Victor. I wish hearts
+would break, as the romancers make them; but how long
+one suffers and lives on! Oh, my love, my soul, my life,
+only say that you believe me, and look kindly at me once
+again, then I will never trouble you again, I will only
+pray for you. But believe me, Victor. The Mother
+Superior of my convent will tell you it is the truth that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+I speak. Oh, for the love of Heaven, believe me! Believe me
+or I shall die!"</p>
+
+<p>It was not in the nature of man to resist her; there
+was truth in the girl's voice and face, if ever truth walked
+abroad on earth. And Conran did believe her, and told
+her so in a few unconnected words, lifting her up in his
+arms, and vowing, with most unrighteous oaths, that her
+father should never have power to persecute her again as
+long as he himself lived to shelter and take care of her.</p>
+
+<p>I was so interested in my Monte Cristo and Haidee (it
+was so like a chapter out of a book), that I entirely forgot
+my durance vile, and my novel and excessively disgraceful,
+though enforced, occupation of spy; and there I
+stayed, alternating between my interest in them and my
+agonies at the revelations concerning my Eudoxia Adelaida&mdash;oh,
+hang it! I mean Sarah Briggs&mdash;till, after a
+most confounded long time, Conran saw fit to take Lucrezia
+off, to get asylum for her with the Colonel's wife
+for a day or two, that "those fools might not misconstrue
+her." By which comprehensive epithet he, I suppose,
+politely designated "Ours."</p>
+
+<p>Then I went my ways to my own room, and there I
+found a scented, mauve-hued, creamy billet-doux, in uncommon
+bad handwriting, though, from my miserable
+Eudoxia Adelaida to the "friend and lover of her soul."
+Confound the woman!&mdash;how I swore at that daintily-perfumed
+and most vilely-scrawled letter. To think that
+where that beautiful signature stretched from one side to
+the other&mdash;"Eudoxia Adelaida St. Julian"&mdash;there
+<i>ought</i> to have been that short, vile, low-bred, hideous,
+Billingsgate cognomen of "Sarah Briggs!"</p>
+
+<p>In the note she reproached me&mdash;the wretched hypocrite!&mdash;for
+my departure the previous night, "without
+one farewell to your Eudoxia, O cruel Augustus!" and
+asked me to give her a rendezvous at some vineyards
+lying a little way off the Casa di Fiori, on the road to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+Melita. Now, being a foolish boy, and regarding myself
+as having been loved and wronged, whereas I had only
+been playing the very common <i>rôle</i> of pigeon, I could not
+resist the temptation of going, just to take one last look
+of that fair, cruel face, and upbraid her with being the
+first to sow the fatal seeds of lifelong mistrust and misery
+in my only too fond and faithful, &amp;c. &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>So, at the appointed hour, just when the sun was setting
+over the far-away Spanish shore, and the hush of
+night was sinking over the little, rocky, peppery, military-thick,
+Mediterranean isle, I found myself <i>en route</i> to
+the vineyards; which, till I came to Malta, had been one
+of my delusions, Idea picturing them in wreaths and
+avenues, Reality proving them hop-sticks and parched
+earth. I drew near; it was quite dark now, the sun had
+gone to sleep under the blue waves, and the moon was
+not yet up. Though I knew she was Sarah Briggs, and
+an adventuress who had made game of me, two facts that
+one would fancy might chill the passion out of anybody,
+so mad was I about that woman, that, if I had met her
+then and there, I should have let her wheedle me over,
+and gone back to the Casa di Fiori with her and been
+fleeced again: I am sure I should, sir, and so would you,
+if, at eighteen, new to life, you had fallen in with Eudox&mdash;&mdash;pshaw!&mdash;with
+Sarah Briggs, my Marchioness St
+Julian.</p>
+
+<p>I drew near the vineyards: my heart beat thick, I could
+not see, but I was certain I heard the rustle of her dress,
+caught the perfume of her hair. All her sins vanished:
+how could I upbraid her, though she were three times
+over Sarah Briggs? Yes, she was coming; I <i>felt</i> her
+near; an electric thrill rushed through me as soul met
+soul. I heard a murmured "Dearest, sweetest!" I felt
+the warm clasp of two arms, but&mdash;a cold row of undress
+waistcoat-buttons came against my face, and a voice I
+knew too well cried out, as I rebounded from him, impelled
+thereto by a not gentle kick,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The devil! get out! Who the deuce are you?"</p>
+
+<p>We both stopped for breath. At that minute up rose
+the silver moon, and in its tell-tale rays we glared on one
+another, I and Little Grand.</p>
+
+<p>That silence was sublime: the pause between Beethoven's
+andante allegro&mdash;the second before the Spanish
+bull rushes upon the torreador.</p>
+
+<p>"You little miserable wretch!" burst out Grand, slowly
+and terribly; "you little, mean, sneaking, spying, contemptible
+milksop! I should like to know what you mean
+by bringing out your ugly phiz at this hour, when you
+used to be afraid of stirring out for fear of nurse's bogies?
+And to dare to come lurking after me!"</p>
+
+<p>"After you, Mr. Grandison!" I repeated, with grandiloquence.
+"Really you put too much importance on
+your own movements. I came by appointment to meet
+the Marchioness St. Julian, whom, I presume, as you are
+well acquainted with her, you know in her real name of
+Sarah Briggs, and to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sarah Briggs!&mdash;<i>you</i> come by appointment?" stammered
+Little Grand.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir; if you disbelieve my word of honor, I will
+condescend to show you my invitation."</p>
+
+<p>"You little ape!" swore Grand, coming back to his
+previous wrath; "it is a lie, a most abominable, unwarrantable
+lie! <i>I</i> came by appointment, sir; you did no
+such thing. Look there!"</p>
+
+<p>And he flaunted before my eyes in the moonlight the
+fac-simile of my letter, verbatim copy, save that in his
+Cosmo was put in the stead of Augustus.</p>
+
+<p>"Look there!" said I, giving him mine.</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand snatched it, read it over once, twice, thrice,
+then drooped his head, with a burning color in his face,
+and was silent.</p>
+
+<p>The "knowing hand" was done!</p>
+
+<p>We were both of us uncommonly quiet for ten minutes,
+neither of us liked to be the first to give in.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last Little Grand looked up and held out his hand,
+no more nonsense about him now.</p>
+
+<p>"Simon, you and I have been two great fools; we can't
+chaff one another. She's a cursed actress, and&mdash;let's
+make it up, old boy."</p>
+
+<p>We made it up accordingly&mdash;when Little Grand was
+not conceited he was a very jolly fellow&mdash;and then I
+gave him my whole key to the mysteries, intricacies, and
+charms of our Casa di Fiori. We could not chaff one
+another, but poor Little Grand was pitiably sore then, and
+for long afterwards. He, the "old bird," the cool hand,
+the sharp one of Ours, to have been done brown, to be the
+joke of the mess, the laugh of all the men, down to the
+weest drummer-boy! Poor Little Grand! He was too
+done up to swagger, too thoroughly angry with himself to
+swear at anybody else. He only whispered to me, "Why
+the dickens could she want you and me to meet our selves?"</p>
+
+<p>"To give us a finishing hoax, I suppose," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand drew his cap over his eyes, and hung his
+head down in abject humiliation.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose so. What fools we have been, Simon!
+And, I say, I've borrowed three hundred of old Miraflores,
+and it's all gone up at that devilish Casa; and
+how I shall get it from the governor, Heaven knows, for
+<i>I</i> don't."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm in the same pickle, Grand," I groaned. "I've
+given that old rascal notes of hand for two hundred
+pounds, and, if it don't drop from the clouds, I shall never
+pay it. Oh, I say, Grand, love comes deucedly expensive."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said he, with a sympathetic shiver, "think what
+a pair of hunters we might have had for the money!"
+With which dismal and remorseful remembrance the old
+bird, who had been trapped like a young pigeon, swore
+mightily, and withdrew into humbled and disgusted
+silence.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Next morning we heard, to our comfort&mdash;what lots of
+people there always are to tell us how to lock our stable-door
+when our solitary mare has been stolen&mdash;that, with a
+gentle hint from the police, the Marchioness St. Julian,
+with her <i>confrères</i>, had taken wing to the Ionian Isles,
+where, at Corfu or Cephalonia, they will re-erect the Casa
+di Fiori, and glide gently on again from vingt-et-un to loo,
+and from loo to lansquenet, under eyes as young and
+blinded as our own. They went without Lucrezia. Conran
+took her into his own hands. Any other man in the
+regiment would have been pretty well ridiculed at taking
+a bride out of the <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Cara'">Casa</ins> di Fiori; but the statements made
+by the high-born Abbess of her Roman convert were so
+clear, and so to the girl's honor, and he had such a way
+of holding his own, of keeping off liberties from himself
+and anything belonging to him, and was, moreover, known
+to be of such fastidious honor, that his young wife was
+received as if she had been a Princess in her own right.
+With her respected parent Conran had a brief interview
+previous to his flight from Malta, in which, with a few
+gentle hints, he showed that worthy it would be wiser to
+leave his daughter unmolested for the future, and I doubt
+if Mr. Orangia Magnolia, <i>alias</i> Pepe Guari, would know
+his own child in the joyous, graceful, daintily-dressed
+mistress of Conran's handsome Parisian establishment.</p>
+
+<p>Little Grand and I suffered cruelly. We were the butts
+of the mess for many a long month afterwards, when
+every idiot's tongue asked us on every side after the health
+of the Marchioness St. Julian? when we were going to
+teach them lansquenet? how often we heard from the
+aristocratic members of the Maltese Peerage? with like
+delightful pleasantries, which the questioners deemed high
+wit. We paid for it, too, to that arch old screw Balthazar;
+but I doubt very much if the money were not well
+lost, and the experience well gained. It cured me of my
+rawness and Little Grand of his self-conceit, the only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+thing that had before spoilt that good-hearted, quick-tempered,
+and clever-brained little fellow. Oh, Pater
+and Materfamilias, disturb not yourselves so unnecessarily
+about the crop of wild oats which your young ones are
+sowing broadcast. Those wild oats often spring from a
+good field of high spirit, hot courage, and thoughtless
+generosity, that are the sign and basis of nobler virtues
+to come, and from them very often rise two goodly plants&mdash;Experience
+and Discernment.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc081.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc082a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES:</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.<br />
+
+<br />
+<br />IN THREE SEASONS.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="FIRST" id="FIRST"></a>SEASON THE FIRST.&mdash;THE ELIGIBLE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of the kindest-natured persons that I ever
+knew on this earth, where kind people are as rare
+as black eagles or red deer, is Helena, Countess
+of Marabout, <i>née</i> De Bonc[oe]ur. She has foibles, she has
+weaknesses&mdash;who amongst us has not?&mdash;she will wear
+her dresses <i>décolletées</i>, though she's sixty, if Burke tells
+us truth; she will rouge and practise a thousand other
+little toilette tricks, but they are surely innocent, since
+they deceive nobody; and if you wait for a woman who
+is no artifices, I am afraid you shall have to forswear
+the sex <i>in toto</i>, my friends, and come growling back to
+your Diogenes' tub in the Albany, with your lantern still
+lit every day of your lives.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout is a very charming person. As for
+her weaknesses, she is all the nicer for them, to my taste.
+I like people with weaknesses myself; those without them
+do look so dreadfully scornfully and unsympathizingly
+upon one from the altitude of their superiority, <i>de toute
+la hauteur de sa bêtise</i>, as a witty Frenchman says. Humanity
+was born with weaknesses. If I were a beggar, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+might hope for a coin from a man with some; a man
+without any, I know, would shut up his porte-monnaie,
+with an intensified click, to make me feel trebly envious,
+and consign me to D 15 and his truncheon, on the score
+of vagrancy.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout is a very charming person, despite her
+little foibles, and she gives very pleasant little dinners,
+both at her house in Lowndes Square and in her jointure
+villa at Twickenham, where the bad odors of Thames are
+drowned in the fragrance of the geraniums, piled in great
+heaps of red, white, and variegated blossom in the flowerbeds
+on the lawn. She has been married twice, but has
+only one son, by her first union&mdash;Carruthers, of the
+Guards&mdash;a very good fellow, whom his mother thinks
+perfection, though if she <i>did</i> know certain scenes in her
+adored Philip's life, the good lady might hesitate before
+she endowed her son with all the cardinal virtues as she
+does at the present moment. She has no daughters,
+therefore you will wonder to hear that the prime misery,
+burden, discomfort, and worry of her life is chaperonage.
+But so it is.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout is the essence of good nature; she
+can't say No: that unpleasant negative monosyllable was
+never heard to issue from her full, smiling, kind-looking
+lips: she is in a high position, she has an extensive circle,
+thanks to her own family and those of the baronet and
+peer she successively espoused; and some sister, or cousin,
+or friend, is incessantly hunting her up to bring out their
+girls, and sell them well off out of hand; young ladies
+being goods extremely likely to hang <i>on</i> hand nowadays.</p>
+
+<p>"Of all troubles, the troubles of a chaperone are the
+greatest," said Lady Marabout to me at the wedding
+déjeûner of one of her protegées. "In the first place, one
+looks on at others' campaigns instead of conducting them
+one's self; secondly, it brings back one's own bright days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+to see the young things' smiles and blushes, like that
+girl's just now (I do hope she'll be happy!); and thirdly,
+one has all the responsibility, and gets all the blame if
+anything goes wrong. I'll never chaperone anybody
+again now I have got rid of Leila."</p>
+
+<p>So does Lady Marabout say twenty times; yet has she
+invariably some young lady under her wing, whose relatives
+are defunct, or invalided, or in India, or out of
+society somehow; and we all of us call her house The
+Yard, and her (among ourselves) not Lady Marabout
+but Lady Tattersall. The worries she has in her chaperone's
+office would fill a folio, specially as her heart inclines
+to the encouragement of romance, but her reason
+to the banishment thereof; and while her tenderness suffers
+if she thwarts her protégées' leanings, her conscience
+gives her neuralgic twinges if she abets them to unwise
+matches while under her dragonnage.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter, mother?" asked Carruthers, one
+morning. He's very fond of his mother, and will never
+let any one laugh at her in his hearing.</p>
+
+<p>"Matter? Everything!" replied Lady Marabout,
+concisely and comprehensively, as she sat on the sofa in
+her boudoir, with her white ringed hands and her <i>bien
+conservé</i> look, and her kindly pleasant eyes and her rich
+dress; one could see what a pretty woman she has been,
+and that Carruthers may thank her for his good looks.
+"To begin with, Félicie has been so stupid as to marry;
+married the greengrocer (whom she will ruin in a week!),
+and has left me to the mercies of a stupid woman who
+puts pink with cerise, mauve with magenta, and sky-blue
+with azureline, and has no recommendation except that
+she is as ugly as the Medusa, and so will not tempt you
+to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Make love to her, as I did to Marie," laughed Carruthers.
+"Marie was a pretty little dear; it was very
+severe in you to send her away."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout tried hard to look severe and condemnatory,
+but failed signally, nature had formed the smooth
+brow and the kindly eyes in far too soft a mould.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't jest about it, Philip; you know it was a great
+pain, annoyance, and scandal to me. Well! Félicie is
+gone, and Oakes was seen pawning some of my Mechlin
+the other day, so I have been obliged to discharge <i>her</i>;
+and they both of them suited me so well! Then Bijou
+is ill, poor little pet&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"With repletion of chicken panada?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; Bijou isn't such a gourmet. You judge him by
+yourself, I suppose; men always do! Then Lady Hautton
+told me last night that you were the wildest man on
+town, and at forty&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You think I ought to <i>ranger</i>? So I will, my dear
+mother, some day; but at present I am&mdash;so very comfortable;
+it would be a pity to alter! What pains one's
+friends are always at to tell unpalatable things; if they
+would but be only half so eager to tell us the pleasant
+ones! I shall expect you to cut Lady Hautton if she
+speak badly of me, I can't afford to lose your worship,
+mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"My worship? How conceited you are, Philip! As
+for Lady Hautton, I believe she does dislike you, because
+you did not engage yourself to Adelina, and were selected
+aide-de-camp to her Majesty, instead of Hautton; still, I
+am afraid she spoke too nearly the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Marie has entered her service and told tales."</p>
+
+<p>But Lady Marabout wouldn't laugh, she always looks
+very grave about Marie.</p>
+
+<p>"My worst trouble," she began hastily, "is that your
+aunt Honiton is too ill to come to town; no chance of her
+being well enough to come at all this season; and of
+course the charge of Valencia has devolved on me. You
+know how I hate chaperoning, and I did <i>so</i> hope I should
+be free this year; besides, Valencia is a great responsibility,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+very great; a girl of so much beauty always is;
+there will be sure to be so many men about her at once,
+and your aunt will expect me to marry her so very well.
+It is excessively annoying."</p>
+
+<p>"My poor dear mother!" cried Carruthers. "I grant
+you <i>are</i> an object of pity. You are everlastingly having
+young fillies sent you to break in, and they want such a
+tight hand on the ribbons."</p>
+
+<p>"And a tight hand, as you call it, I never had, and
+never shall have," sighed Lady Marabout. "Valencia
+will be no trouble to me on that score, however; she has
+been admirably educated, knows all that is due to her
+position, and will never give me a moment's anxiety by
+any imprudence or inadvertence. But she is excessively
+handsome, and a beauty is a great responsibility when
+she first comes out."</p>
+
+<p>"Val was always a handsome child, if I remember. I
+dare say she is a beauty now. When is she coming up?
+because I'll tell the men to mark the house and keep
+clear of it," laughed Carruthers. "You're a dreadfully
+dangerous person, mother; you have always the best-looking
+girl in town with you. Fulke Nugent says if he should
+ever want such a thing as a wife when he comes into the
+title, he shall take a look at the Marabout Yearlings
+Sale."</p>
+
+<p>"Abominably rude of you and your friends to talk me
+over in your turf slang! I wish <i>you</i> would come and bid
+at the sale, Philip; I should like to see you married&mdash;well
+married, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"My beloved mother!" cried Carruthers. "Leave me
+in peace, if you please, and catch the others if you can.
+There's Goodey, now; every chaperone and débutante in
+London has set traps for him for the last I don't know
+how many years; wouldn't he do for Valencia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Goodwood? Of course he would; he would do for any
+one; the Dukedom's the oldest in the peerage. Goodwood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+is highly eligible. Thank you for reminding me,
+Philip. Since Valencia is coming, I must do my best for
+her." Which phrase meant with Lady Marabout that
+she must be very lynx-eyed as to settlements, and a perfect
+dragon to all detrimental connections, must frown
+with Medusa severity on all horrors of younger sons, and
+advocate with all the weight of personal experience the
+advantage and agrémens of a good position, in all of which
+practicalities she generally broke down, with humiliation
+unspeakable, immediately her heart was enlisted and her
+sympathies appealed to on the enemy's side. She sighed,
+played with her bracelets thoughtfully, and then, heroically
+resigning herself to her impending fate, brightened
+up a little, and asked her son to go and choose a new
+pair of carriage-horses for her.</p>
+
+<p>To look at Lady Marabout as she sat in her amber
+satin couch that morning, pleasant, smiling, well-dressed,
+well-looking, with the grace of good birth and the sunniness
+of good nature plainly written on her smooth brow
+and her kindly eyes, and wealth&mdash;delicious little god!&mdash;stamping
+itself all about her, from the diamond rings on
+her soft white fingers to the broidered shoe on the feet,
+of whose smallness she was still proud, one might have
+ignorantly imagined her to be the most happy, enviable,
+well-conditioned, easy-going dowager in the United Kingdom.
+But appearances are deceptive, and if we believe
+what she constantly asserted, Lady Marabout was very
+nearly worn into her grave by a thousand troubles;
+her almshouses, whose roofs would eternally blow off
+with each high wind; her dogs, whom she would overfeed;
+her ladies' maids, who were only hired to steal, tease,
+or scandalize her; the begging letter-writers, who distilled
+tears from her eyes and sovereigns from her purse, let
+Carruthers disclose their hypocrisies as he might; the
+bolder begging-letters, written by hon. secs., and headed
+by names with long handles, belonging to Pillars of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+State and Lights of the Church, which compelled her to
+make a miserable choice between a straitened income or a
+remorseful conscience&mdash;tormented, in fine, with worries
+small and large, from her ferns, on which she spent a
+large fortune, and who drooped maliciously in their glass
+cases, with an ill-natured obstinacy characteristic of
+desperately-courted individuals, whether of the floral or
+the human world, to those marriageable young ladies
+whom she took under her wing to usher into the great
+world, and who were certain to run counter to her wishes
+and overthrow her plans, to marry ill, or not marry at all,
+or do something or other to throw discredit on her chaperoning
+abilities. She was, she assured us, <i>pétrie</i> with
+worries, small and large, specially as she was so eminently
+sunny, affable, and radiant a looking person, that all the
+world took their troubles to her, selected her as their confidante,
+and made her the repository of their annoyances;
+but her climax of misery was to be compelled to chaperone,
+and as a petition for some débutante to be intrusted
+to her care was invariably made each season, and "No"
+was a monosyllable into which her lips utterly refused to
+form themselves, each season did her life become a burden
+to her. There was never any rest for the soul of
+Helena, Countess of Marabout, till her house in Lowndes
+Square was shut up, and her charges off her hand, and she
+could return in peace to her jointure-villa at Twickenham,
+or to Carruthers' old Hall of Deepdene, and among
+her flowers, her birds, and her hobbies, throw off for a
+while the weary burden of her worries as a chaperone.</p>
+
+<p>"Valencia will give me little trouble, I hope. So admirably
+brought-up a girl, and so handsome as she is, will
+be sure to marry soon, and marry well," thought Lady
+Marabout, self-congratulatorily, as she dressed for dinner
+the day of her niece's arrival in town, running over mentally
+the qualifications and attractions of Valencia Valletort,
+while Félicie's successor, Mademoiselle Despréaux,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+whose crime was then to put pink with cerise, mauve with
+magenta, and sky-blue with azureline, gave the finishing
+touches to her toilette&mdash;"Valencia will give me no
+trouble; she has all the De Boncoeur beauty, with the
+Valletort dignity. Who would do for her? Let me see;
+eligible men are not abundant, and those that are eligible
+are shy of being marked as Philip would say&mdash;perhaps
+from being hunted so much, poor things! There is Fulke
+Nugent, heir to a barony, and his father is ninety&mdash;very
+rich, too&mdash;he would do; and Philip's friend, Caradoc,
+poor, I know, but their Earldom's the oldest peerage
+patent. There is Eyre Lee, too; I don't much like the
+man, supercilious and empty-headed; still he's an unobjectionable
+alliance. And there is Goodwood. Every
+one has tried for Goodwood, and failed. I should like
+Valencia to win him; he is decidedly the most eligible
+man in town. I will invite him to dinner. If he is not
+attracted by Valencia's beauty, nothing can attract him&mdash;&mdash;<i>Despréaux!
+comme vous êtes bête! Otez ces panaches,
+de grace!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Valencia will give me no trouble; she will marry at
+once," thought Lady Marabout again, looking across the
+dinner-table at her niece.</p>
+
+<p>If any young patrician might be likely to marry at
+once, it was the Hon. Valencia Valletort; she was, to the
+most critical, a beauty: her figure was perfect, her features
+were perfect, and if you complained that her large
+glorious eyes were a trifle too changeless in expression,
+that her cheek, exquisitely independent of Maréchale
+powder, Blanc de Perle, and liquid rouge, though it was,
+rarely varied with her thoughts and feelings, why, you
+were very exacting, my good fellow, and should remember
+that nothing is quite perfect on the face of the earth&mdash;not
+even a racer or a woman&mdash;and that whether you
+bid at the Marabout yearling sales or the Rawcliffe, if
+you wish to be pleased you'd better leave a hypercritical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+spirit behind you, and not expect to get <i>all</i> points to your
+liking. The best filly will have something faulty in
+temper or breeding, symmetry or pace, for your friend
+Jack Martingale to have the fun of pointing out to you
+when your money is paid and the filly in your stall; and
+your wife will have the same, only Martingale will point
+<i>her</i> flaws out behind your back, and only hint them to
+you with an all-expressive "Not allowed to smoke in the
+dining-room <i>now</i>!" "A little bit of a flirt, madame&mdash;n'est-ce
+pas, Charlie?" "Reins kept rather tight, eh, old
+fellow?" or something equally ambiguous, significant, and
+unpleasant.</p>
+
+<p>"I must consider, Philip, I have brought out the beauty
+of the season," said Lady Marabout to Carruthers, eying
+her niece as she danced at her first ball at the Dowager-Duchess
+of Amandine's, and beginning to brighten up a
+little under the weight of her responsibilities.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you have, mother. Val's indisputably handsome.
+You must tell her to make play with Goodwood or
+Nugent."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout unfurled her fan, and indignantly interrupted
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip! do you suppose I would teach Valencia,
+or any girl under my charge, to lay herself out for
+any man, whoever or whatever it might be? I trust
+your cousin would not stoop to use such man[oe]uvres, did
+I even stoop to counsel them. Depend upon it, Philip,
+it is precisely those women who try to 'make play,' as
+you call it, with your sex that fail most to charm them.
+It is abominable the way in which you men talk, as if we
+all hunted you down, and would drive you to St. George's
+<i>nolens volens</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"So you would, mother," laughed Carruthers. "We
+'eligible men' have a harder life of it than rabbits in a
+warren, with a dozen beagles after them. From the minute
+we're of age we're beset with traps for the unwary, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+the spring-guns are so dexterously covered, with an inviting,
+innocent-looking turf of courtesies and hospitalities
+that it's next to a mural impossibility to escape them, let
+one retire into one's self, keep to monosyllables through all
+the courses of all the dinners and all the turns of all the
+valses, and avoid everything 'compromising,' as one may.
+I've suffered, and can tell you. I suffer still, though I
+believe and hope they are beginning to look on me as an
+incurable, given over to the clubs, the coulisses, and the
+cover-side. There's a fellow that's known still more of
+the <i>peines fortes et dures</i> than I. Goodwood's coming to
+ask for an introduction to Val, I would bet."</p>
+
+<p>He was coming for that purpose, and, though Lady
+Marabout had so scornfully and sincerely repudiated her
+son's counsel relative to making play with Goodwood,
+blandly ignorant of her own weaknesses like a good many
+other people, Lady Marabout was not above a glow of
+chaperone gratification when she saw the glance of admiration
+which the Pet Eligible of the season bestowed on
+Valencia Valletort. Goodwood was a good-looking fellow&mdash;a
+clever fellow&mdash;though possibly he shone best alone
+at a mess luncheon, in a chat driving to Hornsey Wood,
+round the fire in a smoking-room, on a yacht deck, or anywhere
+where ladies of the titled world were not encountered,
+he having become afraid of them by dint of much
+persecution, as any October partridge of a setter's nose.
+He was passably good-looking, ordinarily clever, a very
+good fellow as I say, and&mdash;he was elder son of his Grace
+of Doncaster, which fact would have made him the desired
+of every unit of the <i>beau sexe</i>, had he been hideous
+as the Veiled Prophet or Brutal Gilles de Rayes. The
+Beauty often loves the Beast in our day, as in the days
+of fairy lore. We see that beloved story of our petticoat
+days not seldom acted out, and when there is no possibility
+of personal transmogrification and amelioration for
+the Beast moreover; only&mdash;the Beauty has always had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+whispered in her little ear the title she will win, and the
+revenues she will gain, and the cloth of gold she will wear,
+if she caresses Bruin the enamoured, swears his ugly head
+is god-like, and vows fidelity unswerving!</p>
+
+<p>Goodwood was no uncouth Bruin, and he had strawberry-leaves
+in his gift; none of your lacquered, or ormolu,
+or silver-gilt coronets, such as are cast about nowadays
+with a liberality that reminds one of flinging a handful of
+halfpence from a balcony, where the nimblest beggar is
+first to get the prize; but of the purest and best gold; and
+Goodwood had been tried for accordingly by every woman
+he came across for the last dozen years. Women of every
+style and every order had primed all their rifles, and had
+their shot at him, and done their best to make a centre
+and score themselves as winner: belles and bas bleus,
+bewitching widows and budding débutantes, fast young
+ladies who tried to capture him in the hunting-field by
+clearing a bullfinch; saintly young ladies, who illuminated
+missals, and hinted they would like to take his conversion
+in hand; brilliant women, who talked at him all
+through a long rainy day, when Perthshire was flooded,
+and the black-fowl unattainable; showy women, who
+<i>posê'd</i> for him whole evenings in their opera-boxes, whole
+mornings in their boudoir&mdash;all styles and orders had set
+at him, till he had sometimes sworn in his haste that all
+women were man-traps, and that he wished to Heaven he
+were a younger son in the Foreign Office, or a poor devil
+in the Line, or anything, rather than what he was; the
+Pet Eligible of his day.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodwood is certainly struck with her," thought Lady
+Marabout, as Despréaux disrobed her that night, running
+over with a retrogressive glance Valencia Valletort's successes
+at her first ball. "Very much struck, indeed, I
+should say. I will issue cards for another 'At Home.'
+As for 'making play' with him, as Philip terms it, of
+course that is only a man's nonsense. Valencia will need<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+none of those trickeries, I trust; still, it is any one's duty
+to make the best alliance possible for such a girl, and&mdash;dear
+Adeliza would be very pleased."</p>
+
+<p>With which amiable remembrance of her sister (whom,
+conceiving it her duty to love, Lady Marabout persuaded
+herself that she <i>did</i> love, from a common feminine opticism
+that there's an eleventh commandment which makes
+it compulsory to be attached to relatives <i>n'importe</i> of
+whatever degree of disagreeability, though Lady Honiton
+was about the most odious hypochondriac going, in a perpetual
+state of unremitting battle with the whole outer
+world in general, and allopathists, hom[oe]opathists, and
+hydropathists in especial), the most amiable lady in all
+Christendom bade Despréaux bring up her cup of coffee
+an hour earlier in the morning, she had so much to do!
+asked if Bijou had had some panada set down by his
+basket in case he wanted something to take in the night;
+wished her maid good night, and laid her head on her
+pillow as the dawn streamed through the shutters, already
+settling what bridal presents she should give her niece
+Valencia, when she became present Marchioness of Goodwood
+and prospective Duchess of Doncaster before the
+altar rails of St. George's.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a decidedly handsome girl, that cousin of yours,
+Phil," said Goodwood, on the pavement before her Grace
+of Amandine's, in Grosvenor Place, at the same hour that
+night.</p>
+
+<p>"I think she <i>is</i> counted like me!" said Carruthers. "Of
+course she's handsome; hasn't she De Bonc[oe]ur blood in
+her, my good fellow? We're all of us good-looking, always
+have been, thank God! If you're inclined to sacrifice,
+Goodwood, now's your time, and my mother'll be delighted.
+She's brought out about half a million of débutantes,
+I should say, in her time, and all of 'em have
+gone wrong, somehow; wouldn't go off at all, like damp
+gunpowder, or would go off too quick in the wrong direction,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+like a volunteer's rifle charge; married ignominiously,
+or married obstinately, or never excited pity in the breast
+of any man, but had to retire to single-blessedness in the
+country, console themselves with piety and an harmonium,
+and spread nets for young clerical victims. Give her a
+triumph at last, and let her have glory for once, as a
+chaperone, in catching <i>you</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Goodwood gave a little shiver, and tried to light a
+Manilla, which utterly refused to take light, for the
+twelfth time in half a minute.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue! If the Templars' Order were extant,
+wouldn't I take the vows and bless them! What an
+unspeakable comfort and protection that white cross would
+be to us, Phil, if we could stick it on our coats, and know
+it would say to every woman that looked at us, 'No go,
+my pretty little dears&mdash;not to be caught!' Marriage! I
+can't remember any time that that word wasn't my bugbear.
+When I was but a little chicken, some four years
+old, I distinctly remember, when I was playing with little
+Ida Keane on the terrace, hearing her mother simper to
+mine, 'Perhaps darling Goodwood may marry my little
+Ida some day, who knows?' I never would play with Ida
+afterwards; instinct preserved me; she's six or seven-and
+thirty now, and weighs ten stone, I'm positive. Why <i>won't</i>
+they let us alone? The way journalists and dowagers, the
+fellows who want to write a taking article, and the women
+who want to get rid of a taking daughter, all badger us, in
+public and private, about marriage just now, is abominable,
+on my life; the affair's <i>ours</i>, I should say, not theirs, and
+to marry isn't the ultimatum of a man's existence, nor
+anything like it."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not! It's more like the extinguisher. Good
+night, old fellow." And Carruthers drove away in his
+hansom, while Goodwood got into his night-brougham,
+thinking that for the sake of the title, the evil (nuptial)
+day <i>must</i> come, sooner or later, but dashed off to forget<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+the disagreeable obligation over the supper-table of the
+most sparkling empress of the demi-monde.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout had her wish; she brought out the belle
+of the season, and when a little time had slipped by, when
+the Hon. Val had been presented at the first Drawing-room,
+and shone there despite the worry, muddle, and
+squeeze incidental to that royal and fashionable ceremony,
+and she had gathered second-hand from her son what was
+said in the clubs relative to this new specimen of the
+Valletort beauty, she began to be happier under her duties
+than she had ever been before, and wrote letters to "dearest
+Adeliza," brimful of superlative adjectives and genuine
+warmth.</p>
+
+<p>"Valencia will do me credit: I shall see her engaged
+before the end of June; she will have only to choose,"
+Lady Marabout would say to herself some twenty times
+in the pauses of the morning concerts, the morning parties,
+the bazaar committees, the toilette consultations, the audiences
+to religious beggars, whose name was Legion and
+rapacity unmeasured, the mass of unanswered correspondence
+whose debt lay as heavily on Lady Marabout as his
+chains on a convict, and were about as little likely to be
+knocked off, and all the other things innumerable that
+made her life in the season one teetotum whirl of small
+worries and sunshiny cares, from the moment she began
+her day, with her earliest cup of Mocha softened with
+cream from that pet dairy of hers at Fernditton, where,
+according to Lady Marabout, the cows were constantly
+<i>in articulo mortis</i>, but the milk invariably richer than
+anywhere else, an agricultural anomaly which presented
+no difficulties to <i>her</i> reason. Like all women, she loved
+paradoxes, defied logic recklessly, and would clear at a
+bound a chasm of solecisms that would have kept Plato
+in difficulties about crossing it, and in doubt about the
+strength of his jumping-pole, all his life long.</p>
+
+<p>"She will do me great credit," the semi-consoled chaperone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+would say to herself with self-congratulatory relief;
+and if Lady Marabout thought now and then, "I wish she
+were a trifle&mdash;a trifle more&mdash;demonstrative," she instantly
+checked such an ungrateful and hypercritical
+wish, and remembered that a heart is a highly treacherous
+and unadvisable possession for any young lady, and
+a most happy omission in her anatomy, though Lady
+Marabout had, she would confess to herself on occasions
+with great self-reproach, an unworthy and lingering weakness
+for that contraband article, for which she scorned and
+scolded herself with the very worst success.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout <i>had</i> a heart herself; to it she had had
+to date the greatest worries, troubles, imprudences, and
+vexations of her life; she had had to thank it for nothing,
+and to dislike it for much; it had made her grieve most
+absurdly for other people's griefs; it had given her a
+hundred unphilosophical pangs at philosophic ingratitude
+from people who wanted her no longer; it had teased,
+worried, and plagued her all her life long, had often interfered
+in the most meddling and inconvenient manner
+between her and her reason, her comfort and her prudence;
+and yet she had a weakness for the same detrimental
+organ in other people&mdash;a weakness of which she
+could no more have cured herself than of her belief in
+the detection-defying powers of liquid rouge, the potentiality
+of a Liliputian night-bolt against an army of burglars,
+the miraculous properties of sal volatile, the efficacy
+of sermons, and such-like articles of faith common to
+feminine orthodoxy. A weakness of which she never felt
+more ignominiously convicted and more secretly ashamed
+than in the presence of Miss Valletort, that young lady
+having a lofty and magnificent disdain for all such follies,
+quite unattainable to ordinary mortals, which oppressed
+Lady Marabout with a humiliating sense of inferiority to
+her niece of eighteen summers. "So admirably educated!
+so admirably brought up!" she would say to herself over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+and over again, and if heretic suggestions that the stiffest
+trained flowers are not always the best, that the upright
+and spotless arum-lily isn't so fragrant as the careless,
+brilliant, tangled clematis; that rose-boughs, tossing free
+in sunshine and liberty, beat hollow the most carefully-pruned
+standard that ever won a medal at Regent's Park,
+with such-like allegories, arising from contemplation of
+her conservatory or her balcony flowers, <i>would</i> present
+themselves, Lady Marabout repressed them dutifully, and
+gratefully thought how many pounds' weight lighter became
+the weary burden of a chaperone's responsibilities
+when the onerous charge had been educated "on the best
+system."</p>
+
+<p>"Goodwood's attentions <i>are</i> serious, Philip, say what
+you like," said the Countess to her son, as determinedly
+as a theologian states his pet points with wool in his ears,
+that he may not hear any Satan-inspired, rational, and
+mathematical disproval of them, with which you may
+rashly seek to soil his tympana and smash his arguments&mdash;"Goodwood's
+attentions <i>are</i> serious, Philip, say what
+you like," said her ladyship, at a morning party at Kew,
+eating her Neapolitan ice, complacently glancing at the
+"most eligible alliance of the season," who was throwing
+the balls at lawn-billiards, and talking between whiles to
+the Hon. Val with praiseworthy and promising animation.</p>
+
+<p>"Serious indeed, mother, if they tend matrimony-wards!"
+smiled Carruthers. "It's a very serious time indeed for
+unwary sparrows when they lend an ear to the call-bird,
+and think about hopping on to the lime-twigs. I should
+think it's from a sense of compunction for the net you've
+led us into, that you all particularize our attentions, whenever
+they point near St. George's, by that very suggestive
+little adjective 'serious!' Yes, I am half afraid poor
+Goodey is a little touched. He threw over our Derby
+sweepstakes up at Hornsey Wood yesterday to go and
+stifle himself in Willis's rooms at your bazaar, and buy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+a guinea cup of Souchong from Valencia; and, considering
+he's one of the best shots in England, I don't think
+you could have a more conclusive, if you could have a more
+poetic, proof of devoted renunciation. <i>I</i>'d fifty times
+rather get a spear in my side, à la Ivanhoe, for a woman
+than give up a Pigeon-match, a Cup-day, or a Field-night!"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll never do either!" laughed Lady Marabout,
+who made it one of her chief troubles that her son would
+not marry, chiefly, probably, because if he <i>had</i> married
+she would have been miserable, and thought no woman
+good enough for him, would have been jealous of his
+wife's share of his heart, and supremely wretched, I have
+no doubt, at his throwing himself away, as she would have
+thought it, had his handkerchief lighted on a Princess
+born, lovely as Galatea, and blessed with Venus's cestus.</p>
+
+<p>"Never, <i>plaise à Dieu</i>!" responded her son, piously over
+his ice; "but if Goodwood's serious, what's Cardonnel?
+<i>He</i>'s lost his head, if you like, after the Valletort beauty."</p>
+
+<p>"Major Cardonnel!" said Lady Marabout, hastily.
+"Oh no, I don't think so. I hope not&mdash;I trust not."</p>
+
+<p>"Why so? He's one of the finest fellows in the
+Service."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say; but you see, my dear Philip, he's not&mdash;not&mdash;desirable."</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers stroked his moustaches and laughed:</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, fie, mother! if all other Belgraviennes are Mammon-worshippers,
+I thought you kept clear of the paganism.
+I thought your freedom from it was the only touch
+by which you weren't 'purely feminine,' as the lady novelists
+say of their pet bits of chill propriety."</p>
+
+<p>"Worship Mammon! Heaven forbid!" ejaculated
+Lady Marabout. "But there are duties, you see, my
+dear; your friend is a very delightful man, to be sure; I
+like him excessively, and if Valencia felt any <i>great</i> preference
+for him&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You'd feel it <i>your</i> duty to counsel her to throw him
+over for Goodwood."</p>
+
+<p>"I never said so, Philip," interrupted Lady Marabout,
+with as near an approach to asperity as she could achieve,
+which approach was less like vinegar than most people's
+best honey.</p>
+
+<p>"But you implied it. What are 'duties' else, and why
+is poor Cardonnel 'not desirable'?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout played a little tattoo with her spoon in
+perplexity.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, you know as well as I do what I
+mean. One might think you were a boy of twenty to
+hear you!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, like all disputants, when beaten in
+argument and driven into a corner, you resort to vituperation
+of your opponent!" laughed Carruthers, as he left
+her and lounged away to pick up the stick with which
+pretty Flora Elmers had just knocked the pipe out of
+Aunt Sally's head on to the velvet lawn of Lady George
+Frangipane's dower-house, leaving his mother by no means
+tranquillized by his suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me!" thought Lady Marabout, uneasily, as she
+conversed with the Dowager-Countess of Patchouli on the
+respective beauties of two new pelargonium seedlings, the
+Leucadia and the Beatrice, for which her gardener had
+won prizes the day before at the Regent's Park Show&mdash;"dear
+me! why is there invariably this sort of cross-purposes
+in everything? It will be so grievous to lose
+Goodwood (and he <i>is</i> decidedly struck with her; when he
+bought that rosebud yesterday of her at the bazaar, and
+put it in the breast of his waistcoat, I heard what he said,
+and it was no nonsense, no mere flirting complaisance
+either)&mdash;it would be so grievous to lose him; and yet if
+Valencia really care for Cardonnel&mdash;and sometimes I
+almost fancy she does&mdash;I shouldn't know which way
+to advise. I thought it would be odd if a season could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+pass quietly without my having some worry of this sort!
+With fifty men always about Valencia, as they are, how
+<i>can</i> I be responsible for any mischief that may happen,
+though, to hear Philip talk, one would really imagine it
+was <i>my</i> fault that they lost their heads, as he calls it! As
+if a forty-horse steam-power could stop a man when he's
+once off down the incline into love! The more you try
+to pull him back the more impetus you give him to go
+headlong down. I wish Goodwood would propose, and
+we could settle the affair definitively. It is singular, but
+she has had no offers hardly with all her beauty. It is
+very singular, in <i>my</i> first season I had almost as many as
+I had names on my tablets at Almack's. But men don't
+marry now, they say. Perhaps 'tisn't to be wondered at,
+though I wouldn't allow it to Philip. Poor things! they
+lose a very great many pleasant things by it, and get
+nothing, I'm sure, nine times out of ten, except increased
+expenses and unwelcome worries. I don't think I would
+have married if I'd been a man, though I'd never admit
+it, of course, to one of them. There are plenty of women
+who know too much of their own sex ever to wonder that
+a man doesn't marry, though of course we don't say so;
+'twouldn't be to our interest. Sculptors might as well
+preach iconoclasm, or wine-merchants tee-totalism, as
+women misoganism, however little in our hearts we may
+marvel at it. Oh, my dear Lady Patchouli! you praise
+the Leucadia too kindly&mdash;you do indeed&mdash;but if you
+really think so much of it, let me send you some slips. I
+shall be most happy, and Fenton will be only too proud;
+it is his favorite seedling."</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers was quite right. One fellow at least had lost
+his head after the beauty of the season, and he was Cardonnel,
+of the&mdash;Lancers, as fine a fellow, as Philip said,
+as any in the Queen's, but a dreadful detrimental in the
+eyes of all chaperones, because he was but the fourth son
+of one of the poorest peers in the United Kingdom, a fact<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+which gave him an ægis from all assaults matrimonial,
+and a freedom from all smiles and wiles, traps and
+gins, which Goodwood was accustomed to tell him he bitterly
+envied him, and on which Cardonnel had fervently
+congratulated himself, till he came under the fire of the
+Hon. Val's large luminous eyes one night, when he was
+levelling his glass from his stall at Lady Marabout's box,
+to take a look at the new belle, as advised to do by that
+most fastidious female critic, Vane Steinberg. Valencia
+Valletort's luminous eyes had gleamed that night under
+their lashes, and pierced through the lenses of his lorgnon.
+He saw her, and saw nothing but her afterwards, as men
+looking on the sun keep it on their retina to the damage
+and exclusion of all other objects.</p>
+
+<p>Physical beauty, even when it is a little bit soulless, is
+an admirable weapon for instantaneous slaughter, and the
+trained and pruned standard roses show a very effective
+mass of bloom; though, as Lady Marabout's floral tastes
+and experiences told her, they don't give one the lasting
+pleasure that a careless bough of wild rose will do, with
+its untutored grace and its natural fragrance. With the
+standard you see we keep in the artificial air of the horticultural
+tent, and are never touched out of it for a second;
+its perfume seems akin to a bouquet, and its destiny
+is, we are sure, to a parterre. The wild-rose fragrance
+breathes of the hill-side and the woodlands, and brings
+back to us soft touches of memory, of youth, of a fairer
+life and a purer air than that in which we are living now.</p>
+
+<p>The Hon. Val did <i>not</i> have as many offers as her aunt
+and chaperone had on the first flush of her pride in her
+anticipated. Young ladies, educated on the "best systems,"
+are apt to be a trifle wearisome, and <i>don't</i>, somehow
+or other, take so well as the sedulous efforts of their
+pruners and trainers&mdash;the rarefied moral atmosphere of
+the conservatories, in which they are carefully screened
+from ordinary air, and the anxiety evinced lest the flower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+should ever forget itself, and sway naturally in the wind&mdash;deserve.
+But Cardonnel had gone mad after her, that
+perfect face of hers had done for him; and whatever Goodwood
+might be, <i>he</i> was serious&mdash;he positively haunted the
+young beauty like her own shadow&mdash;he was leaning on
+the rails every morning of his life that she took her early
+ride&mdash;he sent her bouquets as lavishly as if he'd been a
+nursery gardener. By some species of private surveillance,
+or lover's clairvoyance, he knew beforehand where
+she would go, and was at the concert, fête, morning party,
+bazaar, or whatever it happened to be, as surely as was
+Lady Marabout herself. Poor Cardonnel was serious, and
+fiercely fearful of his all-powerful and entirely eligible
+rival; though greater friends than he and Goodwood had
+been, before this girl's face appeared on the world of Belgravia,
+never lounged arm-in-arm into Pratt's, or strolled
+down the "sweet shady side of Pall-Mall."</p>
+
+<p>Goodwood's attentions were very marked, too, even to
+eyes less willing to construe them so than Lady Marabout's.
+Goodwood himself, if chaffed on the subject, vouchsafed
+nothing; laughed, stroked his moustaches, or puffed his
+cigar, if he happened to have that blessed resource in all
+difficulties, and comforter under all embarrassments, between
+his lips at the moment; but decidedly he sought
+Valencia Valletort more, or, to speak more correctly, he
+shunned her less than he'd ever done any other young
+lady, and one or two Sunday mornings&mdash;<i>mirabile dictu!</i>&mdash;he
+was positively seen at St. Paul's, Knightsbridge, in
+the seat behind Lady Marabout's sittings. A fact which,
+combining as it did a brace of miracles at once, of early
+rising and unusual piety, set every Belgravienne in that
+fashionable sanctuary watching over the top of her illuminated
+prayer-book, to the utter destruction of her hopes
+and interruption of her orisons.</p>
+
+<p>Dowagers began to tremble behind their fans, young
+ladies to quake over their bouquets; the topic was eagerly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+discussed by every woman from Clarges Street to Lowndes
+Square; their Graces of Doncaster smiled well pleased on
+Valencia&mdash;she was unquestionable blood, and they so
+wished dear Goodwood to settle! There was whispered an
+awful whisper to the whole female world; whispered over
+matutinal chocolate, and luncheon Strasbourg pâtés, ball-supper
+Moëts', and demi-monde-supper Silleri, over Vane
+Steinberg's cigar and Eulalie Rosière's cigarette, over the
+<i>Morning Post</i> in the clubs, and <i>Le Follet</i> in the boudoir,
+that&mdash;the Pet Eligible would&mdash;marry! That the Pet
+Prophecy of universal smash was going to be fulfilled
+could hardly have occasioned greater consternation.</p>
+
+<p>The soul of Lady Marabout had been disquieted ever
+since her son's suggestions at Lady George Frangipane's
+morning party, and she began to worry: for herself, for
+Valencia, for Goodwood, for Cardonnel, for her responsibilities
+in general, and for her "dearest Adeliza's" alternate
+opinions of her duenna qualifications in particular.
+Lady Marabout had an intense wish, an innocent wish
+enough, as innocent and very similar in its way to that
+of an Eton boy to make a centre at a rifle-contest, viz., to
+win the Marquis of Goodwood; innocent, surely, for
+though neither the rifle prize nor the Pet Eligible could
+be won without mortification unspeakable to a host of
+unsuccessful aspirants, if we decree that sort of thing
+sinful and selfish, as everything natural seems to me to
+get decreed nowadays, we may as well shut up at once;
+if we may not try for the top of the pole, why erect poles
+at all, monsieur? If we must not do our best to pass
+our friend and brother, we must give up climbing forever,
+and go on all fours placably with Don and Pontos.</p>
+
+<p>Everybody has his ambition: one sighs for the Woolsack,
+another for the Hunt Cup; somebody longs to be
+First Minister, somebody else pines to be first dancer; one
+man plumes himself on a new fish-sauce, another on a fresh
+reform bill; A. thirsts to get a single brief, B. for the time<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+when he shall be worried with no briefs at all; C. sets his
+hopes on being the acrobat at Cremorne, D. on being the
+acrobat of the Tuileries; fat bacon is Hodge the hedger's
+<i>summum bonum</i>, and Johannisberg <i>pur</i> is mine; Empedocles
+thinks notoriety everything, and Diogenes thinks
+quiet everything&mdash;each has his own reading of ambition,
+and Lady Marabout had hers; the Duchess of Doncaster
+thirsted for the Garter for her husband, Lady Elmers's
+pride was to possess the smallest terrier that ever took
+daisy tea and was carried in a monkey-muff, her Grace of
+Amandine slaved night and day to bring her party in and
+throw the ministry out. Lady Marabout sighed but for
+one thing&mdash;to win the Pet Eligible of the season, and give
+éclat for once to one phase of her chaperone's existence.</p>
+
+<p>Things were nicely in train. Goodwood was beginning
+to bite at that very handsome fly the Hon. Val, and promised
+to be hooked and landed without much difficulty
+before long, and placed, hopelessly for him, triumphantly
+for her, in the lime-basket of matrimony. Things were
+beautifully in train, and Lady Marabout was for once flattering
+herself she should float pleasantly through an unruffled
+and successful season, when Carruthers poured the
+one drop of <i>amari aliquid</i> into her champagne-cup by his
+suggestion of Cardonnel's doom. And then Lady Marabout
+begun to worry.</p>
+
+<p>She who could not endure to see a fly hurt or a flower
+pulled needlessly, had nothing for it but to worry for Cardonnel's
+destiny, and puzzle over the divided duties which
+Carruthers had hinted to her. To reject the one man because
+he was not well off did seem to her conscience, uncomfortably
+awakened by Phil's innuendoes, something
+more mercenary than she quite liked to look at; yet to
+throw over the other, future Duke of Doncaster, the eligible,
+the darling, the yearned-for of all May Fair and Belgravia,
+seemed nothing short of madness to inculcate to
+Valencia; a positive treason to that poor absent, trusting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+"dearest Adeliza," who, after the visions epistolarily
+spread out before her, would utterly refuse to be comforted
+if Goodwood any way failed to become her son-in-law,
+and, moreover, the heaviest blow to Lady Marabout herself
+that the merciless axe of that brutal headsman Contretemps
+could deal her.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know really what to do or what to advise,"
+would Lady Marabout say to herself over and over again
+(so disturbed by her onerous burden of responsibilities
+that she would let Despréaux arrange the most outrageous
+coiffures, and, never noticing them, go out to dinner with
+emeralds on blue velvet, or something as shocking to
+feminine nerves in her temporary aberration), forgetting
+one very great point, which, remembered, would have
+saved her all trouble, that nobody asked her to do anything,
+and not a soul requested her advice. "But Goodwood
+is decidedly won, and Goodwood must not be lost;
+in our position we owe something to society," she would
+invariably conclude these mental debates; which last
+phase, being of a vagueness and obscure application that
+might have matched it with any Queen's speech or electional
+address upon record, was a mysterious balm to
+Lady Marabout's soul, and spoke volumes to <i>her</i>, if a
+trifle hazy to you and to me.</p>
+
+<p>But Lady Marabout, if she was a little bit of a sophist,
+had not worn her eye-glass all these years without being
+keen-sighted on some subjects, and, though perfectly satisfied
+with her niece's conduct with Goodwood, saw certain
+symptoms which made her tremble lest the detrimental
+Lancer should have won greater odds than the eligible
+Marquis.</p>
+
+<p>"Arthur Cardonnel is excessively handsome! Such
+very good style! Isn't it a pity they're all so poor!
+His father played away everything&mdash;literally everything.
+The sons have no more to marry upon, any one of them,
+than if they were three crossing-sweepers," said her ladyship,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+carelessly, driving home from St. Paul's one Sunday
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>And, watching the effect of her stray arrow, she had
+beheld an actual flush on the beauty's fair, impassive
+cheek, and had positively heard a smothered sigh from
+an admirably brought-up heart, no more given ordinarily
+to such weaknesses than the diamond-studded heart pendent
+from her bracelet, the belle's heart and the bracelet's
+heart being both formed alike, to fetch their price, and
+bid to do no more:&mdash;power of volition would have been
+as inconvenient in, and interfered as greatly with, the
+sale of one as of the other.</p>
+
+<p>"She does like him!" sighed Lady Marabout over that
+Sabbath's luncheon wines. "It's always my fate&mdash;always;
+and Goodwood, never won before, will be thrown&mdash;actually
+thrown&mdash;away, as if he were the younger son
+of a Nobody!" which horrible waste was so terrible to
+her imagination that Lady Marabout could positively
+have shed tears at the bare prospect, and might have shed
+them, too, if the Hon. Val, the butler, two footmen, and
+a page had not inconveniently happened to be in the room
+at the time, so that she was driven to restrain her feelings
+and drink some Amontillado instead. Lady Marabout
+is not the first person by a good many who has had to
+smile over sherry with a breaking heart. Ah! lips have
+quivered as they laughed over Chambertin, and trembled
+as they touched the bowl of a champagne-glass. Wine
+has assisted at many a joyous festa enough, but some that
+has been drunk in gayety has caught gleams, in the
+eyes of the drinkers, of salt water brighter than its
+brightest sparkles: water that no other eyes can see.
+Because we may drink Badminton laughingly when the
+gaze of Society the Non-Sympathetic is on us, do you
+think we must never have tasted any more bitter dregs?
+<i>Va-t'en, bécasse!</i> where have you lived! Nero does not
+always fiddle while Rome is burning from utter heartlessness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+believe me, but rather&mdash;sometimes, perhaps&mdash;because
+his heart is aching!</p>
+
+<p>"Goodwood will propose to-night, I fancy, he is so
+very attentive," thought Lady Marabout, sitting with her
+sister chaperones on the cosy causeuses of a mansion in
+Carlton Terrace, at one of the last balls of the departing
+season. "I never saw dear Valencia look better, and
+certainly her waltzing is&mdash;&mdash;Ah! good evening, Major
+Cardonnel! Very warm to-night, is it not? I shall be
+so glad when I am down again at Fernditton. Town, in
+the first week of July, is really not habitable."</p>
+
+<p>And she furled her fan, and smiled on him with her
+pleasant eyes, and couldn't help wishing he hadn't been
+on the Marchioness Rondeletia's visiting list, he <i>was</i> such
+a detrimental, and he was ten times handsomer than
+Goodwood!</p>
+
+<p>"Will Miss Valletort leave you soon?" asked Cardonnel,
+sitting down by her.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ah! monsieur, vous êtes là!</i>" thought Lady Marabout,
+as she answered, like a guarded diplomatist as she was,
+that it was not all settled at present what her niece's post-season
+destiny would be, whether Devon or Fernditton, or
+the Spas, with her mother, Lady Honiton; and then
+unfurled her fan again, and chatted about Baden and her
+own indecision as to whether she should go there this
+September.</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask you a question, and will you pardon me
+for its plainness?" asked Cardonnel, when she'd exhausted
+Baden's desirable and non-desirable points.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout shuddered as she bent her head, and
+thought, "The creature is never going to confide in me!
+He will win me over if he do, he looks so like his mother!
+And what shall I say to Adeliza!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is your niece engaged to Goodwood or not?"</p>
+
+<p>If ever a little fib was tempting to any lady, from Eve
+downward, it was tempting to Lady Marabout now! A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+falsehood would settle everything, send Cardonnel off the
+field, and clear all possibility of losing the "best match
+of the season." Besides, if not engaged to Goodwood
+actually to-night, Val would be, if she liked, to-morrow,
+or the next day, or before the week was over at the furthest&mdash;would
+it be such a falsehood after all? She colored,
+she fidgeted her fan, she longed for the little fib!&mdash;how
+terribly tempting it looked! But Lady Marabout is a
+bad hand at prevarication, and she hates a lie, and she
+answered bravely, with a regretful twinge, "Engaged?
+No; not&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet! Thank God!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout stared at him and at the words muttered
+under his moustaches:</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Major Cardonnel, I do not see why you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Should thank Heaven for it? Yet I do&mdash;it is a reprieve.
+Lady Marabout, you and my mother were close
+friends; will you listen to me for a second, while we are
+not overheard? That I have loved your niece&mdash;had the
+madness to love her, if you will&mdash;you cannot but have
+seen; that she has given me some reasonable encouragement
+it is no coxcombry to say, though I have known
+from the first what a powerful rival I had against me;
+but that Valencia loves me and does not love him, I believe&mdash;nay,
+I <i>know</i>. I have said nothing decided to her;
+when all hangs on a single die we shrink from hazarding
+the throw. But I must know my fate to-night. If she
+come to you&mdash;as girls will, I believe, sometimes&mdash;for
+countenance and counsel, will you stand my friend?&mdash;will
+you, for the sake of my friendship with your son,
+your friendship with my mother, support my cause, and
+uphold what I believe Valencia's heart will say in my
+favor?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout was silent: no Andalusian ever worried
+her fan more ceaselessly in coquetry than she did in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+perplexity. Her heart was appealed to, and when that
+was enlisted, Lady Marabout was lost!</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but&mdash;my dear Major Cardonnel, you are
+aware&mdash;&mdash;" she began, and stopped. I should suppose
+it may be a little awkward to tell a man to his face he is
+"not desirable!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am aware that I cannot match with Goodwood? I
+am; but I know, also, that Goodwood's love cannot match
+with mine, and that your niece's affection is not his. That
+he may win her I know women too well not to fear, therefore
+I ask <i>you</i> to be my friend. If she refuse me, will
+you plead for me?&mdash;if she ask for counsel, will you give
+such as your own heart dictates (I ask no other)&mdash;and,
+will you remember that on Valencia's answer will rest
+the fate of a man's lifetime?"</p>
+
+<p>He rose and left her, but the sound of his voice rang
+in Lady Marabout's ears, and the tears welled into her
+eyes: "Dear, dear! how like he looked to his poor dear
+mother! But what a position to place me in! Am I
+<i>never</i> to have any peace?"</p>
+
+<p>Not at this ball, at any rate. Of all the worried chaperones
+and distracted duennas who hid their anxieties
+under pleasant smiles or affable lethargy, none were a
+quarter so miserable as Helena, Lady Marabout. Her
+heart and her head were enlisted on opposite sides; her
+wishes pulled one way, her sympathies another; her sense
+of justice to Cardonnel urged her to one side, her sense
+of duty to "dearest Adeliza" urged her to the other;
+her pride longed for one alliance, her heart yearned for
+the other. Cardonnel had confided in her and appealed
+to her; <i>sequitur</i>, Lady Marabout's honor would not allow
+her to go against him: yet, it was nothing short of grossest
+treachery to poor Adeliza, down there in Devon, expecting
+every day to congratulate her daughter on a
+prospective duchy won, to counsel Valencia to take one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+of these beggared Cardonnels, and, besides&mdash;to lose all
+her own laurels, to lose the capture of Goodwood!</p>
+
+<p>No Guelphs and Ghibelins, no Royalists and Imperialists,
+ever fought so hard as Lady Marabout's divided
+duties.</p>
+
+<p>"Valencia, Major Cardonnel spoke to me to-night,"
+began that best-hearted and most badgered of ladies, as
+she sat before her dressing-room fire that night, alone
+with her niece.</p>
+
+<p>Valencia smiled slightly, and a faint idea crossed Lady
+Marabout's mind that Valencia's smile was hardly a
+pleasant one, a trifle too much like the play of moonbeams
+on ice.</p>
+
+<p>"He spoke to me about you."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you can guess, my dear, what he said?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am no clairvoyante, aunt;" and Miss Val yawned
+a little, and held out one of her long slender feet to admire
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Every woman, my love, becomes half a clairvoyante
+when she is in love," said Lady Marabout, a little bit
+impatiently; she hadn't been brought up on the best
+systems herself, and though she admired the refrigeration
+(on principle), it irritated her just a little now and
+then. "Did he&mdash;did he say anything to <i>you</i> to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"And what did you answer him, my love?"</p>
+
+<p>"What would you advise me?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout sighed, coughed, played nervously with
+the tassels of her peignoir, crumpled Bijou's ears with a
+reckless disregard to that priceless pet's feelings, and
+wished herself at the bottom of the Serpentine. Cardonnel
+had trusted her, she couldn't desert <i>him</i>; poor
+dear Adeliza had trusted her, she couldn't betray <i>her</i>;
+what was right to one would be wrong to the other, and
+to reconcile her divided duties was a Danaid's labor.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+For months she had worried her life out lest her advice
+should be asked, and now the climax was come, and
+asked it was.</p>
+
+<p>"What a horrible position!" thought Lady Marabout.</p>
+
+<p>She waited and hesitated till the pendule had ticked
+off sixty seconds, then she summoned her courage and
+spoke:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, advice in such matters is often very harmful,
+and always very useless; plenty of people have asked
+my counsel, but I never knew any of them take it unless
+it chanced to chime in with their fancy. A woman's best
+adviser is her own heart, specially on such a subject as
+this. But before I give my opinion, may I ask if you
+have accepted him?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout's heart throbbed quick and fast as she
+put the momentous question, with an agitation for which
+she would have blushed before her admirably nonchalante
+niece; but the tug of war was coming, and if Goodwood
+should be lost!</p>
+
+<p>"You have accepted him?" she asked again.</p>
+
+<p>"No! I&mdash;refused him."</p>
+
+<p>The delicate rose went out of the Hon. Val's cheeks
+for once, and she breathed quickly and shortly.</p>
+
+<p>Goodwood was <i>not</i> lost then!</p>
+
+<p>Was she sorry&mdash;was she glad? Lady Marabout hardly
+knew; like Wellington, she felt the next saddest thing
+after a defeat is a victory.</p>
+
+<p>"But you love him, Valencia?" she asked, half ashamed
+of suggesting such weakness, to this glorious beauty.</p>
+
+<p>The Hon. Val unclasped her necklet as if it were a
+chain, choking her, and her face grew white and set: the
+coldest will feel on occasion, and all have <i>some</i> tender
+place that can wince at the touch.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps; but such folly is best put aside at once. Certainly
+I prefer him to others, but to accept him would
+have been madness, absurdity. I told him so!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You told him so! If you had the heart to do so,
+Valencia, he has not lost much in losing you!" burst in
+Lady Marabout, her indignation getting the better of her
+judgment, and her heart, as usual, giving the coup de
+grace to her reason. "I am shocked at you! Every
+tender-hearted woman feels regret for affection she is
+obliged to repulse, even when she does not return it; and
+you, who love this man&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you have had me accept him, aunt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," cried Lady Marabout, firmly, forgetting every
+vestige of "duty," and every possibility of dear Adeliza's
+vengeance, "if you love him, I would, decidedly. When
+I married my dear Philip's father, he was what Cardonnel
+is, a cavalry man, as far off his family title then as Cardonnel
+is off his now."</p>
+
+<p>"The more reason I should not imitate your imprudence,
+my dear aunt; death might not carry off the intermediate
+heirs quite so courteously in this case! No, I
+refused Major Cardonnel, and I did rightly; I should
+have repented it by now had I accepted him. There is
+nothing more silly than to be led away by romance. You
+De Bonc[oe]urs <i>are</i> romantic, you know; we Valletorts are
+happily free from the weakness. I am very tired, aunt,
+so good night."</p>
+
+<p>The Hon. Val went, the waxlight she carried shedding
+a paler shade on her handsome face, whiter and more
+set than usual, but held more proudly, as if it already
+wore the Doncaster coronet; and Lady Marabout sighed
+as she rang for her maid.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she acted wisely, and I ought to be very
+pleased; but that poor dear fellow!&mdash;his eyes <i>are</i> so like
+his mother's!"</p>
+
+<p>"I congratulate you, mother, on a clear field. You've
+sent poor Arthur off very nicely," said Carruthers, the
+next morning, paying his general visit in her boudoir before
+the day began, which is much the same time in Town<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+as in Greenland, and commences, whatever almanacs
+may say, about two or half-past <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> "Cardonnel left
+this morning for Heaven knows where, and is going to
+exchange, Shelleto tells me, into the &mdash;&mdash;th, which is ordered
+to Bengal, so <i>he</i> won't trouble you much more. When
+shall I be allowed to congratulate my cousin as the future
+Duchess of Doncaster?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray, don't tease me, Philip. I've been vexed enough
+about your friend. When he came to me this morning,
+and asked me if there was no hope, and I was obliged to
+tell him there was none, I felt wretched," said Lady Marabout,
+as nearly pettishly as she ever said anything; "but
+I am really not responsible, not in the least. Besides,
+even you must admit that Goodwood is a much more
+desirable alliance, and if Valencia had accepted Cardonnel,
+pray what would all Belgravia have said? Why,
+that, disappointed of Goodwood, she took the other out of
+pure pique! We owe something to society, Philip, and
+something to ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers laughed:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, my dear mother, you women will never be worth
+all you ought to be till you leave off kowtow-ing to 'what
+will be said,' and learn to defy that terrible oligarchy of
+the Qu'en dira-t-on?"</p>
+
+<p>"When will Goodwood propose?" wondered Lady
+Marabout, fifty times a day, and Valencia Valletort
+wondered too. Whitebait was being eaten, and yachts
+being fitted, manned, and victualled, outstanding Ascot
+debts were being settled, and outstanding bills were being
+passed hurriedly through St. Stephen's; all the clockwork
+of the season was being wound up for the last time previous
+to a long standstill, and going at a deuce of a pace,
+as if longing to run down, and give its million wheels
+and levers peace; while everybody who'd anything to
+settle, whether monetary or matrimonial, personal or
+political, was making up his mind about it and getting it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+off his hands, and some men were being pulled up by
+wide-awake Jews to see what they were "made of," while
+others were pulled up by adroit dowagers to know what
+they had "meant" before the accounts of the season were
+scored out and settled. "Had Goodwood proposed?"
+asked all Belgravia. "Why hadn't Goodwood proposed?"
+asked Lady Marabout and Valencia. Twenty
+most favorable opportunities for the performance of that
+ceremony had Lady Marabout made for him "accidentally
+on purpose" the last fortnight; each of those times
+she had fancied the precious fish hooked and landed, and
+each time she had seen him, free from the hook, floating
+on the surface of society.</p>
+
+<p>"He <i>must</i> speak definitely to-morrow," thought Lady
+Marabout. But the larvæ of to-morrow burst into the
+butterfly of to-day, and to-day passed into the chrysalis
+of yesterday, and Goodwood was always very nearly
+caught, and never <i>quite</i>!</p>
+
+<p>"Come up-stairs, Philip; I want to show you a little
+Paul Potter I bought the other day," said Lady Marabout
+one morning, returning from a shopping expedition
+to Regent Street, meeting her son at her own door just
+descending from his tilbury. "Lord Goodwood calling,
+did you say, Soames? Oh, very well."</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout floated up the staircase, but
+signed to her footman to open the door, not of the drawing-room,
+but of her own boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>"The Potter is in my own room, Philip; you must
+come in here if you wish to see it," said that adroit lady,
+for the benefit of Soames. But when the door was shut,
+Lady Marabout lowered her voice confidentially: "The
+Potter isn't here, dear; I had it hung in the little cabinet
+through the drawing-rooms, but I don't wish to go
+up there for a few moments&mdash;you understand."</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers threw himself in a chair, and laughed till
+the dogs Bijou, Bonbon, and Pandore all barked in a
+furious concert.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I understand! So Goody's positively coming to the
+point up there, is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt he is," said Lady Marabout, reprovingly.
+"Why else should he come in when I was not at home?
+There is nothing extraordinary in it. The only thing I
+have wondered at is his having delayed so long."</p>
+
+<p>"If a man had to hang himself, would you wonder he
+put off pulling the bolt?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see any point in your jests at all!" returned
+Lady Marabout. "There is nothing ridiculous in winning
+such a girl as Valencia."</p>
+
+<p>"No; but the question here is not of winning her, but
+of buying her. The price is a little high&mdash;a ducal coronet
+and splendid settlements, a wedding-ring and bondage
+for life; but he will buy her, nevertheless. Cardonnel
+couldn't pay the first half of the price, and so he was
+swept out of the auction-room. You are shocked, mother!
+Ah, truth <i>is</i> shocking sometimes, and always <i>maladroit</i>;
+one oughtn't to bring it into ladies' boudoirs."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Philip! I will not have you so
+satirical. Where do you take it from? Not from me, I
+am sure! Hark! there is Goodwood going! That is his
+step on the stairs, I think! Dear me, Philip, I wish you
+sympathized with me a little more, for I <i>do</i> feel happy,
+and I can't help it; dear Adeliza will be so gratified."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, I'll do my best to be sympathetic,
+I'll go and congratulate Goodwood as he gets in his cab,
+if you fancy I ought; but, you see, if I were in Dahomey
+beholding the head of my best friend coming off, I
+couldn't quite get up the amount of sympathy in their
+pleasure at the refreshing sight the Dahomites might
+expect from me, and so&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Lady Marabout missed the comparison of herself
+to a Dahomite, for she had opened the door and was
+crossing to the drawing-rooms, her eyes bright, her step
+elastic, her heart exultant at the triumph of her man[oe]uvres.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+The Hon. Val was playing with some ferns in an
+étagère at the bottom of the farthest room, and responded
+to the kiss her aunt bestowed on her about as much as if
+she had been one of the statuettes on the consoles.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, love, <i>what did he say</i>?" asked Lady Marabout,
+breathlessly, with eager delight and confident
+anticipation.</p>
+
+<p>Like drops of ice on warm rose-leaves fell each word
+of the intensely chill and slightly sulky response on Lady
+Marabout's heart.</p>
+
+<p>"He said that he goes to Cowes to-morrow for the
+Royal Yacht Squadron dinner, and then on in the <i>Anadyomene</i>
+to the Spitzbergen coast for walruses. He left a
+P. P. C. card for you."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Walruses!</i>" shrieked Lady Marabout.</p>
+
+<p>"Walruses," responded the Hon. Val.</p>
+
+<p>"And said no more than that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more than that!"</p>
+
+<p>The Pet Eligible had flown off uncaught after all!
+Lady Marabout needed no further explanation&mdash;<i>tout fut
+dit</i>. They were both silent and paralyzed. Do you suppose
+Pompey and Cornelia had much need of words when
+they met at Lesbos after the horrible déroute of Pharsalia?</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"I'm in your mother's blackest books for ever, Phil,"
+said Goodwood to Carruthers in the express to Southampton
+for the R.Y.C. Squadron Regatta of that year, "but
+I can't help it. It's no good to badger us into marriage;
+it only makes us double, and run to earth. I <i>was</i> near
+compromising myself with your cousin, I grant, but the
+thing that chilled me was, she's too <i>studied</i>. It's all got
+up beforehand, and goes upon clockwork, and it don't
+interest one accordingly; the mechanism's perfect, but we
+know when it will raise its hand, and move its eyes, and
+bow its head, and when we've looked at its beauty once
+we get tired of it. That's the fault in Valencia, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+scores of them, and as long as they <i>won't</i> be natural, why,
+they can't have much chance with us!"</p>
+
+<p>Which piece of advice Carruthers, when he next saw
+his mother, repeated to her, for the edification of all future
+débutantes, adding a small sermon of his own:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, I ask you, is it to be expected that
+we can marry just to oblige women and please the newspapers?
+Would you have me marched off to Hanover
+Square because it would be a kindness to take one of Lady
+Elmers' marriageable daughters, or because a leading
+journal fills up an empty column with farcical lamentation
+on our dislike to the bondage? Of course you
+wouldn't; yet, for no better reasons, you'd have chained
+poor Goodwood, if you could have caught him. Whether
+a man likes to marry or not is certainly his own private
+business, though just now it's made a popular public discussion.
+Do you wonder that we shirk the institution?
+If we have not fortune, marriage cramps our energies,
+our resources, our ambitions, loads us with petty cares,
+and trebles our anxieties. To one who rises with such a
+burden on his shoulders, how many sink down in obscurity,
+who, but for the leaden weight of pecuniary difficulties
+with which marriage has laden their feet, might
+have climbed the highest round in the social ladder? On
+the other side, if we have fortune, if we have the unhappy
+happiness to be eligible, is it wonderful that we are not
+flattered by the worship of young ladies who love us for
+what we shall give them, that we don't feel exactly honored
+by being courted for what we are worth, and that
+we're not over-willing to give up our liberty to oblige
+those who look on us only as good speculations? What
+think you, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout looked up and shook her head mournfully:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, you are right. I see it&mdash;I don't dispute
+it; but when a thing becomes personal, you know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+philosophy becomes difficult. I have such letters from
+poor dear Adeliza&mdash;such letters! Of course she thinks
+it is all my fault, and I believe she will break entirely
+with me. It is so very shocking. You see all Belgravia
+coupled their names, and the very day that he went off
+to Cowes in that heartless, abominable manner, if an
+announcement of the alliance as arranged did not positively
+appear in the <i>Court Circular</i>! It did indeed! I
+am sure Anne Hautton was at the bottom of it; it would
+be just like her. Perhaps poor Valencia cannot be
+pitied after her treatment of Cardonnel, but it is very hard
+on <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout is right: when a thing becomes personal,
+philosophy becomes difficult. When your gun
+misses fire, and a fine cock bird whirrs up from the covert
+and takes wing unharmed, never to swell the number of
+your triumphs and the size of your game-bag, could you
+by any chance find it in your soul to sympathize with the
+bird's gratification at your mortification and its own good
+luck? I fancy not.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc118.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 60%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc119a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2>LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.<br />
+
+<br /><br />IN THREE SEASONS.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="SECOND" id="SECOND"></a>SEASON THE SECOND&mdash;THE OGRE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>"If there be one class I dislike more than another,
+it is that class; and if there be one person in
+town I utterly detest, it is that man!" said our
+friend Lady Marabout, with much unction, one morning,
+to an audience consisting of Bijou, Bonbon, and Pandore,
+a cockatoo, an Angora cat, and a young lady sitting in a
+rocking-chair, reading the magazines of the month. The
+dogs barked, the cockatoo screamed, the cat purred a
+vehement affirmative, the human auditor looked up, and
+laughed:</p>
+
+<p>"What is the class, Lady Marabout, may I ask?"</p>
+
+<p>"Those clever, detestable, idle, good-for-nothing, fashionable,
+worthless men about town, who have not a penny
+to their fortune, and spend a thousand a year on gloves
+and scented tobacco&mdash;who are seen at everybody's house,
+and never at their own&mdash;who drive horses fit for a Duke's
+stud, and haven't money enough to keep a donkey on
+thistles&mdash;who have handsome faces and brazen consciences&mdash;who
+are positively leaders of ton, and yet are glad to
+write feuilletons before the world is up to pay their stall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+at the Opera&mdash;who give a guinea for a bouquet, and
+can't pay a shilling of their just debts,&mdash;I detest the
+class, my dear!"</p>
+
+<p>"So it seems, Lady Marabout. I never heard you so
+vehement. And who is the particular scapegoat of this
+type of sinners?"</p>
+
+<p>"Chandos Cheveley."</p>
+
+<p>"Chandos Cheveley? Isn't he that magnificent man
+Sir Philip introduced to me at the Amandines' breakfast
+yesterday? Why, Lady Marabout, his figure alone
+might outbalance a multitude of sins!"</p>
+
+<p>"He is handsome enough. <i>Did</i> Philip introduce him
+to you, my dear? I wonder! It was very careless of him.
+But men <i>are</i> so thoughtless; they will know anybody
+themselves, and they think we may do the same. The
+men called here while we were driving this morning. I
+am glad we were out: he very seldom comes to <i>my</i> house."</p>
+
+<p>"But why is he so dreadful? The Amandines are tremendously
+exclusive, I thought."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he goes everywhere! No party is complete without
+Chandos Cheveley, and I have heard that at September
+or Christmas he has more invitations than he could
+possibly accept; but he is a most objectionable man, all
+the same&mdash;a man every one dreads to see come near her
+daughters. He has extreme fascination of manner, but
+he has not a farthing! How he lives, dresses, drives the
+horses he does, is one of those miracles of London men's
+lives which <i>we</i> can never hope to puzzle out. Philip says
+he likes him, but Philip never speaks ill of anybody, except
+a woman now and then, who teases him; but the
+man is my detestation&mdash;has been for years. I was annoyed
+to see his card: it is the first time he has called
+this season. He knows I can't endure his class or him."</p>
+
+<p>With which Lady Marabout wound up a very unusually
+lengthy and uncharitable disquisition, length and
+uncharitableness being both out of her line; and Lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+Cecil Ormsby rolled her handkerchief into a ball, threw
+it across the room for Bonbon, the spaniel puppy, and
+laughed till the cockatoo screamed with delight:</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Lady Marabout, do forgive me, but it is such
+fun to hear you positively, for once, malicious! Who is
+your Horror, genealogically speaking? this terrible&mdash;what's
+his name?&mdash;Chandos Cheveley?"</p>
+
+<p>"The younger son of a younger son of one of the Marquises
+of Danvers, I believe, my dear; an idle man about
+town, you know, with not a sou to be idle upon, who sets
+the fashion, but never pays his tailor. I am never malicious,
+I hope, but I do consider men of that stamp very
+objectionable."</p>
+
+<p>"But what is Sir Philip but a man about town?"</p>
+
+<p>"My son! Of course he is a man about town. My
+dear, what else should he be? But if Philip likes to
+lounge all his days away in a club-window, he has a perfect
+right; he has fortune. Chandos Cheveley is not
+worth a farthing, and yet yawns away his day in White's
+as if he were a millionnaire; the one can support his <i>far
+niente</i>, the other cannot. There are gradations in everything,
+my love, but in nothing more than among the men,
+of the same set and the same style, whom one sees in
+Pall-Mall."</p>
+
+<p>"There are chestnut horses and horse-chestnuts, chevaliers
+and chevaliers d'industrie, rois and rois d'Yvetot,
+Carrutherses and Chandos Cheveleys!" laughed Lady
+Cecil. "I understand, Lady Marabout. Il y a femmes
+et femmes&mdash;men about town and men about town, I
+shall learn all the classes and distinctions soon. But how
+is one to know the sheep that may be let into the fold
+from the wolves in sheep's clothing, that must be kept
+out of it? Your Ogre is really very distinguished-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Distinguished? Oh yes, my love; but the most distinguished
+men are the most objectionable sometimes. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+assure you, my dear Cecil, I have seen an elder son whom
+sometimes I could hardly have told from his own valet,
+and a younger of the same family with the style of a
+D'Orsay. Why, did I not this very winter, when I went
+to stay at Rochdale, take Fitzbreguet himself, whom I
+had not chanced to see since he was a child, for one of
+the men out of livery, and bid him bring Bijou's basket
+out of the carriage. I did indeed&mdash;<i>I</i> who hate such
+mistakes more than any one! And Lionel, his second
+brother, has the beauty of an Apollo and the <i>air noble</i> to
+perfection. One often sees it; it's through the doctrine
+of compensation, I suppose, but it's very perplexing, and
+causes endless <i>embrouillements</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"When the mammas fall in love with Lord Fitz's
+coronet, and the daughters with Lord Lionel's face, I
+suppose?" interpolated Lady Cecil.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly so, dear. As for knowing the sheep from the
+wolves, as you call them," went on Lady Marabout, sorting
+her embroidery silks, "you may very soon know more
+of Chandos Cheveley's class&mdash;(this Magenta braid is good
+for nothing; it's a beautiful color, but it fades immediately)&mdash;you
+meet them in the country at all fast houses,
+as they call them nowadays, like the Amandines'; they
+are constantly invited, because they are so amusing, or so
+dead a shot, or so good a whip, and live on their invitations,
+because they have no <i>locale</i> of their own. You see,
+all the women worth nothing admire, and all the women
+worth anything shun, them. They have a dozen accomplishments,
+and not a single reliable quality; a hundred
+houses open to them, and not a shooting-box of their own
+property or rental. You will meet this Chandos Cheveley
+everywhere, for instance, as though he were somebody desirable.
+You will see him in his club-window, as though
+he were born only to read the papers; in the Ride, mounted
+on a much better animal than Fitzbreguet, though the one
+pays treble the price he ought, and the other, I dare say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+no price at all; at Ascot, on Amandine's or Goodwood's
+drag, made as much of among them all as if he were an
+heir-apparent to the throne; and yet, my love, that man
+hasn't a penny, lives Heaven knows where, and how he
+gets money to keep his cab and buy his gloves is, as I say,
+one of those mysteries of settling days, whist-tables, periodical
+writing, Baden <i>coups de bonheur</i>, and such-like fountains
+of such men's fortunes which we can never hope to
+penetrate&mdash;and very little we should benefit if we could!
+My dearest Cecil! if it is not ten minutes to five! We
+must go and drive at once."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Ormsby was a great pet of Lady Marabout's; she
+had been so from a child; so much so, that when, the year
+after Valencia Valletort's discomfiture (a discomfiture so
+heavy and so public, that that young beauty was seized
+with a fit of filial devotion, attended her mamma to Nice,
+and figured not in Belgravia the ensuing season, and even
+Lady Marabout's temper had been slightly soured by it, as
+you perceive), another terrible charge was shifted on her
+shoulders by an appeal from the guardians of the late Earl
+of Rosediamond's daughter for her to be brought out under
+the Marabout wing, she had consented, and surrendered
+herself to be again a martyr to responsibility for the sake
+of Cecil and Cecil's lost mother. The young lady was a
+beauty; she was worse, she was an heiress; she was worse
+still, she was saucy, wayward, and notable for a strong will
+of her own&mdash;a more dangerous young thorough-bred was
+never brought to a gentler Rarey; and yet she was the
+first charge of this nature that Lady Marabout had ever
+accepted in the whole course of her life with no misgivings
+and with absolute pleasure. First, she was very fond of
+Cecil Ormsby; secondly, she longed to efface her miserable
+failure with Valencia by a brilliant success, which should
+light up all the gloom of her past of chaperonage; thirdly,
+she had a sweet and long-cherished diplomacy nestling in
+her heart to throw her son and Lord Rosediamond's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+daughter together, for the eventual ensnaring and fettering
+of Carruthers, which policy nothing could favor so well
+as having the weapon for that deadly purpose in her own
+house through April, May, and June.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby was a beauty and an heiress&mdash;spirited,
+sarcastic, brilliant, wilful, very proud; altogether, a more
+spirited young filly never needed a tight hand on the
+ribbons, a light but a firm seat, and a temperate though
+judicious use of the curb to make her endure being ridden
+at all, even over the most level grass countries of life.
+And yet, for the reasons just mentioned, Lady Marabout,
+who never had a tight hand upon anything, who is to be
+thrown in a moment by any wilful kick or determined
+plunge, who is utterly at the mercy of any filly that
+chooses to take the bit between her own teeth and bolt
+off, and is entirely incapable of using the curb, even to
+the most ill-natured and ill-trained Shetland that ever
+deserved to have its mouth sawed,&mdash;Lady Marabout
+undertook the jockeyship without fear.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say you wonder, after my grief with Valencia,
+that I have consented to bring another girl out, but when
+I heard it was poor Rosediamond's wish&mdash;his dying wish,
+one may almost say&mdash;that Cecil should make her début
+with me, what <i>was</i> I to do, my dear?" she explained,
+half apologetically, to Carruthers, when the question was
+first agitated. Perhaps, too, Lady Marabout had in her
+heart been slightly sickened of perfectly trained young
+ladies brought up on the best systems, and admitted to
+herself that the pets of the foreign houses may <i>not</i> be the
+most attractive flowers after all.</p>
+
+<p>So Lady Cecil Ormsby was installed in Lowndes
+Square, and though she was the inheritor of her mother's
+wealth, which was considerable, and possessor of her own
+wit and beauty, which were not inconsiderable either, and
+therefore a prize to fortune-hunters and a lure to misogamists,
+as Lady Marabout knew very well how to keep the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+first off, and had her pet project of numbering her refractory
+son among the converted second, she rather congratulated
+herself than otherwise in having the pleasure and
+éclat of introducing her; and men voted the Marabout
+Yearlings Sale of that season, since it comprised Rosediamond's
+handsome daughter, as dangerous as a horse-dealer's
+auction to a young greenhorn, or a draper's
+"sale, without reserve, at enormous sacrifice," to a lady
+with a soul on bargains bent.</p>
+
+<p>"How very odd! Just as we have been talking of
+him, there is that man again! I must bow to him, I suppose;
+though if there <i>be</i> a person I dislike&mdash;&mdash;" said
+Lady Marabout, giving a frigid little bend of her head
+as her barouche, with its dashing roans, rolled from her
+door, and a tilbury passed them, driving slowly through
+the square.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby bowed to its occupant with less severity,
+and laughed under the sheltering shadow of her white
+parasol-fringe.</p>
+
+<p>"The Ogre has a very pretty trap, though, Lady Marabout,
+and the most delicious gray horse in it! Such
+good action!"</p>
+
+<p>"If its action is good, my love, I dare say it is more
+than could be said of its master's actions. He is going
+to call on that Mrs. Maréchale, very probably; he was
+always there last season."</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout shook her head and looked grave,
+which, combined with the ever-damnatory demonstrative
+conjunction, blackened Mrs. Maréchale's moral character
+as much as Lady Marabout could blacken any one's, she
+loving as little to soil her own fingers and her neighbors'
+reputations with the indelible Italian chalk of scandal as
+any lady I know; being given, on the contrary, when
+compelled to draw any little social croquis of a back-biting
+nature, to sketch them in as lightly as she could,
+take out as many lights as possible, and rub in the shadows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+with a very chary and pitying hand, except, indeed,
+when she took the portrait of such an Ogre as Chandos
+Cheveley, when I can't say she was quite so merciful,
+specially when policy and prejudice combined to suggest
+that it would be best (and not unjust) to use the blackest
+Conté crayons obtainable.</p>
+
+<p>The subject of it would not have denied the correctness
+of the silhouette Lady Marabout had snipped out
+for the edification of Lady Cecil, had he caught a glimpse
+of it: he had no habitation, nor was ever likely to have
+any, save a bachelor's suite in a back street; he had been
+an idle man for the last twenty years, with not a sou to
+be idle upon; the springs of his very precarious fortunes,
+his pursuits, habits, reputation, ways and means, were all
+much what she had described them; yet he set the fashion
+much oftener than Goodwood, and dukes and millionnaires
+would follow the style of his tie, or the shape of his hat;
+he moved in the most brilliant circles as Court Circulars
+have it, and all the best houses were open to him. At
+his Grace of Amandine's, staying there for the shooting,
+he would alter the stud, find fault with the claret, arrange
+a Drive for deer in the forest, and flirt with her Grace
+herself, as though, as Lady Marabout averred, he had
+been Heir-apparent or Prince Regent, who honored the
+Castle by his mere presence, Amandine all the while
+swearing by every word he spoke, thinking nothing well
+done without Cheveley, and submitting to be set aside in
+his own Castle, with the greatest gratification at the
+extinction.</p>
+
+<p>But that Chandos Cheveley was not worth a farthing,
+that he was but a Bohemian on a brilliant scale, that any
+day he might disappear from that society where he now
+glittered, never to reappear, everybody knew; how he
+floated there as he did, kept his cab and his man, paid
+for his stall at the Opera, his club fees, and all the other
+trifles that won't wait, was an eternal puzzle to every one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+ignorant of how expensively one may live upon nothing
+if one just gets the knack, and of how far a fashionable
+reputation, like a cake of chocolate, will go to support
+life when nothing more substantial is obtainable. Lady
+Marabout had sketched him correctly enough, allowing
+for a little politic bitterness thrown in to counteract Carruthers's
+thoughtlessness in having introduced him to
+Rosediamond's daughter (that priceless treasure for whom
+Lady Marabout would fain have had a guard of Janissaries,
+if they would not have been likely to look singular
+and come expensive); and ladies of the Marabout class
+did look upon him as an Ogre, guarded their daughters
+from his approach at a ball as carefully, if not as demonstratively,
+as any duck its ducklings from the approach
+of a water-rat, did not ask him to their dinners, and
+bowed to him chillily in the Ring. Others regarded him
+as harmless, from his perfect pennilessness; what danger
+was there in the fascinations of a man whom all Belgravia
+knew hadn't money enough to buy dog-skin
+gloves, though he always wore the best Paris lavender
+kid? While others, the pretty married women chiefly,
+from her Grace of Amandine downwards to Mrs. Maréchale,
+of Lowndes Square, flirted with him, fearfully,
+and considered Chandos Cheveley what nobody ever succeeded
+in disproving him, the most agreeable man on
+town, with the finest figure, the best style, and the most
+perfect bow, to be seen in the Park any day between
+March and July. But then, as Lady Marabout remarked
+on a subsequent occasion, a figure, a style, and a bow are
+admirable and enviable things, but they're not among
+the cardinal virtues, and don't do to live upon; and
+though they're very good buoys to float one on the smooth
+sparkling sea of society, if there come a storm, one may
+go down, despite them, and become helpless prey to the
+sharks waiting below.</p>
+
+<p>"Philip certainly admires her very much; he said the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+other day there was something in her, and that means a
+great deal from him," thought Lady Marabout, complacently,
+as she and Cecil Ormsby were wending their way
+through some crowded rooms. "Of course I shall not
+influence Cecil towards him; it would not be honorable
+to do so, since she might look for a higher title than my
+son's; still, if it should so fall out, nothing would give
+me greater pleasure, and really nothing would seem more
+natural with a little judicious manage&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"May I have the honor of this valse with you?" was
+spoken in, though not to, Lady Marabout's ear. It was
+a soft, a rich, a melodious voice enough, and yet Lady
+Marabout would rather have heard the hiss of a Cobra
+Capella, for the footmen <i>might</i> have caught the serpent
+and carried it off from Cecil Ormsby's vicinity, and she
+couldn't very well tell them to rid the reception-chambers
+of Chandos Cheveley.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout vainly tried to catch Cecil's eye, and
+warn her of the propriety of an utter and entire repudiation
+of the valse in question, if there were no "engaged"
+producible to softly chill the hopes and repulse the advances
+of the aspirant; but Lady Cecil's soul was obstinately
+bent saltatory-wards; her chaperone's ocular telegram
+was lost upon her, and only caught by the last
+person who should have seen it, who read the message off
+the wires to his own amusement, but naturally was not
+magnanimous enough to pass it on.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought to have warned her never to dance with that
+detestable man. If I could but have caught her eye even
+now!" thought Lady Marabout, restlessly. The capella
+<i>would</i> have been much the more endurable of the two;
+the serpent couldn't have passed its arm round Rosediamond's
+priceless daughter and whirled her down the
+ball-room to the music of Coote and Timney's band, as
+Chandos Cheveley was now doing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why did <i>you</i> not ask her for that waltz, Philip?" cried
+the good lady, almost petulantly.</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers opened his eyes wide.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother, you know I never dance! I come
+to balls to oblige my hostesses and look at the women, but
+not to carry a seven-stone weight of tulle illusion and white
+satin, going at express pace, with the thermometer at 80
+deg., and a dense crowd jostling one at every turn in the
+circle. <i>Bien obligé!</i> that's not my idea of pleasure; if
+it were the Pyrrhic dance, now, or the Tarantella, or the
+Bolero, under a Castilian chestnut-tree&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue! You might have danced for once,
+just to have kept her from Chandos Cheveley."</p>
+
+<p>"From the best waltzer in London? Not so selfish.
+Ask Amandine's wife if women don't like to dance with
+that fellow!"</p>
+
+<p>"I should be very sorry to mention his name to her, or
+any of her set," responded Lady Marabout, getting upon
+certain virtuous stilts of her own, which she was given to
+mount on rare occasion and at distant intervals, always
+finding them very uncomfortable and unsuitable elevations,
+and being as glad to cast them off as a traveller to kick
+off the <i>échasses</i> he has had to strap on over the sandy
+plains of the Landes.</p>
+
+<p>"What could possess you to introduce him to Cecil,
+Philip? It was careless, silly, unlike you; you know how
+I dislike men of his&mdash;his&mdash;objectionable stamp," sighed
+Lady Marabout, the white and gold namesakes in her
+coiffure softly trembling a gentle sigh in the perfumy
+zephyr raised by the rotatory whirl of the waltzers, among
+whom she watched with a horrible fascination, as one
+watches a tiger being pugged out of its lair, or a deserter
+being led out to be shot, Chandos Cheveley, waltzing
+Rosediamond's priceless daughter down the ball-room.</p>
+
+<p>"He is so dreadfully handsome! I wonder why it is
+that men and women, who have no fortune but their faces,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+will be so dangerously, so obstinately, so provokingly attractive
+as one sees them so often!" thought Lady Marabout,
+determining to beat an immediate retreat from the
+present salons, since they were infested by the presence of
+her Ogre, to Lady Hautton's house in Wilton Crescent.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Hautton headed charitable bazaars, belonged to
+the Cummingite nebulæ, visited Homes and Hospitals
+(floating to the bedside of luckless feminine patients to
+read out divers edifying passages, whose effect must have
+been somewhat neutralized to the hearers, one would imagine,
+by the envy-inspiring rustle of her silks, the flash
+of her rings, and the chimes of her bracelets, chains, and
+châtelaine), looked on the "Amandine set" as lost souls,
+and hence "did not know" Chandos Cheveley&mdash;a fact
+which, though the Marabout and Hautton antagonism was
+patent to all Belgravia, served to endear her all at once
+to her foe; Lady Marabout, like a good many other
+people, being content to sink personal resentment, and
+make a truce with the infidels for the sake of enjoying a
+mutual antipathy&mdash;that closest of all links of union!</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout and Lady Hautton were foes, but they
+were dear Helena and dear Anne, all the same; dined at
+each other's tables, and smiled in each other's faces.
+They might be private foes, but they were public friends;
+and Lady Marabout beat a discreet retreat to the Hautton's
+salons&mdash;"so many engagements" is so useful a plea!&mdash;and
+from the Hautton she passed on to a ball at the Duke
+of Doncaster's; and, as at both, if Lady Cecil Ormsby
+did not move "a goddess from above," she moved a brilliant,
+sparkling, nonchalante, dangerous beauty, with
+some of her sex's faults, all her sex's witcheries, and
+more than her sex's mischief, holding her own royally,
+saucily, and proudly, and Chandos Cheveley was encountered
+no more, but happily detained at petit souper in a
+certain Section of the French Embassy, Lady Marabout
+drove homewards, in the gray of the morning, relieved,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+complacent, and gratified, dozing deliciously, till she was
+woke up with a start.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Marabout, what a splendid waltzer your Ogre,
+Chandos Cheveley, is!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout opened her eyes with a jerk that set her
+feathers trembling, her diamonds scintillating, and her
+bracelets ringing an astonished little carillon.</p>
+
+<p>"My love, how you frightened me!"</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby laughed&mdash;a gay, joyous laugh, innocent
+of having disturbed a doze, a lapse into human weakness of
+which her chaperone never permitted herself to plead guilty.</p>
+
+<p>"Frightened you, did I? Why, your <i>bête noire</i> is as
+terrible to you as C[oe]ur de Lion to the Saracen children,
+or Black Douglas to the Lowland! And, really, I can't
+see anything terrible in him; he is excessively brilliant
+and agreeable, has something worth hearing to say to you,
+and his waltzing is&mdash;&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil Ormsby had not a word in her repertory&mdash;though
+it was an enthusiastic and comprehensive one, and
+embraced five languages&mdash;sufficiently commendatory to
+finish her sentence.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say, dear! I never denied, or heard denied,
+his having every accomplishment under the sun. The
+only pity is, he has nothing more substantial!" returned
+Lady Marabout, a little bit tartly for <i>her</i> lips, only used
+to the softest (and most genuine) milk of roses.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Rosediamond's daughter laughed a little mournfully,
+and played with her fan.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor man! Brilliant and beggared, fashionable and
+friendless, courted and cashiered&mdash;a sad destiny! Do you
+know, Lady Marabout, I have half a mind to champion
+your Ogre!"</p>
+
+<p>"My love, don't talk nonsense!" said Lady Marabout,
+hastily, at which Lady Cecil only laughed still more softly
+and gayly again, and sprung down as the carriage stopped
+in Lowndes Square.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Rosediamond's daughter's deucedly handsome, eh,
+Cheveley? I saw you waltzing with her last night," said
+Goodwood at Lord's the next morning, watching a match
+between the Household Cavalry and the Zingari Eleven.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she is the best thing we have seen for some time,"
+said Cheveley, glancing round to see if the Marabout
+liveries were on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let the Amandine or little Maréchale hear you
+say so, or you'll have a deuce of a row," laughed Goodwood.
+"She's worth a good deal, too; she's all her
+mother's property, and that's something, I know. The
+deaths in her family have kept her back two years or more,
+but now she <i>is</i> out, I dare say Lady Tattersall will put her
+up high in the market."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt. Why don't <i>you</i> make the investment&mdash;she's
+much more attractive than that Valletort ice statue
+who hooked you so nearly last year? Fortescue's out!
+Well done, little Jimmy! Ah! there's the Marabout
+carriage. I am as unwelcome to that good lady, I know,
+as if I were Quasimodo or Quilp, and as much to be
+shunned, in her estimation, as Vidocq, armed to the teeth;
+nevertheless, I shall go and talk to them, if only in revenge
+for the telegraphic warning of 'dangerous' she shot
+at Lady Cecil last night when I asked her to waltz. Goodwood,
+don't you envy me my happy immunity from traps
+matrimonial?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is that man again&mdash;how provoking! I wish
+we had not come to see Philip's return match. He is
+positively coming up to talk to us," thought Lady Marabout,
+restlessly, as her Ogre lifted his hat to her. In vain
+did she do her best to look severe, to look frigid, to chill
+him with a withering "good morning," (a little word,
+capable, if you notice, of expressing every gradation in
+feeling, from the nadir of delighted intimacy to the zero
+of rebuking frigidity;) her coldest ice was as warm as a
+pine-apple ice that has been melting all day under a refreshment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+tent at a horticultural fête? Her <i>rôle</i> was <i>not</i>
+chilliness, and never could be; she would have beamed
+benign on a headsman who had led her out to instant decapitation,
+and been no more able to help it than a peach
+to help its bloom or a claret its bouquet. She did her
+utmost to freeze Chandos Cheveley, but either she failed
+signally, or he, being blessed with the brazen conscience
+she had attributed to him, was steeled to all the tacit
+repulses of her looks, for he leant against the barouche-door,
+let her freeze him away as she might, and chatted to
+Cecil Ormsby, "positively," Lady Marabout remarked to
+that safest confidante, herself, "positively as if the man
+had been welcome at my house for the last ten years! If
+Cecil <i>would</i> but second me, he couldn't do it; but she <i>will</i>
+smile and talk with him just as though he were Goodwood
+or Fitzbreguet! It is very disagreeable to be forced against
+one's will like this into countenancing such a very objectionable
+person; and yet what <i>can</i> one do?"</p>
+
+<p>Which query she could by no means satisfactorily
+answer herself, being a regular female Nerva for clemency,
+utterly incapable of the severity with which that stern
+Catiline, Lady Hautton, would have signed the unwelcome
+intruder out of the way in a brace of seconds. And
+under Nerva's gentle rule, though Nerva was longing
+with all her heart to have the courage to call the lictors
+and say, "Away with him!" Cheveley leant against the
+door of the carriage unmolested, though decidedly undesired
+by one of its occupants, talked to by Lady Cecil,
+possibly because she found him as agreeable as her Grace
+of Amandine and Lillia Maréchale had done before her,
+possibly only from that rule of contrariety which is such
+a pet motor-power with her sex; and Lady Marabout
+reclined among her cushions, tucked up in her tiger-skin
+in precisely that state of mind in which Fuseli said to his
+wife, "Swear, my dear, you don't know how much good
+it will do you," dreading in herself the possible advent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+of the Hautton carriage, for that ancient enemy and
+rigid pietist, of whose keen tongue and eminent virtue
+she always stood secretly in awe, to see this worthless and
+utterly objectionable member of that fast, graceless, and
+"very incorrect" Amandine set, absolutely <i>en sentinelle</i>
+at the door of her barouche!</p>
+
+<p>Does your best friend <i>ever</i> come when you want him
+most? Doesn't your worst foe <i>always</i> come when you
+want him least? Of course, at that juncture, the Hautton
+carriage came on the ground (Hautton was one of the
+Zingari Club, and maternal interest brought her foe to
+Lord's as it had brought herself), and the Hautton eye-glass,
+significantly and surprisedly raised, said as distinctly
+to Lady Marabout, as though elfishly endowed with vocal
+powers, "You allow <i>that</i> man acquaintance with Rosediamond's
+daughter!" Lady Marabout was stung to the
+soul by the deserved rebuke, but she didn't know how on
+earth to get rid of the sinner! There he leaned, calmly,
+nonchalantly, determinedly, as if he were absolutely welcome;
+and Lady Cecil talked on to him as if he were
+absolutely welcome too.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout felt branded in the eyes of all Belgravia
+to have Chandos Cheveley at her carriage-door, the
+most objectionable man of all his most objectionable class.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very strange!" she thought. "I have seen that
+man about town the last five-and-twenty years&mdash;ever since
+he was a mere boy, taken up and petted by Adeline Patchouli
+for some piece of witty Brummelian impudence
+he said to her on his first introduction&mdash;and he has never
+sought my acquaintance before, but always seemed to be
+quite aware of my dislike to him and all his set. It is
+very grievous he should have chosen the very season I
+have poor dear Rosediamond's daughter with me; but
+it is always my fate&mdash;if a thing can happen to annoy me
+it always will!"</p>
+
+<p>With which Lady Marabout, getting fairly distracted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+under the iron hand of adverse fate, and the ruthless surveillance
+of the Hautton glass, invented an impromptu
+necessity for immediate shopping at Lewis and Allonby's,
+and drove off the ground at the sole moment of interest
+the match possessed for her&mdash;viz., when Carruthers was
+rattling down Hautton's stumps, and getting innings innumerable
+for the Household.</p>
+
+<p>"Mais ce n'est que le premier pas qui coûte;" the old
+proverb's so true we wear it threadbare with repeating it!
+Lady Marabout might as well have stayed on Lord's
+ground, and not lacerated her feelings by leaving at the
+very hour of the Household Cavalry's triumphs, for any
+good that she did thereby. The Hautton eye-glass had
+lighted on Chandos Cheveley, and Chandos Cheveley's
+eye-glass on Rosediamond's daughter;&mdash;and Cecil Ormsby
+arched her eyebrows, and gave her parasol a little impatient
+shake as they quitted Lord's.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Marabout, I never could have believed you ill-natured;
+you interrupted my ball last night, and my conversation
+this morning! I shall scold you if you ever do
+so again. And now tell me (as curiosity is a weakness
+incidental to all women, no woman ought to refuse to
+relieve it in another) why <i>are</i> you so prejudiced against
+that very handsome, and very amusing person?"</p>
+
+<p>"Prejudiced, my dear child! I am not in the least prejudiced,"
+returned Lady Marabout. (Nobody ever admitted
+to a prejudice that <i>I</i> ever heard. It's a plant
+that grows in all gardens, and is sedulously matted up,
+watered, and strengthened; but invariably disavowed by
+its sturdiest cultivators.) "As for Chandos Cheveley,
+I merely mentioned to you what all town knows about
+him; and the dislike I have to his class is one of principle,
+not of prejudice."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil made a <i>moue mutine</i>:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lady Marabout! if you go to 'principle,' <i>tout
+est perdu!</i> 'Principle' has been made to bear the onus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+of every private pique since the world began, and has had
+to answer for more cruelties and injustice than any word
+in the language. The Romans flung the Christians to
+the lions 'on principle,' and the Europeans slew the Mahomedans
+'on principle,' and 'principle' lighted the autos-da-fé,
+and signed to the tormentor to give a turn more
+to the rack! Please don't appeal to anything so severe
+and hypocritical. Come, what are the Ogre's sins?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout laughed, despite the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think I am a compiler of such catalogues,
+my love? Pray do not let us talk any more about Chandos
+Cheveley, he is very little worth it; all I say to you
+is, be as cool to him as you can, without rudeness, of
+course. I am never at home when he calls, and were I
+you, I would be always engaged when he asks you to waltz;
+his acquaintance can in no way benefit you."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil gave a little haughty toss of her head, and
+lay back in the barouche.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> will judge of that! I am not made for fetters of
+any kind, you know, and I like to choose my own acquaintance
+as well as to choose my own dresses. I cannot
+obey you either this evening, for he asked me to put
+him on my tablets for the first waltz at Lord Anisette's
+ball, and I consented. I had no 'engaged' ready, unless
+I had had a falsehood ready too, and <i>you</i> wouldn't counsel
+that, Lady Marabout, I am very sure?"</p>
+
+<p>With which straightforward and perplexing question
+Cecil Ormsby successfully silenced her chaperone, by
+planting her in that disagreeable position known as between
+the horns of a dilemma; and Lady Marabout,
+shrinking alike from the responsibility of counselling a
+"necessary equivocation," as society politely terms its indispensable
+lies, and the responsibility of allowing Cecil
+acquaintance with the "very worst" of the Amandine set,
+sighed, wondered envyingly how Anne Hautton would act
+in her place, and almost began to wish somebody else had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+had the onerous stewardship of that brilliant and priceless
+jewel, Rosediamond's daughter, now that the jewel
+threatened to be possessed with a will of its own:&mdash;the
+greatest possible flaw in a gem of pure water, which they
+only want to scintillate brilliantly among the bijouterie
+of society, and let itself be placed passively in the setting
+most suitable for it, that can be conceived in the eyes of
+lady lapidaries intrusted with its sale.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very odd," thought Lady Marabout; "she seems
+to have taken a much greater fancy to that odious man
+than to Philip, or Goodwood, or Fitz, or any one of the
+men who admire her so much. I suppose I always <i>am</i> to
+be worried in this sort of way! However, there can be
+no real danger; Chandos Cheveley is the merest butterfly
+flirt, and with all his faults none ever accused him of
+fortune-hunting. Still, they say he is wonderfully fascinating,
+and certainly he has the most beautiful voice I
+ever heard; and if Cecil should ever like him at all, I
+could never forgive myself, and what <i>should</i> I say to
+General Ormsby?"</p>
+
+<p>The General, Cecil's uncle and guardian, is one of the
+best-humored, best-tempered, and most <i>laissez-faire</i> men
+in the Service, but was, for all that, a perpetual dead
+weight on Lady Marabout's mind just then, for was not
+he the person to whom, at the end of the season, she
+would have to render up account of the successes and
+the shortcomings of her chaperone's career?</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think of proposing Chandos Cheveley as a
+suitable alliance for Cecil Ormsby, my dear Helena?"
+asked Lady Hautton, with that smile which was felt to
+be considerably worse than strychnine by her foes and
+victims, at a house in Grosvenor Place, that night.</p>
+
+<p>"God forbid!" prayed Lady Marabout, mentally, as
+she joined in the Hautton laugh, and shivered under the
+stab of the Hautton sneer, which was an excessively sharp
+one. Lady Hautton being one of a rather numerous class<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+of eminent Christians, so panoplied in the armor of righteousness
+that they can tread, without feeling it, on the
+tender feet of others.</p>
+
+<p>The evening was spoiled to Lady Marabout; she felt
+morally and guiltily responsible for an unpardonable
+indiscretion:&mdash;with that man waltzing with Cecil Ormsby,
+her "graceful, graceless, gracious Grace" of Amandine
+visibly irritated with jealousy at the sight, and Anne
+Hautton whispering behind her fan with acidulated significance.
+Lady Marabout had never been more miserable
+in her life! She heard on all sides admiration of
+Rosediamond's daughter; she was gratified by seeing
+Goodwood, Fitzbreguet, Fulke Nugent, every eligible
+man in the room, suing for a place on her tablets; she
+had the delight of beholding Carruthers positively join
+the negligent beauty's train; and yet the night was a
+night of purgatory to Lady Marabout, for Chandos
+Cheveley had his first waltz, and several after it, and the
+Amandine set were there to gossip, and the Hautton
+clique to be shocked, at it.</p>
+
+<p>"Soames, tell Mason, when Mr. Chandos Cheveley
+calls, I am not at home," said Lady Marabout at
+breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady," said Soames, who treasured up the
+order, and told it to Mr. Chandos Cheveley's man at the
+first opportunity, though, greatly to his honor, we must
+admit, he did <i>not</i> imitate the mild formula of fib, and
+tell his mistress her claret was not corked when it was so
+incontestably.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby lifted her head and looked across the
+table at her hostess, and the steady gaze of those violet
+eyes, which were Rosediamond's daughter's best weapons
+of war, so discomposed Lady Marabout, that she forgot
+herself sufficiently to proffer Bijou a piece of bread, an
+unparalleled insult, which that canine Sybarite did not
+forget all day long.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Not at home, sir," said Mason, as duly directed, when
+Cheveley's cab pulled up, a week or two after the general
+order, at the door.</p>
+
+<p>Cheveley smiled to himself as his gray had her head
+turned, and the wheel grated off the trottoir, while he
+lifted his hat to Cecil Ormsby, just visible between the
+amber curtains and above the balcony flowers of one of
+the windows of the drawing-room&mdash;quite visible enough
+for her return smile and bow to be seen in the street by
+Cheveley, in the room by Lady Marabout.</p>
+
+<p>"Some of Lady Tattersall's generalship!" he thought,
+as the gray trotted out of the square. "Well! I have
+no business there. Cecil Ormsby is not her Grace of
+Amandine, nor little Maréchale, and the good lady is
+quite right to brand me 'dangerous' to her charge, and
+pronounce me 'inadmissible' to her footman. I've very
+little title to resent her verdict."</p>
+
+<p>"My dearest Cecil, whatever possessed you to bow to
+that man!" cried Lady Marabout, in direst distress.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not customary to bow to one's acquaintances&mdash;I
+thought it was?" asked Lady Cecil, with demure mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear, from a window!&mdash;and when Mason is
+saying we are not at home!"</p>
+
+<p>"That isn't <i>Mason's</i> fib, or <i>Mason's</i> fault, Lady Marabout!"
+suggested Cecil, with wicked emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no falsehood or fault at all anywhere&mdash;everybody
+knows well enough what 'not at home' means,"
+returned Lady Marabout, almost pettishly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes," laughed the young lady, saucily. "It
+means 'I am at home and sitting in my drawing room,
+but I shall not rise to receive you, because you are not
+worth the trouble.' It's a polite cut direct, and a honeyed
+rudeness&mdash;a bitter almond wrapped up in a sugar
+dragée, like a good many other bonbons handed about in
+society."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cecil, you have some very strange ideas;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+you will get called satirical if you don't take care," said
+Lady Marabout, nervously.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby's tone worried her, and made her feel
+something as she felt when she had a restive, half-broken
+pair of horses in her carriage, for the direction of whose
+next plunge or next kick nobody could answer.</p>
+
+<p>"And if I be&mdash;what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, you could not anyhow get a more
+disadvantageous reputation! It may amuse gentlemen
+though it frightens half <i>them</i>; but it offends all women
+irremediably. You see, there are so few whom it doesn't
+hit somewhere," returned Lady Marabout, quite innocent
+of the neat satire of her own last sentence.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil Ormsby laughed, and threw herself down by her
+chaperone's side:</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind: I can bear their enmity; it is a greater
+compliment than their liking. The women whom women
+love are always quiet, colorless, inoffensive&mdash;foils. Lady
+Marabout, tell me, why did you give that general order
+to Mason?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have told you before, my dear. Because I have no
+wish to know Mr. Chandos Cheveley," returned Lady
+Marabout, as stiffly as she could say anything. "It is, as
+I said, not from prejudice, but from prin&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Marabout, if you use that word again, I will
+drive to uncle Ormsby's rooms in the Albany and stay
+with him for the season; I will, positively! I am sure
+all the gentlemen there will be delighted to have my society!
+Pray, what <i>are</i> your Ogre's crimes? Did you
+ever hear anything dishonorable, mean, ungenerous, attributed
+to him? Did you ever hear he broke his word,
+or failed to act like a gentleman, or was a defaulter at
+any settling day?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout required some explanation of what a
+defaulter at a settling day might be, and, on receiving it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+was compelled to confess that she never <i>had</i> heard anything
+of that kind imputed to Chandos Cheveley.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I have not, my dear. The man is a gentleman,
+everybody knows, however idle and improvident
+a one. If he could be accused of anything of that kind,
+he would not belong to such clubs, and associate with
+such men as he does. Besides, Philip would not know
+him; certainly would not think well of him, which I
+confess he does. But that is not at all the question."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ne vous en déplaise</i>, I think it very much and very
+entirely the question," returned Lady Cecil, with a toss
+of her haughty little head. "If you can bring nothing
+in evidence against a man, it is not right to send him to
+the galleys and mark him 'Forçat.'"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cecil, there is plenty in evidence against
+him," said Lady Marabout, with a mental back glance to
+certain stories told of the "Amandine set," "though not
+of that kind. A man may be perfectly unexceptionable
+in his conduct with his men friends, but very objectionable
+acquaintance for us to seek, all the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I see! Lord Goodwood may bet, and flirt, and
+lounge his days away, and be as fast a man as he likes,
+and it is all right; but if Mr. Cheveley does the same, it
+is all wrong, because he is not worth forgiving."</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally it is," returned Lady Marabout, seriously
+and na&iuml;vely. "But how very oddly you put things, my
+love; and why you should interest yourself in this man,
+when everything I tell you is to his disadvantage, I
+cannot imagine."</p>
+
+<p>A remark that showed Lady Marabout a skilful tactician,
+insomuch as it silenced Cecil&mdash;a performance
+rather difficult of accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad I gave the order to Mason," thought
+that good lady. "I only wish we did not meet the man
+in society; but it is impossible to help that. We are all
+cards of one pack, and get shuffled together, whether we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+like it or not. I wish Philip would pay her more attention;
+he admires her, I can see, and he can make any
+woman like him in ten days when he takes the trouble;
+but he is so tiresome! She would be exactly suited to
+him; she has all he would exact&mdash;beauty, talent, good
+blood, and even fortune, though that he would not need.
+The alliance would be a great happiness to me. Well, he
+dines here to-night, and he gives that concert at his barracks
+to-morrow morning, purely to please Cecil, I am
+sure. I think it may be brought about with careful management."</p>
+
+<p>With which pleasant reflection she went to drive in
+the Ring, thinking that her maternal and duenna duties
+would be alike well fulfilled, and her chaperone's career
+well finished, if by any amount of tact, intrigue, finesses,
+and diplomacy she could live to see Cecil Ormsby sign
+herself Cecil Carruthers.</p>
+
+<p>"If that man were only out of town!" she thought,
+as Cheveley passed them in Amandine's mail-phaeton at
+the turn.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout might wish Cheveley were out of town&mdash;and
+wish it devoutly she did&mdash;but she wasn't very likely
+to have her desire gratified till the general migration
+should carry him off in its tide to the deck of a yacht, a
+lodge in the Highlands, a German Kursaal, or any one
+of those myriad "good houses" where nobody was so
+welcome as he, the best shot, the best seat, the best wit,
+the best billiard-player, the best whist-player, and the
+best authority on all fashionable topics, of any man in
+England. Cheveley used to aver that he liked Lady
+Marabout, though she detested him; nay, that he liked
+her <i>for</i> her detestation; he said it was cordial, sincere,
+and refreshing, therefore a treat in the world of Belgravia;
+still, he didn't like her so well as to leave Town in the
+middle of May to oblige her; and though he took her
+hint as it was meant, and pulled up his hansom no more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+at her door, he met her and Rosediamond's daughter at dinners,
+balls, concerts, morning-parties innumerable. He
+saw them in the Ring; he was seen by them at the Opera;
+he came across them constantly in the gyration of London
+life. Night after night Lady Cecil persisted in writing
+his name in her tablets; evening after evening a bizarre
+fate worried Lady Marabout, by putting him on the left
+hand of her priceless charge at a dinner-party. Day after
+day all the harmony of a concert was marred to her ear
+by seeing her Ogre talking of Beethoven and Mozart,
+chamber music and bravura music in Cecil's: morning
+after morning gall was poured into her luncheon sherry,
+and wormwood mingled in her vol-au-vent, by being told,
+with frank mischief, by her desired daughter-in-law, that
+she "had seen Mr. Cheveley leaning on the rails, smoking,"
+when she had taken her after-breakfast canter.</p>
+
+<p>"Chandos Cheveley getting up before noon! He <i>must</i>
+mean something unusual!" thought her chaperone.</p>
+
+<p>"Helena has set her heart on securing Cecil Ormsby for
+Carruthers. I hope she may succeed better than she did
+with poor Goodwood last season," laughed Lady Hautton,
+with her inimitable sneer, glancing at the young lady in
+question at a bazaar in Willis's Rooms, selling rosebuds
+for anything she liked to ask for them, and cigars tied up
+with blue ribbon a guinea the half-dozen, at the Marabout
+stall. Lady Hautton <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'has'">had</ins> just been paying a charitable
+visit to St. Cecilia's Refuge, of which she was head patroness,
+where, having floated in with much benignity,
+been worshipped by a select little toady troop, administered
+spiritual consolation with admirable condescension,
+and distributed illuminated texts for the adornment of
+the walls and refreshment of the souls, she was naturally
+in a Christian frame of mind towards her neighbors.
+Lady Marabout caught the remark&mdash;as she was intended
+to do&mdash;and thought it not quite a pleasant one; but, my
+good sir, did you ever know those estimable people, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+spend all their time fitting themselves for another world,
+ever take the trouble to make themselves decently agreeable
+in the present one? The little pleasant courtesies,
+affabilities, generosities, and kindnesses, that rub the edge
+off the flint-stones of the Via Dolorosa, are quite beneath
+the attention of Mary the Saint, and only get attended to
+by Martha the Worldly, poor butterfly thing! who is fit
+for nothing more serviceable and profitable!</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout <i>had</i> set her heart on Cecil Ormsby's
+filling that post of honor&mdash;of which no living woman
+was deserving in her opinion&mdash;that of "Philip's wife;"
+an individual who had been, for so many years, a fond
+ideal, a haunting anxiety, and a dreaded rival, en même
+temps, to her imagination. She <i>was</i> a little bit of a
+match-maker: she had, over and over again, arranged
+the most admirable and suitable alliances; alliances that
+would have shamed the scepticism of the world in general,
+as to the desirability of the holy bonds, and brought every
+refractory man to the steps of St. George's; alliances,
+that would have come off with the greatest éclat, but for
+one trifling hindrance and difficulty&mdash;namely, the people
+most necessary to the arrangements could never by any
+chance be brought to view them in the same light, and
+were certain to give her diplomacy the <i>croc-en-jambe</i> at
+the very moment of its culminating glory and finishing
+finesses. She was a little bit of a match-maker&mdash;most
+kind-hearted women are; the tinder they play with is
+much better left alone, but <i>they</i> don't remember that!
+Like children in a forest, they think they'll light a pretty
+bright fire, just for fun, and never remember what a
+seared, dreary waste that fire may make, or what a prairie
+conflagration it may stretch into before it's stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"Cecil Ormsby is a terrible flirt," said Lady Hautton,
+to another lady, glancing at the rapid sale of the rosebuds
+and cigars, the bunches of violets and the sprays of lilies
+of the valley, in which that brilliant beauty was doing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+such thriving business at such extravagant profits, while
+the five Ladies Hautton presided solemnly over articles
+of gorgeous splendor, which threatened to be left on
+hand, and go in a tombola, as ignominiously as a beauty
+after half a dozen seasons, left unwooed and unwon,
+goes to the pêle-mêle raffle of German Bad society, and
+is sold off at the finish to an unknown of the Line, or a
+Civil Service fellow, with five hundred a year.</p>
+
+<p>"Was Cecil a flirt?" wondered Lady Marabout. Lady
+Marabout was fain to confess to herself that she thought
+she was&mdash;nay, that she hoped she was. If it wasn't flirting,
+that way in which she smiled on Chandos Cheveley,
+sold him cigarettes, laughed with him over the ices and
+nectarines he fetched her, and positively invested him with
+the cordon d'honneur of a little bouquet of Fairy roses,
+for which twenty men sued, and he (give Satan his due)
+did not even ask&mdash;if it wasn't flirting, <i>what was it</i>?
+Lady Marabout shivered at the suggestion; and though
+she was, on principle, excessively severe on flirting, she
+could be very glad of what she didn't approve, when it
+aided her, on occasion&mdash;like most other people&mdash;and
+would so far have agreed with Talleyrand, as to welcome
+the worst crime (of coquetry) as far less a sin than the
+unpardonable blunder of encouraging an Ogre!</p>
+
+<p>"I can't send Cecil away from the stall, as if she were
+a naughty child, and I can't order the man out of Willis's
+Rooms," thought that unhappy and fatally-worried lady,
+as she presided behind her stall, an emphatic witness of
+the truth of the poeticism that "grief smiles and gives
+no sign," insomuch as she looked the fairest, sunniest,
+best-looking, and best-tempered Dowager that ever
+shrouded herself in Chantilly lace.</p>
+
+<p>"I do think those ineligible, detrimental, objectionable
+persons ought not to be let loose on society as they are,"
+she pondered; "let them have their clubs and their mess
+breakfasts, their Ascot and their Newmarket, their lansquenet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+parties and their handicap pigeon matches, if they
+like; but to have them come amongst <i>us</i> as they do,
+asked everywhere if they happen to have good blood and
+good style, free to waltz and flirt and sing, and show all
+sorts of attention to marriageable girls, while all the while
+they are no more available for anything serious than if
+they were club stewards or cabmen&mdash;creatures that live
+on their fashionable aroma, and can't afford to buy the
+very bottles of bouquets on their toilette-tables&mdash;fast
+men, too, who, knowing they can never marry themselves,
+make a practice of turning marriage into ridicule, and
+help to set all the rich men more dead against it than
+they are,&mdash;to have them come promiscuously among the
+very best people, with nothing to distinguish them as
+dangerous, or label them as 'ought to be avoided,'&mdash;it's
+dreadful! it's a social evil! it <i>ought</i> to be remedied!
+They muzzle dogs in June, why can't they label Ogres in
+the season? I mustn't send poor little Bijou out for a
+walk in Kensington Gardens without a string, these men
+ought not to go about in society without restriction: a
+snap of Bijou's doesn't do half such mischief as a smile
+of theirs!"</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout chatted across the stall to his
+Grace of Doncaster, and entrapped him into purchases
+of fitting ducal prodigality, and smiled on scores of people
+she didn't know, in pleasant <i>pro tempore</i> expediency that
+had, like most expediency in our day, its ultimate goal in
+their purses and pockets, and longed for some select gendarmerie
+to clear Willis's Rooms of her Cobra Capella,
+and kept an eye all the while on Cecil Ormsby&mdash;Cecil,
+selling off everything on the stall by sheer force of her
+bright violet eyes, receiving ten-pound notes for guinea
+trifles, making her Bourse rise as high as she liked,
+courted for a spray of mignonette as entreatingly as ever
+Law was courted in the Rue Quincampoix for Mississippi
+scrip, served by a Corps d'Elite, in whom she had actually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+enlisted Carruthers, Goodwood, Fulke Nugent, Fitzbreguet,
+and plenty of the most desirable and most desired
+men in town, yet of which&mdash;oh the obstinacy of women!
+she had actually made Chandos Cheveley, with those
+wicked little Fairy roses in his coat, positively the captain
+and the chief!</p>
+
+<p>"It is enough to break one's heart!" thought Lady
+Marabout, wincing under the Hautton glance, which she
+saw only the plainer because she <i>wouldn't</i> see it at all,
+and which said with horrible distinctness, "There is that
+man, who can hardly keep his own cab, who floats on
+society like a pleasure-boat, without rudder, ballast, or
+anchors, of whom I have told you, in virtuous indignation
+and Christian charity, fifty thousand naughty stories,
+who visits that wicked, notorious little Maréchale, who
+belongs to the Amandine set, who is everything that he
+ought not and nothing that he ought to be, who hasn't
+a penny he doesn't make by a well-made betting-book or
+a dashed-off magazine article,&mdash;there he is flirting all
+day at your own stall with Rosediamond's daughter, and
+you haven't the <i>savoir faire</i>, the strength of will, the tact,
+the proper feeling, to stop it!"</p>
+
+<p>To all of which charges Lady Marabout humbly bent
+her head, metaphorically speaking, and writhed, in secret,
+under the glance of her ancient enemy, while she talked
+and laughed with the Duke of Doncaster. C. Petronius,
+talking epicureanisms and witicisms, while the life-blood
+was ebbing away at every breath, was nothing to the suffering
+and the fortitude of Helena, Lady Marabout, turning
+a smiling, sunny, tranquil countenance to the world
+in front of her stall, while that world could see Chandos
+Cheveley admitted behind it!</p>
+
+<p>"I must do something to stop this!" thought Lady
+Marabout, with the desperation of a Charlotte Corday.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Cheveley going in for the Ormsby tin?" said
+Amandine to Eyre Lee. "Best thing he could do, eh?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+But Lady Tattersall and the trustees would cut rough,
+I am afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"What does Chandos mean with that daughter of
+Rosediamond's?" wondered her Grace, annoyedly. She
+had had him some time in her own rose chains, and when
+ladies have driven a lover long in that sort of harness,
+they could double-thong him with all the might of their
+little hands, if they fancy he is trying to break away.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Chandos Cheveley turning fortune-hunter? I suppose
+he would like Lady Cecil's money to pay off his
+Ascot losses," said Mrs. Maréchale, with a malicious
+laugh. At Ascot, the day before, he had not gone near
+her carriage; the year before he had driven her down in
+her mail-phaeton: what would there be too black to say
+of him <i>now</i>?</p>
+
+<p>"I must do something to stop this!" determined Lady
+Marabout, driving homewards, and glancing at Cecil
+Ormsby, as that young lady lay back in the carriage, a
+little grave and dreamy after her day's campaign&mdash;signs
+of the times terrifically ominous to her chaperone, skilled
+in reading such meteorological omens. But how was the
+drag to be put on the wheel? That momentous question
+absorbed Lady Marabout through her toilette that evening,
+pursued her to dinner, haunted her through two soirées,
+kept her wide awake all night, woke up with her to
+her early coffee, and flavored the potted tongue and the
+volaille à la Richelieu she took for her breakfast. "I
+can't turn the man out of town, and I can't tell people
+to strike him off their visiting-lists, and I can't shut
+Cecil and myself up in this house as if it were a convent,
+and, as to speaking to her, it is not the slightest use. She
+has such a way of putting things that one can never deny
+their truth, or reason them away, as one can with other
+girls. Fond as I am of her, she's fearfully difficult to
+manage. Still I owe it as a sacred duty to poor Rosediamond
+and the General, who says he places such implicit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+confidence in me, to interfere. It is my duty; it
+can't be helped. I must speak to Chandos Cheveley himself.
+I have no right to consult my own scruples when
+so much is at stake," valorously determined Lady Marabout,
+resolved to follow stern moral rules, and, when right
+was right, to let "le diable prendre le fruit."</p>
+
+<p>To be a perfect woman of the world, I take it, ladies
+must weed out early in life all such little contemptible
+weaknesses as a dislike to wounding other people; and
+a perfect woman of the world, therefore, Lady Marabout
+was not, and never would be. Nohow could she acquire
+Anne Hautton's invaluable sneer&mdash;nohow could she
+imitate that estimable pietist's delightful way of dropping
+little icy-barbed sentences, under which I have known the
+bravest to shrink, frozen, out of her path. Lady Marabout
+was grieved if she broke the head off a flower needlessly,
+and she could not cure herself of the same lingering
+folly in disliking to say a thing that pained anybody;
+it is incidental to the De Bonc[oe]ur blood&mdash;Carruthers
+inherits it&mdash;and I have seen fellows spared through it,
+whom he could else have withered into the depths of their
+boots by one of his satirical mots. So she did not go to
+her task of speaking to Chandos Cheveley, armed at all
+points for the encounter, and taking pleasure in feeling
+the edge of her rapier, as Lady Hautton would have
+done. The Cobra was dangerous, and must be crushed,
+but Lady Marabout did not very much relish setting her
+heel on it; it was a glittering, terrible, much-to-be-feared,
+and much-to-be-abused serpent,&mdash;but it might <i>feel</i> all the
+same, you see.</p>
+
+<p>"I dislike the man on principle, but I don't want to
+pain him," she thought, sighing for the Hautton stern
+<i>savoir faire</i> and Achilles impenetrability, and goading
+herself on with the remembrance of duty and General
+Ormsby, when the opportunity she had resolved to seek
+presented itself accidentally at a breakfast at Lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+George Frangipane's toy villa at Fulham, and she found
+herself comparatively alone in the rose-garden with
+Cheveley, for once without Cecil's terrible violet eyes
+upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you allow me a few words with you, Mr. Cheveley?"
+she asked, in her blandest manner&mdash;the kindly
+hypocrite!</p>
+
+<p>The blow must be dealt, but it might as well be softened
+with a few chloroform fumes, and not struck savagely
+with an iron-spiked mace.</p>
+
+<p>Cheveley raised his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"With me? With the greatest pleasure!"</p>
+
+<p>"He is a mere fortune-hunter. I will <i>not</i> spare him, I
+am resolved," determined Lady Marabout, as she toyed
+with her parasol-handle, remarked incidentally how unequalled
+Lady George was in roses, especially in the tea-rose,
+and dealt blow No. 1. "Mr. Cheveley, I am going
+to speak to you very frankly. I consider frankness in all
+things best, myself&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Cheveley bowed, and smiled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish he would answer, it would make it so much
+easier; he will only look at one with those eyes of his,
+and certainly they <i>are</i> splendid!" thought Lady Marabout,
+as she went on quickly, on the same principle as the
+Chasseurs Indiens approach an abattis at double-quick.
+"When Lord Rosediamond died last year he left, as
+probably you are aware, his daughter in my sole care; it
+was a great responsibility&mdash;very great&mdash;and I feel, of
+course, that I shall have to answer to him for my discharge
+of it."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout didn't say whether Rosediamond was
+accustomed to visit her per medium, and hear her account
+of her stewardship nightly through a table-claw; but we
+must suppose that he was. Cheveley bowed again, and
+didn't inquire, not being spiritually interested.</p>
+
+<p>"Why <i>won't</i> he answer?" thought Lady Marabout.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+"That I have not been blind to your very marked attention
+to my dear Cecil, I think you must be aware, Mr.
+Cheveley, and it is on that subject, indeed, that I&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Wished to speak to me? I understand!" said Cheveley
+as she paused, with that faint smile, half sad, half
+proud, that perplexed Lady Marabout. "You are about
+to insinuate to me gently that those attentions have been
+exceedingly distasteful to you, exceedingly unacceptable
+in me; you would remind me that Lady Cecil Ormsby is
+a beauty and an heiress, and that I am a fortune-hunter,
+whose designs are seen through and motives found out;
+you would hint to me that our intercourse must cease: is
+it not so?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout, cursed with that obstinate, ill-bred,
+unextinguishable weakness for truth incidental and ever
+fatal to the De Bonc[oe]urs, couldn't say that it was <i>not</i>
+what she was going to observe to him, but it was exceedingly
+unpleasant, now it was put in such plain, uncomplimentary
+terms, to admit to the man's face that she was
+about to tell him he was a mercenary schemer, whose
+attentions only sprang from a lawless passion for the
+<i>beaux yeux</i> of Cecil's <i>cassette</i>.</p>
+
+<p>She would have told him all that, and much more, with
+greatest dignity and effect, if he hadn't anticipated her;
+but to have her weapon parried before it was fairly out
+of its sheath unnerved her arm at the outset.</p>
+
+<p>"What <i>would</i> Anne Hautton do? Dear me! there
+never was anybody perpetually placed in such wretched
+positions as I am!" thought Lady Marabout, as she
+played with her parasol, and murmured something not very
+clear relative to "responsibility" and "not desirable,"
+two words as infallibly a part of Lady Marabout's stock
+in trade as a sneer at the "swells" is of <i>Punch's</i>. How
+she sighed for some cold, nonchalant, bitter sentence, such
+as the Hautton répertoire could have supplied! how she
+scorned herself for her own weakness and lack of severity!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+But she would not have relished hurting a burglar's feelings,
+though she had seen him in the very act of stealing
+her jewel-boxes, by taxing him with the theft; and though
+the Ogre <i>must</i> be crushed, the crushing began to give
+Lady Marabout neuralgic twinges. She was no more
+able to say the stern things she had rehearsed and resolved
+upon, than she was able to stab him with her parasol, or
+strangle him with her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"I guessed rightly what you were about to say to me?"
+said Cheveley, who seemed somehow or other to have taken
+all the talk into his own hands, and to have become the
+master of the position. "I thought so. I do not wonder
+at your construction; I cannot blame you for your resolution.
+Lady Cecil has some considerable fortune, they say;
+it is very natural that you should have imagined a man
+like myself, with no wealth save a good name, which only
+serves to make lack of wealth more conspicuous, incapable
+of seeking her society for any better, higher, more
+disinterested motive than that of her money; it was not
+charitable, perhaps, to decide unhesitatingly that it was
+impossible I could be drawn to her by any other attraction,
+that it was imperative I must be dead to everything
+in her that gives her a nobler and a higher charm; but
+it was very natural, and one learns never to hope for
+the miracle of a charitable judgment, <i>even</i> from Lady
+Marabout!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mr. Cheveley, indeed you mistake!" began
+Lady Marabout, restlessly. That was a little bit of a
+story, he didn't mistake at all; but Lady Marabout, collapsing
+like an india-rubber ball under the prick of a
+sarcasm, shivered all over at his words, his voice, his slight
+sad smile. "The man is as dreadful as Cecil," she
+thought; "he puts things so horribly clearly!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mistake? I do not think I do. You have thought
+all this, and very naturally; but now hear me for a moment.
+I have sought Lady Cecil's society, that is perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+true; we have been thrown together in society, very often
+accidentally; sometimes, I admit, through my own seeking.
+Few men could be with her and be steeled against her. I
+have been with her too much; but I sought her at first
+carelessly, then irresistibly and unconsciously, never with
+the motive you attribute to me. I am not as utterly
+beggared as you deem me, but neither am I entirely barren
+of honor. Believe me, Lady Marabout, my pride alone
+would be amply sufficient to raise a barrier between me
+and Cecil stronger than any that could be opposed to me
+by others. Yesterday I casually overheard words from
+Amandine which showed me that society, like you, has
+put but one construction on the attention I have paid her&mdash;a
+construction I might have foreseen had I not been
+unconsciously fascinated, and forgetful, for the time, of
+the infallible whispers of my kind friends. Her fortune,
+I know, was never numbered among her attractions for
+me; so little, that now that Amandine's careless words
+have reminded me of the verdict of society, I shall
+neither seek her nor see her again. Scores of men marry
+women for their money, and their money alone, but I am
+not one of them; with my own precarious fortunes, only
+escaping ruin because I am not rich enough to tempt ruin.
+I would never take advantage of any interest I may have
+excited in her, to speak to her of a passion that the world
+would tell her was only another name for avarice and
+selfishness. I dare not trust myself with her longer,
+perhaps. I am no god to answer for my self-control;
+but you need not fear; I will never seek her love&mdash;never
+even tell her of mine. I shall leave town to-morrow;
+what <i>I</i> may suffer matters not. Lady Cecil is safe from
+me! Whatever you may have heard of my faults, follies,
+or vices, none ever told you, I think, that I broke my
+word?"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"And when the man said that, my dear Philip, I assure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+you I felt as guilty as if I had done him some horrible
+wrong; he stood there with his head up, looking at me
+with his sad proud eyes&mdash;and they are beautiful!&mdash;till,
+positively, I could almost have cried&mdash;I could, indeed,
+for though I don't like him on principle, I couldn't help
+pitying him," said Lady Marabout, in a subsequent relation
+of the scene to her son. "Wasn't it a terrible position?
+I was as near as possible forgetting everything due
+to poor Rosediamond, and saying to him that I believed
+Cecil liked him and would never like anybody else, but,
+thank Heaven! I remembered myself, and checked myself
+in time. If it had been anybody but Chandos Cheveley,
+I should really have admired him, he spoke so
+nobly! When he lifted his hat and left me, though I
+<i>ought</i> to have been glad (and I <i>was</i> glad, of course) that
+Cecil would be free from the society of anybody so objectionable
+and so dangerous, I felt wretched for him&mdash;I
+did indeed. It <i>is</i> so hard always to be placed in such
+miserable positions!"</p>
+
+<p>By which you will perceive that the triumphant crushing
+of Lady Marabout's Cobra didn't afford her the unmixed
+gratification she had anticipated.</p>
+
+<p>"I have done what was my duty to poor Rosediamond,
+and what General Ormsby's confidence merited," she solaced
+herself that day, feeling uncomfortably and causelessly
+guilty, she hardly knew why, when she saw Chandos
+Cheveley keeping sedulously with the "Amandine
+set," and read in Cecil's tell-tale face wonder, perplexity,
+and regret thereat, till the Frangipane fête came to an
+end. She had appeased the manes of the late Rosediamond,
+who, to her imagination, always appeared sitting
+up aloft keeping watch over the discharge of her chaperone's
+duties, but she had a secret and horrible dread that
+she had excited the wrath of Rosediamond's daughter.
+She had driven her Ogre off the scene, it is true, but
+she could not feel that she had altogether come off the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+best in the contest. Anne Hautton had congratulated
+her, indeed, on having "acted with decision <i>at last</i>," but
+then she had marred it all by asking if Carruthers was
+likely to be engaged to Cecil? And Lady Marabout had
+been forced to confess he was not; Philip, when pressed
+by her that very morning to be a little attentive to Cecil,
+having shaken his head and laughed:</p>
+
+<p>"She's a bewitching creature, mother, but she don't
+bewitch <i>me</i>! You know what Shakspeare says of wooing,
+wedding, and repentance. I've no fancy for the inseparable
+trio!"</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, Lady Marabout was far from peace and tranquillity,
+though the Cobra <i>was</i> crushed, as she drove away
+from the Frangipane breakfast, and she was little nearer
+them when Cecil turned her eyes upon her with a question
+worse to Lady Marabout's ear than the roar of a Lancaster
+battery.</p>
+
+<p>"What have you said to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cecil! What have I said to whom?" returned
+Lady Marabout, with Machiavellian surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"You know well enough, Lady Marabout! What have
+you said to him&mdash;to Mr. Cheveley?"</p>
+
+<p>Cecil's impetuosity invariably knocked Lady Marabout
+down at one blow, as a ball knocks down the pegs at lawn
+billiards. She rallied after the shock, but not successfully,
+and tried at coldness and decision, as recommended by
+Hautton prescriptions.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cecil, I have said to him what I think it my
+duty to say to him. Responsible as I am for you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Responsible for me, Lady Marabout? Indeed you are
+not. I am responsible for myself!" interrupted Lady
+Cecil, with that haughty arch of her eyebrows and that
+flush on her face before which Lady Marabout was powerless.
+"What have you said to him? I <i>will</i> know!"</p>
+
+<p>"I said very little to him, indeed, my dear; he said it
+all himself."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What did he say himself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> tell her&mdash;she is so dreadfully persistent,"
+thought the unhappy and badgered Peeress; and tell her
+she did, being a means of lessening the young lady's interest
+in the subject of discussion as little judicious as she
+could well have hit upon.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil listened, silent for once, shading her face
+with her parasol, shading the tears that gathered on her
+lashes and rolled down her delicate flushed cheeks, at the
+recital of Chandos Cheveley's words, from her chaperone's
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout gathered courage from the tranquillity
+with which her recital was heard.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, my love, Chandos Cheveley's own honor
+points in the same direction with my judgment," she
+wound up, in conclusion. "He has acted rightly at last,
+I allow, and if you&mdash;if you have for the moment felt a
+tinge of warmer interest in him&mdash;if you have been taken
+by the fascination of his manner, and invested him with a
+young girl's romance, you will soon see with us how infinitely
+better it is that you should part, and how impossible
+it is that&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil's eyes flashed such fire through their tears,
+that Lady Marabout stopped, collapsed and paralyzed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is by such advice as that you repay his nobility,
+his generosity, his honor!&mdash;it is by such words as those
+you reward him for acting as not one man in a hundred
+would have acted! Hush, hush, Lady Marabout, I thought
+better of you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens! <i>where will it end?</i>" thought Lady
+Marabout, distractedly, as Rosediamond's wayward daughter
+sprang down at the door with a flush in her face, and
+a contemptuous anger in her eyes, that made Bijou, jumping
+on her, stop, stare, and whine in canine dismay.</p>
+
+<p>"And I fancied she was listening passively!" thought
+Lady Marabout.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well! the man is gone to-day, that is one comfort. I
+am very thankful I acted as I did," reasoned that ever-worried
+lady in her boudoir the next morning. "I am
+afraid Cecil is really very fond of him, there were such
+black shadows under her eyes at breakfast, poor child!
+But it is much better as it is&mdash;much better. I should
+never have held up my head again if I had allowed her to
+make such a disadvantageous alliance. I can hardly bear
+to think of what would have been said, even now the danger
+is over!"</p>
+
+<p>While Lady Marabout was thus comforting herself over
+her embroidery silks, Cecil Ormsby was pacing into the
+Park, with old Twitters the groom ten yards behind her,
+taking her early ride before the world was up&mdash;it was only
+eleven o'clock; Cecil had been used to early rising, and
+would never leave it off, having discovered some recipe that
+made her independent of ordinary mortals' quantum of
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"Surely he will be here this morning to see me for the
+last time," thought that young lady, as she paced up the
+New Ride under the Kensington Gardens trees, with her
+heart beating quickly under the gold aiglettes of her riding-jacket.</p>
+
+<p>"I must see her once more, and then&mdash;&mdash;" thought
+Chandos Cheveley, as he leaned against the rails, smoking,
+as he had done scores of mornings before. His man had
+packed his things; his hansom was waiting at the gates
+to take him to the station, and his portmanteau was lettered
+"Ischl." He had only come to take one last look
+of the face that haunted him as no other had ever succeeded
+in doing. The ring of a horse's hoof fell on his
+ear. There she came, on her roan hack, with the sun
+glancing off her chestnut hair. He looked up to bow to
+her as she passed on, for the Ride had never been a rendezvous
+for more than a bow (Cecil's insurrectionary
+tactics had always been carried on before Lady Marabout's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+face), but the roan was pulled up by him that
+morning for the very first time, and Cecil's eyes fell on
+him through their lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Cheveley&mdash;is it true you are going out of town?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite true."</p>
+
+<p>If her voice quivered as she asked the question, he
+barely kept his own from doing the same as he answered it.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you be gone long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Till next season, at earliest."</p>
+
+<p>His promise to Lady Marabout was hard to keep! He
+would not have trusted his strength if he had known she
+would have done more than canter on with her usual bow
+and smile.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil was silent. The groom waited like a statue his
+ten yards behind them. She played with her reins nervously,
+the color coming and going painfully in her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Marabout told me of&mdash;of some conversation you
+had with her yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>Low as the words were, Cheveley heard them, and his
+hand, as it lay on the rails, shook like a girl's.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil was silent again; she looked at him, her eyes full
+of unshed tears, as the color burned in her face, and she
+drooped her head almost to a level with her hands as they
+played with the reins.</p>
+
+<p>"She told me&mdash;you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped again. Cecil was new to making proposals,
+though not to rejecting them. Cheveley set his teeth to
+keep in the words that rushed to his lips, and Cecil saw
+the struggle as she bent her head lower and lower to the
+saddle, and twisted the reins into a Gordian knot.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you&mdash;must we&mdash;why should&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Fragmentary monosyllables enough, but sufficient to fell
+his strength.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake do not tempt me!" he muttered. "You
+little know&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I know all!" she whispered softly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You cannot! My worthless life!&mdash;my honor! I
+could not take such a sacrifice, I would not!&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;if my peace&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She could not end her phrase, yet it said enough;&mdash;his
+hand closed on hers.</p>
+
+<p>"Your peace! Good God! in <i>my</i> hands! I stay;
+then&mdash;let the world say what it likes!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"Drive back; I have changed my mind about going
+abroad to-day," said Cheveley, as he got into his hansom
+at Albert Gate.</p>
+
+<p>"How soon she has got over it! Girls do," thought
+Lady Marabout, as Cecil Ormsby came in from her ride
+with the brightest bloom on her cheeks a June breeze ever
+fanned there. She laid her hat on the table, flung her
+gauntlets at Bijou, and threw herself on her knees by Lady
+Marabout, a saucy smile on her face, though her lashes
+were wet.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear Lady Marabout, I can forgive you now, but you
+will never forgive me!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout turned white as her point-lace cap,
+gave a little gasp of paralyzed terror, and pushed back
+her chair as though a shell had exploded on the hearth-rug.</p>
+
+<p>"Cecil! Good Heaven!&mdash;you don't mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes I do," said Cecil, with a fresh access of color,
+and a low, soft laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout gasped again for breath:</p>
+
+<p>"General Ormsby!" was all she could ejaculate.</p>
+
+<p>"General Ormsby? What of him? Did you ever
+know uncle Johnnie refuse to please <i>me</i>? And if my
+money be to interfere with my happiness, and not promote
+it, as I conceive it its duty and purpose to do, why,
+I am of age in July, you know, and I shall make a deed
+of gift of it all to the Soldiers' Home or the Wellington
+College, and there is only one person who will care for
+me <i>then</i>."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Lady Cecil was quite capable of carrying her threat
+into execution, and Lady Cecil had her own way accordingly,
+as she had had it from her babyhood.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"I shall never hold up my head again! And what a
+horrible triumph for Anne Hautton! I am always the
+victim&mdash;always!" said Lady Marabout, that day two
+months, when the last guest at Cecil Ormsby's wedding
+déjeûner had rolled away from the house. "A girl who
+might have married anybody, Philip; she refused twenty
+offers this season&mdash;she did, indeed! It is heart-breaking,
+say what you like; you needn't laugh, it <i>is</i>. Why did I
+offer them Fernditton for this month, you say, if I didn't
+countenance the alliance? Nonsense! that is nothing to
+the purpose. Of course, I seemed to countenance it to a
+degree, for Cecil's sake, and I admire Chandos Cheveley,
+I confess (at least I should do, if I didn't dislike his class
+on principle); but, say what you like, Philip, it is the
+most terrible thing that could have happened for <i>me</i>.
+Those men <i>ought</i> to be labelled, or muzzled, or done something
+with, and not be let loose on society as they are.
+He has a noble nature, you say. I don't say anything
+against his nature! She worships him? Well, I know
+she does. What is that to the point? He will make her
+happy? I am sure he will. He has the gentlest way
+with her possible. But how does that console <i>me</i>? Think
+what <i>you</i> feel when an outsider, as you call it, beats all
+the favorites, upsets all your betting-books, and carries
+off the Doncaster Cup, and then realize, if you've any
+humanity in you, what <i>we</i> feel under such a trial as this
+is to me! Only to think what Anne Hautton will
+always say!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout is not the only person to whom the
+first thought, the most dreaded ghost, the ghastliest skeleton,
+the direst aggravation, the sharpest dagger-thrust,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+under all troubles, is the remembrance of that one omnipotent
+Ogre&mdash;"<span class="smcap">Qu'en dira-t-on?</span>"</p>
+
+<p>"Laugh at her, mother," counselled Carruthers; and,
+<i>amis lecteurs</i>, I pass on his advice to you as the best and
+sole bowstring for strangling the ogre in question, which
+is the grimmest we have in all Bogeydom.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc161.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 60%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc162a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2>LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.<br />
+
+<br /><br />IN THREE SEASONS.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="THIRD" id="THIRD"></a>SEASON THE THIRD.&mdash;THE CLIMAX.</h4>
+
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, the most unfortunate thing has
+happened," said Lady Marabout, one morning;
+"really the greatest contretemps that could have
+occurred. I suppose I never <i>am</i> to be quiet!"</p>
+
+<p>"What's the row <i>now</i>, madre carissima?" asked her son.</p>
+
+<p>"It is no row, but it is an annoyance. You have heard
+me speak of my poor dear friend Mrs. Montolieu; you
+know she married unhappily, poor thing, to a dreadful
+creature, something in a West India regiment&mdash;nobody
+at all. It is very odd, and it is very wrong, and there
+must be a great mistake somewhere, but certainly most
+marriages <i>are</i> unhappy."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet you are always recommending the institution!
+What an extraordinary obstinacy and opticism,
+my dear mother! I suppose you do it on the same principle
+as nurses recommend children nasty medicines, or
+as old Levett used to tender me dry biscuit <i>sans confiture</i>:
+''Tisn't so nice as marmalade, I know, Master Philip, but
+then, dear, it's <i>so</i> wholesome!'"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Philip," cried Lady Marabout;
+"I don't mean it in that sense at all, and you know I
+don't. If poor Lilla Montolieu is unhappy, I am sure it
+is all her abominable odious husband's fault; she is the
+sweetest creature possible. But she has a daughter, and
+concerning that daughter she wrote to me about a month
+ago, and&mdash;I never was more vexed in my life&mdash;she
+wants me to bring her out this season."</p>
+
+<p>"A victim again! My poor dear mother, you certainly
+deserve a Belgravian testimonial; you shall have a statue
+set up in Lowndes Square commemorative of the heroic
+endurance of a chaperone's existence, subscribed for
+gratefully by the girls you married well, and penitentially
+by the girls you couldn't marry at all."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout laughed a little, but sighed again:</p>
+
+<p>"'It is fun to you, but it is death to me'&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"As the women say when we flirt with them," interpolated
+Carruthers.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, poor dear Lilla didn't know what to do.
+There she is, in that miserable island with the unpronounceable
+name that the man is governor of; shut out
+of all society, with nobody to marry this girl to if she
+had her there, except their secretary, or a West Indian
+planter. Of course, no mother would ruin her daughter's
+prospects, and take her into such an out-of-the-world
+corner. She knew no one so well as myself, and so to me
+she applied. She is the sweetest creature! I would do
+anything to oblige or please her, but I can't help being
+very sorry she has pounced upon me. And I don't the
+least know what this girl is like, not even whether she is
+presentable. I dare say she was petted and spoiled in
+that lazy, luxurious, tropical life when she was little, and
+she has been brought up the last few years in a convent
+in France, the very last education <i>I</i> should choose for a
+girl. Fancy, if I should find her an ignorant, unformed
+hoyden, or a lethargic, overgrown child, or an artificial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+French girl, who goes to confession every day, and carries
+on twenty undiscoverable love affairs&mdash;fancy, if she
+should be ugly, or awkward, or brusque, or gauche, as
+ten to one she will be&mdash;fancy, if I find her utterly unpresentable!&mdash;what
+in the world shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Decline her," suggested Carruthers. "I wouldn't
+have a horse put in my tilbury that I'd never seen, and
+risk driving a spavined, wall-eyed, underbred brute
+through the Park; and I suppose the ignominy of the
+début would be to you much what the ignominy of such
+a turn-out would be to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Decline her? I can't, my dear Philip! I agreed to
+have her a month ago. I have never seen you to tell you
+till now, you know; you've been so sworn to Newmarket
+all through the Spring Meetings. Decline her? she comes
+to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>"Comes to-night?" laughed Carruthers. "All is lost,
+then. We shall see the Countess of Marabout moving
+through London society with a West Indian, who has a
+skin like Othello; has as much idea of manners as a housemaid
+that suddenly turns out an heiress, and is invited by
+people to whom she yesterday carried up their hot water;
+reflects indelible disgrace on her chaperone by gaucheries
+unparalleled; throws glass or silver missiles at Soames's
+head when he doesn't wait upon her at luncheon to
+her liking, as she has been accustomed to do at the
+negroes&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Philip, pray don't!" cried Lady Marabout, piteously.</p>
+
+<p>"Or, we shall welcome under the Marabout wing a
+young lady fresh from convent walls and pensionnaire
+flirtations, who astonishes a dinner-party by only taking
+the first course, on the score of jours maigres and conscientious
+scruples; who is visited by révérends pères from
+Farm Street, and fills your drawing-room with High
+Church curates, whom she tries to draw over from their
+'mother's' to their 'sister's' open arms; who goes every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+day to early morning mass instead of taking an early
+morning canter, and who, when invited to sing at a soirée
+musicale, begins 'Sancta Maria adorata!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Philip, <i>don't</i>!" cried Lady Marabout. "Bark at him,
+Bijou, the heartless man! It is as likely as not little
+Montolieu may realize one of your horrible sketches. Ah,
+Philip, you don't know what the worries of a chaperone
+are!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Heaven, no!" laughed Carruthers.</p>
+
+<p>"It is easy to make a joke of it, and very tempting, I
+dare say&mdash;one's woes always <i>are</i> amusing to other people,
+they don't feel the smart themselves, and only laugh at the
+grimace it forces from one&mdash;but I can tell you, Philip, it is
+anything <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'put'">but</ins> a pleasant prospect to have to go about in
+society with a girl one may be ashamed of!&mdash;I don't know
+anything more trying; I would as soon wear paste diamonds
+as introduce a girl that is not perfectly good style."</p>
+
+<p>"But why not have thought of all this in time?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout sank back in her chair, and curled
+Bijou's ears, with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, if everybody always thought of things
+in time, would there be any follies committed at all? It's
+precisely because repentance comes too late, that repentance
+is such a horrible wasp, with such a merciless sting. Besides,
+<i>could</i> I refuse poor Lilla Montolieu, unhappy as she is with
+that bear of a man?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never felt more anxious in my life," thought Lady
+Marabout, as she sat before the fire in her drawing-room&mdash;it
+was a chilly April day&mdash;stirring the cream into her pre-prandial
+cup of tea, resting one of her small satin-slippered
+feet on Bijou's back, while the firelight sparkled on the
+Dresden figures, the statuettes, the fifty thousand costly
+trifles, in which the Marabout rooms equalled any in Belgravia.
+"I never felt more anxious&mdash;not on any of Philip's
+dreadful yachting expeditions, nor even when he <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'went that'">went on that</ins>
+perilous exploring tour into Arabia Deserta, I do think. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+she <i>should</i> be unpresentable&mdash;and then poor dear Lilla's
+was not much of a match, and the girl will not have a
+sou, she tells me frankly; I can hardly hope to do anything
+for her. There is one thing, she will not be a responsibility
+like Valencia or Cecil, and what would have
+been a bad match for <i>them</i> will be a good one for her.
+She must accept the first offer made her, if she have any
+at all, which will be very doubtful; few Benedicts bow
+to Beatrices nowadays, unless Beatrice is a good 'investment,'
+as they call it. She will soon be here. That is the
+carriage now stopped, I do think. How anxious I feel!
+Really it can't be worse for a Turkish bridegroom never
+to see his wife's face till after the ceremony than it is for
+one not to have seen a girl till one has to introduce her.
+If she shouldn't be good style!"</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout's heart palpitated, possibly prophetically,
+as she set down her little Sèvres cup and rose
+out of her arm-chair, with Bijou shaking his silver collar
+and bells, to welcome the new inmate of Lowndes Square,
+with her sunny smile and her kindly voice, and her soft
+beaming eyes, which, as I have often stated, would have
+made Lady Marabout look amiable at an Abruzzi bandit
+who had demanded her purse, or an executioner who had
+led her out to capital punishment, and now made her radiate,
+warm and bright, on a guest whose advent she
+dreaded. Hypocrisy, you say. Not a bit of it! Hypocrisy
+may be eminently courteous, but take my word for it,
+it's never <i>cordial</i>! There are natures who throw such
+golden rays around them naturally, as there are others
+who think brusquerie and acidity cardinal virtues, and
+deal them out as points of conscience; are there not sunbeams
+that shine kindly alike on fragrant violet tufts and
+barren brambles, velvet lawns and muddy trottoirs? are
+there not hail-clouds that send jagged points of ice on all
+the world pêle-mêle, as mercilessly on the broken rose as
+on the granite boulder?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"She <i>is</i> good style, thank Heaven!" thought Lady
+Marabout, as she went forward, with her white soft hands,
+their jewels flashing in the light, outstretched in welcome.
+"My dear child, how much you are like your mother!
+You must let me be fond of you for her sake, first, and
+then&mdash;for your own!"</p>
+
+<p>The conventional thought did not make the cordial utterance
+insincere. The two ran in couples&mdash;we often
+drive such pairs, every one of us&mdash;and if they entail insincerity,
+<i>Veritas, vale!</i></p>
+
+<p>"Madre mia, I called to inquire if you have survived
+the anxiety of last night, and to know what <i>jeune sauvage</i>
+or feir <i>religieuse</i> you may have had sent you for the galvanizing
+of Belgravia?" said Carruthers, paying his accustomed
+visit in his mother's boudoir, and throwing
+macaroons at Bijou's nose.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, I hardly know; she puzzles me. She's
+what, if she were a man, I should classify as a detrimental."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she awkward?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least. Perfect manners, wherever she
+learned them."</p>
+
+<p>"Brusque?"</p>
+
+<p>"Soft as a gazelle. Very like her mother."</p>
+
+<p>"Brown?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fair as that statuette, with a beautiful bloom; lovely
+gold hair, too, and hazel eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"What are the shortcomings, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are none; and it's that that puzzles me. She's
+been six years in that convent, and yet, I do assure you,
+her style is perfect. She's hardly eighteen, but she's the
+air of the best society. She is&mdash;a&mdash;well, <i>almost</i> nobody,
+as people rank now, you know, for poor dear Lilla's marriage
+was not what she should have made, but the girl
+might be a royal duke's daughter for manner."</p>
+
+<p>"A premature artificial <i>femme du monde</i>? Bah! nothing
+more odious," said Carruthers, poising a macaroon on Pandore's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+nose. "Make ready!&mdash;present!&mdash;fire! There's a
+good dog!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, nothing of that sort: very natural, frank, vivacious.
+Nothing artificial about her; very charming indeed!
+But she might be a young Countess, the queen of
+a <i>monde</i> rather than a young girl just out of a French
+convent; and, you know, my dear Philip, that sort of wit
+and nonchalance may be admirable for Cecil Cheveley,
+assured of her position, but they're dangerous to a girl
+like this Flora Montolieu: they will make people remark
+her and ask who she is, and try to pull her to pieces, if
+they don't find her somebody they <i>dare</i> not hit. I would
+much rather she were of the general pattern, pleasing, but
+nothing remarkable, well-bred, but nothing to envy, thoroughly
+educated, but monosyllabic in society; such a
+girl as that passes among all the rest, suits mediocre men
+(and the majority of men <i>are</i> mediocre, you know, my
+dear Philip), and pleases women because she is a nice girl,
+and no rival; but this little Montolieu&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout sighed with a prescience of coming
+troubles, while Carruthers laughed and rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Will worry your life out! I must go, for I have to
+sit in court-martial at two (for a mere trifle, a deuced bore
+to us, but <i>le service oblige</i>!), so I shall escape introduction
+to your little Montolieu to-day. Why <i>will</i> you fill your
+house with girls, my dear mother?&mdash;it is fifty times more
+agreeable when you are reigning alone. Henceforth, I
+can't come in to lunch with you without going through
+the formula of a mild flirtation&mdash;women think you so ill-natured
+if you don't flirt a little with them, that amiable
+men like myself haven't strength of mind to refuse. You
+should keep <i>your</i> house an open sanctuary for me, when
+you know I've no other in London except when I retreat
+into White's and the U. S.!"</p>
+
+<p>"She puzzles me!" pondered Lady Marabout, as Despréaux
+disrobed her that night. "I always <i>am</i> to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+puzzled, I think! I never <i>can</i> have one of those quiet,
+mediocre, well-mannered, remarkable-for-nothing girls,
+who have no idiosyncrasies and give nobody any trouble;
+one marries them safely to some second-rate man; nobody
+admires them, and nobody dislikes them; they're to society
+what neutral tint is among body-colors, or rather
+what grays are among dresses, inoffensive, unimpeachable,
+always look ladylike, but never look brilliant; colorless
+dresses are very useful, and so are characterless girls; and
+I dare say the draper would tell us the grays in the long
+run are the easiest to sell, as the girls are to marry; they
+please the commonplace taste of the generality, and do
+for every-day wear! Flora Montolieu puzzles me; she
+is very charming, very striking, very lovable, but she
+puzzles me! I have a presentiment that that child will
+give me a world of anxiety, an infinitude of trouble!"</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout laid her head on her pillow, not
+the happier that Flora Montolieu was lying asleep in the
+room next her, dreaming of the wild-vine shadows and
+the night-blooming flowers of her native tropics, under the
+rose-curtains of her new home in Lowndes Square, already
+a burden on the soul and a responsibility on the mind of
+that home's most genial and generous mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"If she were a man, I should certainly call her a detrimental,"
+said Lady Marabout, after a more deliberate
+study of her charge. "You know, my dear Philip, the
+sort of man one call detrimental; attractive enough to
+do a great deal of damage, and ineligible enough to make
+the damage very unacceptable: handsome and winning,
+but a younger son, or a something nobody wants; a delightful
+flirtation, but a terrible alliance; you know what
+I mean! Well, that is just what this little Montolieu is
+in our sex; I am quite sure it is what she will be considered;
+and if it be bad for a man, it is very much worse
+for a woman! Everybody will admire her, and nobody
+will marry her; I have a presentiment of it!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With which prophetical mélange of the glorious and
+the inglorious for her charge's coming career, Lady Marabout
+sighed, and gave a little shiver, such as</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sous des maux ignorés nous fait gémir d'avance,</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>as Delphine Gay well phrased it. And she floated out
+of her boudoir to the dining-room for luncheon, at which
+unformal and pleasant meal Carruthers chanced to stay,
+criticise a new dry sherry, and take a look at this unsalable
+young filly of the Marabout Yearling Sales.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about her being detrimental, mother,
+nor about her being little; she in more than middle
+height," laughed he; "but I vow she is the prettiest
+thing you've had in your list for some time. You've
+had much greater beauties, you say? Well, perhaps so;
+but I bet you any money she will make a sensation."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure she will," reiterated Lady Marabout, despairingly.
+"I have no doubt she will have a brilliant season;
+there is something very piquante, taking, and uncommon
+about her; but who will marry her at the end
+of it?"</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers shouted with laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven forbid that I should attempt to prophesy! I
+would undertake as readily to say who'll be the owner of
+the winner of the Oaks ten years hence! I can tell you
+who <i>won't</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yourself; because you'll never marry anybody at
+all," cried Lady Marabout. "Well! I must say I should
+not wish you to renounce your misogamistic notions here.
+The Montolieus are not at all what <i>you</i> should look for;
+and a child like Flora would be excessively ill suited to
+you. If I could see you married, as I should desire, to
+some woman of weight and dignity, five or six-and-twenty,
+fit for you in every way&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>De grace, de grace!</i> My dear mother, the mere sketch
+will kill me, if you insist on finishing it! Be reasonable!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+Can anything be more comfortable, more tranquil, than I
+am now? I swing through life in a rocking-chair; if I'm
+a trifle bored now and then, it's my heaviest trial. I float
+as pleasantly on the waves of London life, in my way, as
+the lotus-eaters of poetry on the Ganges in theirs; and
+<i>you'd</i> have the barbarity to introduce into my complacent
+existence the sting of matrimony, the phosphorus of
+Hymen's torch, the symbolical serpent of a wedding-ring?&mdash;for
+shame!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout laughed despite herself, and the solemnity,
+in <i>her</i> eyes, of the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>should</i> like to see you happily married, for all that,
+though I quite despair of it now; but perhaps you are
+right."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I am right! Adam was tranquil and unworried
+till fate sent him a wife, and he was typical of the
+destinies of his descendants. Those who are wise, take
+warning; those who are not, neglect it and repent. Lady
+Hautton <ins title="Transcriber's Note: abbreviation for the French 'compagnie'">et C<sup>ie</sup></ins> are very fond of twisting scriptural obscurities
+into 'types.' <i>There's</i> a type plain as day, and
+salutary to mankind, if detrimental to women!"</p>
+
+<p>"Philip, you are abominable! don't be so wicked!"
+cried Lady Marabout, enjoying it all the more because
+she was a little shocked at it, as your best women will on
+occasion; human nature is human nature everywhere,
+and the female heart gives pleasurable little pulses at the
+sight of forbidden fruits now, as in the days of Eve.</p>
+
+<p>"Who's that Miss Montolieu with your mother this
+year, Phil?" dozens of men asked Carruthers, that season,
+across the mess-table, in the smoking-room of the Guards,
+in the Ride or the Ring, in the doorways of ball-rooms, or
+anywhere where such-like questions are asked and new
+pretty women discussed.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it in her that takes so astonishingly?" wondered
+Lady Marabout, who is, like most women, orthodox
+on all points, loving things by rule, worrying if they go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+out of the customary routine, and was, therefore, quite
+incapable of reconciling herself to so revolutionary a fact
+as a young lady being admired who was not a beauty, and
+sought while she was detrimental in every way. It was
+"out of the general rule," and your orthodox people hate
+anything "out of the general run," as they hate their
+prosperous friends: the force of hatred can no further
+go! Flora Montolieu's crime in Belgravia was much akin
+to the Bonapartes' crimes to the Bourbons. Thrones
+must be filled legitimately, if not worthily, in the eyes
+of the orthodox people, and this Petit Caporal of Lady
+Marabout's had no business to reign where the Hereditary
+Princesses and all the other noble lines failed to sway the
+sceptre. Lady Marabout, belonging to the noble lines
+herself, agreed in her heart with them, and felt a little
+bit guilty to have introduced this democratic and unwelcome
+element in society.</p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu "took," as people say of bubble companies,
+meaning that they will pleasantly ruin a million
+or two: or of new fashions, meaning that they will become
+general with the many and, <i>sequitur</i>, unwearable
+with the few. She had the brilliance and grace of one
+of her own tropical flowers, with something piquante and
+attractive about her that one had to leave nameless, but
+that was all the more charming for that very fact perhaps;
+full of life and animation, but soft as a gazelle, as her
+chaperone averred; not characterless, as Lady Marabout
+fondly desired (on the same principle, I suppose, as a
+timid whip likes a horse as spiritless as a riding-school
+hack), but gifted with plenty of very marked character,
+so much, indeed, that it rather puzzled her <i>camériste</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Girls shouldn't have marked character; they should
+be clay that one can mould, not a self-chiselled statuette,
+that will only go into its own niche, and won't go into
+any other. This little Montolieu would make just such
+a woman as Vittoria Colonna or Madame de Sablé, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+one doesn't want <i>those</i> qualities in a girl, who is but a
+single little ear in the wheat-sheaf of society, and whom
+one wants to marry off, but can't expect to marry well.
+Her poor mother, of course, will look to me to do something
+advantageous for her, and I verily believe she is that sort
+of girl that will let me do nothing," thought Lady Marabout,
+already beginning to worry, as she talked to Lady
+George Frangipane at a breakfast in Palace Gardens,
+and watched Flora Montolieu, with Carruthers on her
+left and Goodwood on her right, amusing them both, to
+all semblance, and holding her own to the Lady Hautton's
+despite, who held <i>their</i> own so excessively chillily and
+loftily that no ordinary mortals cared to approach them,
+but, beholding them, thought involuntarily of the stately
+icebergs off the Spitzbergen coast, only that the icebergs
+<i>could</i> melt or explode when their time came, and the
+time was never known when the Hautton surface could
+be moved to anger or melt to any sunshine whatever.
+At least, whether their maids or their mother ever beheld
+the first of the phenomena, far be it from me to say, but
+the world never saw either.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Miss Montolieu, how do you like our life here?"
+Carruthers was asking. "Which is preferable&mdash;Belgravia
+or St. Denis?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Belgravia, decidedly," laughed Lady Marabout's
+charge. "I think your life charming. All change, excitement,
+gayety, who would not like it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody&mdash;that is not fresh to it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fresh to it? Ah! are you one of the class who find
+no beauty in anything unless it is new? If so, do not
+charge the blame on to the thing, as your tone implies;
+take it rather to yourself and your own fickleness."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I do," smiled Carruthers. "But whether
+one's self or 'the thing' is to blame, the result's much the
+same&mdash;satiety! Wait till you have had two or three
+seasons, and then tell me if you find this mill-wheel routine,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+these circus gyrations, so delightful! We are the
+performing stud, who go round and round in the hippodrome,
+day after day for show, till we are sick of the
+whole programme, knowing our white stars are but a
+daub of paint, and our gay spangles only tinfoil. You
+are a little pony just joined to the troupe, and just pleased
+with the glitter of the arena. Wait till you've had a
+few years of it before you say whether going through the
+same hoops and passing over the same sawdust is so very
+amusing."</p>
+
+<p>"If I do not, I shall desert the troupe, and form a circus
+of my own less mechanical and more enjoyable."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Il faut souffrir pour être belle, il faut souffrir encore
+plus pour être à la mode!</i>" said Goodwood, on her right,
+while Lady Egidia Hautton thought, "How bold that
+little Montolieu is!" and her sister, Lady Feodorowna,
+wondered what her cousin Goodwood <i>could</i> see there.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see the necessity," interrupted Flora, "and I
+certainly would never bow to the 'il faut.' I would make
+fashion follow me; I would not follow fashion." ("That
+child talks as though she were the Duchess of Amandine;"
+thought Lady Marabout, catching fragmentary portions
+across the table, the Marabout oral and oracular organs
+being always conveniently multiplied when she was armed
+cap à pie as a chaperone.) "Sir Philip, you talk as if
+you belonged to the 'nothing-is-new, and nothing-is-true,
+and it-don't-signify' class. I should have thought you
+were above the nil admirari affectation."</p>
+
+<p>"He admires, as we all do, when we find something
+that compels our homage," said Goodwood, with an emphasis
+that would have made the hearts of any of the
+Hereditary Princesses palpitate with gratification, but
+at which the ungrateful Petit Caporal only glanced at
+him a little surprisedly with her large hazel eyes, as
+though she by no means saw the point of the speech.</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers laughed:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Nil admirari? Oh no. I enjoy life, but then it is
+thanks to the clubs, my yacht, my cigar-case, my stud,
+a thousand things,&mdash;not thanks at all to Belgravia."</p>
+
+<p>"Complimentary to the Belgraviennes!" cried Flora,
+with a shrug of her shoulders. "They have not known
+how to amuse you, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies never <i>do</i> amuse us!" sighed Carruthers. "<i>Tant
+pis pour nous!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to Lady Patchouli's this evening?"
+asked Goodwood.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe we are. I think Lady Marabout said so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall exert myself, and go too. It will be a
+terrible bore&mdash;balls always are. But to waltz with <i>you</i>
+I will try to encounter it!"</p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu arched her eyebrows, and gave him a
+little disdainful glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Goodwood, do not be so sure that I shall waltz
+at all with you. If <i>you</i> take vanity for wit, <i>I</i> cannot
+accept discourtesy as compliment!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well hit, little lady!" thought Carruthers, with a
+mental bravissima.</p>
+
+<p>"What a speech!" thought Lady Marabout, across the
+table, as shocked as though a footman had dropped a
+cascade of iced hock over her.</p>
+
+<p>"You got it for once, Goodwood," laughed Carruthers,
+as they drove away in his tilbury. "You never had such
+a sharp brush as that."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove, no! Positively it was quite a new sensation&mdash;refreshing,
+indeed! One grows so tired of the women
+who agree with one eternally. She's charming, on my
+word. Who <i>is</i> she, Phil? In an heraldic sense, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, what could possess you to answer
+Lord Goodwood like that?" cried Lady Marabout, as her
+barouche rolled down Palace Gardens.</p>
+
+<p>"Possess me? The Demon of Mischief, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my love, it was a wonderful compliment from
+him!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Was it? I do not see any compliment in those vain,
+impertinent, Brummelian amour-propreisms. I must coin
+the word, there is no good one to express it."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear Flora, you know he is the Marquis of
+Goodwood, the Duke of Doncaster's son! It is not as if
+he were a boy in the Lancers, or an unfledged <i>petit maître</i>
+from the Foreign Office&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Were he her Majesty's son, he should not gratify his
+vanity at my expense! If he expected me to be flattered
+by his condescension, he mistook me very much. He has
+been allowed to adopt that tone, I suppose; but from a
+man to a woman a chivalrous courtesy is due, though the
+man be an emperor."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so&mdash;of course; but that <i>is</i> their tone nowadays,
+my love, and you cannot alter it. I always say the
+Regency-men inaugurated it, and their sons and grandsons
+out-Herod Herod. But to turn a tide, or be a wit
+with impunity, a woman wants to occupy a prominent and
+unassailable position. Were you the Duchess of Amandine,
+you might say that sort of thing, but a young girl
+just out <i>must not</i>&mdash;indeed she must not! The Hauttons
+heard you, and the Hauttons are very merciless people;
+perfectly bred themselves, and pitiless on the least infringement
+of the convenances. Besides, ten to one you
+may have gained Goodwood's ill-will; and he is a man
+whose word has immense weight, I assure you."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see anything remarkable in him to give him
+weight," said the literal and unimpressible little Montolieu.
+"He is a commonplace person to my taste, neither
+so brilliant nor so handsome by a great deal as many
+gentlemen I see&mdash;as Sir Philip, for instance, Lady Marabout?"</p>
+
+<p>"An my son? No, my love, he is not; very few men
+have Philip's talents and person," said Lady Marabout,
+consciously mollified and propitiated, but going on, nevertheless,
+with a Spartan impartiality highly laudable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+"Goodwood's rank, however, is much higher than Philip's
+(at least it stands so, though really the Carruthers are by
+far the older, dating as far back as Ethelbert II., while
+the Doncaster family are literally unknown till the fourteenth
+century, when Gervaise d'Ascotte received the
+acolade before Ascalon from Godfrey de Bouillon); Goodwood
+<i>has</i> great weight, my dear, in the best circles. A
+compliment from him is a great compliment to any woman,
+and the sort of answer you gave him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Must have been a great treat to him, dear Lady Marabout,
+if every one is in the habit of kow-towing before
+him. Princes, you know, are never so happy as when
+they can have a little bit of nature; and my speech must
+have been as refreshing to Lord Goodwood as the breath
+of his Bearnese breezes and the freedom of his Pyrenean
+forests were to Henri Quatre after the court etiquette and
+the formal ceremonial of Paris."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about its being a treat to him, my dear;
+it was more likely to be a shower-bath. And your illustration
+isn't to the point. The Bearnese breezes were
+Henri Quatre's native air, and might be pleasant to him;
+but the figurative ones are not Goodwood's, and I am sure
+cannot please him."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Lady Marabout, I do not want to please him!"
+persisted the young lady, perversely. "I don't care in
+the least what he thinks, or what he says of me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me, how oddly things go!" thought Lady Marabout.
+"There was Valencia, one of the proudest girls
+in England, his equal in every way, an acknowledged
+beauty, who would have said the dust on the trottoir was
+diamonds, and worn turquoises on azureline, or emeralds
+on rose, I verily believe, if such opticisms and gaucheries
+had been Goodwood's taste; and here is this child&mdash;for
+whom the utmost one can do will be to secure a younger
+son out of the Civil Service, or a country member&mdash;cannot
+be made to see that he is of an atom more importance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+than Soames or Mason, and treats him with downright
+nonchalant indifference. What odd anomalies one sees
+in everything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who <i>is</i> that young lady with you this season?" Lady
+Hautton asked, smiling that acidulated smile with which
+that amiable saint always puts long questions to you of
+which she knows the answer would be <i>peine forte et dure</i>.
+"Not the daughter of that horrid John Montolieu, who
+did all sorts of dreadful things, and was put into a West
+India regiment? Indeed! that man? Dear me! Married
+the sister of your incumbent at Fernditton? Ah,
+really!&mdash;very singular! But how do you come to have
+brought out the daughter?"</p>
+
+<p>At all of which remarks Lady Marabout winced, and
+felt painfully guilty of a gross democratic dereliction
+from legitimate and beaten paths, conscious of having
+sinned heavily in the eyes of the world and Lady Hautton,
+by bringing within the sacred precincts of Belgravia the
+daughter of a <i>mauvais sujet</i> in a West India corps and a
+sister of a perpetual curate. The world was a terrible
+dragon to Lady Marabout; to her imagination it always
+appeared an incarnated and omniscient bugbear, Argus-eyed,
+and with all its hundred eyes relentlessly fixed on
+her, spying out each item of her shortcomings, every little
+flaw in the Marabout diamonds, any spur-made tear
+in her Honiton flounces, any crease in her train at a
+Drawing-room, any lèse-majesté against the royal rule of
+conventionalities, any glissade on the polished oak floor
+of society, though like a good many other people she
+often worried herself needlessly; the flaws, tears, creases,
+high treasons, and false glissades being fifty to one too
+infinitesimal or too unimportant to society for one of the
+hundred eyes (vigilant and unwinking though I grant
+they are) to take note of them. The world was a terrible
+bugbear to Lady Marabout, and its special impersonation
+was Anne Hautton. She disliked Anne Hautton; she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+didn't esteem her; she knew her to be a narrow, censorious,
+prejudiced, and strongly malicious lady; but she
+was the personification of the World to Lady Marabout,
+and had weight and terror in consequence. Lady Marabout
+is not the first person who has burnt incense and
+bowed in fear before a little miserable clay image she cordially
+despised, for no better reason&mdash;for the self-same
+reason, indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"She evidently thinks I ought not to have brought
+Flora out; and perhaps I shouldn't; though, poor little
+thing, it seems very hard she may not enjoy society&mdash;fitted
+for society, too, as she is&mdash;just because her father is in a
+West India regiment, and poor Lilla was only a clergyman's
+daughter. Goodwood really seems to admire her.
+I can never forgive him for his heartless flirtation with
+Valencia; but if he <i>were</i> to be won by a Montolieu, what
+would the Hauttons say?"</p>
+
+<p>And sitting against the wall, with others of her sisterhood,
+at a ball, a glorious and golden vision rose up before
+Lady Marabout's eyes.</p>
+
+<p>If the unknown, unwelcome, revolutionary little Montolieu
+should go in and win where the Lady Hauttons
+had tried and failed through five seasons&mdash;if this little
+tropical flower should be promoted to the Doncaster conservatory,
+where all the stately stephanotises of the
+peerage had vainly aspired to bloom&mdash;if this Petit Caporal
+should be crowned with the Doncaster diadem,
+that all the legitimate rulers had uselessly schemed to
+place on their brows! The soul of Lady Marabout rose
+elastic at the bare prospect&mdash;it would be a great triumph
+for a chaperone as for a general to conquer a valuable
+position with a handful of boy recruits.</p>
+
+<p>If it <i>should</i> be! Anne Hautton would have nothing
+to say after <i>that</i>!</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout, though she was the most amiable
+lady in Christendom, was not exempt from a feeling of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+longing for a stone to roll to the door of her enemy's
+stronghold, or a flourish of trumpets to silence the boastful
+and triumphant <i>fanfare</i> that was perpetually sounding
+at sight of her defeats from her opponent's ramparts.</p>
+
+<p>Wild, visionary, guiltily scheming, sinfully revolutionary
+seemed such a project in her eyes. Still, how tempting!
+It would be a terrible blow to Valencia, who'd
+tried for Goodwood fruitlessly, to be eclipsed by this unknown
+Flora; it would be a terrible blow to their Graces
+of Doncaster, who held nobody good enough, heraldically
+speaking, for their heir-apparent, to see him give the best
+coronet in England to a bewitching little interloper, sans
+money, birth, or rank. "They wouldn't like it, of course;
+I shouldn't like it for Philip, for instance, though she's
+a very sweet little thing; all the Ascottes would be very
+vexed, and all the Valletorts would never forgive it; but
+it would be <i>such</i> a triumph over Anne Hautton!" pondered
+Lady Marabout, and the last clause carried the day.
+Did you ever know private pique fail to carry the day over
+public charity?</p>
+
+<p>And Lady Marabout glanced with a glow of prospective
+triumph, which, though erring to her Order, was delicious
+to her individuality, at Goodwood waltzing with the little
+Montolieu a suspicious number of times, while Lady Egidia
+Hautton was condemned to his young brother, Seton
+Ascotte, and Lady Feodorowna danced positively with
+nobody better than their own county member, originally
+a scion of Goodwood's bankers! Could the force of
+humiliation further go? Lady Hautton sat smiling and
+chatting, but the tiara on her temples was a figurative
+thorn crown, and Othello's occupation was gone. When
+a lady's daughters are dancing with an unavailable <i>cadet</i>
+of twenty, and a parvenu, only acceptable in the last extremities
+of despair, what good is it for her to watch the
+smiles and construe the attentions?</p>
+
+<p>"We shall see who triumphs now," thought Lady Marabout,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+with a glow of pleasure, for which her heart reproached
+her a moment afterwards. "It is very wrong,"
+she thought; "if those poor girls don't marry, one ought
+to pity them; and as for her&mdash;going through five seasons,
+with a fresh burden of responsibility leaving the schoolroom,
+and added on your hands each year, <i>must</i> sour the
+sweetest temper; it would do mine, I am sure. I dare
+say, if I had had daughters, I should have been ten times
+more worried even than I am."</p>
+
+<p>Which she would have been, undoubtedly, and the eligibles
+on her visiting-list ten times more too! Men
+wouldn't have voted the Marabout dinners and soirées so
+pleasant as they did, under the sway of that sunshiny
+hostess, if there had been Lady Maudes and Lady Marys
+to exact attention, and lay mines under the Auxerre carpets,
+and man-traps among the épergne flowers of Lowndes
+Square. Nor would Lady Marabout have been the same;
+the sunshine couldn't have shone so brightly, nor the
+milk of roses flowed so mildly under the weight and wear
+of marriageable but unmarried daughters; the sunshine
+would have been fitful, the milk of roses curdled at best.
+And no wonder! Those poor women! they have so much
+to go through in the world, and play but such a monotonous
+rôle, taken at its most brilliant and best, from first
+to last, from cradle to grave, from the berceaunettes in
+which they commence their existence to the mausoleum
+in which they finish it. If they <i>do</i> get a little bit soured
+when they have finished their own game, and have to sit
+at the card-tables, wide awake however weary, vigilant
+however drowsy, alert however bored to death, superintending
+the hands of the fresh players, surreptitiously
+suggesting means for securing the tricks, keeping a
+dragon's eye out for revokes, and bearing all the brunt
+of the blame if the rubber be lost&mdash;if they do get a little
+bit soured, who can, after all, greatly wonder?</p>
+
+<p>"That's a very brilliant little thing, that girl Montolieu,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+said Goodwood, driving over to Hornsey Wood, the morning
+after, with Carruthers and some other men, in his
+drag.</p>
+
+<p>"A deuced pretty waltzer!" said St. Lys, of the Bays;
+"turn her round in a square foot."</p>
+
+<p>"And looks very well in the saddle; sits her horse
+better than any woman in the Ride, except Rosalie
+Rosière, and as she came from the Cirque Olympique
+originally, one don't count <i>her</i>," said Fulke Nugent. "I
+<i>do</i> like a woman to ride well, I must say. I promised
+your mother to take a look at the Marabout Yearling
+Sale, Phil, if ever I wanted the never-desirable and ever-burdensome
+article she has to offer, and if anything could
+tempt me to pay the price she asks, I think it would be
+that charming Montolieu."</p>
+
+<p>"She's the best thing Lady Tattersall ever had on
+hand," said Goodwood, drawing his whip over his off-wheeler's
+back. "You know, Phil&mdash;gently, gently,
+Coronet!&mdash;what spoilt your handsome cousin was, as I
+said, that it was all mechanism; perfect mechanism, I
+admit, but all artificial, prearranged, put together, wound
+up to smile in this place, bow in that, and frown in the
+other; clockwork every inch of it! Now&mdash;so-ho,
+Zouave! confound you, <i>won't</i> you be quiet?&mdash;little Montolieu
+hasn't a bit of artifice about her; 'tisn't only that
+you don't know what she's going to say, but that <i>she</i>
+doesn't either; and whether it's a smile or a frown, a
+jest or a reproof, it's what the moment brings out, not
+what's planned beforehand."</p>
+
+<p>"The hard hit you had the other day seems to have
+piqued your interest," said Carruthers, smoothing a loose
+leaf of his Manilla.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally. The girl didn't care a button about my
+compliment (I only said it to try her), and the plucky
+answer she gave me amused me immensely. Anything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+unartificial and frank is as refreshing as hock-and-seltzer
+after a field-day&mdash;one likes it, don't you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderfully eloquent you are, Goody. If you come
+out like that in St. Stephen's, we sha'n't know you, and
+the ministerialists will look down in the mouth with a
+vengeance!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be satirical, Phil! If I admire Mademoiselle
+Flora, what is it to you, pray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all," said Carruthers, with unnecessary
+rapidity of enunciation.</p>
+
+<p>"My love, what are you going to wear to-night? The
+Bishop of Bonviveur is coming. He was a college friend
+of your poor uncle's; knew your dear mother before she
+married. I want you to look your very best and charm
+him, as you certainly do most people," said Lady Marabout.
+Adroit intriguer! The bishop was going, sans
+doute; the bishop loved good wine, good dinners, and good
+society, and found all three in Lowndes Square, but the
+bishop was entirely unavailable for purposes matrimonial,
+having had three wives, and being held tight in hand by a
+fourth; however, a bishop is a convenient piece to cover
+your king, in chess, and the bishop served admirably just
+then in Lady Marabout's moves as a <i>locum tenens</i> for
+Goodwood. Flora Montolieu, in her innocence, made
+herself look her prettiest for her mother's old friend, and
+Flora Montolieu was conveniently ready, looking her
+prettiest, for her chaperone's pet-eligible, when Goodwood&mdash;who
+hated to dine anywhere in London except at the
+clubs, the Castle, or the Guards' mess, and was as difficult
+to get for your dinners as birds'-nests soup or Tokay
+pur&mdash;entered the Marabout drawing-rooms.</p>
+
+<p>"Anne Hautton will see he dined here to-night, in the
+<i>Morning Post</i> to-morrow morning, and she will know
+Flora must attract him very unusually. What <i>will</i> she,
+and Egidia, and Feodorowna say?" thought Lady Marabout,
+with a glow of pleasure, which she was conscious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+was uncharitable and sinful, and yet couldn't repress, let
+her try how she might.</p>
+
+<p>In scheming for the future Duke of Doncaster for John
+Montolieu's daughter, she felt much as democratically and
+treasonably guilty to her order as a prince of the blood
+might feel heading a Chartist émeute; but then, suppose
+the Chartist row was that Prince's sole chance of crushing
+an odious foe, as it was the only chance for her to
+humiliate the Hautton, don't you think it might look
+tempting? Judge nobody, my good sir, till you've been
+in similar circumstances yourself&mdash;a golden rule, which
+might with advantage employ those illuminating colors
+with which ladies employ so much of their time just now.
+Remembering it, they might hold their white hands from
+flinging those sharp flinty stones, that surely suit them so
+ill, and that soil their fingers in one way quite as much
+as they soil the victim's bowed head in another? Illuminate
+the motto, mesdames and demoiselles! Perhaps you
+<i>will</i> do that&mdash;on a smalt ground, with a gold Persian
+arabesque round, and impossible flowers twined in and
+out of the letters; but, <i>remember</i> it!&mdash;pardon! It were
+asking too much.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, did you notice how very marked
+Goodwood's attentions were to Flora last night?" asked
+Lady Marabout, the morning after, in one of her most
+sunshiny and radiant moods, as Carruthers paid her his
+general matutinal call in her boudoir.</p>
+
+<p>"Marked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, marked! Why do you repeat it in that tone?
+If they <i>were</i> marked, there is nothing to be ridiculed that
+I see. They were very marked, indeed, especially for
+him; he's such an unimpressible, never-show-anything
+man. I wonder you did not notice it!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear mother!" said Carruthers, a little impatiently,
+brushing up the Angora cat's ruff the wrong
+way with his cane, "do you suppose I pass my evenings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+noticing the attentions other men may see fit to pay to
+young ladies?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;don't be impatient. You never used to be,"
+said Lady Marabout. "If you were in my place just for
+a night or two, or any other chaperone's, you'd be more
+full of pity. But people never <i>will</i> sympathize with anything
+that doesn't touch themselves. The only chords
+that strike the key-note in anybody is the chord that
+sounds 'self;' and that is the reason why the world is as
+full of crash and tumult as Beethoven's 'Storm.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right, my dear mother!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it's quite right. I always think you have
+a great deal of sympathy for a man, Philip, even for
+people you don't harmonize with&mdash;(you could sympathize
+with that child Flora, yesterday, in her rapturous delight
+at seeing that Coccoloba Uvifera in the Patchouli conservatory,
+because it reminded her of her West Indian
+home, and you care nothing whatever about flowers, nor
+yet about the West Indies, I should suppose)&mdash;but you
+never will sympathize with me. You know how many
+disappointments and grievances and vexations of every
+kind I have had the last ten, twenty, ay, thirty, forty
+seasons&mdash;ever since I had to chaperone your aunt
+Eleanore, almost as soon as I was married, and was worried,
+more than anybody ever <i>was</i> worried, by her coquetteries
+and her inconsistencies and her vacillations&mdash;so
+badly as she married, too, at the last! Those flirting
+beauties so often do; they throw away a hundred admirable
+chances and put up with a wretched <i>dernier resort</i>;&mdash;let
+a thousand salmon break away from the line
+out of their carelessness, and end by being glad to land
+a little minnow. I don't know when I <i>haven't</i> been worried
+by chaperoning. Flora Montolieu is a great anxiety,
+a great difficulty, little detrimental that she is!"</p>
+
+<p>"Detrimental! What an odd word you choose for her."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't choose it for her; she <i>is</i> it," returned Lady
+Marabout, decidedly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"How so?"</p>
+
+<p>"How so! Why, my dear Philip, I told you the very
+first day she came. How so! when she is John Montolieu's
+daughter, when she has no birth to speak of, and
+not a farthing to her fortune."</p>
+
+<p>"If she were Jack Ketch's daughter, you could not
+speak much worse. Her high-breeding might do credit
+to a Palace; I only wish one found it in all Palaces!
+and I never knew you before measure people by their
+money."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, no more I do. I can't bear you when
+you speak in that tone; it's so hard and sarcastic, and
+unlike you. <i>I</i> don't know what you mean either. I
+should have thought a man of the world like yourself
+knew well enough what I intend when I say Flora is a
+detrimental. She has a sweet temper, very clever, very
+lively, very charming, as any one knows by the number
+of men that crowd about her, but a detrimental she
+is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little heart!" muttered Carruthers in his beard,
+too low for his mother to hear.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And yet I am quite positive that if she herself act
+judiciously, and it is well managed for her, Goodwood
+may be won before the season is over," concluded Lady
+Marabout.</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers, not feeling much interest, it is presumed, in
+the exclusively feminine pursuit of match-making, returned
+no answer, but played with Bijou's silver bells,
+and twisted his own tawny moustaches.</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite positive it <i>may be</i>, if properly managed,"
+reiterated Lady Marabout. "You might second me a
+little, Philip."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I?</i> Good Heavens! my dear mother, what are you
+thinking of? I would sooner turn torreador, and throw
+lassos over bulls at Madrid, than help you to fling nuptial
+cables over poor devils in Belgravia. Twenty to one?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+I'm going to the Yard to look at a bay filly of Cope
+Fielden's, and then on to a mess-luncheon of the Bays."</p>
+
+<p>"Must you go?" said his mother, looking lovingly on
+him. "You look tired, Philip. Don't you feel well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly; but Cambridge had us out over those confounded
+Wormwood Scrubs this morning, and three hours
+in this June sun, in our harness, makes one swear. If it
+were a sharp brush, it would put life into one; as it is, it
+only inspires one with an intense suffering from boredom,
+and an intense desire for hock and seltzer."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad you haven't a sharp brush, as you
+call it, for all that," said Lady Marabout. "It might be
+very pleasant to you, Philip, but it wouldn't be quite so
+much so to me. I wish you would stay to luncheon."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to-day, thanks; I have so many engagements."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been very good in coming to see me this
+season&mdash;even better than usual. It <i>is</i> very good of you,
+with all your amusements and distractions. You have
+given me a great many days this month," said Lady Marabout,
+gratefully. "Anne Hautton sees nothing of Hautton,
+she says, except at a distance in Pall-Mall or the
+Park, all the season through. Fancy if I saw no more
+of you! Do you know, Philip, I am almost reconciled to
+your never marrying. I have never seen anybody I
+should like at all for you, unless you had chosen Cecil
+Ormsby&mdash;Cecil Cheveley I mean; and I am sure I should
+be very jealous of your wife if you had one. I couldn't
+help it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Rest tranquil, my dear mother; you will never be
+put to the test!" said Carruthers, with a laugh, as he bid
+her good morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps it <i>is</i> best he shouldn't marry: I begin to
+think so," mused Lady Marabout, as the door closed on
+him. "I used to wish it very much for some things. He
+is the last of his name, and it seems a pity; there ought
+to be an heir for Deepdene; but still marriage <i>is</i> such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+lottery (he is right enough there, though I don't admit it
+to him: it's a tombola where there is one prize to a million
+of blanks; one can't help seeing that, though, on
+principle, I never allow it to him or any of his men), and
+if Philip had any woman who didn't appreciate him, or
+didn't understand him, or didn't make him happy, how
+wretched <i>I</i> should be! I have often pictured Philip's
+wife to myself, I have often idealized the sort of woman
+I should like to see him marry, but it's very improbable
+I shall ever meet my ideal realized; one never does!
+And, after all, whenever I have fancied, years ago, he
+<i>might</i> be falling in love, I have always felt a horrible
+dread lest she shouldn't be worthy of him&mdash;a jealous
+fear of her that I could not conquer. It's much better as
+it is; there is no woman good enough for him."</p>
+
+<p>With which compliment to Carruthers at her sex's expense
+Lady Marabout returned to weaving her pet projected
+toils for the ensnaring of Goodwood, for whom
+also, if asked, I dare say the Duchess of Doncaster would
+have averred on <i>her</i> part, looking through <i>her</i> maternal
+Claude glasses, no woman was good enough either. When
+ladies have daughters to marry, men always present to
+their imaginations a battalion of worthless, decalogue-smashing,
+utterly unreliable individuals, amongst whom
+there is not one fit to be trusted or fit to be chosen; but
+when their sons are the candidates for the holy bond, they
+view all women through the same foggy and non-embellishing
+medium, which, if it does not speak very much
+for their unprejudiced discernment, at least speaks to the
+oft-disputed fact of the equality of merit in the sexes,
+and would make it appear that, in vulgar parlance, there
+must be six of the one and half a dozen of the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Flora, soft and careless, and rebellious as she looks,
+<i>is</i> ambitious, and has set her heart on winning Goodwood,
+I do believe, as much as ever poor Valencia did. True,
+she takes a different plan of action, as Philip would call<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+it, and treats him with gay nonchalante indifference, which
+certainly seems to pique him more than ever my poor
+niece's beauty and quiet deference to his opinions did;
+but that is because she reads him better, and knows more
+cleverly how to rouse him. She has set her heart on winning
+Goodwood, I am certain, ambitious as it seems. How
+eagerly she looked out for the Blues yesterday at that
+Hyde Park inspection&mdash;though I am sure Goodwood
+does not look half so handsome as Philip does in harness,
+as they call it; Philip is so much the finer man! I will
+just sound her to-day&mdash;or to-night as we come back from
+the opera," thought Lady Marabout, one morning.</p>
+
+<p>Things were moving to the very best of her expectations.
+Learning experience from manifold failures, Lady
+Marabout had laid her plans this time with a dexterity
+that defied discomfiture: seconded by both the parties
+primarily necessary to the accomplishment of her man[oe]uvres,
+with only a little outer-world opposition to give
+it piquancy and excitement, she felt that she might defy
+the fates to checkmate her here. This should be her
+Marathon and Lemnos, which, simply reverted to, should
+be sufficient to secure her immunity from the attacks of
+any feminine Xantippus who should try to rake up her
+failures and tarnish her glory. To win Goodwood with a
+nobody's daughter would be a feat as wonderful in its
+way as for Miltiades to have passed "in a single day and
+with a north wind," as Oracle exacted, to the conquest of
+the Pelasgian Isles; and Lady Marabout longed to do it,
+as you, my good sir, may have longed in your day to take
+a king in check with your only available pawn, or win
+one of the ribands of the turf with a little filly that
+seemed to general judges scarcely calculated to be in the
+first flight at the Chester Consolation Scramble.</p>
+
+<p>Things were beautifully in train; it even began to dawn
+on the perceptions of the Hauttons, usually very slow to
+open to anything revolutionary and unwelcome. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+Grace of Doncaster, a large, lethargic, somnolent dowager,
+rarely awake to anything but the interests and restoration
+of the old ultra-Tory party in a Utopia always
+dreamed of and never realized, like many other Utopias
+political and poetical, public and personal, had turned
+her eyes on Flora Montolieu, and asked her son the question
+inevitable, "<i>Who</i> is she?" to which Goodwood had
+replied with a devil-may-care recklessness and a headlong
+indefiniteness which grated on her Grace's ears, and imparted
+her no information whatever: "One of Lady
+Tattersall's yearlings, and the most charming creature <i>I</i>
+ever met. You know that? Why did you ask me, then?
+You know all I do, and all I care to do!"&mdash;a remark
+that made the Duchess wish her very dear and personal
+friend, Lady Marabout, were comfortably and snugly interred
+in the mausoleum of Fern Ditton, rather than alive
+in the flesh in Belgravia, chaperoning young ladies whom
+nobody knew, and who were not to be found in any of
+Sir E. Burke's triad of volumes.</p>
+
+<p>Belgravia, and her sister Mayfair, wondered at it, and
+talked over it, raked up the parental Montolieu lineage
+mercilessly, and found out, from the Bishop of Bonviveur
+and Sauceblanche, that the uncle on the distaff side had
+been only a Tug at Eton, and had lived and died at Fern
+Ditton a perpetual curate and nothing else&mdash;not even a
+dean, not even a rector! Goodwood <i>couldn't</i> be serious,
+settled the coteries. But the more hints, innuendoes,
+questions, and adroitly concealed but simply suggested
+animadversion Lady Marabout received, the greater was
+her glory, the warmer her complacency, when she saw her
+Little Montolieu, who was not little at all, leading, as she
+undoubtedly did lead, the most desired eligible of the day
+captive in her chains, sent bouquets by him, begged for
+waltzes by him, followed by him at the Ride, riveting his
+lorgnon at the Opera, monopolizing his attention&mdash;though,
+clever little intriguer, she knew too well how to pique him
+ever to let him monopolize hers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"She certainly makes play, as Philip would call it,
+admirably with Goodwood," said Lady Marabout, admiringly,
+at a morning party, stirring a cup of Orange Pekoe,
+yet with a certain irrepressible feeling that she should
+almost prefer so very young a girl not to be quite so adroit
+a schemer at seventeen. "That indifference and nonchalance
+is the very thing to pique and retain such a
+courted fastidious creature as Goodwood; and she knows
+it, too. Now a clumsy casual observer might even fancy
+that she liked some others&mdash;even you, Philip, for instance&mdash;much
+better; she talks to you much more, appeals to
+you twice as often, positively teases you to stop and lunch
+or come to dinner here, and really told you the other
+night at the Opera she missed you when you didn't come
+in the morning; but to anybody who knows anything of
+the world, it is easy enough to see which way her inclinations
+(yes, I <i>do</i> hope it is inclination as well as ambition&mdash;I
+am not one of those who advocate pure <i>mariages de
+convenance</i>; I don't think them right, indeed, though
+they are undoubtedly very expedient sometimes) turn. I
+do not think <i>anybody</i> ever could prove me to have erred
+in my quick-sightedness in those affairs. I may have
+been occasionally mistaken in other things, or been the
+victim of adverse and unforeseen circumstances which
+were beyond my control, and betrayed me; but I know
+no one can read a girl's heart more quickly and surely
+than I, or a man's either, for that matter."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we all know you are a clairvoyante in heart
+episodes, my dear mother; they are the one business of
+your life!" smiled Carruthers, setting down his ice, and
+lounging across the lawn to a group of cedars, where
+Flora Montolieu stood playing at croquet, and who, like
+a scheming adventuress, as she was, immediately verified
+Lady Marabout's words, and piqued Goodwood à outrance
+by avowing herself tired of the game, and entering with
+animated verve into the prophecies for Ascot with Carruthers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+whose bay filly Sunbeam, sister to Wild-Falcon,
+was entered to run for the Queen's Cup.</p>
+
+<p>"What an odd smile that was of Philip's," thought
+Lady Marabout, left to herself and her Orange Pekoe.
+"He has been very intimate with Goodwood ever since
+they joined the Blues, cornets together, three-and-twenty
+years ago; surely he can't have heard him drop anything
+that would make him fancy he was <i>not serious</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>An idle fear, which Lady Marabout dismissed contemptuously
+from her mind when she saw how entirely
+Goodwood&mdash;in defiance of the Hauttons' sneer, the drowsy
+Duchess's unconcealed frown, all the comments sure to be
+excited in feminine minds, and all the chaff likely to be
+elicited from masculine lips at the mess-table, and in the
+U. S., and in the Guards' box before the curtain went up
+for the ballet&mdash;vowed himself to the service of the little
+detrimental throughout that morning party, and spoke a
+temporary adieu, whose tenderness, if she did not exactly
+catch, Lady Marabout could at least construe, as he pulled
+up the tiger-skin over Flora's dainty dress, before the Marabout
+carriage rolled down the Fulham Road to town.
+At which tenderness of farewell Carruthers&mdash;steeled to
+all such weaknesses himself&mdash;gave a disdainful glance
+and a contemptuous twist of his moustaches, as he stood
+by the door talking to his mother.</p>
+
+<p>"You too, Phil?" said Goodwood, with a laugh, as the
+carriage rolled away.</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers stared at him haughtily, as he will stare at
+his best friends if they touch his private concerns more
+nearly than he likes; a stare which said disdainfully, "I
+don't understand you," and thereby told the only lie to
+which Carruthers ever stooped in the whole course of his
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>Goodwood laughed again.</p>
+
+<p>"If you poach on my manor <i>here</i>, I shall kill you
+Phil; so <i>gare à vous</i>!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are in an enigmatical mood to-day! I can't say
+I see much wit in your riddles," said Carruthers, with
+his grandest and most contemptuous air, as he lit his
+Havana.</p>
+
+<p>"Confound that fellow! I'd rather have had any other
+man in London for a rival! Twenty and more years ago
+how he cut me out with that handsome Virginie Peauderose,
+that we were both such mad boys after in Paris.
+However, it will be odd if <i>I</i> can't win the day here. A
+Goodwood rejected&mdash;pooh! There isn't a woman in
+England that would do it!" thought Goodwood, as he
+drove down the Fulham Road.</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>His</i> manor!' Who's told him it's his? And if it
+be, what is that to me?" thought Carruthers, as he got
+into his tilbury. "Philip, <i>you</i>'re not a fool, like the rest
+of them, I hope? You've not forsworn yourself surely?
+Pshaw!&mdash;nonsense!&mdash;impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly she <i>has</i> something very charming about her.
+If I were a man I don't think I could resist her," thought
+Lady Marabout, as she sat in her box in the grand tier,
+tenth from the Queen's, moving her fan slowly, lifting
+her lorgnon now and then, listening vaguely to the music
+of the second act of the "Barbiere," for probably about
+the two hundredth time in her life, and looking at Flora
+Moutolieu, sitting opposite to her.</p>
+
+<p>"The women are eternally asking me who she is, I
+don't care a hang <i>who</i>, but she's the prettiest thing in
+London," said Fulke Nugent, which was the warmest
+praise that any living man about town remembered to
+have heard fall from his lips, which limited themselves
+religiously to one legitimate laudation, which is a superlative
+nowadays, though Mr. Lindley Murray, if alive,
+wouldn't, perhaps, receive or recognize it as such: "Not
+bad-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't <i>who</i> a woman is, it's <i>what</i> she is, that's the
+question, I take it," said Goodwood, as he left the Guards'
+box to visit the Marabout.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"By George!" laughed Nugent to Carruthers, "Goodey
+must be serious, eh, Phil? He don't care a button for
+little Bibi; he don't care even for Zerlina. When the
+ballet begins, I verily believe he's thinking less of the
+women before him than of the woman who has left the
+house; and if a fellow can give more ominous signs of
+being 'serious,' as the women phrase it, I don't know 'em,
+do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know much about that sort of thing at all!"
+muttered Carruthers, as he went out to follow Goodwood
+to the Marabout box.</p>
+
+<p>That is an old, old story, that of the fair Emily stirring
+feud between Palamon and Arcite. It has been
+acted out many a time since Beaumont and Fletcher lived
+and wrote their twin-thoughts and won their twin laurels;
+but the bars that shut the kinsmen in their prison-walls,
+the ivy-leaves that filled in the rents of their prison-stones,
+were not more entirely and blissfully innocent of
+the feud going on within, and the battle foaming near
+them, than the calm, complacent soul of Lady Marabout
+was of the rivalry going on close beside her for the sake
+of little Montolieu.</p>
+
+<p>She certainly thought Philip made himself specially
+brilliant and agreeable that night; but then that was
+nothing new, he was famous for talking well, and liked
+his mother enough not seldom to shower out for her some
+of his very best things; certainly she thought Goodwood
+did not shine by the contrast, and looked, to use an undignified
+word, rather cross than otherwise; but then nobody
+<i>did</i> shine beside Philip, and she knew a reason that made
+Goodwood pardonably cross at the undesired presence of
+his oldest and dearest chum. Even <i>she</i> almost wished
+Philip away. If the presence of her idolized son could
+have been unwelcome to her at any time, it was so that
+night.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't like Philip to monopolize her so, he who has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+so much tact usually, and cares nothing for girls himself,"
+thought Lady Marabout; "he must do it for mischief,
+and yet <i>that</i> isn't like him at all; it's very tiresome, at
+any rate."</p>
+
+<p>And with that skilful diplomacy in such matters, on
+which, if it was sometimes overthrown, Lady Marabout
+not unjustly plumed herself, she dexterously entangled
+Carruthers in conversation, and during the crash of one
+of the choruses whispered, as he bent forward to pick up
+her fan, which she had let drop,</p>
+
+<p>"Leave Flora a little to Goodwood; he has a right&mdash;he
+spoke decisively to her to-day."</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers bowed his head, and stooped lower for the fan.</p>
+
+<p>He left her accordingly to Goodwood till the curtain
+fell after the last act of the "Barbiere;" and Lady Marabout
+congratulated herself on her own adroitness.
+"There is nothing like a little tact," she thought; "what
+would society be without the guiding genius of tact, I
+wonder? One dreadful Donnybrook Fair!"</p>
+
+<p>But, someway or other, despite all her tact, or because
+her son inherited that valuable quality in a triple measure
+to herself, someway, it was Goodwood who led her to her
+carriage, and Carruthers who led the little Montolieu.</p>
+
+<p>"Terribly <i>bête</i> of Philip; how very unlike him!"
+mused Lady Marabout, as she gathered her burnous round
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Carruthers talked and laughed as he led Flora Montolieu
+through the passages, more gayly, perhaps, than
+usual.</p>
+
+<p>"My mother has told me some news to-night, Miss
+Montolieu," he said, carelessly. "Am I premature in
+proffering you my congratulations? But even if I be so,
+you will not refuse the privilege to an old friend&mdash;to a
+very sincere friend&mdash;and will allow me to be the first to
+wish you happiness?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout's carriage stopped the way. Flora<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+Montolieu colored, looked full at him, and went to it,
+without having time to answer his congratulations, in
+which the keenest-sighted hearer would have failed to
+detect anything beyond every-day friendship and genuine
+indifference. The most truthful men will make the most
+consummate actors when spurred up to it.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, you look ill to-night; I am glad you
+have no engagements," said Lady Marabout, as she sat
+down before the dressing-room fire, toasting her little
+satin-shod foot&mdash;she has a weakness for fire even in the
+hottest weather&mdash;while Flora Montolieu lay back in a
+low chair, crushing the roses mercilessly. "You <i>do</i> feel
+well? I should not have thought so, your face looks so
+flushed, and your eyes so preternaturally dark. Perhaps
+it is the late hours; you were not used to them in France,
+of course, and it must be such a change to this life from
+your unvarying conventual routine at St. Denis. My love,
+what was it Lord Goodwood said to you to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do not speak to me of him, Lady Marabout, I hate
+his name!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout started with an astonishment that
+nearly upset the cup of coffee she was sipping.</p>
+
+<p>"Hate his name? My dearest Flora, why, in Heaven's
+name?"</p>
+
+<p>Flora did not answer; she pulled the roses off her hair
+as though they had been infected with Brinvilliers' poison.</p>
+
+<p>"What has he done?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>He</i> has done nothing!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who has done anything, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no one&mdash;no one has done anything, but&mdash;I am
+sick of Lord Goodwood's name&mdash;tired of it!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout sat almost speechless with surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Tired of it, my dear Flora?"</p>
+
+<p>Little Montolieu laughed:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, tired of it, perhaps from hearing him praised
+so often, as the Athenian trader grew sick of Aristides,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+and the Jacobin of Washington's name. Is it unpardonably
+heterodox to say so?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout stirred her coffee in perplexity:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, pray don't speak in that way; that's
+like Philip's tone when he is enigmatical and sarcastic,
+and worries me. I really cannot in the least understand
+you about Lord Goodwood, it is quite incomprehensible
+to me. I thought I overheard him to-day at Lady
+George's concert speak very definitely to you indeed, and
+when he was interrupted by the Duchess before you could
+give him his reply, I thought I heard him say he should
+call to-morrow morning to know your ultimate decision.
+Was I right?"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right."</p>
+
+<p>"He really proposed marriage to you to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet you say you are sick of his name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Does it follow, imperatively, Lady Marabout, that
+because the Sultan throws his handkerchief, it must be
+picked up with humility and thanksgiving?" asked Flora
+Montolieu, furling and unfurling her fan with an impatient
+rapidity that threatened entire destruction of its
+ivory and feathers, with their Watteau-like group elaborately
+painted on them&mdash;as pretty a toy of the kind as
+could be got for money, which had been given her by Carruthers
+one day in payment of some little bagatelle of a bet.</p>
+
+<p>"Sultan!&mdash;Humility!" repeated Lady Marabout,
+scarcely crediting her senses. "My dear Flora, do you
+know what you are saying? You must be jesting! There
+is not a woman in England who would be insensible to
+the honor of Goodwood's proposals. You are jesting,
+Flora!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not, indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean to say, you could positively think of <i>rejecting</i>
+him!" cried Lady Marabout, rising from her chair in
+the intensity of her amazement, convinced that she was
+the victim of some horrible hallucination.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why should it surprise you if I did?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Why?</i>" repeated Lady Marabout, indignantly. "Do
+you ask me <i>why</i>? You must be a child, indeed, or a
+consummate actress, to put such a question; excuse me,
+my dear, if I speak a little strongly: you perfectly bewilder
+me, and I confess I cannot see your motives or
+your meaning in the least. You have made a conquest
+such as the proudest women in the peerage have vainly
+tried to make; you have one of the highest titles in the
+country offered to you; you have won a man whom everybody
+declared would never be won; you have done this,
+pardon me, without either birth or fortune on your own
+side, and then you speak of rejecting Goodwood&mdash;Goodwood,
+of all the men in England! You cannot be serious,
+Flora, or, if you are, you must be mad!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout spoke more hotly than Lady Marabout
+had ever spoken in all her life. Goodwood absolutely
+won&mdash;Goodwood absolutely "come to the point"&mdash;the
+crowning humiliation of the Hauttons positively within
+her grasp&mdash;her Marathon and Lemnos actually gained!
+and all to be lost and flung away by the unaccountable
+caprice of a wayward child! It was sufficient to exasperate
+a saint, and a saint Lady Marabout never pretended
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu toyed recklessly with her fan.</p>
+
+<p>"You told Sir Philip this evening, I think, of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I hinted it to him, my dear&mdash;yes. Philip has known
+all along how much I desired it, and as Goodwood is one
+of his oldest and most favorite friends, I knew it would
+give him sincere pleasure both for my sake and Goodwood's,
+and yours too, for I think Philip likes you as
+much as he ever does any young girl&mdash;better, indeed;
+and I could not imagine&mdash;I could not dream for an
+instant&mdash;that there was any doubt of your acceptation, as,
+indeed, there <i>cannot</i> be. You have been jesting to worry
+me, Flora!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Little Montolieu rose, threw her fan aside, as if its
+ivory stems had been hot iron, and leaned against the
+mantelpiece.</p>
+
+<p>"You advise me to accept Lord Goodwood, then, Lady
+Marabout?"</p>
+
+<p>"My love, if you need my advice, certainly!&mdash;such an
+alliance will never be proffered to you again; the brilliant
+position it will place you in I surely have no need to point
+out!" returned Lady Marabout. "The little hypocrite!"
+she mused, angrily, "as if her own mind were not fully
+made up&mdash;as if any girl in Europe would hesitate over
+accepting the Doncaster coronet&mdash;as if a nameless Montolieu
+could doubt for a moment her own delight at being
+created Marchioness of Goodwood! Such a triumph as
+<i>that</i>&mdash;why I wouldn't credit <i>any</i> woman who pretended
+she wasn't dazzled by it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you did not approve of marriages of convenience?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout played a tattoo&mdash;slightly perplexed
+tattoo&mdash;with her spoon in her Sèvres saucer.</p>
+
+<p>"No more I do, my dear&mdash;that is, under some circumstances;
+it is impossible to lay down a fixed rule for
+everything! Marriages of convenience&mdash;well, perhaps
+not; but as <i>I</i> understand these words, they mean a mere
+business affair, arranged as they are in France, without
+the slightest regard to the inclinations of either; merely
+regarding whether the incidents of fortune, birth, and
+station are equal and suitable. Marriages <i>de convenance</i>
+are when a parvenu barters his gold for good blood, or
+where an <i>ancienne princesse</i> mends her fortune with a
+<i>nouveau riche</i>, profound indifference, meanwhile, on each
+side. I do not call this so; decidedly not! Goodwood
+must be very deeply attached to you to have forgotten
+his detestation of marriage, and laid such a title as his at
+your feet. Have you any idea of the weight of the Dukes
+of Doncaster in the country? Have you any notion of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+what their rent-roll is? Have you any conception of
+their enormous influence, their very high place, the magnificence
+of their seats? Helmsley almost equals Windsor!
+All these are yours if you will; and you affect to hesitate&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"To let Lord Goodwood buy me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Buy you? Your phraseology is as strange as my
+son's!"</p>
+
+<p>"To accept him only for the coronet and the rent-roll,
+his position and his Helmsley, seems not a very grateful
+and flattering return for his preference?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not see that at all," said Lady Marabout, irritably.
+Is there anything more annoying than to have unwelcome
+truths thrust in our teeth? "It is not as though he were
+odious to you&mdash;a hideous man, a coarse man, a cruel man,
+whose very presence repelled you. Goodwood is a man
+quite attractive enough to merit some regard, independent
+of his position; you have an affectionate nature, you
+would soon grow attached to him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"And, in fact," she went on, warming with her subject,
+and speaking all the more determinedly because she was
+speaking a little against her conscience, and wholly for
+her inclinations, "my dear Flora, if you need persuasion&mdash;which
+you must pardon me if I doubt your doing in
+your heart, for I cannot credit any woman as being insensible
+to the suit of a future Duke of Doncaster, or
+invulnerable to the honor it does her&mdash;if you need persuasion,
+I should think I need only refer to the happiness
+it will afford your poor dear mother, amidst her many
+trials, to hear of so brilliant a triumph for you. You are
+proud&mdash;Goodwood will place you in a position where
+pride may be indulged with impunity, nay, with advantage.
+You are ambitious&mdash;what can flatter your ambition
+more than such an offer. You are clever&mdash;as Goodwood's
+wife you may lead society like Madame de Rambouillet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+or immerse yourself in political intrigue like the Duchess
+of Devonshire. It is an offer which places within your
+reach everything most dazzling and attractive, and it is
+one, my dear Flora, which you must forgive me if I say
+a young girl of obscure rank, as rank goes, and no fortune
+whatever, should pause before she lightly rejects. You
+cannot afford to be fastidious as if you were an heiress or
+a lady-in-your-own-right."</p>
+
+<p>That was as ill-natured a thing as the best-natured lady
+in Christendom ever said on the spur of self-interest, and
+it stung Flora Montolieu more than her hostess dreamed.</p>
+
+<p>The color flushed into her face and her eyes flashed.</p>
+
+<p>"You have said sufficient, Lady Marabout, I accept
+the Marquis to-morrow!"</p>
+
+<p>And taking up her fan and her opera-cloak, leaving
+the discarded roses unheeded on the floor, she bade her
+chaperone good-night, and floated out of the dressing-room,
+while Lady Marabout sat stirring the cream in a
+second cup of coffee, a good deal puzzled, a little awed by
+the odd turn affairs had taken, with a slight feeling of
+guilt for her own share in the transaction, an uncomfortable
+dread lest the day should ever come when Flora
+should reproach her for having persuaded her into the
+marriage, a comfortable conviction that nothing but good
+<i>could</i> come of such a brilliant and enviable alliance, and,
+above all other conflicting feelings, one delicious, dominant,
+glorified security of triumph over the Hauttons,
+<i>mère et filles</i>.</p>
+
+<p>But when morning dawned, Lady Marabout's horizon
+seemed cleared of all clouds, and only radiant with unshadowed
+sunshine. Goodwood was coming, and coming
+to be accepted.</p>
+
+<p>She seemed already to read the newspaper paragraphs
+announcing his capture and Flora's conquest, already to
+hear the Hauttons' enforced congratulations, already to
+see the nuptial party gathered round the altar rail of St.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+George's. Lady Marabout had never felt in a sunnier,
+more light-hearted mood, never more completely at peace
+with herself and all the world as she sat in her boudoir
+at her writing-table, penning a letter which began:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"<span class="smcap">My dearest Lilla</span>,&mdash;What happiness it gives me
+to congratulate you on the brilliant future opening to
+your sweet Flora&mdash;&mdash;"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>And which would have continued, no doubt, with
+similar eloquence if it had not been interrupted by
+Soames opening the door and announcing "Sir Philip
+Carruthers," who walked in, touched his mother's brow
+with his moustaches, and went to stand on the hearth with
+his arm on the mantelpiece.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Philip, you never congratulated me last
+night; pray do so now!" cried Lady Marabout, delightedly,
+wiping her pen on the pennon, which a small ormolu
+knight obligingly carried for that useful purpose. Ladies
+always wipe their pens as religiously as they bolt their
+bedroom doors, believe in cosmetics, and go to church on
+a Sunday.</p>
+
+<p>"Was your news of last night true, then?" asked Carruthers,
+bending forwards to roll Bijou on its back with
+his foot.</p>
+
+<p>"That Goodwood had spoken definitively to her? Perfectly.
+He proposed to her yesterday at the Frangipane
+concert&mdash;not <i>at</i> the concert, of course, but afterwards,
+when they were alone for a moment in the conservatories.
+The Duchess interrupted them&mdash;did it on purpose&mdash;and
+he had only time to whisper hurriedly he should come
+this morning to hear his fate. I dare say he felt tolerably
+secure of it. Last night I naturally spoke to Flora about
+it. Oddly enough, she seemed positively to think at first
+of rejecting him&mdash;<i>rejecting</i> him!&mdash;only fancy the madness!
+Between ourselves, I don't think she cares anything
+about him, but with such an alliance as that, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+course I felt it my bounden duty to counsel her as
+strongly as I could to accept the unequalled position it
+proffered her. Indeed, it could have been only a girl's
+waywardness, a child's caprice to pretend to hesitate, for
+she <i>is</i> very ambitious and very clever, and I would never
+believe that any woman&mdash;and she less than any&mdash;would
+be proof against such dazzling prospects. It would be
+absurd, you know, Philip. Whether it was hypocrisy or
+a real reluctance, because she doesn't feel for him the
+idealic love she dreams of, I don't know, but I put it
+before her in a way that plainly showed her all the brilliance
+of the proffered position, and before she bade me
+good night, I had vanquished all her scruples, if she had
+any, and I am able to say&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Good God, what have you done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Done?" re-echoed Lady Marabout, vaguely terrified.
+"Certainly I persuaded her to accept him. She <i>has</i> accepted
+him probably; he is here now! I should have
+been a strange person indeed to let any young girl in my
+charge rashly refuse such an offer."</p>
+
+<p>"You induced her to accept him! God forgive you!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout turned pale as death, and gazed at him
+with undefinable terror.</p>
+
+<p>"Philip! You do not mean&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Great Heavens! have you never seen, mother&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>He leaned his arms on the marble, with his forehead
+bowed upon them, and Lady Marabout gazed at him still,
+as a bird at a basilisk.</p>
+
+<p>"Philip, Philip! what have I done? How could I
+tell?" she murmured, distractedly, tears welling into her
+eyes. "If I had only known! But how could I dream
+that child had any fascination for you? How could I
+fancy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! No, you are in no way to blame. You could
+not know it. <i>I</i> barely knew it till last night," he answered,
+gently.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Philip loves her, and <i>I</i> have made her marry Goodwood!"
+thought Lady Marabout, agonized, remorseful,
+conscience-struck, heart-broken in a thousand ways at
+once. The climax of her woes was reached, life had no
+greater bitterness for her left; her son loved, and loved
+the last woman in England she would have had him love;
+that woman was given to another, and <i>she</i> had been the
+instrument of wrecking the life to save or serve which she
+would have laid down her own in glad and instant sacrifice!
+Lady Marabout bowed her head under a grief,
+before which the worries so great before, the schemes but
+so lately so precious, the small triumphs just now so all-absorbing,
+shrank away into their due insignificance.
+Philip suffering, and suffering through her! Self glided
+far away from Lady Marabout's memory then, and she
+hated herself, more fiercely than the gentle-hearted soul
+had ever hated any foe, for her own criminal share in
+bringing down this unforeseen terrific blow on her beloved
+one's head.</p>
+
+<p>"Philip, my dearest, what <i>can</i> I do?" she cried, distractedly;
+"if I had thought&mdash;if I had guessed&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Do nothing. A woman who could give herself to a
+man whom she did not love should be no wife of mine,
+let me suffer what I might."</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>I</i> persuaded her, Philip! Mine is the blame!"</p>
+
+<p>His lips quivered painfully:</p>
+
+<p>"Had she cared for me as&mdash;I may have fancied, she
+had not been so easy to persuade! She has much force
+of character, where she wills. He is here now, you say;
+I cannot risk meeting him just yet. Leave me for a little
+while; leave me&mdash;I am best alone."</p>
+
+<p>Gentle though he always was to her, his mother knew
+him too well ever to dispute his will, and the most bitter
+tears Lady Marabout had ever known, ready as she was
+to weep for other people's woes, and rarely as she had
+to weep for any of her own, choked her utterance and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+blinded her eyes as she obeyed and closed the door on
+his solitude. Philip&mdash;her idolized Philip&mdash;that ever
+her house should have sheltered this creature to bring a
+curse upon him! that ever she should have brought this
+tropical flower to poison the air for the only one dear to
+her!</p>
+
+<p>"I am justly punished," thought Lady Marabout,
+humbly and penitentially&mdash;"justly. I thought wickedly
+of Anne Hautton. I did not do as I would be done by.
+I longed to enjoy their mortification. I advised Flora
+against my own conscience and against hers. I am justly
+chastised! But that <i>he</i> should suffer through me, that
+my fault has fallen on his head, that my Philip, my
+noble Philip, should love and not be loved, and that <i>I</i>
+have brought it on him&mdash;&mdash;Good Heaven! what is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"That" was a man whom her eyes, being misty with
+tears, Lady Marabout had brushed against, as she ascended
+the staircase, ere she perceived him, and who, passing on
+with a muttered apology, was down in the hall and out
+of the door Mason held open before she had recovered
+the shock of the rencontre, much before she had a possibility
+of recognizing him through the mist aforesaid.</p>
+
+<p>A fear, a hope, a joy, a dread, one so woven with
+another there was no disentangling them, sprang up like
+a ray of light in Lady Marabout's heart&mdash;a possibility
+dawned in her: to be rejected as an impossibility? Lady
+Marabout crossed the ante-room, her heart throbbing
+tumultuously, spurred on to noble atonement and reckless
+self-sacrifice, if fate allowed them.</p>
+
+<p>She opened the drawing-room door; Flora Montolieu
+was alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Flora, you have seen Goodwood?"</p>
+
+<p>She turned, her own face as pale and her own eyes as
+dim as Lady Marabout's.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You have refused him?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu misconstrued her chaperone's eagerness,
+and answered haughtily enough:</p>
+
+<p>"I have told him that indifference would be too poor
+a return for his affections to insult him with it, and that
+I would not do him the injury of repaying his trust by
+falsehood and deception. I meant what I said to you
+last night; I said it on the spur of pain, indignation, no
+matter what; but I could not keep my word when the
+trial came."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout bent down and kissed her, with a fervent
+gratitude that not a little bewildered the recipient.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child! thank God! little as I thought to say
+so. Flora, tell me, you love some one else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Marabout, you have no right&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yea, I have a right&mdash;the strongest right! Is not
+that other my son?"</p>
+
+<p>Flora Montolieu looked up, then dropped her head and
+burst into tears&mdash;tears that Lady Marabout soothed then,
+tears that Carruthers soothed, yet more effectually still,
+five minutes afterwards.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"That <i>I</i> should have sued that little Montolieu, and
+sued to her for Philip!" mused Lady Marabout. "It is
+very odd. Perhaps I get used to being crossed and disappointed
+and trampled on in every way and by everybody;
+but certainly, though it is most contrary to my
+wishes, though a child like that is the last person I should
+ever have chosen or dreamt of as Philip's wife, though it
+is a great pain to me, and Anne Hautton of course will
+be delighted to rake up everything she can about the
+Montolieus, and it <i>is</i> heart-breaking when one thinks how
+a Carruthers <i>might</i> marry, how the Carruthers always
+<i>have</i> married, rarely any but ladies in their own right for
+countless generations, still it <i>is</i> very odd, but I certainly
+feel happier than ever I did in my life, annoyed as I am
+and grieved as I am. It <i>is</i> heart-breaking (that horrid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+John Montolieu! I wonder what relation one stands in
+legally to the father of one's son's wife; I will ask Sir
+Fitzroy Kelley; not that the Montolieus are likely to
+come to England)&mdash;it is very sad when one thinks whom
+Philip might have married; and yet she certainly is infinitely
+charming, and she really appreciates and understands
+him. If it were not for what Anne Hautton will
+always say, I could really be pleased! To think what
+an anxious hope, what a dreaded ideal, Philip's wife has
+always been to me; and now, just as I had got reconciled
+to his determined bachelor preferences, and had grown to
+argue with him that it was best he shouldn't marry, he
+goes and falls in love with this child! Everything is at
+cross-purposes in life, I think! There is only one thing
+I am resolved upon&mdash;I will <span class="smcap">NEVER</span> chaperone anybody
+again."</p>
+
+<p>And she kept her vow. None can christen her Lady
+Tattersall any longer with point, for there are no yearling
+sales in that house in Lowndes Square, whatever there be
+in the other domiciles of that fashionable quarter. Lady
+Marabout has shaken that burden off her shoulders, and
+moves in blissful solitude and tripled serenity through
+Belgravia, relieved of responsibility, and wearing her
+years as lightly, losing the odd trick at her whist as
+sunnily, and beaming on the world in general as radiantly
+as any dowager in the English Peerage.</p>
+
+<p>That she was fully reconciled to Carruthers's change of
+resolve was shown in the fact that when Anne Hautton
+turned to her, on the evening of his marriage-day, after
+the dinner to which Lady Marabout had bidden all her
+friends, and a good many of her foes, with an amiable
+murmur:</p>
+
+<p>"I am <i>so</i> grieved for you, dearest Helena&mdash;I know
+what your disappointment must be!&mdash;what should <i>I</i> feel
+if Hautton&mdash;&mdash;Your <i>belle-fille</i> is charming, certainly,
+very lovely; but then&mdash;such a connection! You have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+my deepest sympathies! I always told you how wrong
+you were when you fancied Goodwood admired little
+Montolieu&mdash;I beg her pardon, I mean Lady Carruthers&mdash;but
+you <i>will</i> give your imagination such reins!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Marabout smiled, calmly and amusedly, felt no
+pang, and&mdash;thought of Philip.</p>
+
+<p>I take it things must be very rose-colored with us when
+we can smile sincerely on our enemies, and defeat their
+stings simply because we feel them not.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc208.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc209a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUINZE" id="A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUINZE"></a>A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUINZE;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>PENDANT TO A PASTEL BY LA TOUR.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have, among others hanging on my wall, a
+pastel of La Tour's; of the artist-lover of Julie
+Fel, of the monarch of pastellistes, the touch of
+whose crayons was a "brevet of wit and of beauty," and
+on whose easel bloomed afresh the laughing eyes, the
+brilliant tints, the rose-hued lips of all the loveliest women
+of the "Règne Galant," from the princesses of the Blood
+of the House of Bourbon to the princesses of the green-room
+of the Comédie-Française. Painted in the days of
+Louis Quinze, the light of more than a century having
+fallen on its soft colors to fade and blot them with the icy
+brush of time, my pastel is still fresh, still eloquent. The
+genius that created it is gone&mdash;gone the beauty that inspired
+it&mdash;but the picture is deathless! It shows me the
+face of a woman, of a beautiful woman, else, be sure she
+would not have been honored by the crayons of La Tour;
+her full Southern lips are parted with a smile of triumph;
+a chef-d'[oe]uvre of coquetry, a head-dress of lace and
+pearls and little bouquets of roses is on her unpowdered
+hair, which is arranged much like Julie Fel's herself in
+the portrait that hangs, if I remember right, at the Musée
+de Saint Quentin; and her large eyes are glancing at
+you with languor, malice, victory, all commingled. At
+the back of the picture is written "Mlle. Thargélie Dumarsais;"
+the letters are faded and yellow, but the pastel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+is living and laughing yet, through the divine touch of
+the genius of La Tour. With its perfume of dead glories,
+with its odor of the Beau Siècle, the pastel hangs on my
+wall, living relic of a buried age, and sometimes in my
+mournful moments the full laughing lips of my pastel
+will part, and breathe, and speak to me of the distant
+past, when Thargélie Dumarsais saw all Paris at her feet,
+and was not humbled then as now by being only valued
+and remembered for the sake of the talent of La Tour.
+My beautiful pastel gives me many confidences. I will
+betray one to you&mdash;a single leaf from a life of the eighteenth
+century.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="FIRSTM" id="FIRSTM"></a>THE FIRST MORNING.</h4>
+
+<p>In the heart of Lorraine, nestled down among its woods,
+stood an old château that might have been the château of
+the Sleeping Beauty of fairy fame, so sequestered it stood
+amidst its trees chained together by fragrant fetters of
+honeysuckle and wild vine, so undisturbed slept the morning
+shadows on the wild thyme that covered the turf, so
+unbroken was the silence in which the leaves barely stirred,
+and the birds folded their wings and hushed their song till
+the heat of the noonday should be passed. Beyond the
+purple hills stretching up in the soft haze of distance in
+the same province of laughing, luxurious, sunlit Lorraine,
+was Lunéville, the Lunéville of Stanislaus, Montesquieu,
+of Voltaire, of Hénault, of Boufflers, a Versailles in
+miniature, even possessing a perfect replica of Pompadour
+in its own pretty pagan of a Marquise. Within a few
+leagues was Lunéville, but the echo of its mots and madrigals
+did not reach over the hills, did not profane the
+sunny air, did not mingle with the vintage-song of the
+vine-dressers, the silver babble of the woodland brook,
+the hushed chant of the Ave Maria, the vesper bells<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+chimed from the churches and monasteries, which made
+the sole music known or heard in this little valley of
+Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>The château of Grande Charmille stood nestled in its
+woods, gray, lonely, still, silent as death, yet not gloomy,
+for white pigeons circled above its pointed towers, brilliant
+dragon-flies fluttered above the broken basin of the fountain
+that sang as gayly as it rippled among the thyme as
+though it fell into a marble cup, and bees hummed their
+busy happy buzz among the jessamine that clung to its
+ivy-covered walls&mdash;walls built long before Lorraine had
+ceased to be a kingdom and a power, long before a craven
+and effeminated Valois had dared to kick the dead body
+of a slaughtered Guise. Not gloomy with the golden
+light of a summer noon playing amidst the tangled boughs
+and on the silvered lichens; not gloomy, for under the
+elm-boughs on the broken stone steps that led to the
+fountain, her feet half buried in violet-roots and wild
+thyme, leaning her head on her hand, as she looked
+into the water, where the birds flew down to drink, and
+fluttered their wings fearless of her presence, was a
+young girl of sixteen&mdash;and if women sometimes darken
+lives, it must be allowed that they always illumine landscapes!</p>
+
+<p>Aline, when Boufflers saw her in the spring morning,
+in all the grace of youth and beauty, unconscious of
+themselves, made not a prettier picture than this young
+dreamer under the elm-boughs of the Lorraine woods, as
+she bent over the water, watching it bubble and splash
+from the fountain-spout, and hide itself with a rippling
+murmur under the broad green reeds and the leaves of
+the water-lily. She was a charming picture: a brunette
+with long ebon tresses, with her lashes drooping over her
+black, languid, almond-shaped eyes, a smile on her half-pouted
+lips, and all the innocence and dawning beauty
+of her sixteen years about her, while she sat on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+broken steps, now brushing the water-drops off the violets,
+now weaving the reeds into a pretty, useless toy, now
+beckoning the birds that came to peck on the rose-sprays
+beside her.</p>
+
+<p>"Favette! where are your dreams?"</p>
+
+<p>Favette, the young naïad of the Lorraine elm-woods,
+looked up, the plait of rushes dropping from her hands,
+and a warm sudden blush tinging her cheeks and brow
+with a tint like that on the damask rose-leaves that had
+fallen into the water, and floated there like delicate shells.</p>
+
+<p>"Mon Dieu, Monsieur Léon! how you frightened me!"</p>
+
+<p>And like a startled fawn, or a young bird glancing
+round at a rustle amidst the leaves, Favette sprang up,
+half shy, half smiling, all her treasures gathered from
+the woods&mdash;of flowers, of mosses, of berries, of feathery
+grasses, of long ivy-sprays&mdash;falling from her lap on to
+the turf in unheeded disorder.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> frightened you, Favette? Surely not. Are you
+sorry to see me, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry? Oh no, Monsieur Léon!" and Favette glanced
+through her thick curled lashes, slyly yet archly, and
+began to braid again her plait of rushes.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, tell me, then, what and whom were you dreaming
+of, ma mie, as you looked down into the water? Tell
+me, Favette. You have no secrets from your playmate,
+your friend, your brother?"</p>
+
+<p>Favette shook her head, smiling, and plaited her rushes
+all wrong, the blush on her cheeks as bright as that on
+the cups of the rose-leaves that the wind shook down in
+a fresh shower into the brook.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, tell me, mignonne. Was it&mdash;of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of you? Well, perhaps&mdash;yes!"</p>
+
+<p>It was first love that whispered in Favette's pretty voice
+those three little words; it was first love that answered in
+his, as he threw himself down on the violet-tufted turf at
+her feet, as Boufflers at Aline's.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Favette, so should it be! for every hope, every
+dream, every thought of <i>mine</i>, is centred in and colored
+by you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you can leave me to-day," pouted Favette, with
+a sigh and a <i>moue mutine</i>, and gathering tears in her
+large gazelle eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Leave you? Would to Heaven I were not forced!
+But against a king's will what power has a subject? None
+are too great, none are too lowly, to be touched by that
+iron hand if they provoke its grasp. Vincennes yawns
+for those who dare to think, For-l'Evêque for those who
+dare to jest. Monsieur de Voltaire was sent to the Bastille
+for merely defending a truth and his own honor
+against De Rohan-Chabot. Who am I, that I should
+look for better grace?"</p>
+
+<p>Favette struck him, with her plaited rushes, a reproachful
+little blow.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur Vincennes&mdash;Monsieur Voltaire&mdash;who are
+they? I know nothing of those stupid people!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, and fondly stroked her hair:</p>
+
+<p>"Little darling! The one is a prison that manacles
+the deadly crimes of Free Speech and Free Thought;
+the other, a man who has suffered for both, but loves
+both still, and will, sooner or later, help to give both to
+the world&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, you think of your studies, of your ambitions, of
+your great heroes! You think nothing of me, save to
+call me a little darling. You are cruel, Monsieur Léon!"</p>
+
+<p>And Favette twisted her hand from his grasp with
+petulant sorrow, and dashed away her tears&mdash;the tears
+of sixteen&mdash;as bright and free from bitterness as the
+water-drops on the violet-bells.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> cruel&mdash;and to you! My heart must indeed be
+badly echoed by my lips, if you have cause to fancy so a
+single moment. Cruel to you? Favette, Favette! is a
+man ever cruel to the dearest thing in his life, the dearest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+name in his thoughts? If I smiled I meant no sneer; I
+love you as you are, mignonne; the picture is so fair, one
+touch added, or one touch effaced, would mar the whole
+in <i>my</i> eyes. I love you as you are! with no knowledge
+but what the good sisters teach you in their convent solitude,
+and what the songs of the birds, the voices of the
+flowers, whisper to you of their woodland lore. I love
+you as you are! Every morning when I am far away
+from you, and from Lorraine, I shall think of you gathering
+the summer roses, calling the birds about you, bending
+over the fountain to see it mirror your own beauty;
+every evening I shall think of you leaning from the
+window, chanting softly to yourself the Ora pro nobis,
+while the shadows deepen, and the stars we have so often
+watched together come out above the pine-hills. Favette,
+Favette! exile will have the bitterness of death to me;
+to give me strength to bear it, tell me that you love me
+more dearly than as the brother you have always called
+me; that you will so love me when I shall be no longer
+here beside you, but shall have to trust to memory and
+fidelity to guard for me in absence the priceless treasure
+of your heart?"</p>
+
+<p>Favette's head drooped, and her hands played nervously
+with the now torn and twisted braid of rushes: he saw
+her heart beat under its muslin corsage, like a bee caught
+and caged in the white leaves of a lily; and she glanced
+at him under her lashes with a touch of na&iuml;ve coquetry.</p>
+
+<p>"If I tell you so, what gage have I, Monsieur Léon,
+that, a few months gone by, you will even remember it?
+In those magnificent cities you will soon forget Lorraine;
+with the <i>grandes dames</i> of the courts you will soon cease
+to care for Favette?"</p>
+
+<p>"Look in my eyes, Favette, they alone can answer you
+as I would answer! Till we meet again none shall supplant
+you for an hour, none rob you of one thought; you
+have my first love, you will have my last. Favette, you
+believe me?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;I believe!" murmured Favette, resting her
+large eyes fondly on him. "We will meet as we part,
+though you are the swallow, free to take flight over the
+seas to foreign lands, and I am the violet, that must stay
+where it is rooted in the Lorraine woods!"</p>
+
+<p>"Accept the augury," he whispered, resting his lips
+upon her low smooth brow. "Does not the swallow ever
+return to the violet, holding it fairer than all the gaudy
+tropical flowers that may have tempted him to rest on the
+wing and delay his homeward flight? Does not the violet
+ever welcome him the same, in its timid winning spring-tide
+loveliness, when he returns to, as when he quitted,
+the only home he loves? Believe the augury, Favette;
+we shall meet as we part!"</p>
+
+<p>And they believed the augury, as they believed in life,
+in love, in faith; they who were beginning all, and had
+proved none of the treacherous triad!</p>
+
+<p>What had he dreamed of in his solitary ancestral woods
+fairer than this Lorraine violet, that had grown up with
+him, side by side, since he, a boy of twelve, gathered
+heaths from the clefts of the rocks that the little child
+of six years old cried for and could not reach? What
+had she seen that she loved half so well as M. le Chevalier
+from the Castle, whom her uncle, the Curé, held as
+his dearest and most brilliant pupil, whose eyes always
+looked so lovingly into hers, and whose voice was always
+lavishing fond names on his petite Favette?</p>
+
+<p>They believed the augury, and were happy even in the
+sweet sorrow of parting&mdash;sorrow that they had never
+known before&mdash;as they sat together in the morning sunlight,
+while the water bubbled among the violet tufts,
+among the grasses and wild thyme, and the dragon-flies
+fluttered their green and gold and purple wings amidst
+the tendrils of the vines, and the rose-leaves, drifted
+gently by the wind, floated down the brook, till they were
+lost in deepening shadow under the drooping boughs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>II.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="SECONDM" id="SECONDM"></a>THE SECOND MORNING.</h4>
+
+<p>"Savez-vous que Favart va écrire une nouvelle comédie&mdash;La
+Chercheuse d'Esprit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Vraiment? Il doit bien écrire cela, car il s'occupe
+toujours à le <i>chercher</i>, et n'arrive jamais à le trouver!"</p>
+
+<p>The mot had true feminine malice, but the lips that spoke
+it were so handsome, that had even poor Favart himself,
+the poet-pastrycook who composed operas and comedies
+while he made méringues and fanfreluches, and dreamed
+of libretti while he whisked the cream for a supper, been
+within hearing, they would have taken the smart from
+the sting; and, as it was, the hit only caused echoes of
+softly-tuned laughter, for the slightest word of those lips
+it was the fashion through Paris just then to bow to,
+applaud, and re-echo.</p>
+
+<p>Before her Psyche, shrouded in cobweb lace, powdered
+by Martini, gleaming with pearls and emeralds, scented
+with most delicate amber, making her morning toilette,
+and receiving her morning levee according to the fashion
+of the day, sat the brilliant satirist of poor Favart. The
+<i>ruelle</i> was crowded; three marshals, De Richelieu, Lowendal,
+and Maurice de Saxe; a prince, De Soubise; a
+poet, Claude Dorat; an abbé, Voisenon; a centenarian,
+Saint-Aulaire; peers uncounted, De Bièvre, De Caylus,
+De Villars, D'Etissac, Duras, D'Argenson&mdash;a crowd of
+others&mdash;surrounded and superintended her toilette, in a
+glittering troop of courtiers and gentlemen. Dames
+d'atours (for she had her maids of honor as well as Marie
+Leczinska) handed her her flacons of perfume, or her
+numberless notes, on gold salvers, chased by Réveil; the
+ermine beneath her feet, humbly sent by the Russian
+ambassador&mdash;far superior to what the Czarina sent to
+Madame de Mailly&mdash;had cost two thousand louis; her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+bedroom outshone in luxury any at Versailles, Choisy, or
+La Muette, with its Venetian glass, its medallions of
+Fragonard, its plaques of Sèvres, its landscapes of Watteau,
+framed in the carved and gilded wainscoting, its
+Chinese lamps, swinging by garlands of roses, its laughing
+Cupids, buried under flowers, painted in fresco above
+the alcove, its hangings of velvet, of silk, of lace; and
+its cabinets, its screens, its bonbonnières, its jewel-boxes,
+were costly as those of the Marquises de Pompadour or
+De Prie.</p>
+
+<p>Who was she?&mdash;a Princess of the Blood, a Duchess
+of France, a mistress of the King?</p>
+
+<p>Lords of the chamber obeyed her wishes, ministers
+signed lettres de cachet at her instance; "<i>ces messieurs</i>,"
+la Queue de la Régence, had their rendezvous at her suppers;
+she had a country villa that eclipsed Trianon; she
+had fêtes that outshone the fêtes at Versailles; she had a
+"<i>droit de chasse</i>" in one of the royal districts; she had
+the first place on the easels of Coypel, Lancret, Pater,
+Vanloo, La Tour; the first place in the butterfly odes of
+Crébillon le Gai, Claude Dorat; Voisenon.</p>
+
+<p>Who was she?&mdash;the Queen of France? No; much
+more&mdash;the Queen of Paris!</p>
+
+<p>She was Thargélie Dumarsais; matchless as Claire
+Clairon, beautiful as Madeleine Gaussin, resistless as
+Sophie Arnould, great as Adrienne Lecouvreur. She
+was a Power in France&mdash;for was she not the Empress
+of the Comédie? If Madame Lenormand d'Etioles ruled
+the government at Versailles, Mademoiselle Thargélie
+Dumarsais ruled the world at Paris; and if the King's
+favorite could sign her enemies, by a smile, to the Bastille,
+the Court's favorite could sign hers, by a frown, to
+For-l'Evêque.</p>
+
+<p>The foyer was nightly filled while she played in <i>Zaïre</i>,
+or <i>Polyeucte</i>, or <i>Les Folies Amoureuses</i>, with a court of
+princes and poets, marshals and marquises, beaux esprits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+and abbés galants; and mighty nobles strewed with bouquets
+the path from her carriage to the coulisses; bouquets
+she trod on with nonchalant dignity, as though flowers
+only bloomed to have the honor of dying under her foot.
+Louis Quinze smilingly humored her caprices, content
+to wait until it was her pleasure to play at his private
+theatre; dukes, marquises, viscounts, chevaliers, vied who
+should ruin himself most magnificently and most utterly
+for her; and lovers the most brilliant and the most flattering,
+from Richelieu, Roi de Ruelles, to Dorat, poet of
+boudoir-graces and court-Sapphos, left the titled beauties
+of Versailles for the self-crowned Empress of the Français.
+She had all Paris for her chentela, from Versailles
+to the Caveau; for even the women she deposed, the
+actors she braved, the journalists she consigned to For-l'Evêque,
+dared not raise their voice against the idol of
+the hour. A Queen of France? Bah! Pray what could
+Marie Leczinska, the pale, dull pietist, singing canticles
+in her private chapel, compare for power, for sway, for
+courtiers, for brilliant sovereignty, for unrivalled triumph,
+with Thargélie Dumarsais, the Queen of the Theatre?</p>
+
+<p>Ravishingly beautiful looked the matchless actress as
+she sat before her Psyche, flashing <i>[oe]illades</i> on the brilliant
+group who made every added aigrette, every additional
+bouquet of the coiffure, every little <i>mouche</i>, every
+touch to the already perfect toilette, occasion for flattering
+simile and soft-breathed compliment; ravishingly beautiful,
+as she laughed at Maurice de Saxe, or made a disdainful
+<i>moue</i> at an impromptu couplet of Dorat's, or gave
+a blow of her fan to Richelieu, or asked Saint-Aulaire
+what he thought of Vanloo's portrait of her as <i>Rodugune</i>;
+ravishingly beautiful, with her charms that disdained
+alike rouge and maréchale powder, and were matchless
+by force of their own coloring, form, and voluptuous languor,
+when, her toilette finished, followed by her glittering
+crowd, she let Richelieu lead her to his carriage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was a review of Guards on the plain at Sablons
+that morning, a fête afterwards, at which she would be
+surrounded by the most brilliant staff of an army of Noblesse,
+and Richelieu was at that moment the most favored
+of her troop of lovers. M. le Duc, as every one knows,
+never sued at court or coulisse in vain, and the love of
+Thargélie Dumarsais, though perhaps with a stronger
+touch of romance in it than was often found in the atmosphere
+of the foyer, was, like the love of her time and her
+class, as inconstant and vivacious, now settling here, now
+lighting there, as any butterfly that fluttered among the
+limes at Trianon. Did not the jest-loving <i>parterre</i> ever
+salute with gay laughter two lines in a bagatelle-comedy
+of the hour&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oui l'Amour papillonne, sans entraves, à son gré;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Chargé longtemps de fers, de soie même, il mourrait!&mdash;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>when spoken by Thargélie Dumarsais&mdash;laughter that
+hailed her as head-priestess of her pleasant creed, in a
+city and a century where the creed was universal?</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, bonjour! You have not seen her before, have
+you, semi-Englishman? You have found nothing like
+her in the foggy isles, I wager you fifty louis!" cried one
+of Thargélie Dumarsais's court, the Marquis de la Thorillière,
+meeting a friend of his who had arrived in Paris
+only the day before, M. le Chevalier de Tallemont des
+Réaux, as Richelieu's cortége rolled away, and the Marquis
+crossed to his own carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Her? Whom? I have not been in Paris for six
+years, you know. What can I tell of its idols, as I
+remember of old that they change every hour?"</p>
+
+<p>"True! but, bon Dieu! not to know la Dumarsais!
+What it must be to have been buried in those benighted
+Britannic Isles! Did you not see her in Richelieu's
+carriage?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No. I saw a carriage driving off with such an escort
+and such fracas, that I thought it could belong to nobody
+less than to Madame Lenormand d'Etioles; but I did not
+observe it any further. Who is this beauty I ought to
+have seen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thargélie Dumarsais, for whom we are all ruining
+ourselves with the prettiest grace in the world, and for
+whom you will do the same when you have been once to
+the Français; that is, if you have the good fortune to
+attract her eyes and please her fancy, which you may do,
+for the fogs have agreed with you, Léon!&mdash;I should not
+wonder if you become the fashion, and set the women
+raving of you as 'leur zer zevalier!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks for the prophecy, but I shall not stay long
+enough to fulfil it, and steal your myrtle crowns. I leave
+again to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Leave?</i> Sapristi! See what it is to have become
+half English, and imbibed a taste for spleen and solitude!
+Have you written another satire, or have you learned such
+barbarism as to dislike Paris?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither; but I leave for Lorraine to-morrow. It is
+five years since I saw my old pine-woods."</p>
+
+<p>"Dame! it is ten years since <i>I</i> saw the wilds of Bretagne,
+and I will take good care it shall be a hundred
+before I see them again. <i>Hors de Paris, c'est hors du
+monde.</i> Come with me to La Dumarsais's <i>petit souper</i> to-night,
+and you will soon change your mind."</p>
+
+<p>"My good Armand, you have not been an exile, as I
+have; you little know how I long for the very scent of
+the leaves, the very smell of the earth at Grande Charmille!
+But bah! I talk in Hebrew to you. You have
+been lounging away your days in titled beauties, <i>petits
+salons</i>, making butterfly verses, learning their broidery,
+their lisp, and their perfumes, talking to their parrots,
+and using their cosmétiques, till you care for no air but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+what is musk-scented! But what of this Dumarsais of
+yours&mdash;does she equal Lecouvreur?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eclipses her!&mdash;with Paris as with Maurice de Saxe.
+Thargélie Dumarsais is superb, mon cher&mdash;unequalled,
+unrivalled! We have had nothing like her for beauty,
+for grace, for talent, nor, pardieu! for extravagance!
+She ruined <i>me</i> last year in a couple of months. Richelieu
+is in favor just now&mdash;with what woman is he not?
+Thargélie is very fond of the Marshals of France! Saxe
+is fettered to her hand and foot, and the Duchesse de
+Bouillon hates her as rancorously as she does Adrienne.
+Come and see her play <i>Phèdre</i> to-night, and you will renounce
+Lorraine. I will take you to supper with her
+afterwards; she will permit any friend of mine entry, and
+then, generous man that I am, I shall have put you <i>en
+chemin</i> to sun yourself in her smiles and ingratiate yourself
+in her favor. Don't give me too much credit for the
+virtue though, for I confess I should like to see Richelieu
+supplanted."</p>
+
+<p>"Does his reign threaten to last long, then?"</p>
+
+<p>The Marquis shrugged his shoulders, and gave his
+badine an expressive whisk.</p>
+
+<p>"Dieu sait! we are not prophets in Paris. It would be
+as easy to say where that weathercock may have veered
+to-morrow, as to predict where la Dumarsais's love may
+have lighted ere a month! Where are you going, may
+I ask?"</p>
+
+<p>"To see Lucille de Verdreuil. I knew her at Lunéville;
+she and Madame de Boufflers were warm friends
+till Stanislaus, I believe, found Lucille's eyes lovelier
+than Madame la Marquise deemed fit, and then they
+quarrelled, as women ever do, with virulence in exact
+proportion to the ardor of their friendship."</p>
+
+<p>"As the women quarrel at Choisy for <i>notre maître</i>!
+They will be friends again when both have lost the game,
+like Louise de Mailly and the Duchesse de Châteauroux.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+The poor Duchess! Fitz-James and Maurepas, Châtillon
+and Bouillon, Rochefoucauld and le Père Pérussot, all
+together, were too strong for her. All the gossip of that
+Metz affair reached you across the water, I suppose?
+Those pests of Jesuits! if they want him to be their Very
+Christian King, and to cure him of his worship of Cupidon,
+they will have to pull down all the stones of La
+Muette and the Parc aux Cerfs! What good is it to kill
+<i>one</i> poor woman when women are as plentiful as roses at
+Versailles? And now let me drive you to Madame de
+Vaudreuil; if <i>she</i> do not convert you from your fancy
+for Lorraine this morning, Thargélie Dumarsais will
+to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mon zer zevalier, Paris at ado'able! Vous n'êtes pas
+sé'ieux en voulant le quitter, z'en suis sûre!</i>" cried the
+Comtesse de Vaudreuil, in the pretty lisp of the day, a
+charming little blonde, patched and powdered, nestled in
+a chair before a fire of perfumed wood, teasing her monkey
+Zulmé with a fan of Pater's, and giving a pretty
+little sign of contempt and disbelief with some sprays of
+jessamine employed in the chastisement of offenders more
+responsible and quite as audacious as Zulmé.</p>
+
+<p>Her companion, her "zer zevalier," was a young man
+of seven-and-twenty, with a countenance frank, engaging,
+nobly cast, far more serious, far more thoughtful in its
+expression, than was often seen in that laughing and
+mocking age. Exiled when a mere boy for a satirical
+pamphlet which had provoked the wrath of the Censeur
+Royal, and might have cost him the Bastille but for intercession
+from Lunéville, he had passed his youth less in
+pleasure than in those philosophical and political problems
+then beginning to agitate a few minds; which were
+developed later on in the "Encyclopédie," later still in
+the Assemblée Nationale. Voltaire and <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Helvetius', changed for consistency with page 228">Helvétius</ins> had
+spoken well of him at Madame de Geoffrin's; Claudine
+de Tencin had introduced him the night before in her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
+brilliant salons; the veteran Fontenelle had said to him,
+"<i>Monsieur, comme censeur royal je refusai mon approbation
+à votre brochure; comme homme libre je vous en félicite</i>"&mdash;all
+that circle was prepared to receive him well,
+the young Chevalier de Tallemont might make a felicitous
+season in Paris if he chose, with the romance of his exile
+about him, and Madame de Vaudreuil smiling kindly on
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"The country!" she cried; "the country is all very
+charming in eclogues and pastorals, but out of them it is
+a desert of ennui! What <i>can</i> you mean, Léon, by leaving
+Paris to-morrow? Ah, méchant, there must be something
+we do not see, some love besides that of the Lorraine
+woods!"</p>
+
+<p>"Madame, is there not my father?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bien zoli!</i> But at your age men are not so filial.
+There is some other reason&mdash;but what? Any love you
+had there five years ago has hardly any attractions now.
+Five years! Ma foi, five months is an eternity that kills
+the warmest passion!"</p>
+
+<p>"May there not be some love, madame, that time only
+strengthens?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never heard of it if there be. It would be a very
+dreary affair, I should fancy, smouldering, smouldering
+on and on like an ill-lit fire. Nobody would thank you
+for it, mon cher, <i>here</i>! Come, what is your secret? Tell
+it me."</p>
+
+<p>Léon de Tallemont smiled; the smile of a man who
+has happy thoughts, and is indifferent to ridicule.</p>
+
+<p>"Madame, one can refuse you nothing! My secret?
+It is a very simple one. The greatest pang of my enforced
+exile was the parting from one I loved; the greatest
+joy of my return is that I return to her."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bon Dieu! comme c'est drôle!</i> Here is a man talking
+to me of love, and of a love not felt for <i>me</i>!" thought
+Madame la Comtesse, giving him a soft glance of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+beautiful blue eyes. "You are a very strange man. You
+have lived out of France till you have grown wretchedly
+serious and eccentric. Loved this woman for five years?
+Léon! Léon! you are telling me a fairy tale. Who is
+she, this enchantress? She must have some mysterious
+magic. Tell me&mdash;quick!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is no enchantress, madame, and she has no magic
+save the simple one of having ever been very dear to me.
+We grew up together at Grande Charmille; she was the
+orphan niece of the Priest, a fond, innocent, laughing
+child, fresh and fair, and as untouched by a breath of
+impure air as any of the violets in the valley. She was
+scarcely out of the years of childhood when I left her,
+with beauty whose sweetest grace of all was its own unconsciousness.
+Through my five long years of exile I
+have remembered Favette as I saw her last under the
+elm-boughs in the summer light, her eyes dim with the
+tears of our parting, her young heart heaving with its
+first grief. I have loved her too well for others to have
+power to efface or to supplant her; of her only have I
+thought, of her only have I dreamed, holding her but the
+dearer as the years grew further from the hour of our
+separation, nearer to the hour of our reunion. I have
+heard no word of her since we parted; but of what value
+is love without trust and fidelity in trial? The beauty
+of her childhood may have merged into the beauty of
+womanhood, but I fear no other change in Favette. As
+we parted so we vowed to meet, and I believe in her love
+as in my own. I know that I shall find my Lorraine
+violet without stain or soil. Madame, Favette is still
+dearer to me now, Heaven help me, than five years ago.
+Five years&mdash;five years&mdash;true! it <i>is</i> an eternity! Yet
+the bitterness of the past has faded for ever from me <i>now</i>,
+and I only see&mdash;the future!"</p>
+
+<p>Madame de Vaudreuil listened in silence; his words
+stirred in her chords long untouched, never heard amidst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+the mots, the madrigals, the laughter of her world of
+Paris, Versailles, and Choisy. She struck him a little
+blow with her jessamine-sprays, with a mist gathering
+over her lovely blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, hush, Léon! you speak in a tongue unknown
+here. A word of the heart amongst us sounds a word of
+a <i>Gaulois</i> out of fashion&mdash;forbidden!"</p>
+
+
+<h3>III.</h3>
+
+<h4><a name="MIDNIGHT" id="MIDNIGHT"></a>MIDNIGHT.</h4>
+
+<p>The Français was crowded. Thargélie Dumarsais,
+great in <i>Electre</i>, <i>Chimène</i>, <i>Inès</i>, as in "<i>Ninette à la Cour</i>,"
+"<i>Les Moissonneurs</i>," or "<i>Annette et Lubin</i>," was playing
+in "<i>Phèdre</i>." Louis Quinze was present, with all the
+powdered marquises, the titled wits, the glittering gentlemen
+of the Court of Versailles; but no presence stayed
+the shout of adoration with which the parterre welcomed
+the idol of the hour, and Louis le Bien-aimé (des femmes!)
+himself added his royal quota to the ovation, and threw
+at her feet a diamond, superb as any in his regalia. It
+was whispered that the Most Christian King was growing
+envious of his favorite's favor with la Dumarsais, and
+would, ere long, supersede him.</p>
+
+<p>The foyer was filled with princes of the blood, marshals
+of France, dukes, marquises, the élite of her troop
+of lovers; lords and gentlemen crowded the passages,
+flinging their bouquets for her carpet as she passed; and
+poor scholars, young poets, youths without a sou&mdash;amongst
+them Diderot, Gilbert, Jean-Jacques Rousseau&mdash;pressed
+forward to catch a glimpse, by the light of the links, of
+this beauty, on which only the eyes of grands seigneurs
+who could dress Cupidon in a court habit <i>parfilé d'or</i>
+were allowed to gaze closely, as she left the Français,
+after her unmatched and uninterrupted triumphs, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+went to her carriage with Richelieu. The suppers of
+Thargélie Dumarsais were renowned through Paris; they
+equalled in magnificence the suppers of the Regency,
+rivalled them for license, and surpassed them for wit.
+All the world might flock to her fêtes where she undisguisedly
+sought to surpass the lavishness of Versailles,
+even by having showers of silver flung from her windows
+to the people in the streets below; but to her <i>soupers à
+huis clos</i> only a chosen few were admitted, and men would
+speak of having supped with la Dumarsais as boastfully
+as women of having supped with the King at Choisy.</p>
+
+<p>"What you have lost in not seeing her play <i>Phèdre</i>!
+Helvétius would have excused you; all the talk of his
+salons is not worth one glance at la Dumarsais. Mon
+ami! you will be converted to Paris when once you have
+seen her," said the Marquis de la Thorillière, as his carriage
+stopped in the Chaussée d'Antin.</p>
+
+<p>Léon de Tallemont laughed, and thought of the eyes
+that would brighten at his glance, and the heart that
+would beat against his once more under the vine
+shadows of Lorraine. No new magic, however seductive,
+should have strength to shake his allegiance to that Memory,
+and, true to his violet in Lorraine, he defied the
+Queen of the Foyer.</p>
+
+<p>"We are late, but that is always a more pardonable
+fault than to be too early," said the Marquis, as they were
+ushered across the vestibule, through several salons, into
+the supper-room, hung with rich tapestries of "Les
+Nymphes au Bain," "Diane Chasseresse," and "Apollon
+et Daphné;" with gilded consoles, and rosewood buffets,
+enamelled with medallion groups, and crowded with
+Sèvres and porcelaine de Saxe, while Venetian mirrors at
+each end of the salle reflected the table, with its wines,
+and fruits, and flowers, its gold dishes and Bohemian
+glass. The air was heavily perfumed, and vibrating with
+laughter. The guests were Richelieu, Bièvre, Saxe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+D'Etissac, Montcrif, and lovely Marie Camargo, the
+queen of the coulisses who introduced the "short skirts"
+of the ballet, and upheld her innovation so stanchly
+amidst the outcries of scandalized Jansenists and journalists.
+But even Marie Camargo herself paled&mdash;and would
+have paled even had she been, what she was not, in the
+first flush of her youth&mdash;before the superb beauty, the
+languid voluptuousness, the sensuous grace, the southern
+eyes, the full lips, like the open leaves of a damask rose,
+melting yet mocking, of the most beautiful and most
+notorious woman of a day in which beauty and notoriety
+were rife, the woman with the diamond of Louis Quinze
+sparkling in the light upon her bosom, whom Versailles
+and Paris hailed as Thargélie Dumarsais.</p>
+
+<p>The air, scented with amber, rang with the gay echoes
+of a stanza of Dorat's, chanted by Marie Camargo; the
+"Cupids and Bacchantes," painted in the panels of Sèvres,
+seemed to laugh in sympathy with the revel over which
+they presided; the light flashed on the King's diamond,
+to which Richelieu pointed, with a wicked whisper; for
+the Marshal was getting tired of his own reign, and his
+master might pay his court when he would. Thargélie
+Dumarsais, more beautiful still at her <i>petit souper</i> than
+at her <i>petit lever</i>, with her hair crowned with roses, true
+flowers of Venus that might have crowned Aspasia,
+looked up laughingly as her lacqueys ushered in le Marquis
+de la Thorillière and le Chevalier de Tallemont.</p>
+
+<p>"M. le Marquis," cried the actress, "you are late! It
+is an impertinence forbidden at my court. I shall sup in
+future with barred doors, like M. d'Orléans; then all you
+late-comers&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Through the scented air, through the echoing laughter,
+stopping her own words, broke a startled bitter cry:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Mon Dieu, c'est Favette!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Thargélie Dumarsais shrank back in her rose velvet
+fauteuil as though the blow of a dagger had struck her;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+the color fled from her lips, and underneath the delicate
+rouge on her cheeks; her hand trembled as it grasped the
+King's aigrette.</p>
+
+<p>"Favette&mdash;Favette! Who calls me that?"</p>
+
+<p>It was a forgotten name, the name of a bygone life
+that fell on her ear with a strange familiar chime, breaking
+in on the wit, the license, the laughter of her midnight
+supper, as the subdued and mournful sound of vesper
+bells might fall upon the wild refrains and noisy
+drinking-songs of bacchanalian melody.</p>
+
+<p>A surprised silence fell upon the group, the laughter
+hushed, the voices stopped; it was a strange interruption
+for a midnight supper. Thargélie Dumarsais involuntarily
+rose, her lips white, her eyes fixed, her hand clasped
+convulsively on the King's diamond. A vague, speechless
+terror held mastery over her, an awe she could not
+shake off had fastened upon her, as though the dead had
+risen from their graves, and come thither to rebuke her
+for the past forgotten, the innocence lost. The roses in
+her hair, the flowers of revel, touched a cheek blanched
+as though she beheld some unearthly thing, and the hand
+that lay on the royal jewel shook and trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"Favette? Favette?" she echoed again. "It is so
+many years since I heard that name!"</p>
+
+<p>Her guests sat silent still, comprehending nothing of
+this single name which had such power to move and
+startle her. Richelieu alone, leaning back in his chair,
+leisurely picked out one of his brandy-cherries, and waited
+as a man waits for the next scene at a theatre:</p>
+
+<p>"Is it an unexpected tragedy, or an arranged comedy,
+ma chère? Ought one to cry or to laugh? Give me the
+<i>mot d'ordre</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>His words broke the spell, and called Thargélie Dumarsais
+back to the world about her. Actress by profession
+and by nature, she rallied with a laugh, putting out her
+jewelled hand with a languid glance from her long
+almond-shaped eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"A friend of early years, my dear Duc, that is all.
+Ah, Monsieur de Tallemont what a strange rencontre!
+When did you come to Paris? I scarcely knew you at
+the first moment; you have so long been an exile, one
+may pardonably be startled by your apparition, and take
+you for a ghost! I suppose you never dreamed of meeting
+Favette Fontanie under my <i>nom de théâtre</i>? Ah!
+how we change, do we not, Léon? Time is so short, we
+have no time to stand still! Marie, ma chère, give Monsieur
+le Chevalier a seat beside you&mdash;he cannot be happier
+placed!"</p>
+
+<p>Léon de Tallemont heard not a word that she spoke;
+he stood like a man stunned and paralyzed by a sudden
+and violent blow, his head bowed, a mortal pallor changing
+his face to the hues of death, the features that were a
+moment before bright, laughing, and careless, now set in
+mute and rigid anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"Favette! Favette!" he murmured, hoarsely, in the
+vague dreamy agony with which a man calls wildly and
+futilely on the beloved dead to come back to him from
+the silence and horror of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>"Peste!" laughed Richelieu. "This cast-off lover
+seems a strange fellow! Does he not know that absent
+people have never the presumption to dream of keeping
+their places, but learn to give them graciously up!&mdash;shall
+I teach him the lesson? If he have his sixteen
+quarterings, a prick of my sword will soon punish his
+impudence!"</p>
+
+<p>The jeer fell unheeded on Léon de Tallemont's ear;
+had he heard it, the flippant sneer would have had no
+power to sting him then. Regardless of the men around
+the supper-table, he grasped Thargélie Dumarsais's hands
+in his:</p>
+
+<p>"This is how we meet!"</p>
+
+<p>She shrank away from his glance, terrified, she scarce
+knew why, at the mute anguish upon his face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Perhaps for a moment she realized how utterly she had
+abused the love and wrecked the life of this man; perhaps
+with his voice came back to her thronging thoughts
+of guileless days, memories ringing through the haze of
+years, as distant chimes ring over the water from lands
+we have quitted, reaching us when we have floated far
+away out to sea&mdash;memories of an innocent and untroubled
+life, when she had watched the woodland flowers open to
+the morning sun, and listened to the song of the brooks
+murmuring over the violet roots, and heard the sweet
+evening song of the birds rise to heaven under the deep
+vine shadows of Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>One moment she was silent, her eyes falling, troubled
+and guilty, beneath his gaze; then she looked up, laughing
+gayly, and flashing on him her languid lustrous glance.</p>
+
+<p>"You look like a somnambulist, <i>mon ami</i>! Did nobody
+ever tell you, then, how Mme. de la Vrillière carried
+me off from Lorraine, and brought me in her train to
+Paris, till, when Favette Fontanie was tired of being petted
+like the spaniel, the monkey, and the parrot, she broke
+away from Madame la Marquise, and made, after a little
+probation at the Foire St. Laurent, her appearance at the
+Français as Thargélie Dumarsais? <i>Allons donc!</i> have I
+lost my beauty, that you look at me thus? You should
+be reminding me of the proverb, '<i>On revient toujours à
+ses premiers amours!</i>' Surely, Thargélie Dumarsais will
+be as attractive to teach such a lesson as that little peasant
+girl, Favette, used to be? Bah, Léon! Can I not love
+you as well again in Paris as I once loved you at Grande
+Charmille? And&mdash;who knows?&mdash;perhaps I will!"</p>
+
+<p>She leaned towards him; her breath fanning his cheek,
+her scented hair brushing his lips, her lustrous eyes meeting
+his with eloquent meaning, her lips parted with the
+resistless witchery of that melting and seductive <i>sourire
+d'amour</i> to which they were so admirably trained. He
+gazed down on her, breathless, silence-stricken&mdash;gazed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>
+down on the sorceress beauty to which the innocent loveliness
+of his Lorraine flower had changed. Was this
+woman, with the rouge upon her cheeks, the crimson roses
+in her hair, the mocking light in her eyes, the wicked
+laugh on her lips, the diamond glittering like a serpent's
+eye in her bosom&mdash;was she the guileless child he had left
+weeping, on the broken steps of the fountain, tears as
+pure as the dew in the violet-bells, with the summer sunlight
+streaming round her, and no shade on her young
+brow darker than the fleeting shadow flung from above
+by the vine-leaves? A cry broke once more from his lips:</p>
+
+<p>"Would to God I had died before to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>Then he lifted his head, with a smile upon his face&mdash;a
+smile that touched and vaguely terrified all those who
+saw it&mdash;the smile of a breaking heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you for your proffered embraces, but <i>I</i> am
+faithful. I love but one, and I have lost her; Favette is
+dead! I know nothing of Thargélie Dumarsais, the
+Courtesan."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed low to her and left her&mdash;never to see her
+face again.</p>
+
+<p>A silence fell on those he had quitted, even upon
+Richelieu; perhaps even he realized that all beauty, faith,
+and joy were stricken from this man's life; and&mdash;reality
+of feeling was an exile so universally banished from the
+gay salons of the Dix-huitième Siècle, that its intrusion
+awed them as by the unwonted presence of some ghostly
+visitant.</p>
+
+<p>Thargélie Dumarsais sat silent&mdash;her thoughts had
+flown away once more from her brilliant supper-chamber
+to the fountain at Grande Charmille: she was seeing the
+dragon-flies flutter among the elm-boughs, and the water
+ripple over the wild thyme; she was feeling the old
+priest's good-night kiss upon her brow, and her own hymn
+rise and mingle with the chant of the vesper choir; she
+was hearing the song of the forest-birds echo in the Lorraine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+woods, and a fond voice whisper to her, "Fear not,
+Favette!&mdash;we shall meet as we part!"</p>
+
+<p>Richelieu took up his Dresden saucer of cherries once
+more with a burst of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Voilà un drôle!</i>&mdash;this fellow takes things seriously.
+What fools there are in this world! It will be a charming
+little story for Versailles. Dieu! how Louis will
+laugh when I tell it him! I fear though, ma chérie,
+that the 'friend of your childhood' will make you lose
+your reputation by his impolite epithets!"</p>
+
+<p>"When one has nothing, one can lose nothing&mdash;eh,
+ma chère?" laughed Marie Camargo. "Monsieur le Duc,
+she does not hear us&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, <i>l'infidèle</i>!" cried Richelieu. "Mademoiselle! I
+see plainly you love this rude lover of bygone days better
+than you do us!&mdash;is it not the truth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Chut! nobody asks for truths in a polite age!"
+laughed Thargélie Dumarsais, shaking off unwelcome
+memories once for all, and looking down at the King's
+diamond gleaming in the light&mdash;the diamond that prophesied
+to her the triumph of the King's love.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally," added La Camargo. "My friend, I shall
+die with envy of your glorious jewel. <i>Dieu! comme il
+brille!</i>"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc232.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc233a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="DEADLY_DASH" id="DEADLY_DASH"></a>"DEADLY DASH."</h2>
+
+<h3>A STORY TOLD ON THE OFF DAY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the off-day after the Derby everybody, except
+the great winners, is, it will be generally admitted,
+the resigned prey to a certain gentle
+sadness, not to say melancholy, that will only dissipate
+itself under a prolonged regimen of S. and B., seidlitz
+well dashed with Amontillado, or certain heavenly West
+Indian decoctions;&mdash;this indisposition, I would suggest,
+we should call, delicately and dubiously, Epsomitis. It
+will serve to describe innumerable forms and degrees of
+the reactionary malady.</p>
+
+<p>There is the severest shape of all, "dead money," that
+covers four figures, dropped irretrievably, and lost to the
+"milkers;" lost always <i>you</i> say because of a cough, or
+because of a close finish, or because of something dark, or
+because of a strain in the practising gallops, or because
+of a couple of brutes that cannoned just at the start; and
+never, of course, because the horse you had fancied was
+sheerly and simply only fit for a plater. There is the
+second severe form, when you awake with a cheerful expectation
+of a summons for driving "at twelve miles an
+hour" (as if that wasn't moderate and discreet!), and for
+thereby smashing a greengrocer's cart into the middle of
+next week, and running a waggonette into an omnibus,
+as you came back from the Downs, of which you have
+no more remembrance than that there was a crash, and a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+smash, and a woman's screams, and a man's "d&mdash;n the
+swells!" and a <i>tintamarre</i> of roaring conductor and bellowing
+greengrocer, and infuriated females, through which
+you dashed somehow with a cheer&mdash;more shame for you&mdash;and
+a most inappropriate <i>l'Africaine</i> chorus from the
+men on your drag. There is the milder form, which is
+only the rueful recollection of seeing, in a wild ecstasy,
+the chestnut with the white blaze sweep with his superb
+stride to the front, and of having, in your moment of
+rapturous gratitude to the red and blue, rushed, unintentionally,
+during the discussion of Fortnum and Mason's
+hamper, into a promise to take Euphrosyne Brown to
+Baden in August, where you know very well she will cost
+you more than all your sums netted through Gladiateur.
+There are the slenderer touches of the malady, which give
+you, over your breakfast coffee, a certain dolorous meditation
+as to how you could have been such a fool as to have
+placed all your trust in Danebury, or to have put in a
+hole through Spring Cottage just what your yacht costs
+for three months; which makes you wonder why on earth
+you took that lot of actresses on to the hill, and threw
+money enough away on them in those wages of idiotcy
+(or wages of sin, as your uncle the dean would translate
+it), of cashmeres, eau de Cologne, gloves, and bracelets,
+to have purchased those two weight-carriers offered you
+at £600 the pair, and dirt-cheap at that; or which makes
+you only dully and headachily conscious that you drank
+champagne up on the box-seat as if you were a young
+fellow from Eton, and now pay for the juvenile folly, as
+you know you deserve to do, when that beautiful white
+Burgundy at your club, or your own cool perfect claret
+at home, seems to stare you in the face and ask, "Why
+did you crack all those bottles of Dry on the Downs?"</p>
+
+<p>There are symptoms and varieties innumerable of the
+malady that I propose shall be known henceforward as
+Epsomitis; therefore, the off-day finds everybody more or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+less slightly done-up and mournful. Twenty-four hours
+and the Oaks, if properly prepared for by a strictly
+medicinal course of <i>brûles-gueules</i>, as the Chasseurs say,
+smoked perseveringly, will bring all patients round on
+the Friday; but during the twenty-four hours a sense
+that all on and off the course is vanity and vexation of
+spirit will generally and somnolently predominate in the
+universal and fashionable disease of Epsomitis.</p>
+
+<p>One off-day, after the magnificent victory of Monarque's
+unrivalled son, an acquaintance of mine, suffering considerably
+from these symptoms, sought my philosophy and
+my prescriptions. A very sharp irritant for Epsomitis
+may be administered in the form of "I told you so? It's
+all your own fault!" But this species of blister and
+douche bath combined is rarely given unless the patient
+be mad enough to let his wife, if he unluckily have one,
+learn what ails him. As far as I was concerned, I was
+much too sympathetic with the sufferer to be down upon
+him with the triumphant reminder that I had cautioned
+him all along not to place his trust in Russley. I, instead,
+prescribed him cool wines, and led him on to talk of other
+people's misfortunes, the very best way to get reconciled
+with your own. We talked of old times, of old memories,
+of old acquaintance, in the twilight, between Derby and
+Oaks. We got a little melancholy; too much champagne
+is always productive on the morrow of a gently sentimental
+tinge, and a man is always inclined to look on the
+world as a desert when he has the conviction that he himself
+has been made a fool in it. Among other names,
+that of Deadly Dash came up between us. What had
+become of him? I did not know; he did. He told me;
+and I will tell it here, for the story is of the past now.</p>
+
+<p>"Deadly Dash! What a shot he was! Never missed,"
+said my friend, whose own gun is known well enough at
+Hornsey-wood House; therewith falling into a reverie,
+tinged with the Jacques-like gloom of Epsomitis in its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+severest form, from which he awoke to tell me slowly, between
+long draughts of iced drinks, what I write now. I
+alter his tale in nothing, save in filling in with words the
+gaps and blanks that he made, all-eloquent in his halting
+oratory, by meditative, plaintive, moralizing puffs from
+his tonic, the <i>brûle gueule</i>, and an occasional appeal to
+my imagination in the customary formula of "Oh,
+bother!&mdash;<i>you</i> understand&mdash;all the rest of it you know,"
+which, though it tells everything over claret, is not so
+clear a mode of relation in type. For all else here the
+story is as he gave it to me.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>"Deadly Dash!" It was a fatal sounding sobriquet,
+and had a fatal fascination for many, for me as well as
+the rest, when I was in my salad days and joined the old &mdash;&mdash;th,
+amongst whose Light Dragoons, it was so signally
+and ominously famous. The nickname had a wide significance;
+"<i>he always kills</i>," was said with twofold truth,
+in twofold meaning of Dash; in a <i>barrière</i> duel he would
+wheel lightly, aim carelessly, and send the ball straight
+as any arrow through heart or lung, just as he fancied, in
+the neatest style anybody could dream of; and in an intrigue
+he took just the same measures, and hit as invariably
+with the self-same skill and the self-same indifference.
+"He always kills" applied equally to either kind of affair,
+and got him his sobriquet, which he received with as
+laughing an equanimity as a riding man gets the Gilt
+Vase, or a "lover of the leash" the Ravensworth Stakes,
+or the Puppy Cup and Goblet. He was proud of it, and
+had only one regret, that he lived in the dead days of the
+duel, and could only go out when he was on French soil.
+In dare-devilry of every sort he out-Heroded Herod, and
+distanced any who were mad enough to try the pace with
+him in that steeple-chase commonly called "going to the
+bad." It was a miracle how often he used to reach the
+stage of "<i>complete</i> ruin" that the Prince de Soubise once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+sighed for as an unattainable paradise; and picked himself
+up again, without a hair turned, as one may say, and
+started off with as fresh a pace as though nothing had
+knocked him over. Other men got his speed sometimes;
+but nobody could ever equal his stay. For an "out and
+out goer" there was nobody like Deadly Dash; and
+though only a Captain of Horse, with few "expectations,"
+he did what Dukes daren't have done, and lived at a
+faster rate than all the elder sons in the kingdom put
+together. Dash had the best bow and the brightest wits,
+the lightest morals and the heaviest debts of any <i>sabreur</i>
+in the Service; very unscrupulous fellows were staggered
+at <i>his</i> devil-me-care vices; and as for reputation,&mdash;"a
+deuced pleasant fellow, Dash," they used to say at the
+Curragh, in the Guards' Club, at Thatched House anniversary
+dinners, in North Indian cantonments, in Brighton
+barrack-rooms, or in any of the many places where Deadly
+Dash was a household word; "a very pleasant fellow; no
+end 'fit' always, best fun in life over the olives when you
+get him in humor; shoot you dead though next morning,
+if he want, and you be handy for him in a neat snug little
+Bad; make some devil of a <i>mot</i> on you too afterwards,
+just as pleasantly as if he were offering you a Lopez to
+smoke!"</p>
+
+<p>Now, that was just the sort of celebrity that made me
+mad to see the owner of it; there wasn't a living being,
+except that year's favorite out of the Whitewall establishment,
+that I was half so eager to look at, or so reverent
+when I thought of, as "the Killer." I was very young
+then. I had gone through a classic course of yellow covers
+from Jeffs' and Rolandi's, and I had a vague impression
+that a man who had had a dozen <i>barrière</i> affairs
+abroad, and been "<i>enfant</i>" to every lovely <i>lionne</i> of his
+day, must of necessity be like the heroes of Delphine
+Demireps' novels, who had each of them always a "je ne
+sais quoi de farouche et de fier dans ses grands yeux noirs,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+et toute la révélation d'une ame usée, mais dominée par
+des passions encore inépuisables, écrite sur son sombre
+et pale visage," &amp;c., &amp;c., in the Demireps' most telling
+style.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know quite what I expected to see in the Killer,
+but I think it was a sort of compound of Monte Christo,
+Mephistopheles, and Murat mixed in one; what I did see
+was a slight delicate man with a face as fair and soft as a
+girl's, the gentlest possible manners, and a laugh like
+music. Deadly Dash had led a life as bad as he could
+lead, had lit his cigar without a tremor in the wrist, on
+many gray mornings, while his adversary lay dying hard
+among the red rank grasses, had gamed so deep twenty-four
+hours at a stretch that the most reckless <i>galérie</i> in
+Europe held their breath to watch his play; had had a
+tongue of silver for his intrigues and a nerve of steel for
+his <i>vendetta</i>; had lived in reckless rioting and drunk
+deep; but the Demirep would not have had him at any
+price in her romance; he looked so simply and quietly
+thorough-bred, he was so utterly guiltless of all her orthodox
+traits. The gentlest of mortals was Deadly Dash;
+when you first heard his sweet silvery voice, and his
+laughter as light and airy as a woman's, you would never
+believe how often abroad there a dead man had been left
+to get stiff and cold among the clotted herbage, while the
+Killer went out of the town by the early express, smoking
+and reading the "Charivari," and sipping some cold
+Curaçoa punch out of his flask.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course!" growled a man to me once in the Guards'
+smoking-room, an order of the Scots Fusilleers to Montreal
+having turned him misanthrope. "Did Mephistopheles
+ever come out in full harness, with horns and tail
+complete, eh? Not such a fool. He looked like a gentleman,
+and talked like a wit. Would the most dunder-headed
+Cain in Christendom, I should be glad to know,
+be such an ass as to go about town with the brand on his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+forehead, when he could turn down Bond Street any day
+and get a dash of the ladies' pearl powder? Who ever
+<i>shows</i> anything now, my good fellow? Not that Dash
+'paints,' to give the deuce his due&mdash;except himself a
+little blacker even than he is; he don't cant; he couldn't
+cant; not to save his life, I believe. But as to his bewitching
+you, almost as bad as he does the women, I know
+all about that. I used to swear by him till&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Till what?"</p>
+
+<p>"Till he cut a brother of mine out with Rachel, and
+shot him in the woods of Chantilly for flaring-up rough
+at the rivalry. Charlie was rather a good fellow, and
+Dash and I didn't speak after that, you see. Great bore;
+bosh too, perhaps. Dash brews the best Curaçoa punch
+in Europe, and if he name you the winning mount for the
+Granby, you may let the talent damn you as they like.
+Still you know as he killed Charlie,&mdash;" and the Guardsman
+stuck a great cheroot in his mouth, in doubt as to
+whether, after all, it wasn't humbug, and an uncalled-for
+sacrifice, rather scenic and sentimental, to drop an expert
+at Curaçoa brew, and a sure prophet for Croxton
+Park, just because in a legitimate fashion he had potted
+your brother and relieved your entail;&mdash;on the whole, a
+friendly act rather than otherwise? "Keep clear of the
+Killer, though, young one," he added, as he sauntered
+out. "He's like that cheetah cub of Berkeley's; soft as
+silk, you know, <i>patte de velours</i>, and what d'ye call 'em,
+and all the rest of it, but deucedly deadly to deal with."</p>
+
+<p>I did know: it was the eternal refrain that was heard
+on all sides; from the wily Jews through whose meshes
+he slipped; the unhappy duns who were done by him;
+the beauties who were bewitched by him; the hosts and
+husbands who, having him down for the pheasants, found
+him poach other preserves than those of the cover-sides;
+the women who had their characters shattered by a silvery
+sneer from a voice that was as soft, in its murderous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+slander, as in its equally murderous wooing; and all the
+rest, who, in some shape or another, owed ruin to that
+Apollo Apollyon&mdash;Deadly Dash. Ruin which at last
+became so wide and so deep, that even vice began to look
+virtuous when his name was mentioned (vice always does
+when she thinks you are really cleared out), and men of
+his own corps and his own club began to get shy of having
+the Killer's arm linked in theirs too often down Pall
+Mall, for its wrist was terribly steady in either Hazard,
+whether of the yard of green table or the twenty yards
+of green turf.</p>
+
+<p>At last the crisis came: the Killer killed one too many;
+a Russian Prince in the Bois de Vincennes, in a quarrel
+about a pretty wretched little chorus-singer of the Café
+Alcazar, who took their fancies both at once. The <i>mondes</i>
+thought it terribly wicked, not the deed you know, but
+the audacity of a cavalry man's having potted a Very
+Serene High Mightiness. In a Duke, all these crimes
+and crimcons, though as scarlet, would have been held
+but the crimson gold-dotted fruit adorning the strawberry-leaves;
+Deadly Dash, a Light Dragoon whose name was
+signed to plenty of "floating little bills," could not bid
+high enough to purchase his pardon from society, which
+says to its sinners with austere front of virtue, "Oblivion
+cannot be hired,&mdash;unless," adds Society, dropping to
+mellowest murmur her whisper, "unless you can give us
+a premium!" So Dash, with a certain irresistible though
+private pressure upon him from the Horse Guards&mdash;sent
+in his papers to sell. What had been done so often could
+not now be done again; the first steeple-chaser in the
+Service could not at last even save his stake, but was
+finally, irretrievably, struck out.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly the fellow was a bad fellow, and deserved his
+crash so far; he had no scruples, and no conscience; he
+spared neither woman nor man; of remorse he had never
+felt a twinge, and if you were in his path he would pick<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+you off some way or other as indifferently as if you were
+one of the pigeons at Hornsey. And yet, he had been
+kind to me, though I was a young one; with his own
+variable Free Lance sort of liberality, the man would
+give his last sou to get you out of any difficulty, and
+would carry off your mistress, or beggar you at chicken-hazard,
+with the self-same pleasant air the next day: and
+I could not help being sorry that things had come to this
+pass with him. He shot so superbly! Put him where
+you would, in a warm corner while the bouquets of
+pheasants were told off; in a punt, while a square half-mile
+of wild-ducks whirred up from the marshes; in a
+dark forest alley in Transylvania, while the great boar
+rushed down through the twilight, foaming blood and
+roaring fury; in a still Indian night with the only target
+here and there a dusky head diving amidst the jhow
+jungle three hundred yards away: put him where you
+would, he was such a magnificent shot! The sins of a
+Frankenstein should not have lost such a marksman as
+Deadly Dash to the Service.</p>
+
+<p>But the authorities thought otherwise; they were not
+open to the fact, that the man who had been out in more
+<i>barrière</i> affairs, and had won more Grand Military stakes
+than any other, should, by all laws of war-policy, have
+had his blackest transgressions forgiven him, till he could
+have been turned to account against Ghoorkas, Maories,
+or Caffres. The authorities instead, made him send in
+his papers, not knowing the grand knack of turning a
+scamp into a hero&mdash;a process that requires some genius
+and some clairvoyance in the manipulator,&mdash;and Deadly
+Dash, with his lightest and airiest laugh, steamed down
+channel one late autumn night, marked, disgraced, and
+outlawed, for creditors by the score were after him, knowing
+very well that he and his old gay lawless life, and his
+own wild pleasant world, and his old lands yonder in the
+green heart of the grass countries that had gone rood by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+rood to the Hebrews, were all divorced for ever with a
+great gulf between them that could never close.</p>
+
+<p>So he dropped out of the Service, out of the country,
+out of remembrance, out of regret; nobody said a De
+Profundis over him, and some men breathed the freer.
+We can rarely be sure of any who will be sorry to miss
+us; but we can always be certain of some to be glad we
+are gone. And in the Killer's case these last were legion.
+Here and there were one or two who owed him a wayward,
+inconstant bizarre fit of generosity; but there were on
+the other hand hundreds who owed him nothing less than
+entire ruin.</p>
+
+<p>So Deadly Dash went with nobody to regret him and
+nobody to think of him for a second, after the nine hours'
+wonder in the clubs and the mess-rooms that his levanting
+"under a cloud" occasioned; and so the old sobriquet,
+that had used to have so signal a notoriety, dropped out
+of men's mouths and was forgotten. Where he was gone
+no one knew; and to be sure no one asked. Metaphorically,
+he was gone to the devil; and when a man takes
+that little tour, if he furnish talk for a day he has had
+very distinguished and lengthened obsequies as friendship
+goes in this world. Now and then in the course of half-a-dozen
+years I remembered him, when I looked up at
+the head of a Royal over my mantelpiece, with thirteen
+points, that he had stalked once in Ayrshire and given
+to me; but nobody else gave a thought to the Killer.
+Time passed, and whether he had been killed fighting in
+Chili or Bolivia, shot himself at Homburg, become
+Mussulman and entered the Sultan's army, gone to fight
+with the Kabyles and Bedouins, turned brigand for the
+Neapolitan Bourbons, or sunk downward by the old well-worn
+stage, so sadly and so often travelled, into an adventurer
+living by the skill of his écarté and the dread
+surety of his shot, we did not know; we did not care.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+When society has given a man the sack, it matters uncommonly
+little whether he has given himself a shroud.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>Seven or eight years after the name of Deadly Dash
+had ceased to be heard among cavalry men, and quoted
+on all things "horsey," whether of the flat or of the ridge
+and furrow, I was in the Confederate States, on leave for
+a six months' tour there. It was after Lee's raid across
+the border and the days of Gettysburgh. I had run the
+blockade in a fast-built clipper, and pushed on at once
+into the heart of Virginia, to be in the full heat of whatever
+should come on the cards; cutting the cities rather,
+and keeping as much as I could to the camps and the
+woods, for I wanted to see the real thing in the rough.
+In my relish for adventure, however, I was a trifle, as it
+proved, too foolhardy.</p>
+
+<p>Starting alone one day to cross the thirty miles or so
+that parted me from the encampment of some Virginian
+Horse, with no other companions than a very weedy-looking
+steel gray, and a brace of revolvers, I fairly "lost
+tracks," and had not a notion of my way out of a wilderness
+of morass and forest, all glowing with the scarlet
+and the green of the Indian summer. Here and there
+were beautiful wild pools and lakes shut in by dense vegetation,
+so dense, that at noon it was dark as twilight, and
+great tablelands of rock jutted out black and rugged in
+places; but chiefly as far as was to be seen stretched the
+deep entangled woodland, with nothing else to break it,
+brooding quietly over square leagues of swamp. The
+orioles were singing their sweetest, wildest music overhead;
+sign of war there was none, save to be sure, now
+and then when I came on a black, arid circle, where a
+few charred timbers showed where a hut had been burnt
+down and deserted, or my horse shied and snorted uneasily,
+and half stumbled over some shapeless log on the ground&mdash;a
+log that when you looked closer was the swollen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+shattered body of a man who had died hard, with the
+grasses wrenched up in his fingers that the ants had eaten
+bare, and the hollows of his eyes staring open where the
+carrion birds had plucked the eyeballs out. And near
+him there were sure to be, half sunk in swamp, or cleaned
+to skeletons by the eagles and hawks, five, or ten, or
+twenty more, lying nameless and unburied there, where
+they had fallen in some scuffle with pickets, or some stray
+cavalry skirmish, to be told off as "missing," and to be
+thought of no more. These groups I came upon more
+than once rotting among the rich Virginian soil, while
+the scarlet and purple weight of blossoming boughs
+swayed above, and the bright insect life fluttered humming
+around them; they were the only highway marks
+through the wooded wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>So lonely was it mile after mile, and so little notion
+had I of either the way in or the way out, that the <i>hallali!</i>
+of a boar-hunt, or the sweet mellow tongues of the hounds
+when they have found in the coverts at home, were never
+brighter music to me than the sharp crack of rifles and
+the long sullen roll of musketry as they suddenly broke
+the silence, while I rode along, firing from the west that
+lay on my left. The gray, used to powder, pointed his
+ears and quickened his pace. Though a weedy, fiddle-headed
+beast, his speed was not bad, and I rattled him
+over the ground, crashing through undergrowth and
+wading through pools, with all my blood up at the tune
+of those ringing cheery shots; the roar growing louder
+and louder with every moment, and the sulphur scent of
+the smoke borne stronger and stronger down on the wind,
+till the horse broke <i>pêle-mêle</i> through a network of parasites;
+dashed downward along a slope of dank herbage,
+slipping at every step, and with his hind legs tucked
+under him; and shot, like a run-in for a race, on to a
+green plateau, where the skirmish was going on in hot
+earnest.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A glance told me how the land lay. A handful of
+Southern troopers held their own with tremendous difficulty
+against three divisions of Federal infantry, whom
+they had unexpectedly encountered, as the latter were
+marching across the plateau with some batteries of foot
+artillery,&mdash;the odds were probably scarcely less than five
+to one. The Southerners were fighting magnificently, as
+firm in their close square of four hundred as the Consular
+Guard at Marengo, but so surrounded by the Northern
+host, that they looked like a little island circled round
+by raging breakers. Glancing down on the plain as my
+horse scoured and slid along the incline, the nucleus of
+Southerners looked hopelessly lost amidst the belching
+fire and pressing columns of the enemy. The whole was
+surrounded and hidden by the whirling clouds of dust
+and smoke that swirled above in a white heavy mist; but
+through this the sabres flashed, the horses' heads reared,
+maddened and foam-covered, like so many bas-reliefs of
+Bucephalus, the lean rifle-barrels glittered, and for a
+moment I saw the Southern leader, steady as a rock in
+the centre, hewing like a trooper right and left, and with
+a gray heron's feather floating from his sombrero, a signal
+that seemed as well known and as closely followed as the
+snowy plume of Murat.</p>
+
+<p>To have looked on at this and not have taken a share
+in it, one would have been a stone, not a man, and much
+less a cavalry-man; I need not tell you that I smashed
+the gray across the plateau, hurled him into the thick of
+the mêlée, dashed <i>somehow</i> through the Federal ranks,
+and was near the gray plume and fighting for the Old
+Dominion before you could have shouted a stave of
+"Dixie." I was a "non-combatant," I was a "neutral"&mdash;delicate
+Anglo-euphemism for coward, friend to neither
+and traitor to both!&mdash;I was on a tour of observation, and
+had no business to fire a shot for one or the other perhaps,
+but I forgot all that, and with the bridle in my teeth and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+a pistol in each hand, I rode down to give one blow the
+more for the weak side.</p>
+
+<p>How superbly that Gray Feather fought!&mdash;keeping his
+men well up round him, though saddle after saddle was
+emptied, and horse after horse tore riderless out of the
+ranks, or reeled over on their heads, spurting blood, he
+sat like a statue, he fought like a Titan, his sabre seemed
+flashing unceasingly in the air, so often was it raised to
+come down again like lightning through a sword-arm, or
+lay open a skull to the brains; the shots ploughed up the
+earth round him, and rattled like hail through the air, a
+score of balls were aimed at him alone, a score of sabres
+crossed his own; but he was cool as St. Lawrence ice, and
+laid the men dead in struggling heaps under his charger's
+hoofs; only to fight near the man was a glorious intoxication;
+you seemed to "breathe blood" till you got drunk
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>The four hundred had been mowed down to two; I did
+as good work as I could, having wrenched a sword out of
+some dead trooper's hand; but I was only one, and the
+Northerners counted by thousands. Come out of it alive
+I never expected to do; but I vow it was the happiest
+day of my life&mdash;the pace was so splendidly fast! The
+Gray Feather at last glanced anxiously around; his men
+stuck like death to him, ready to be hewed down one by
+one, and die game; his teeth were set tight, and his eyes
+had a flash in them like steel. "Charge! and cut
+through!" he shouted, his voice rolling out like a clarion,
+giving an order that it seemed could be followed by
+nothing short of supernatural aid. The Southrons thought
+otherwise; they only heard to obey; they closed up as
+steadily as though they were a squadron on parade,
+despite the great gaps between them of dying chargers,
+and of heaped-up killed and wounded, that broke their
+ranks like so much piled stones and timber; they halted
+a moment, the murderous fire raking them right and left,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+front and rear; then, with that dense mass of troops
+round them, they charged; shivered the first line that
+wedged them in; pierced by sheer force of impetus the
+columns that opened fire in their path; wrenched themselves
+through as through the steel jaws of a trap, and
+swept out on to the green level of the open plateau, with
+a wild rallying Virginian shout that rings in my ears
+now!</p>
+
+<p>I have been in a good many hot things in my time;
+but I never knew anything that for pace and long odds
+could be anything near to that.</p>
+
+<p>I had kept with them through the charge with no
+other scratch than a shoulder cut; and I had been close
+to their chief through it all. When we were clean out on
+the plains beyond pursuit&mdash;for the Union-men had not a
+squadron of cavalry, though their guns at long range
+belched a storm in our wake&mdash;he turned in his saddle
+without checking his mare's thundering gallop, and
+levelled his rifle that was slung at his aide. "I'll have
+the General, anyhow," he said, quietly taking aim&mdash;still
+without checking his speed&mdash;at the knot of staff-officers
+that now were scarce more than specks in a blurred mass
+of mist. He fired; and the centre figure in that indistinct
+and fast-vanishing group fell from the saddle, while the
+yell of fury that the wind faintly floated nearer told us
+that the shot had been deadly. The Gray Feather
+laughed, a careless airy laugh of triumph, while he
+swept on at topmost pace; a little more, and we should
+dive down into the dark aisles of grand forest-trees and
+cavernous ravines of timber roads, safe from all pursuit;
+a second, and we should reach the green core of the safe
+and silent woods, the cool shelter of mountain-backed
+lakes, the sure refuge of tangled coverts. It was a guinea
+to a shilling that we gained it; it was all but won; a
+moment's straight run-in, and we should have it! But
+that moment was not to be ours.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Out of the narrow cleft of a valley on the left, all
+screened with hanging tumbled foliage, and dark as death,
+there poured suddenly across our front a dense body of
+Federal troopers and Horse Artillery, two thousand
+strong at the least, full gallop, to join the main army.
+We were surrounded in a second, in a second overpowered
+by sheer strength of numbers; only two hundred of us,
+many sorely wounded, and on mounts that were jaded
+and ridden out of all pace, let us fight as we would, what
+could we do against fresh and picked soldiers, swarming
+down on us like a swarm of hornets, while in our rear
+was the main body through which we had just cut our
+way? That the little desperate band "died hard," I need
+not say; but the vast weight of the fresh squadrons pressed
+our little knot in as if between the jaws of a trap, crushing
+it like grain between two iron weights. The Gray
+Feather fought like all the Knights of the Round Table
+merged in one, till he streamed with blood from head to
+foot, and his sabre was hacked and bent like an ash-stick,
+as did a man near him, a tall superb Virginian, handsome
+as any Vandyke or Velasquez picture. At last both
+the Gray Feather and he went down, not by death&mdash;it
+would not come to them&mdash;but literally hurled out of their
+stirrup-leathers by crowding scores who poured on them,
+hamstrung or shot their horses, and made them themselves
+prisoners&mdash;not, however, till the assailants lay
+heaped ten deep about their slaughtered chargers. For
+myself, a blow from a sabre, a second afterwards, felled
+me like so much wood. I saw a whirling blaze of sun, a
+confused circling eddy of dizzy color, forked flames, and
+flashes of light, and I knew no more, till I opened my
+eyes in a dark, square, unhealthy wooden chamber, with
+a dreamy but settled conviction that I was dead, and in
+the family vault, far away under the green old elms of
+Warwickshire, with the rooks cawing above my head.</p>
+
+<p>As the delusion dissipated and the mists cleared, I saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+through the uncertain light a face that was strangely
+but vaguely familiar to me, connected somehow with incoherent
+memories of life at home, and yet unknown to me.
+It was bronzed deeply, bearded, with flakes of gray
+among the fairness of the hair, much aged, much worn,
+scarred and stained just now with the blood of undressed
+wounds and the dust of the combat, for there was no one
+merciful enough there to bring a stoup of water; it was
+rougher, darker, sterner, and yet, with it all, nobler, too,
+than the face that I had known. I lay and stared
+blankly at it: it was the face of the Southern Leader of
+the morning, who sat now, on a pile of straw, looking
+wearily out to the dying sun, one amongst a group of
+twenty, prisoners all, like myself. I moved, and he
+turned his eyes on me; they had laid me down there as a
+"gone 'coon," and were amazed to see me come to life
+again. As our eyes met I knew him&mdash;he was Deadly
+Dash.</p>
+
+<p>The old name left my lips with a shout as strong as a
+half-killed man can give. It seemed so strange to meet
+him there, captives together in the Unionists' hands! It
+struck him with a sharp shock. England and he had
+been divorced so long. I saw the blood leap to his forehead,
+and the light into his glance; then, with a single
+stride, he reached the straw I lay on, holding my hands
+in his, looking on me with the kindly eyes that had used
+to make me like the Killer, and greeting me with a
+warmth that was only damped and darkened by regret
+that my battle done for fair Virginia had laid me low, a
+prisoner with himself, and that we should meet thus, in
+so sharp an hour of adversity, with nothing before us but
+the Capitol, the Carroll prison, or worse. Yet thus we
+did meet once more and I knew at last what had been
+the fate of Deadly Dash, whom England had outlawed
+as a scoundrel, and the New World had found a hero.</p>
+
+<p>Though suffering almost equally himself, he tended me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+with the kindliest sympathy; he came out of his own care
+to ponder how possible it might be to get me eventual
+freedom as a tourist and a mere accidental sharer in the
+fray; he was interested to hear all that I would tell him
+of my own affairs and of his old friends in England, but
+of himself he would not speak; he simply said he had
+been fighting for the Confederacy ever since the war had
+begun; and I saw that he strove in vain to shake off a
+deep heart-broken gloom that seemed to have settled on
+him, doubtless, as I thought, from the cruel defeat of the
+noon, and the hopeless captivity into which he, the most
+restless and the most daring soldier that oversaw service,
+was now flung.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed, too, that every now and then while he sat
+beside me, talking low&mdash;for there were sentinels both in
+and out the rude outhouse of the farm that had been
+turned into our temporary prison&mdash;his eyes wandered to
+the gallant Virginian who had been felled down with
+himself, and who, covered like himself with blood and
+dust, and with his broken left arm hanging shattered, lay
+on the bare earth in a far-off corner motionless and silent,
+with his lips pressed tight under their long black moustaches,
+and such a mute unutterable agony in his eyes as
+I never saw in any human face, though I have seen deaths
+enough in the field and the sick-ward. The rest of the
+Confederate captives were more ordinary men (although
+from none was a single word of lament ever wrenched);
+but this superb Virginian excited my interest, and I
+asked his name, in that sort of languid curiosity at passing
+things which comes with weakness, of the Killer,
+whose glance so incessantly wandered towards him.</p>
+
+<p>"Stuart Lane," he answered, curtly, and added no
+more; but if I ever saw in this world hatred, passionate,
+ungovernable, and intense, I saw it in the Killer's look
+as his glance flashed once more on to the motionless form
+of the handsomest, bravest, and most dauntless officer of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+his gallant regiment that he had seen cut to pieces there
+on that accursed plateau.</p>
+
+<p>"A major of yours?" I asked him. "Ah, I thought
+so; he fought magnificently. How wretched he looks,
+though he is too proud to show it!"</p>
+
+<p>"He is thinking of&mdash;of his bride. He married three
+weeks ago."</p>
+
+<p>The words were simple enough, and spoken very quietly;
+but there was an unsteadiness, as of great effort, over
+them; and the heel of his heavy spurred jack-boot
+crashed into the dry mud with a grinding crush, as though
+it trod terrible memories down. Was it a woman who
+was between these two comrades in arms and companions
+in adversity? I wondered if it were so, even in that moment
+of keen and heavy anxiety for us all, as I looked at
+the face that bent very kindly over the straw to which a
+shot in the knee and a deep though not dangerous shoulder-wound
+bound me. It was very different to the face
+of eight or nine years before&mdash;browner, harder, graver
+far; and yet there was a look as if "sorrow had passed
+by there," and swept the old heartlessness and gay callousness
+away, burning them out in its fires.</p>
+
+<p>Silence fell over us in that wretched outshed where we
+were huddled together. I was hot with incipient fever,
+and growing light-headed enough, though I knew what
+passed before me, to speak to Dash once or twice in a
+dreamy idea that we were in the Shires watching the
+run-in for the "Soldiers' Blue Riband." The minutes
+dragged very drearily as the day wore itself away. There
+were the sullen monotonous tramp of the sentinels to and
+fro, and, from without, the neighing of horses, the bugle
+calls, the roll of the drums, the challenge of outposts&mdash;all
+the varied, endless sounds of a camp; for the farmhouse
+in whose shed we were thrown was the head-quarters
+<i>pro tem</i>. of the Federal General who commanded the
+Divisions that had cost the Killer's handful of Horse so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+fearfully dear. We were prisoners, and escape was impossible.
+All arms of course had been removed from us;
+most, like myself, were too disabled by wounds to have
+been able to avail ourselves of escape had it been possible;
+and the guard was doubled both in and out the shed;
+there was nothing before any of us but the certainty of
+imprisonment in all its horrors in some far-off fortress or
+obscure jail. There was the possible chance that, since
+certain officers on whom the Northerners set great store
+had lately fallen into Southern hands, an exchange might
+be effected; yet, on the other side, graver apprehensions
+still existed, since we knew that the General into whose
+camp we had been brought had proclaimed his deliberate
+purpose of shooting the three next Secessionist officers
+who fell into his power, in requital for three of his own
+officers who had been shot, or were said to have been shot,
+by a Southern raider. We knew very well that, the
+threat made, it would be executed; and each of us, as
+the sun sank gradually down through the hot skies that
+were purple and stormy after the burning day, knew, too,
+that it might never rise again to greet our sight. None
+of us would have heeded whether a ball would hit or
+miss us in the open, in a fair fight, in a man-to-man struggle;
+but the boldest and most careless amidst us felt it
+very bitter to die like dogs, to die as prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>Even Deadly Dash, coolest, most hardened, most devil-may-care
+of soldiers and of sinners, sat with his gaze
+fastened on the slowly sinking light in the west with the
+shadow of a great pain upon his face, while every now
+and then his glance wandered to Stuart Lane, and a
+quick, irrepressible shudder shook him whenever it did
+so. The Virginian never moved; no sign of any sort
+escaped him; but the passionate misery that looked out
+of his eyes I never saw equalled, except, perhaps, in the
+eyes of a stag that I once shot in Wallachia, and that
+looked up with just such a look before it died. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>
+thinking, no doubt, of the woman he loved&mdash;wooed
+amidst danger, won amidst calamity, scarcely possessed
+ere lost for ever;&mdash;thinking of her proud beauty, of her
+bridal caress, that would never again touch his lips, of
+her fair life that would perish with the destruction of his.</p>
+
+<p>Exhaustion from the loss of blood made everything
+pass dreamily, and yet with extraordinary clearness,
+before me, I felt in a wakening dream, and had no sense
+whatever of actual existence, and yet the whole scene was
+so intensely vital and vivid to me, that it seemed burned
+into my very brain itself. It was like the phantasmagoria
+of delirium, utterly impalpable, but yet intensely real.
+I had no power to act or resist, but I seemed to have ten
+times redoubled power to see and hear and feel; I was
+aware of all that passed, with a hundredfold more susceptibility
+to it than I ever felt in health. I remember a
+total impossibility that came on me to decide whether I
+was dreaming or was actually awake. Twilight fell,
+night came; there was a change of sentries, and a light,
+set up in a bottle, shed a flickering, feeble, yellow gleam
+over the interior of the shed, on the dark Rembrandt
+faces of the Southerners and on the steel of the guards'
+bayonets. And I recollect that the Killer, who sat by the
+tossed straw on which they had flung me, laughed the old,
+low, sweet, half-insolent laugh that I had known so well
+in early days. "<i>Il faut souffrir pour être beau!</i> We are
+picturesque, at any rate, quite Salvatoresque! Little
+Dickey would make a good thing of us if he could paint
+us now. He is alive, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>I answered him I believe in the affirmative; but the
+name of that little Bohemian of the Brush, who had used
+to be our butt and <i>protégé</i> in England, added a haze the
+more to my senses. By this time I had difficulty to hold
+together the thread of how, and when, and why I had
+thus met again the face that looked out on me so strangely
+familiarly in the dull, sickly trembling of the feeble light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+of this black, noisome shed in the heart of Federal Divisions.</p>
+
+<p>Through that haze I heard the challenge of the sentries;
+I saw a soldier prod with his bayonet a young lad
+who had fainted from hæmorrhage, and whom he swore
+at for shamming. I was conscious of the entrance of a
+group of officers, whom I knew afterwards to be the
+Northern General and his staff, who came to look at
+their captives. I knew, but only dreamily still, that
+these men were the holders of our fate, and would decide
+on it then and there. I felt a listless indifference, utter
+and opium-like, as to what became of me, and I remember
+that Stuart Lane, and Dash himself, rose together, and
+stood looking with a serene and haughty disdain down on
+the conquerors who held their lives in the balance&mdash;without
+a trace of pain upon their faces now. I remember
+how like they looked to stags that turn at bay; like
+the stags, outnumbered, hunted down, with the blood of
+open wounds and the dust of the long chase on them;
+but, like the deer, too, uncowed, and game to the finish.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon their doom was given. Seven were to be
+sent back with a flag of truce to be exchanged for the
+seven Federal officers they wanted out of the Southerners'
+hands, ten were to be transmitted to the prisons of
+the North,&mdash;three were to be shot at day-dawn in the
+reprisal before named. The chances of life and of death
+were to be drawn for by lottery, and at once.</p>
+
+<p>Not a sound escaped the Virginians, and not a muscle
+of their English Leader's face moved: the prisoners, to a
+man, heard impassively, with a grave and silent dignity,
+that they were to throw the die in hazard, with death for
+the croupier and life for the stake.</p>
+
+<p>The General and his staff waited to amuse themselves
+with personally watching the turns of this new <i>Rouge et
+Noir</i>; gambling in lives was a little refreshing change<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+that sultry, dreary, dun-colored night, camped amongst
+burnt-out farms and wasted corn-lands.</p>
+
+<p>Slips of paper, with "exchange," "death," and "imprisonment"
+written on them in the numbers needed,
+were made ready, rolled up, and tossed into an empty
+canteen; each man was required to come forward and
+draw, I alone excepted because I was an officer of the
+British Army. I remember passionately arguing that
+they had no right to exempt me, since I had been in the
+fray, and had killed three men on my own hook, and
+would have killed thirty more had I had the chance; but
+I was perhaps incoherent in the fever that was fast seizing
+all my limbs from the rack of undressed wounds; at any
+rate, the Northerners took no heed, save to force me into
+silence, and the drawing began. As long as I live I shall
+see that night in remembrance with hideous distinctness:
+the low blackened shed with its f[oe]tid odors from the
+cattle lately foddered there; the yellow light flaring dully
+here and there; the glisten of the cruel rifles; the heaps
+of straw and hay soaked with clotted blood; the group
+of Union Officers standing near the doorway; and the
+war-worn indomitable faces of the Southerners, with the
+fairer head and slighter form of their English chief
+standing out slightly in front of all.</p>
+
+<p>The Conscription of Death commenced; a Federal
+private took the paper from each man as he drew it, and
+read the word of destiny aloud. Not one amongst them
+faltered or paused one moment; each went,&mdash;even those
+most exhausted, most in agony,&mdash;with a calm and steady
+step, as they would have marched up to take the Flag of
+the Stars and Bars from Lee or Longstreet. Not one
+waited a second's breath before he plunged his hand into
+the fatal lottery.</p>
+
+<p>Deadly Dash was the first called: there was not one
+shadow of anxiety upon his face; it was calm without
+effort, careless without bravado, simply, entirely indifferent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+They took his paper and read the words of safety
+and of life&mdash;"Exchange." Then, for one instant, a glory
+of hope flashed like the sun into his eyes&mdash;to die the
+next; die utterly.</p>
+
+<p>Three followed him, and they all drew the fiat for
+detention; the fifth called was Stuart Lane.</p>
+
+<p>Let him have suffered as he would, he gave no sign of
+it now; he approached with his firm, bold cavalry step,
+and his head haughtily lifted; the proud, fiery, dauntless
+Cavalier of ideal and of romance. Without a tremor in
+his wrist he drew his paper out and gave it.</p>
+
+<p>One word alone fell distinct on the silence like the hiss
+of a shot through the night&mdash;"<i>Death!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>He bowed his head slightly as if in assent, and stepped
+backward&mdash;still without a sign.</p>
+
+<p>His English chief gave him one look,&mdash;it was that of
+merciless exultation, of brutal joy, of dark, Cain-like,
+murderous hate; but it passed, passed quickly: Dash's
+head sank on his chest, and on his face there was the
+shadow, I think, of a terrible struggle&mdash;the shadow, I
+know, of a great remorse. He strove with his longing
+greed for this man's destruction; he knew that he thirsted
+<i>to see him die</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Virginian stood erect and silent: a single night
+and the strong and gallant life, the ardent passions, the
+chivalrous courage to do and dare, and the love that was
+in its first fond hours would all be quenched in him as
+though they had never been; but he was a soldier, and
+he gave no sign that his death-warrant was not as dear to
+him as his bridal-night had been. Even his conquerors
+cast one glance of admiration on him; it was only his
+leader who felt for him no pang of reverence and pity.</p>
+
+<p>The lottery continued; the hazard was played out; life
+and death were scattered at reckless chance amidst the
+twenty who were the playthings of that awful gaming;
+all had been done in perfect silence on the part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+condemned; not one seemed to think or to feel for himself,
+and in those who were sent out to their grave not a
+grudge lingered against their comrades of happier fortune.
+Deadly Dash, whose fate was release, alone stood with his
+head sunk, thoughtful and weary.</p>
+
+<p>The three condemned to execution were remanded to
+separate and solitary confinement, treated already as
+felons for that one short night which alone remained to
+them. As his guards removed him, Stuart Lane paused
+slightly, and signed to his chief to approach him; he held
+out his hand to Dash, and his voice was very low, though
+it came to my ear where they stood beside me: "We were
+rivals once, but we may be friends <i>now</i>. As you have
+loved her, be pitiful to her when you tell her of my
+death,&mdash;God knows it may be hers! As you have loved
+her, feel what it is to die without one last look on her
+face!"</p>
+
+<p>Then, and then only, his bronze cheek grew white as a
+woman's, and his whole frame shook with one great silent
+sob; his guard forced him on, and his listener had made
+him no promise, no farewell; neither had he taken his
+hand. He had heard in silence, with a dark and evil
+gloom alone upon him.</p>
+
+<p>The Federal General sharply summoned him from his
+musing, as the chief of those to be exchanged on the
+morrow under a white flag of parley; there were matters
+to be stated to and to be arranged with him.</p>
+
+<p>"I will only see you alone, General," he answered
+curtly.</p>
+
+<p>The Northerner stared startled, and casting a glance
+over the redoubtable leader of horse, whose gray feather
+had become known and dreaded, thought of possible
+assassination. Deadly Dash laughed his old light, ironic,
+contemptuous laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"A wounded unarmed man can scarcely kill you!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+Have as many of your staff about you as you please, but
+let none of my Virginians be present at our interview."</p>
+
+<p>The Northerners thought he intended to desert to them,
+or betray some movement of importance, and assented;
+and he went out with them from the cattle-shed into the
+hot, stormy night, and the Southerners who were condemned
+to death and detention looked after him with a
+long, wistful, dog-like look. They had been with him in
+so many spirit-stirring days and nights of peril, and they
+knew that never would they meet again. He had not
+given one of them a word of adieu; he had killed too
+many to be touched by his soldiers' loss. Who could
+expect pity from Deadly Dash?</p>
+
+<p>An hour passed; I was removed under a guard to a
+somewhat better lodging in the granary, where a surgeon
+hastily dressed my wounds, and left me on a rough pallet
+with a jug of water at my side, and the sentinel for my
+only watcher, bidding me "sleep." Sleep! I could not
+have slept for my ransom. Though life had hardened
+me, and made me sometimes, as I fear, callous enough, I
+could not forget those who were to die when the sun rose;
+specially, I could not forget that gallant Virginian to
+whom life was so precious, yet who gave himself with so
+calm a fortitude to his fate. The rivalry, I thought, must
+be deep and cruel, to make the man from whom he had
+won what they both loved turn from him in hatred, even
+in such extremity as his. On the brink of a comrade's
+grave, feud might surely have been forgotten?</p>
+
+<p>All that had just passed was reeling deliriously through
+my brain, and I was panting in the sheer irritation and
+exhaustion of gunshot wounds, when through the gloom
+Dash entered the granary, closely guarded, but allowed
+to be with me on account of our common country. Never
+was I more thankful to see a familiar face from home
+than to see his through the long watches of that burning,
+heavy, interminable night. He refused to rest; he sat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+by me, tending me as gently as a woman, though he was
+suffering acutely himself from the injuries received in the
+course of the day; he watched me unweariedly, though
+often and often his gaze and his thoughts wandered far
+from me, as he looked out through the open granary door,
+past the form of the sentinel, out to the starry solemn
+skies, the deep woods, and the dark silent land over which
+the stars were brooding, large and clear.</p>
+
+<p>Was he thinking of the Virginian whose life would die
+out for ever, with the fading of those stars, or of the woman
+whom he had lost, whose love was the doomed soldier's,
+and would never be his own, though the grave
+closed over his rival with the morrow's sun? Dreamily,
+half unconsciously, in the excitement of fever, I asked
+him of her of whom I knew nothing:</p>
+
+<p>"Did you love that woman so well?"</p>
+
+<p>His eyes were still fixed on the distant darkening skies,
+and he answered quietly, as though rather to his own
+thoughts than my words,&mdash;"Yes: I love her&mdash;as I never
+loved in that old life in England; as we never love but
+once, I think."</p>
+
+<p>"And she?"</p>
+
+<p>"And she&mdash;has but one thought in the world&mdash;<i>him</i>."</p>
+
+<p>His voice, as he answered, now grated with dull, dragging
+misery over the words.</p>
+
+<p>"Had she so much beauty that she touched you like
+this?"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled slightly, a faint, mournful smile, unutterably
+sad.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; she is very lovely, but her beauty is the least
+rare charm. She is a woman for whom a man would live
+his greatest, and if he cannot live for her&mdash;may&mdash;die."</p>
+
+<p>The utterance was very slow, and seemed to lie on me
+like a hand on my lips compelling me to silence; he had
+forgotten all, except his memory of her, and where he sat
+with his eyes fixed outward on the drifting clouds that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+floated across the stars, I saw his lips quiver once, and I
+heard him murmur half aloud: "My darling! My darling!
+You will know how I loved you <i>then</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>And the silence was never broken between us, but he
+sat motionless thus all the hours through, looking out at
+the deep still woods, and the serene and lustrous skies,
+till the first beams of the sun shone over the hills in the
+east, and I shuddered, where I lay, at its light;&mdash;for I
+knew it was the signal of death.</p>
+
+<p>Then he arose, and bent towards me, and the kindly
+eyes of old looked down on mine.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear old fellow, the General expects me at dawn. I
+must leave you just now; say good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>His hand closed on mine, he looked on me one moment
+longer, a little lingeringly, a little wistfully, then he
+turned and went out with his guard; went out into the
+young day that was just breaking on the world.</p>
+
+<p>I watched his shadow as it faded, and I saw that the
+sun had risen wholly; and I thought of those who were
+to die with the morning light.</p>
+
+<p>All was very calm for a while; then the beat of a drum
+rolled through the quiet of the dawn, and the measured
+tramp of armed men sounded audibly; my heart stood
+still, my lips felt parched,&mdash;I knew the errand of that
+column marching so slowly across the parched turf. A
+little while longer yet, and I heard the sharp ring of the
+ramrods being withdrawn, and the dull echo of the charge
+being rammed down: with a single leap, as though the
+bullets were through me, I sprang, weak as I was, from
+my wretched pallet, and staggered to the open doorway,
+leaning there against the entrance powerless and spell-bound.
+I saw the file of soldiers loading; I saw the
+empty coffin-shells; I saw three men standing bound,
+their forms distinct against the clear, bright haze of
+morning, and the fresh foliage of the woods. Two of
+them were Virginians, but the third was not Stuart Lane<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+With a great cry I sprang forward, but the guards
+seized my arms and held me, helpless as a woman, in
+their gripe. He whom we had called Deadly Dash heard,
+and looked up and smiled. His face was tranquil and
+full of light, as though the pure peace of the day shone
+there.</p>
+
+<p>The gripe of the sentinels held me as if in fetters of
+iron; the world seemed to rock and reel under me, a sea
+of blood seemed eddying before my eyes; the young day
+was dawning, and murder was done in its early hours,
+and I was held there to look on,&mdash;its witness, yet powerless
+to arrest it! I heard the formula&mdash;so hideous then!&mdash;"Make
+ready!"&mdash;"Present!"&mdash;"Fire!" I saw the
+long line of steel tubes belch out their smoke and flame.
+I heard the sullen echo of the report roll down from the
+mountains above. When the mist cleared away, the
+three figures stood no longer clear against the sunlight;
+they had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>With the mad violence of desperation I wrenched myself
+from my guards, and staggered to him where he lay;
+he was not quite dead yet; the balls had passed through
+his lungs, but he breathed still; his eyes were unclosed,
+and the gleam of a last farewell came in them. He
+smiled slightly, faintly once more.</p>
+
+<p>"She will know how I loved her now. Tell her I died
+for her," he said softly, while his gaze looked upwards to
+the golden sun-rays rising in the east.</p>
+
+<p>And with these words life passed away, the smile still
+lingering gently on his lips;&mdash;and I knew no more, for I
+fell like a man stunned down by him where he was
+stretched beside the grave that they had hewn for him
+ere he was yet dead.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>I knew when I saw him there, as well as I knew by
+detail long after, that he had offered his life for Stuart
+Lane's, and that it had been accepted; the Virginian,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+ignorant of the sacrifice made for him, had been sent to
+the Southern lines during the night, told by the Northerners
+that he was pardoned on his parole to return in his
+stead a distinguished Federal officer lately captured by
+him. He knew nothing, dreamt nothing, of the exchange
+by which his life was given back to the woman who loved
+him, when his English Leader died in his place as the sun
+rose over the fresh summer world, never again to rise for
+those whose death-shot rang sullen and shrill through its
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>So Deadly Dash died, and his grave is nameless and
+unknown there under the shadow of the great Virginian
+forests. He was outlawed, condemned, exiled, and the
+world would see no good in him; sins were on him
+heavily, and vices lay darkly at his door; but when I
+think of that grave in the South where the grass grows so
+rankly now, and only the wild deer pauses, I doubt if
+there was not that in him which may well shame the
+best amongst us. We never knew him justly till he
+perished there.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>And my friend who told me this said no more, but took
+up his <i>brûle-gueule</i> regretfully. The story is given as he
+gave it, and the States could whisper from the depths of
+their silent woods many tales of sacrifice as generous, of
+fortitude as great. That when he had related it he was
+something ashamed of having felt it so much, is true; and
+you must refer the unusual weakness, as he did, to the
+fact that he told it on the off-day of the Derby, after
+having put a cracker on Wild Charley. A sufficient
+apology for any number of frailties!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc262.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc263a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_GENERALS_MATCH-MAKING" id="THE_GENERALS_MATCH-MAKING"></a>THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>COACHES AND COUSINSHIP.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Where the devil shall I go this Long? Paris
+is too hot; the inside of my adorable Château
+des Fleurs would give one a lively idea of the
+feelings of eels in a frying-pan. Rome's only fit to melt
+down puffy cardinals, as jocks set themselves before the
+kitchen fire preparatory to the Spring Meetings. In
+Switzerland there's nothing fit to eat. Spain might be
+the ticket&mdash;the Andalusians are a good-looking lot, but
+they haven't a notion of beer. Scotland I daren't enter,
+because I know I should get married under their rascally
+laws. I'd go to the Bads, but the V. P.'s fillies say they
+mean to do 'em this summer, and I won't risk meeting
+them if I know it; the baits they set to catch the unsuspecting
+are quite frightful. Where the devil <i>shall</i> I go?</p>
+
+<p>So spoke Sydenham Morton, whilom Captain of Eton,
+now, in due course, having passed up to Kings, discussing
+ham-pie and audit, devils and coffee, while the June sun
+streamed through the large oriel windows.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>To</i> the devil, I fear, if you only find your proper
+fraternity," said a man, coming in. Oak was never
+sported by Sydie, except when he was rattling certain
+little squares of ivory in boxes lined with green felt.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Mr. Keane, is that you? Come in."</p>
+
+<p>The permission was needless, insomuch as Keane was
+already in and down on a rocking-chair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"One o'clock, and only just begun your breakfast! I
+have finished more than half my day's work."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say," answered Sydie; "but one shining light
+like you, monseigneur, is enough for a college. Why
+should I exert myself? I swore I hadn't four marks a
+year, and I've my fellowship for telling the furbelow.
+We all go in for the dolce here except you, and you're
+such a patent machine for turning out Q. E. D.s by the
+dozen, that you can no more help working than the bed-maker
+can help taking my tea and saying the cat did it,
+and 'May she never be forgiven if she ever so much as
+looked at that there blessed lock.' I say, find a Q. E. D.
+for me, to the most vexatious problem, where I'm to go
+this Long?"</p>
+
+<p>"Go a quiet reading tour; mark out a regular plan,
+and travel somewhere rugged and lonely, with not a
+crinoline, or a trout-stream, or a pack of hounds within a
+hundred miles; the middle of Stonehenge, for example,
+or with the lighthouse men out at the Smalls or Eddystone.
+You'd do wonders when you came back, Sydie."</p>
+
+<p>Sydie shook his head and puffed gravely at his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir. Cramming's not my line. As for
+history, I don't see anything particularly interesting in
+the blackguardisms of men all dust and ashes and gelatine
+now; if I were the Prince of Wales, I might think it
+my duty to inquire into the characters of my grandfathers;
+but not being that individual, I find the Derby
+list much more suited to my genius. As for the classics,
+they won't help me to ask for my dinner at Tortoni's, nor
+to ingratiate myself with the women at the Maison Dorée;
+and I prefer following Ovid's counsels, and enjoying the
+Falernian of life represented in these days by milk-punch,
+to plodding through the De Officiis. As for mathematics,
+it <i>may</i> be something very grand to draw triangles and
+circles till A meets B because C is as long as D; but I
+know, when I did the same operation in chalk when I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+was a small actor on the nursery floor, my nurse (who
+might have gone along with the barbarian who stuck
+Archimedes) called me an idle brat. Well, I say, about
+the Long? Where are <i>you</i> going, most grave and reverent
+seignior?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where there are no impertinent boys, if there be such
+a paradise on earth," rejoined Keane, lighting his pipe.
+"I go to my moor, of course, for the 12th, but until then
+I haven't made up my mind. I think I shall scamper
+over South America; I want freshening up, and I've a
+great fancy to see those buried cities, not to mention a
+chance of buffalo hunting."</p>
+
+<p>"Travelling's such a bore," interrupted Sydie, stretching
+himself out like an india-rubber tube. "Talk of the
+cherub that's always sitting up aloft to watch over poor
+Jack, there are always ten thousand demons watching
+over the life of any luckless Æothen; there are the
+custom-house men, whose natural prey he becomes, and
+the hotel-keepers, who fasten on him to suck his life-blood,
+and there are the mosquitoes, and other things less
+minute but not less agonizing; and there are guides and
+muleteers, and waiters and ciceroni&mdash;oh, hang it! travelling's
+a dreadful bore, if it were only for the inevitable
+widow with four daughters whom you've danced with
+once at a charity ball, who rushes up to you on the
+Boulevards or a Rhine steamer, and tacks herself on to
+you, and whom it's well for you if you can shake off
+when you scatter the dust of the city from the sole of
+your foot."</p>
+
+<p>"You can't chatter, can you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; my frænum was happily cut when I was a baby.
+Fancy what a loss the world would have endured if it
+hadn't been!" said Sydie, lazily shutting his half-closed
+blue eyes. "I say, the governor has been bothering my
+life out to go down to St. Crucis; he's an old brick, you
+know, and has the primest dry in the kingdom. I wish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+you'd come, will you? There's capital fishing and
+cricketing, and you'd keep me company. Do. You shall
+have the best mount in the kingdom, and the General
+will do you no end of good on Hippocrate's rule&mdash;contrarieties
+cure contrarieties."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll think about it; but you know I prefer solitude
+generally; misanthropical, I admit, but decidedly lucky
+for me, as my companions through life will always be my
+ink-stand, my terrier, and my papers. I have never
+wished for any other yet, and I hope I never shall. Are
+you going to smoke and drink audit on that sofa all day?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Sydie, "I'm going to take a turn at
+beer and Brown's for a change. Well, I shall take you
+down with me on Tuesday, sir, so that's settled."</p>
+
+<p>Keane laughed, and after some few words on the business
+that had brought him thither, went across the quad
+to his own rooms to plunge into the intricacies of Fourrier
+and Laplace, or give the vigor of his brain to stuffing
+some young goose's empty head, or cramming some idle
+young dog with ballast enough to carry him through the
+shoals and quicksands of his Greats.</p>
+
+<p>Gerald Keane was a mathematical Coach, and had
+taken high honors&mdash;a rare thing for a Kingsman to do,
+for are they not, by their own confession, the laziest disciples
+of the dolce in the whole of Granta, invariably
+bumped and caught out, and from sheer idleness letting
+other men beat Lord's and shame the Oxford Eleven, and
+graduate with Double Firsts, while they lie perdus in the
+shades of Holy Henry? Keane, however, was the one exception
+to the rule. He was dreadfully wild, as ladies
+say, for his first term or two, though equally eloquent at
+the Union; then his family exulting in the accuracies of
+their prophecies regarding his worthlessness, and somebody
+else daring him to go in for honors, his pluck was
+put up, and he set himself to work to show them all what
+he could do if he chose. Once roused to put out his powers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+he liked using them; the bother of the training over,
+it is no trouble to keep place as stroke-oar; and now men
+pointed him out in the Senate House, and at the Senior
+Fellows' table, and he bid fair to rank with the writer on
+Jasher and the author of the Inductive Sciences.</p>
+
+<p>People called him very cold. It was popularly averred
+that he had no more feeling than Roubilliac's or Thorwaldsen's
+statues; but as he was a great favorite with the
+under-grads, and always good-natured to them, there were
+a few men who doubted the theory, though <i>he</i> never tried
+to refute or dispute it.</p>
+
+<p>Of all the young fellows, the one Keane liked the best,
+and to whom he was kindest, was Sydenham Morton&mdash;Sydie
+to everybody in Granta, from the little fleuriste opposite
+in King's Parade, to the V. P.'s wife, who petted
+him because his uncle was a millionnaire&mdash;the dearest
+fellow in the world, according to all the Cambridge young
+ladies&mdash;the darling of all the milliner and confectioner
+girls in Trumpington Street and Petty Cury&mdash;the best
+chap going among the kindred spirits, who got gated, and
+lectured, and rusticated for skying over to Newmarket, or
+pommelling bargees, or taking a lark over at Cherryhinton&mdash;the
+best-dressed, fastest, and most charming of Cantabs,
+as he himself would gravely assure you.</p>
+
+<p>They were totally dissimilar, and far asunder in position;
+but an affair on the slope of the Matterhorn, when
+the boy had saved the elder man's life, had riveted attachment
+between them, and bridged over the difference of
+their academical rank.</p>
+
+<p>The Commencement came and went, with its speeches,
+and its H.R.H. Chancellor, and its pretty women gliding
+among the elms of Neville's Court (poor Leslie Ellis's
+daily haunt), filling the grim benches of the Senate
+House, and flitting past the carved benches of King's
+Chapel. Granta was henceforth a desert to all Cambridge
+belles; they could walk down Trumpington Street without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+meeting a score of little straw hats, and Trumpington
+Street became as odious as Sahara; the "darling Backs"
+were free to them, and, of course, they who, by all relations,
+from those of Genesis to those of Vanity Fair, have
+never cared, save for <i>fruit défendu</i>, saw nothing to admire
+in the trees, and grass, and river, minus outriggers and
+collegians. There was a general exodus: Masters' red
+hoods, Fellows Commoners' gold-lace, Fellows' gown and
+mortar boards, morning chapel surplices, and under-grads'
+straw-hats and cutaway coats, all vanished from court and
+library, street and cloister. Cambridge was empty; the
+married Dons and their families went off to country-houses
+or Rhine steamers; Fellows went touring with
+views to mediæval architecture, Roman remains, Greek
+inscriptions, Paris laisser aller, or Norwegian fishing, according
+to their tastes and habits; under-grads scattered
+themselves over the face of the globe, and were to be
+found in knots of two or three calling for stout in Véfour's,
+kicking up a row with Austrian gendarmerie,
+chalking up effigies of Bomba on Italian walls, striding
+up every mountain from Skiddaw to the Pic du Midi,
+burrowing like rabbits in a warren for reading purposes
+on Dartmoor, kissing sunny-haired Gretchens in German
+hostelries, swinging through the Vaterland with knapsacks
+and sticks, doing a walking tour&mdash;in fact, swarming
+everywhere with their impossible French and hearty
+voices, and lithe English muscle, Granta marked on them
+as distinctly as an M.B. waistcoat marks an Anglican, or
+utter ignorance of modern politics a "great classic."</p>
+
+<p>Cambridge had emptied itself of the scores of naughty
+boys that lie in the arms of Mater, and on Tuesday Keane
+and Sydie were shaking and rattling over those dreadful
+nervous Eastern Counties tenders, through that picturesque
+and beautiful country that does permutations with such
+laudable perseverance on pollards, fens, and flats&mdash;flats,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+fens, and pollards&mdash;at the snail's pace that, according to
+the E.G.R., we must believe to be "express."</p>
+
+<p>"I wrote and told the governor you were coming down
+with me, sir," said Sydie, hanging up his hat. "I didn't
+tell him what a trouble I had to make you throw over
+South America for a fortnight, and come and taste his
+curry at the Beeches. You'll like the old boy; he's as
+hot and choleric, and as genial and good-hearted, as any
+old brick that ever walked. He was born as sweet-tempered
+and soft-mouthed as mamma when an eldest son
+waltzes twice with Adeliza, and the pepper's been put into
+him by the curry-powder, the gentlemanlike transportation,
+and the unlimited command over black devils, enjoyed by
+gentlemen of the H.E.I.C.S."</p>
+
+<p>"A nabob uncle," thought Keane. "Oh, I see, yellow,
+dyspeptic, always boring one with 'How to govern India,'
+and recollections of 'When I served with Napier.' What
+a fool I was to let Sydie persuade me to go. A month in
+Lima and the Pampas would be much pleasanter."</p>
+
+<p>"He came over last year," continued Sydie, in blissful
+ignorance, "and bought the Beeches, a very jolly place,
+only he's crammed it with everything anybody suggested,
+and tried anything that any farmer recommended, so
+that the house and the estate present a peculiar compendium
+of all theories of architecture, and a general exhibition
+of all sorts of tastes. He's his hobbies; pouncing
+on and apprehending small boys is one of 'em, for which
+practice he is endeared to the youth of St. Crucis as the
+'old cove,' the 'Injian devil,' and like affectionate cognomens.
+But the General's weak point is me&mdash;me and
+little Fay."</p>
+
+<p>"His mare, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"His mare!&mdash;bless my heart, no!&mdash;his mare!" And
+Sydie lay back, and laughed silently. "His mare! By
+George! what would she say? She's a good deal too
+lively a young lady to run in harness for anybody, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+she's soft-mouthed enough when she's led. Mare! No,
+Fay's his niece&mdash;my cousin. Her father and my father
+went to glory when we were both smalls, and left us in
+legacy to the General, and a pretty pot of money the
+legacy has cost him."</p>
+
+<p>"Your cousin, indeed! The name's more like a mare's
+than a girl's," answered Keane, thinking to himself. "A
+cousin! I just wish I'd known that. One of those Indian
+girls, I bet, tanned brown as a berry, flirts à outrance, has
+run the gauntlet of all the Calcutta balls, been engaged
+to men in all the Arms, talks horridly broad Anglo-Indian-English.
+I know the style."</p>
+
+<p>The engine screamed, and pulled up at the St. Crucis
+station, some seventy miles farther on, lying in the midst
+of Creswickian landscapes, with woodlands, and cottages,
+and sweet fresh stretches of meadow-land, such as do one's
+heart good after hard days and late nights in dust and
+gaslight.</p>
+
+<p>"Deuced fine points," said Sydie, taking the ribbons of
+a high-stepping bay that had brought one of the neatest
+possible traps to take him and Keane to the Beeches, and
+springing, in all his glory, to the box, than which no imperial
+throne could have offered to him one-half so delightful
+a seat. "Governor never keeps screws. What
+a crying shame we're not allowed to keep the sorriest
+hack at King's. That comes of gentlemen slipping into
+shoes that were meant for beggars. Hallo, there are the
+old beech-trees; I vow I can almost taste the curry and
+dry from looking at them."</p>
+
+<p>In dashed the bay through the park-gates, sending the
+shingle flying up in small simoons, and the rooks cawing
+in supreme surprise from their nests in the branches of
+the beech-trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, my ancient, how are you?" began Sydie to the
+butler, while that stately person expanded into a smile of
+welcome. "Down, dog, down! 'Pon my life, the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+place looks very jolly. What have you hung all that
+armor up for;&mdash;to make believe our ancestors dwelt in
+these marble halls? How devilish dusty I am. Where's
+the General? Didn't know we were coming till next
+train. Fay! Fay! where are you? Ashton, where's
+Miss Morton?"</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Sydie dear," cried the young lady in question,
+rushing across the hall with the most ecstatic delight,
+and throwing herself into the Cantab's arms, who received
+her with no less cordiality, and kissed her straightway,
+regardless of the presence of Keane, the butler, and
+Harris.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Sydie," began the young lady, breathlessly, "I'm
+so delighted you're come. There's the archery fête, and
+a picnic at Shallowton, and an election ball over at
+Coverdale, and I want you to dance with me, and to try
+the new billiard-table, and to come and see my aviary,
+and to teach me pistol-shooting (because Julia Dupuis
+can shoot splendidly, and talks of joining the Rifles), and
+to show me how to do Euclid, and to amuse me, and to
+play with me, and to tell me which is the prettiest of
+Snowdrop's pups to be saved, and to&mdash;&mdash;" She stopped
+suddenly, and dropped from enthusiastic tirade to subdued
+surprise, as she caught sight of Keane for the first
+time. "Oh, Sydie, why did you not introduce me to your
+friend? How rude I have been!"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Keane, my cousin, the torment of my existence,
+Miss Morton in public, Little Fay in private life. There,
+you know one another now. I can't say any more. Do
+tell me where the governor is."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Keane, what can you think of me?" cried Fay.
+"Any friend of Sydenham's is most welcome to the
+Beeches, and my uncle will scold me frightfully for giving
+you such a reception. Please do forgive me, I was so
+delighted to see my cousin."</p>
+
+<p>"Which I can fully enter into, having a weakness for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+Sydie myself," smiled Keane. "I am sure he is very
+fortunate in being the cause of such an excuse."</p>
+
+<p>Keane said it <i>par complaisance</i>, but rather carelessly;
+young ladies, as a class, being one of his aversions. He
+looked at Fay Morton, however, and saw she was not an
+Indianized girl after all. She was not yellow, but, au
+contraire, had waving fair hair, long dark eyes, and a
+mischievous, sunny face&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A rosebud set with little wilful thorns,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And sweet as English air could make her.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Where's the governor, Fay?" reiterated Sydie.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, my dear boy. Thought of your old uncle the
+first thing, Sydie? God bless my soul, how well you look!
+Confound you, why didn't you tell me what train you
+were coming by? Devil take you, Ashton, why's there
+no fire in the hall? Thought it was warm, did you?
+Hum! more fool you then."</p>
+
+<p>"Uncle dear," said Miss Fay, "here is Sydie's friend,
+Mr. Keane; you are being as rude as I have been."</p>
+
+<p>The General, at this conjuration, swung sharp round,
+a stout, hale, handsome old fellow, with gray moustaches
+and a high color, holding a spade in his hand and clad in
+a linen coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless my soul, sir," cried the General, shaking Keane's
+hand with the greatest possible energy, "charmed to see
+you&mdash;delighted, 'pon my honor; only hope you're come
+to stay till Christmas; there are plenty of bachelors' dens.
+Devil take me! of what was I thinking? I was pleased
+to see that boy, I suppose. More fool I, you'll say, a
+lazy, good-for-nothing young dog like him. Don't let me
+keep you standing in the hall. Cursed cold, isn't it? and
+there's Little Fay in muslin! Ashton, send some hot
+water into the west room for Mr.&mdash;Mr.&mdash;&mdash;Confound
+you, Sydie, why didn't you tell&mdash;I mean introduce me?&mdash;Mr.
+Keane. Luncheon will be on the table in ten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+minutes. Like curry, Mr. Keane? There, get along,
+Sydie, you foolish boy; you can talk to Fay after
+luncheon."</p>
+
+<p>"Sydie," whispered Fay, an hour before dinner, when
+she had teased the Cantab's life out of him till he had
+consented to pronounce judgment on the puppies, "what
+a splendid head that man has you brought with you;
+he'd do for Plato, with that grand calm brow and lofty
+unapproachable look. Who is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"The greatest philosopher of modern times," responded
+her cousin, solemnly. "A condensation of Solon, Thales,
+Plutarch, Seneca, Cicero, Lucullus, Bion, Theophrastes,
+and Co.; such a giant of mathematical knowledge, and
+all other knowledge, too, that every day, when he passes
+under Bacon's Gate, we are afraid the old legend will
+come to pass, and it will tumble down as flat as a pancake;
+a homage to him, but a loss to Cambridge."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said Miss Fay, impatiently. "(I like that
+sweet little thing with the black nose best, dear.) <i>Who</i>
+is he? What is he? How old is he? What's his name?
+Where does he live?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gently, young woman," cried Sydie. "He is Tutor
+and Fellow of King's, and a great gun besides; he's
+some twenty-five years older than you. His name on the
+rolls is Gerald, I believe, and he dwells in the shadow of
+Mater, beyond the reach of my cornet; for which fact,
+not being musically inclined, he is barbarian enough to
+return thanks daily in chapel."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry he is come. It was stupid of you to bring
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Wherefore, <i>ma cousine</i>? Are you afraid of him?
+You needn't be. Young ladies are too insignificant
+atoms of creation for him to criticise. He'll no more
+expect sense from you than from Snowdrop and her
+pups."</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid!" repeated Fay, with extreme indignation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+"I should like to see any man of whom I should feel
+afraid! If he doesn't like fun and nonsense, I pity
+him; but if he despise me ever so much for it, I shall
+enjoy myself before him, and in spite of him. I was
+sorry you brought him, because he will take you away
+when I want you all to myself; and he looks so haughty,
+that&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>are</i> afraid of him, Fay, and won't own it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am <i>not</i>," reiterated Fay, impetuously; "and I will
+smoke a cigar with him after dinner, to show you I am
+not one bit."</p>
+
+<p>"I bet you six pair of gloves you do no such thing,
+young lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Done. Do keep the one with a black nose, Sydie;
+and yet that little liver-colored darling is too pretty to be
+killed. Suppose we save them all? Snowdrop will be
+so pleased."</p>
+
+<p>Whereon Fay kissed all the little snub noses with the
+deepest affection, and was caught in the act by Keane and
+the General.</p>
+
+<p>"There's that child with her arms full of dogs," said
+the General, beaming with satisfaction at sight of his
+niece. "She's a little, spoilt, wilful thing. She's an old
+bachelor's pet, and you must make allowances. I call
+her the fairy of the Beeches, God bless her! She nursed
+me last winter, when I was at death's door from these
+cursed cold winds, sir, better than Miss Nightingale
+could have done. What a devilish climate it <i>is</i>; never
+two days alike. I don't wonder Englishwomen are such
+icicles, poor things; they're frostbitten from their cradle
+upwards."</p>
+
+<p>"India warms them up, General, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>The General shook with laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure, to be sure; if prudery's the fashion,
+they'll wear it, sir, as they would patches or hair-powder;
+but they're always uncommonly glad to leave it off and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>
+lock it out of sight when they can. What do you think
+of the kennels? I say, Sydie, confound you, why did you
+bring down any traps with you? Haven't room for 'em,
+not for one. Couldn't cram a tilbury into the coach-house."</p>
+
+<p>"A trap, governor?" said Sydie, straightening his back
+after examination of the pups; "can't keep even a wall-eyed
+cab-horse; wish I could."</p>
+
+<p>"Where's your drag, then?" demanded the General.</p>
+
+<p>"My drag? Don't I just wish I had one, to offer my
+bosom friend the V. P. a seat on the box. Calvert, of
+Trinity, tooled us over in his to the Spring Meetings, and
+his grays are the sweetest pair of goers&mdash;the leaders especially&mdash;that
+ever you saw in harness. We came back
+'cross country, to get in time for hall, and a pretty mess
+we made of it, for we broke the axle, and lamed the off-wheeler,
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But, God bless my soul," stormed the General, excited
+beyond measure, "you wrote me word you were going to
+bring a drag down with you, and of course I supposed
+you meant what you said, and I had Harris in about it,
+and he swore the coach-house was as full of traps as ever
+it could hold, so I had my tax-cart and Fay's phaeton
+turned into one of the stalls, and then, after all, it comes
+out you've never brought it! Devil take you, Sydie, why
+can't you be more thoughtful&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear governor&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense; don't talk to me!" cried the General, trying
+to work himself into a passion, and diving into the
+recesses of six separate pockets one after another. "Look
+here, sir, I suppose you'll believe your own words? Here
+it is in black and white.&mdash;'P. S. I shall bring <i>my Coach</i>
+down with me.' There, what do you say now? Confound
+you, what are you laughing at? <i>I</i> don't see anything
+to laugh at. In my day, young fellows didn't
+make fools of old men in this way. Bless my soul, why<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+the devil don't you leave off laughing, and talk a little
+common sense? The thing's plain enough.&mdash;'P.S. <i>I
+shall bring my Coach down with me</i>.'"</p>
+
+<p>"So I have," said Sydie, screaming with laughter.
+"Look at him&mdash;he's a first-rate Coach, too! Wheels
+always oiled, and ready for any road; always going up
+hill, and never caught coming down; started at a devil
+of a pace, and now keeps ahead of all other vehicles on
+all highways. A first-class Coach, that will tool me
+through the tortuous lanes and treacherous pitfalls of the
+Greats with flying colors. My Coach! Bravo, General!
+that's the best bit of fun I've had since I dressed up like
+Sophonisba Briggs, and led the V. P. a dance all round
+the quad, every hair on his head standing erect in his
+virtuous indignation at the awful morals of his college."</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, what?" grunted the General, light beginning to
+dawn upon him. "Do you mean Mr. Keane? Hum!
+how's one to be up to all your confounded slang? How
+could I know? Devil take you, Sydie, why can't you
+write common English? You young fellows talk as bad
+jargon as Sepoys. You're sure I'm delighted to see you,
+Mr. Keane, though I did make the mistake."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, General," said Keane; "but it's rather
+cool of you, Master Sydie, to have forced me on to your
+uncle's hands without his wish or his leave."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, not at all," swore the General, with vehement
+cordiality. "I gave him carte blanche to ask whom
+he would, and unexpected guests are always most welcome;
+<i>not</i> that you were unexpected though, for I'd told
+that boy to be sure and bring somebody down here&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And have had the tax-cart and my phaeton turned
+out to make comfortable quarters for him," said Miss
+Fay, with a glance at The Coach to see how he took
+chaff, "and I only hope Mr. Keane may like his accommodation."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps, Miss Morton," said Keane, smiling, "I shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+like it so well that you will have to say to me as poor
+Voltaire to his troublesome abbé, 'Don Quichotte prenait
+les auberges pour les châteaux, mais vous avez pris les
+châteaux pour les auberges.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Tiresome man," thought Fay. "I wish Sydie hadn't
+brought him here; but I shall do as I always do, however
+grand and supercilious he may look. He has lived
+among all those men and books till he has grown as cold
+as granite. What a pity it is people don't enjoy existence
+as I do!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are thinking, Miss Morton," said Keane, as he
+walked on beside her, with an amused glance at her face,
+which was expressive enough of her thoughts, "that if
+your uncle is glad to see me, you are not, and that Sydie
+was very stupid not to bring down one of his kindred
+spirits instead of&mdash;&mdash;Don't disclaim it now; you should
+veil your face if you wish your thoughts not to be read."</p>
+
+<p>"I was not going to disclaim it," said Fay, quickly
+looking up at him with a rapid glance, half penitence,
+half irritation. "I always tell the truth; but I was <i>not</i>
+thinking exactly that; I don't want any of Sydie's
+friends&mdash;I detest boys&mdash;but I certainly <i>was</i> thinking
+that as you look down on everything that we all delight
+in, I fancied you and the Beeches will hardly agree. If
+I am rude, you must not be angry; you wanted me to tell
+you the truth."</p>
+
+<p>Keane smiled again.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I look down on the things you delight in? I
+hardly know enough of you, as we have only addressed
+about six syllables to each other, to be able to judge what
+you like and what you don't like; but certainly I must
+admit, that caressing the little round heads of those puppies
+yonder, which seemed to afford you such extreme
+rapture, would not be any source of remarkable gratification
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>Fay looked up at him and laughed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, I am fond of animals as you are fond of books.
+Is it not an open question whether the live dog or sheepskin
+is not as good as the dead Morocco or Russian
+leather?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is it an open question, whether Macaulay's or Arago's
+brain weighs no more than a cat's or a puppy's?"</p>
+
+<p>"Brain!" said impudent little Fay; "are your great
+men always as honest and as faithful as my poor little
+Snowdrop? I have an idea that Sheridan's brains were
+often obscured by brandy; that Richelieu had the weakness
+to be prouder of his bad poems than his magnificent
+policies; and that Pope and Byron had the folly to be
+more tenacious of a glance at their physical defect than
+an onslaught on their noblest works. I could mention a
+good many other instances where brain was not always a
+voucher for corresponding strength of character."</p>
+
+<p>Keane was surprised to hear a sensible speech from this
+volatile little puss, and honored her by answering her
+seriously.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, rather, Miss Morton, that those to whom many
+temptations fall should have many excuses made. Where
+the brain preponderates, excelling in creative faculty and
+rapid thought, there will the sensibilities be proportionately
+acute. The vivacity and vigorous life which produced
+the rapid flow of Sheridan's eloquence led him into
+the dissipation which made him end his days in a spunging-house.
+Men of cooler minds and natures must not
+presume to judge him. They had not his temptation;
+they cannot judge of his fault. Richelieu, in all probability,
+amused himself with his verses as he amused
+himself with his white kitten and its cork, as a <i>délassement</i>;
+had he piqued himself upon his poetry, as they say,
+he would have turned poetaster instead of politician. As
+for the other two, you must remember that Pope's deformity
+made him a subject of ridicule to the woman he was
+fool enough to worship, and Byron, poor fellow, was over-susceptible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+on all points, or he would scarcely have
+allowed the venomed arrows from the Scotch Reviewers
+to wound him, nor would he have cared for the desertion
+of a wife who was to him like ice to fire. When you are
+older, you will learn that it is very dangerous and unjust
+to say this thing is right, that wrong, that feeling wise, or
+this foolish; for all temperaments are different, and the
+same circumstances may produce very different effects.
+Your puppies will grow up with dissimilar characters;
+how much more so, then, must men?"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Fay was quiet for a minute, then she flashed her
+mischievous eyes on him.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly; but then, by your own admission, you
+have no right to decide that your love for mathematics is
+wise, and my love for Snowdrop foolish; it may be quite
+<i>au contraire</i>. Perhaps, after all, I may have 'chosen the
+better part.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Fay, go in and dress for dinner," interrupted the
+General, trotting up; "your tongue would run on forever
+if nobody stopped it; you're no exception to your sex on
+that point. Is she?"</p>
+
+<p>Keane laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Miss Morton's frænum, like Sydie's, was cut
+too far in her infancy, and therefore she has been 'unbridled'
+ever since."</p>
+
+<p>"In all things!" cried little Fay. "Nobody has put
+the curb on me yet, and nobody ever shall."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be too sure, Fay," cried Sydie. "Rarey does
+wonders with the wildest fillies. Somebody may bring
+you down on your knees yet."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have to see to that, Sydie," laughed the
+General. "Come, get along, child, to your toilette. I
+never have my soup cold and my curry overdone. To
+wait for his dinner is a stretch of good nature, and
+patience that ought not to be expected of any man."</p>
+
+<p>The soup was not cold nor the curry overdone, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+dinner was pleasant enough, in the long dining-room, with
+the June sun streaming in through its bay-windows from
+out the brilliant-colored garden, and the walls echoing
+with the laughter of Sydie and his cousin, the young lady
+keeping true to her avowal of "not caring for Plato's
+presence." "Plato," however, listened quietly, peeling
+his peaches with tranquil amusement; for if the girl
+talked nonsense, it was clever nonsense, as rare, by the
+way, and quite as refreshing as true wit.</p>
+
+<p>"My gloves are safe; you're too afraid of him, Fay,"
+whispered Sydie, bending forwards to give her some hautboys.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I?" cried Miss Fay, with a <i>moue</i> of supreme contempt.
+Neither the whisper nor the <i>moue</i> escaped Keane,
+as he talked with the governor on model drainage.</p>
+
+<p>"Where's my hookah, Fay?" asked the General, after
+dessert. "Get it, will you, my pet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Voilà!" cried Miss Fay, lifting the narghilé from the
+sideboard. Then taking some cigars off the mantelpiece,
+she put one in her own mouth, struck a fusee, and, handing
+the case to Keane, said, with a saucy smile in her
+soft bright eyes, though, to tell the truth, she was a little
+bit afraid of taking liberties with him:</p>
+
+<p>"If you are not above such a sublunary indulgence,
+will you have a cigar with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"With the greatest pleasure," said Keane, with a grave
+bow; "and if you would like to further rival George
+Sand, I shall be very happy to give you the address of
+my tailor."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you exceedingly; but as long as crinoline is
+the type of the sex that are a little lower than the angels,
+and ribbon-ties the seal of those but a trifle better than
+Mephistopheles, I don't think I will change it," responded
+Little Fay, contemptuously, as she threw herself down on
+a couch with an indignant defiant glance, and puffed at
+her Manilla.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I <i>hate</i> him, Sydie," said the little lady, vehemently,
+that night.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you, dear?" answered the Cantab; "you see,
+you've never had anybody to be afraid of, or had any
+man neglect you before."</p>
+
+<p>"He may neglect me if he please, I am sure I do not
+care," rejoined Fay, disdainfully; "only I do wish, Sydie,
+that you had never brought him here to make us all
+uncomfortable."</p>
+
+<p>"He don't make me uncomfortable, quite otherwise;
+nor yet the governor; you're the only victim, Fay."</p>
+
+<p>Fay saw little enough of Keane for the next week or
+two. He was out all day with Sydie trout-fishing, or
+walking over his farms with the General, or sitting in the
+study reading, and writing his articles for the <i>Cambridge
+Journal</i>, <i>Leonville's Mathematical Journal</i>, or the <i>Westminster
+Review</i>. But when she was with him, there was no
+mischief within her reach that Miss Fay did not perpetrate.
+Keane, to tease her, would condemn&mdash;so seriously
+that she believed him&mdash;all that she loved the best; he
+would tell her that he admired quiet, domestic women;
+that he thought girls should be very subdued and retiring;
+that they should work well, and not care much for
+society; at all of which, being her extreme antipodes,
+Little Fay would be vehemently wrathful. She would
+get on her pony without any saddle in her evening dress,
+and ride him at the five-bar gate in the stable-yard; she
+would put on Sydie's smoking-cap, and look very pretty
+in it, and take a Queen's on the divan of the smoking-room,
+reading <i>Bell's Life</i>, and asking Keane how much
+he would bet on the October; she would spend all the
+morning making wreaths of roses, dressing herself and
+the puppies up in them, inquiring if it was not a laudable
+and industrious occupation. There was no nonsense or
+mischief Fay would not imagine and forthwith commit,
+and anything they wanted her not to do she would do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+straightway, even to the imperilling of her own life and
+limb. She tried hard to irritate or rouse "Plato," as she
+called him, but Plato was not to be moved, and treated
+her as a spoilt child, whom he alone had sense enough to
+resist.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be great folly for you to attempt it, Miss
+Morton. Those horses are not fit to be driven by any
+one, much less by a woman," said Keane, quietly, one
+morning.</p>
+
+<p>They were in the stable-yard, and chanced to be alone
+when a new purchase of the governor's&mdash;two scarcely
+broken-in thorough-bred colts&mdash;were brought with a new
+mail-phaeton into the yard, and Miss Fay forthwith
+announced her resolution of driving them round the
+avenue. The groom that came with them told her they
+were almost more than he could manage, their own coachman
+begged and implored, Keane reasoned quietly, all to
+no purpose. The rosebud had put out its little wilful
+thorns; Keane's words added fuel to the fire. Up she
+sprang, looking the daintiest morsel imaginable perched
+up on that very exalted box-seat, told the horrified groom
+to mount behind, and started them off, lifting her hat
+with a graceful bow to "Plato," who stood watching the
+phaeton with his arms folded and his cigar in his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after, he started in the contrary direction, for the
+avenue circled the Beeches in an oval of four miles, and
+he knew he should meet her coming back. He strolled
+along under the pleasant shadow of the great trees,
+enjoying the sunset and the fresh air, and capable of
+enjoying them still more but for an inward misgiving.
+His presentiment was not without its grounds. He had
+walked about a mile and a half round the avenue, when
+a cloud of dust told him what was up, and in the distance
+came the thorough-breds, broken away as he had prophesied,
+tearing along with the bits between their teeth,
+Little Fay keeping gallantly hold of the ribbons, but as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+powerless over the colts now they had got their heads as
+the groom leaning from the back seat.</p>
+
+<p>On came the phaeton, bumping, rattling, oscillating,
+threatening every second to be turned over. Keane
+caught one glance of Fay's face, resolute and pale, and
+of her little hands grasping the ribbons, till they were
+cut and bleeding with the strain. There was nothing for
+it but to stand straight in the animals' path, catch their
+heads, and throw them back on their haunches. Luckily,
+his muscles were like iron&mdash;luckily, too, the colts had
+come a long way, and were not fresh. He stood like a
+rock, and checked them; running a very close risk of
+dislocating his arms with the shock, but saving little Fay
+from destruction. The colts stood trembling, the groom
+jumped out and caught the reins, Keane amused himself
+silently with the mingled penitence, vexation, shame, and
+rebellion visible in the little lady's face.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, quietly, "as you were so desirous of
+breaking your neck, will you ever forgive me for defeating
+your purpose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray don't!" cried Fay, passionately. "I do thank
+you so much for saving my life; I think it so generous
+and brave of you to have rescued me at such risk to
+yourself. I feel that I can never be grateful enough to
+you, but don't talk in that way. I know it was silly and
+self-willed of me."</p>
+
+<p>"It was; that fact is obvious."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I shall make it more so," cried Miss Fay, with
+her old wilfulness. "I do feel very grateful, and I would
+tell you so, if you would let me; but if you think it has
+made me afraid, you are quite wrong, and so you shall
+see."</p>
+
+<p>And before he could interfere, or do more than mechanically
+spring up after her, she had caught the reins from
+the groom, and started the trembling colts off again. But
+Keane put his hand on the ribbons.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Foolish child; are you mad?" he said, so gravely
+yet so gently that Fay let them go, and let him drive her
+back to the stable-yard, where she sprang out, and rushed
+away to her own room, terrified the governor with a few
+vehement sentences, which gave him a vague idea that
+Keane was murdered and both Fay's legs broken, and
+then had a private cry all to herself, with her arms round
+Snowdrop's neck, curled up in one of the drawing-room
+windows, where she had not been long when the General
+and Keane passed through, not noticing her, hidden as
+she was, in curtains, cushions, and flowers.</p>
+
+<p>"She's a little wilful thing, Keane," the General was
+saying, "but you mustn't think the worse of her for
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't. I am sick of those conventional young
+ladies who agree with everything one says to them&mdash;who
+keep all the frowns for mothers and servants, and are as
+serene as a cloudless sky abroad, smile blandly on all
+alike, and haven't an opinion of their own."</p>
+
+<p>"Fay's plenty of opinions of her own," chuckled the
+General; "and she tells 'em pretty freely, too. Bless
+the child, she's not ashamed of any of her thoughts and
+never will be."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not. Your little niece can do things that no
+other young lady could and they are so pretty in her
+that it would be a thousand pities for her to grow one
+atom less natural and wilful. Grapes growing wild are
+charming&mdash;grapes trained to a stake are ruined. I assure
+you, if I were you, I would not scold her for driving
+those colts to-day. High spirits and love of fun led her
+on, and the courage and presence of mind she displayed
+are too rare among her sex for us to do right in checking
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure, to be sure," assented the governor, gleefully.
+"God bless the child, she's one among a thousand,
+sir. Cognac, not milk and water. There's the
+dinner-bell; confound it."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whereat the General made his exit, and Keane also;
+and Fay kissed the spaniel with even more passionate
+attachment than ordinary.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Snowdrop, I don't hate him any more; he is a
+darling!"</p>
+
+<p>One glowing August morning Keane was in the study
+pondering whether he would go to his moor or not. The
+General had besought him to stay. His gamekeeper
+wrote him that it was a horribly bad rainy season in Invernessshire;
+the trout and the rabbits were very good
+sport in a mild way here. Altogether, Keane felt half
+disposed to keep where he was, when a shadow fell across
+his paper; and, as he looked up, he saw in the open window
+the English rosebud.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not one of the open questions, Mr. Keane,"
+asked Fay, "whether it is very wise to spend all this
+glorious morning shut out of the sight of the sun-rays
+and the scent of the flowers?"</p>
+
+<p>"How have <i>you</i> been spending it, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Putting bouquets in all the rooms, cleaning my
+aviary, talking to the puppies, and reading Jocelyn under
+the limes in the shrubberies&mdash;all very puerile, but all
+very pleasant. Perhaps if you descended to a lazy day
+like that now and then, you might be none the worse!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that a challenge? Will you take me under the
+limes?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed! I do not admit men who despise them
+to my gardens of Armida, any more than you would
+admit me into your Schools. I have as great a scorn for
+a skeptic as you have for a tyro."</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me. I have no scorn for a tyro. But you
+would not come to the Accademe; you dislike 'Plato'
+too much."</p>
+
+<p>Fay looked up at him half shyly, half mischievously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do dislike you, when you look down on me as
+Richelieu might have looked down on his kitten."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Liking to see its play?" said Keane, half sadly.
+"Contrasting its gay insouciance with his own toil and
+turmoil, regretting, perhaps, the time when trifles made
+his joy as they did his kitten's? If I were to look on
+you so, there would not be much to offend you."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not think so of me, or you would speak to
+me as if I were an intelligent being, not a silly little
+thing."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know I think you silly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you think all women so."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps; but then you should rather try to redeem
+me from my error in doctrine. Come, let us sign a treaty
+of peace. Take me under the limes. I want some fresh
+air after writing all day; and in payment I will teach
+you Euclid, as you vainly beseeched your cousin to do
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you?" cried Fay, eagerly. Then she threw back
+her head. "I never am won by bribes."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor yet by threats? What a difficult young lady
+you are. Come, show me your shrubbery sanctum now
+you have invaded mine."</p>
+
+<p>The English rosebud laid aside its wilful thorns, and
+Fay, a little less afraid of her Plato, and therefore a
+little less defiant to him, led him over the grounds, filled
+his hands with flowers, showed him her aviary, read some
+of Jocelyn to him, to show him, she said, that Lamartine
+was better than the [OE]dipus in Coloneus, and thought, as
+she dressed for dinner, "I wonder if he does despise me&mdash;he
+has such a beautiful face, if he were not so haughty
+and cold!"</p>
+
+<p>The next day Keane gave her an hour of Euclid in the
+study. Certainly The Coach had never had such a pretty
+pupil; and he wished every dull head he had to cram was
+as intelligent as this fair-haired one. Fay was quick and
+clever; she was stimulated, moreover, by his decree concerning
+the stupidity of all women; she really worked as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+hard as any young man studying for degrees when they
+supposed her fast asleep in bed, and she got over the Pons
+Asinorum in a style that fairly astonished her tutor.</p>
+
+<p>The Coach did not dislike his occupation either; it did
+him good, after his life of solitude and study, something
+as the kitten and cork did Richelieu good after his cabinets
+and councils; and Little Fay, with her flowers and
+fun, mischief and impudence, and that winning wilfulness
+which it amused him gradually to tame down, unbent
+the chillness which had grown upon him. He was the
+better for it, as a man after hard study or practice is the
+better for some fresh sea-breezes, and some days of careless
+dolce.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Fay, have you had another poor devil flinging
+himself at your feet by means of a postage-stamp?" said
+Sydie one morning at breakfast. "You can't disguise
+anything from me, your most interested, anxious, and
+near and dear relative. Whenever the governor looks
+particularly stormy I see the signs of the times, that if I
+do not forthwith remove your dangerously attractive
+person, all the bricks, spooneys, swells, and
+do-nothings
+in the county will speedily fill the Hanwell wards to
+overflowing."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk such nonsense, Sydie," said Fay, impatiently,
+with a glance at Keane, as she handed him his
+chocolate.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! deuce take the fellows," chuckled the General.
+"Love, devotion, admiration! What a lot of stuff they
+do write. I wonder if Fay were a little beggar, how
+much of it all would stand the test? But we know a
+trick worth two of that. Try those sardines, Keane.
+House is let, Fay&mdash;eh? House is let; nobody need
+apply. Ha, ha!"</p>
+
+<p>And the General took some more curry, laughing till
+he was purple, while Fay blushed scarlet, a trick of which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
+she was rarely guilty; Sydie smiled, and Keane picked
+out his sardines with calm deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo! God bless my soul!" burst forth the General
+again. "Devil take me! I'll be hanged if I stand it!
+Confound 'em all! I do call it hard for a man not to be
+able to sit at his breakfast in peace. Good Heavens!
+what will come to the country, if all those little devils
+grow up to be food for Calcraft? He's actually pulling
+the bark off the trees, as I live! Excuse me, I <i>can't</i> sit
+still and see it."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith the General bolted from his chair, darted
+through the window, upsetting three dogs, two kittens, and
+a stand of flowers in his exit, and bolted breathlessly
+across the park with the poker in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless his old heart! Ain't he a brick?" shouted Sydie.
+"Do excuse me, Fay, I must go and hear him blow up
+that boy sky-high, and give him a shilling for tuck afterwards;
+it will be so rich."</p>
+
+<p>The Cantab made his exit, and Fay busied herself calming
+the kittens' minds, and restoring the dethroned geraniums.
+Keane read his <i>Times</i> for ten minutes, then
+looked up.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Morton, where is your tongue? I have not heard
+it for a quarter of an hour, a miracle that has never happened
+in the two months I have been at the Beeches."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not want to hear it."</p>
+
+<p>"What! am I in <i>mauvais odeur</i> again?" smiled Keane.
+"I thought we were good friends. Have you found the
+Q. E. D. to the problem I gave you?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure!" cried Fay, exultantly. And kneeling
+down by him, she went through the whole thing in exceeding
+triumph.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a good child," said her tutor, smiling, in himself
+amazed at this volatile little thing's capacity for
+mathematics. "I think you will be able to take your degree,
+if you like. Come, do you hate me now, Fay?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No," said Fay, a little shyly. "I never hated you, I
+always admired you; but I was afraid of you, though I
+would never confess it to Sydie."</p>
+
+<p>"Never be afraid of me," said Keane, putting his hand
+on hers as it lay on the arm of his chair. "You have no
+cause. You can do things few girls can; but they are
+pretty in you, where they might be&mdash;not so pretty in
+others. <i>I</i> like them at the least. You are very fond of
+your cousin, are you not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of Sydie? Oh, I love him dearly!"</p>
+
+<p>Keane took his hand away, and rose, as the General
+trotted in:</p>
+
+<p>"God bless my soul, Keane, how warm it is! Confoundedly
+hot without one's hat, I can tell you. Had my
+walk all for nothing, too. That cursed little idiot wasn't
+trespassing after all. Stephen had set him to spud out
+the daisies, and I'd thrashed the boy before I'd listen to
+him. Devil take him!"</p>
+
+<p>August went out and September came in, and Keane
+stayed on at the Beeches. They were pleasant days to
+them all, knocking over the partridges right and left, enjoying
+a cold luncheon under the luxuriant hedges, and
+going home for a dinner, full of laughter, and talk, and
+good cookery; and Fay's songs afterwards, as wild and
+sweet in their way as a goldfinch's on a hawthorn spray.</p>
+
+<p>"You like Little Fay, don't you, Keane?" said the
+General, as they went home one evening.</p>
+
+<p>Keane looked startled for a second.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said, rather haughtily. "That Miss
+Morton is very charming every one must admit."</p>
+
+<p>"Bless her little heart! She's a wild little filly, Keane,
+but she'll go better and truer than your quiet broken-in
+ones, who wear the harness so respectably, and are so
+wicked and vicious in their own minds. And what do
+you think of my boy?" asked the General, pointing to
+Sydie, who was in front. "How does he stand at Cambridge?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Sydie? Oh, he's a nice young fellow. He is a great
+favorite there, and he is&mdash;the best things he can be&mdash;generous,
+sweet-tempered, and honorable&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure," echoed the General, rubbing his hands.
+"He's a dear boy&mdash;a very dear boy. They're both exactly
+all I wished them to be, dear children; and I must
+say I am delighted to see 'em carrying out the plan I had
+always made for 'em from their childhood."</p>
+
+<p>"Being what, General, may I ask?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, any one can see, as plain as a pikestaff, that
+they're in love with each other," said the General, glowing
+with satisfaction; "and I mean them to be married
+and happy. They dote on each other, Keane, and I sha'n't
+put any obstacles in their way. Youth's short enough,
+Heaven knows; let 'em enjoy it, say I, it don't come back
+again. Don't say anything to him about it; I want to
+have some fun with him. They've settled it all, of course,
+long ago; but he hasn't confided in me, the sly dog.
+Trust an old campaigner, though, for twigging an <i>affaire
+de c[oe]ur</i>. Bless them both, they make me feel a boy
+again. We'll have a gay wedding, Keane; mind you
+come down for it. I dare say it'll be at Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>Keane walked along, drawing his cap over his eyes.
+The sun was setting full in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what sport?" cried Fay, running up to them.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty fair," said Keane, coldly, as he passed her.</p>
+
+<p>It was an hour before the dinner-bell rang. Then he
+came down cold and calm, particularly brilliant in conversation,
+more courteous, perhaps, to her than ever, but
+the frost had gathered round him that the sunny atmosphere
+of the Beeches had melted; and Fay, though she
+tried to tease, and to coax, and to win him, could not
+dissipate it. She felt him an immeasurable distance from
+her again. He was a learned, haughty, grave philosopher,
+and she a little naughty child.</p>
+
+<p>As Keane went up-stairs that night, he heard Sydie
+talking in the hall.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my worshipped Fay, I shall be intensely and
+utterly miserable away from the light of your eyes; but,
+nevertheless, I must go and see Kingslake from John's
+next Tuesday, because I've promised; and let one idolize
+your divine self ever so much, one can't give up one's
+larks, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Keane ground his teeth with a bitter sigh and a fierce
+oath.</p>
+
+<p>"Little Fay, I would have loved you more tenderly
+than that!"</p>
+
+<p>He went in and threw himself on his bed, not to sleep.
+For the first time for many years he could not summon
+sleep at his will. He had gone on petting her and
+amusing himself, thinking of her only as a winning, wayward
+child. Now he woke with a shock to discover, too
+late, that she had stolen from him unawares the heart he
+had so long refused to any woman. With his high intellect
+and calm philosophy, after his years spent in severe
+science and cold solitude, the hot well-springs of passion
+had broken loose again. He longed to take her bright
+life into his own grave and cheerless one; he longed to
+feel her warm young heart beat with his own, icebound
+for so many years; but Little Fay was never to be his.</p>
+
+<p>In the bedroom next to him the General sat, with his
+feet in his slippers and his dressing-gown round him,
+smoking his last cheroot before a roaring fire, chuckling
+complacently over his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure, we'll have a very gay wedding, such as
+the county hasn't seen in all its blessed days," he muttered,
+with supreme satisfaction. "Sydie shall have this
+place. What do I want with a great town of a house
+like this, big enough for a barrack? I'll take that shooting-box
+that's to let four miles off; that'll be plenty
+large enough for me and my old chums to smoke in and
+chat over bygone times, and it will do our hearts good&mdash;freshen
+us up a bit to see those young things enjoying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+themselves. My Little Fay will be the prettiest bride
+that ever was seen. Silly young things to suppose I don't
+see through them. Trust an old soldier! However, love
+is blind, they say. How could they have helped falling
+in love with one another? and who'd have the heart to
+part 'em, I should like to know!"</p>
+
+<p>Keane stayed that day; the next, receiving a letter
+which afforded a true though a slight excuse to return to
+Cambridge, he went, the General, Fay, and Sydie believing
+him gone only for a few days, he knowing that
+he would never set foot in the Beeches again. He went
+back to his rooms, whose dark monastic gloom in the
+dull October day seemed to close round him like an iron
+shroud. Here, with his books, his papers, his treasures
+of intellect, science and art, his "mind a kingdom" to
+him, he had spent many a happy day, with his brain
+growing only clearer and clearer as he followed out a
+close reasoning or clenched a subtle analysis. Now, for
+the sake of a mischievous child but half his age, he
+shuddered as he entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my dear boy," began the General one day after
+dinner, "I've seen your game, though you thought I didn't.
+How do you know, you young dog, that I shall give my
+consent?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, bother, governor, I know you will," cried Sydie,
+aghast; "because, you see, if you let me have a few cool
+hundreds I can give the men such slap-up wines&mdash;and it's
+my last year, General."</p>
+
+<p>"You sly dog!" chuckled the governor, "I'm not
+talking of your wine-merchant, and you know I'm not,
+Master Sydie. It's no good playing hide-and-seek with
+me; I can always see through a milestone when Cupid is
+behind it; and there's no need to beat round the bush
+with me, my boy. I never gave my assent to anything
+with greater delight in my life; I've always meant you
+to marry Fay, and&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Marry Fay!" shouted Sydie. "Good Heavens! governor,
+what next?" And the Cantab threw himself
+back and laughed till he cried, and Snowdrop and her
+pups barked furiously in a concert of excited sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir, why?&mdash;why, because&mdash;devil take you,
+Sydie&mdash;I don't know what you are laughing at, do you?"
+cried the General, starting out of his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do, governor; you're laboring under a most
+delicious delusion."</p>
+
+<p>"Delusion!&mdash;eh?&mdash;what? Why, bless my soul, I
+don't think you know what you are saying, Sydie,"
+stormed the General.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes I do; you've an idea&mdash;how you got it into your
+head Heaven knows, but there it is&mdash;you've an idea that
+Fay and I are in love with one another; and I assure you
+you were never more mistaken in your life."</p>
+
+<p>Seeing the General standing bolt upright staring at
+him, and looking decidedly apocleptic, Sydie made the
+matter a little clearer.</p>
+
+<p>"Fay and I would do a good deal to oblige you, my
+beloved governor, if we could get up the steam a little,
+but I'm afraid we really <i>cannot</i>. Love ain't in one's own
+hands, you see, but a skittish mare, that gets her head,
+and takes the bit between her teeth, and bolts off with
+you wherever she likes. Is it possible that two people
+who broke each other's toys, and teased each other's lives
+out, and caught the measles of each other, from their
+cradle upwards, should fall in love with each other when
+they grow up? Besides, I don't intend to marry for the
+next twenty years, if I can help it. I couldn't afford a
+milliner's bill to my tailor's, and I should be ruined for
+life if I merged my bright particular star of a self into a
+respectable, lark-shunning, bill-paying, shabby-hatted,
+family man. Good Heavens, what a train of horrors
+comes with the bare idea!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say, sir, you won't marry your
+cousin?" shouted the General.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless your dear old heart, <i>no</i>, governor&mdash;ten times
+over, <i>no</i>! I wouldn't marry anybody, not for half the
+universe."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I've done with you, sir&mdash;I wash my hands of
+you!" shouted the General, tearing up and down the
+room in a quick march, more beneficial to his feelings
+than his carpet. "You are an ungrateful, unprincipled,
+shameless young man, and are no more worthy of the
+affection and the interest I've been fool enough to waste
+on you than a tom-cat. You're an abominably selfish,
+ungrateful, unnatural boy; and though you <i>are</i> poor
+Phil's son, I will tell you my mind, sir; and I must say
+I think your conduct with your cousin, making love to
+her&mdash;desperate love to her&mdash;winning her affections, poor
+unhappy child, and then making a jest of her and treating
+it with a laugh, is disgraceful, sir&mdash;<i>disgraceful</i>, do you
+hear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I hear, General," cried Sydie, convulsed with
+laughter; "but Fay cares no more for me than for those
+geraniums. We are fond of one another, in a cool,
+cousinly sort of way, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue!" stormed the General. "Don't
+dare to say another word to me about it. You know well
+enough that it has been the one delight of my life, and
+if you'd had any respect or right feeling in you, you'd
+marry her to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"She wouldn't be a party to that. Few women <i>are</i>
+blind to my manifold attractions; but Fay's one of 'em.
+Look here, governor," said Sydie, laying his hand affectionately
+on the General's shoulder, "did it never occur
+to you that though the pretty castle's knocked down,
+there may be much nicer bricks left to build a new one?
+Can't you see that Fay doesn't care two buttons about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+me, but cares a good many diamond studs about somebody
+else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing has occurred to me but that you and she are
+two heartless, selfish, ungrateful chits. Hold your tongue,
+sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"But, General&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, sir; don't talk to me, I tell you.
+In love with somebody else? I should like to see him
+show his face here. Somebody she's talked to for five
+minutes at a race-ball, and proposed to her in a corner,
+thinking to get some of my money. Some swindler, or
+Italian refugee, or blackleg, I'll be bound&mdash;taken her in,
+made her think him an angel, and will persuade her to
+run away with him. I'll set the police round the house&mdash;I'll
+send her to school in Paris. What fools men are
+to have anything to do with women at all! You seem in
+their confidence; who's the fellow?"</p>
+
+<p>"A man very like a swindler or a blackleg&mdash;Keane!"</p>
+
+<p>"Keane!" shouted the General, pausing in the middle
+of his frantic march.</p>
+
+<p>"Keane," responded Sydie.</p>
+
+<p>"Keane!" shouted the General again. "God bless my
+soul, she might as well have fallen in love with the man
+in the moon. Why couldn't she like the person I'd
+chosen for her?"</p>
+
+<p>"If one can't guide the mare one's self, 'tisn't likely the
+governors can for one," muttered Sydie.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor dear child! fallen in love with a man who don't
+care a button for her, eh? Humph!&mdash;that's always the
+way with women&mdash;lose the good chances, and fling themselves
+at a man's feet who cares no more for their tom-foolery
+of worship than he cares for the blacking on his
+boots. Devil take young people, what a torment they
+are! The ungrateful little jade, how dare she go and
+smash all my plans like that? and if I ever set my heart
+on anything, I set it on that match. Keane! he'll no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+more love anybody than the stone cherubs on the terrace.
+He's a splendid head, but his heart's every atom as cold
+as granite. Love her? Not a bit of it. When I told
+him you were going to marry her (I thought you would,
+and so you will, too, if you've the slightest particle of
+gratitude or common sense in either of you), he listened
+as quietly and as calmly as if he had been one of the men
+in armor in the hall. Love, indeed! To the devil with
+love, say I! It's the head and root of everything that's
+mischievous and bad."</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a bit, uncle," cried Sydie; "you told him all
+about your previous match-making, eh? And didn't he
+go off like a shot two days after, when we meant him to
+stay on a month longer? Can't you put two and two
+together, my once wide-awake governor? 'Tisn't such a
+difficult operation."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I can't," shouted the General: "I don't know
+anything, I don't see anything, I don't believe in anything,
+I hate everybody and everything, I tell you; and
+I'm a great fool for having ever set my heart on any plan
+that wanted a woman's concurrence&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For if she will she will, you may depend on't,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And if she won't she won't, and there's an end on't."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith the General stuck his wide-awake on
+fiercely, and darted out of the bay-window to cool himself.
+Half way across the lawn, he turned sharp round,
+and came back again.</p>
+
+<p>"Sydie, do you fancy Keane cares a straw for that
+child?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't say. It's possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph! Well, can't you go and see? That's come
+of those mathematical lessons. What a fool I was to
+allow her to be so much with him!" growled the General,
+with many grunts and half-audible oaths, swinging round<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+again, and trotting through the window as hot and peppery
+as his own idolized curry.</p>
+
+<p>Keane was sitting writing in his rooms at King's some
+few days after. The backs looked dismal with their
+leafless, sepia-colored trees; the streets were full of sloppy
+mud and dripping under-grads' umbrellas; his own room
+looked sombre and dark, without any sunshine on its
+heavy oak bookcases, and massive library-table, and dark
+bronzes. His pen moved quickly, his head was bent over
+the paper, his mouth sternly set, and his forehead paler
+and more severe than ever. The gloom in his chambers
+had gathered round him himself, when his door was burst
+open, and Sydie dashed in and threw himself down in a
+green leather arm-chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, here am I back again. Just met the V. P.
+in the quad, and he was so enchanted at seeing me, that
+he kissed me on both cheeks, flung off his gown, tossed
+up his cap, and performed a <i>pas d'extase</i> on the spot.
+Isn't it delightful to be so beloved? Granta looks very
+delicious to-day, I must say&mdash;about as refreshing and
+lively as an acidulated spinster going district-visiting in
+a snow-storm. And how are you, most noble lord?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty well."</p>
+
+<p>"Only that? Thought you were all muscle and iron.
+I say. What <i>do</i> you think the governor has been saying
+to me?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell! No, I should not have guessed it if I'd tried
+for a hundred years! By George! nothing less than that
+I should marry Fay. What do you think of that, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>Keane traced Greek unconsciously on the margin of
+his <i>Times</i>. For the life of him, with all his self-command,
+he could not have answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Marry Fay! <i>I!</i>" shouted Sydie. "Ye gods, what
+an idea! I never was so astonished in all my days.
+Marry Little Fay!&mdash;the governor must be mad, you
+know."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You will not marry your cousin?" asked Keane, tranquilly,
+though the rapid glance and involuntary start did
+not escape Sydie's quick eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Marry! I! By George, no! She wouldn't have me,
+and I'm sure I wouldn't have her. She is a dear little
+monkey, and I'm very fond of her, but I wouldn't put
+the halter round my neck for any woman going. I don't
+like vexing the General, but it would be really too great
+a sacrifice merely to oblige him."</p>
+
+<p>"She cares nothing for you, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing? Well, I don't know. Yes, in a measure,
+she does. If I should be taken home on a hurdle one
+fine morning, she'd shed some cousinly tears over my
+inanimate body; but as for <i>the other thing</i>, not one bit of
+it. 'Tisn't likely. We're a great deal too like one
+another, too full of devilry and carelessness, to assimilate.
+Isn't it the delicious contrast and fiz of the sparkling
+acid of divine lemons with the contrariety of the fiery
+spirit of beloved rum that makes the delectable union
+known and worshipped in our symposia under the blissful
+name of <span class="smcap">PUNCH</span>? Marry Little Fay! By Jove, if all
+the governor's match-making was founded on no better
+reasons for success, it is a small marvel that he's a
+bachelor now! By George, it's time for hall!"</p>
+
+<p>And the Cantab took himself off, congratulating himself
+on the adroit manner in which he had cut the Gordian
+knot that the General had muddled up so inexplicably
+in his unpropitious match-making.</p>
+
+<p>Keane lay back in his chair some minutes, very still;
+then he rose to dine in hall, pushing away his books and
+papers, as if throwing aside with them a dull and heavy
+weight. The robins sang in the leafless backs, the sun
+shone out on the sloppy streets; the youth he thought
+gone for ever was come back to him. Oh, strange stale
+story of Hercules and Omphale, old as the hills, and as
+eternal! Hercules goes on in his strength slaying his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+hydra and his Laomedon for many years, but he comes
+at last, whether he like it or not, to his Omphale, at
+whose feet he is content to sit and spin long golden
+threads of pleasure and of passion, while his lion's skin
+is motheaten and his club rots away.</p>
+
+<p>Little Fay sat curled up on the study hearth-rug, reading
+a book her late guest had left behind him&mdash;a very
+light and entertaining volume, being Delolme "On the
+Constitution," but which she preferred, I suppose, to
+"What Will He Do With It?" or the "Feuilles d'Automne,"
+for the sake of that clear autograph, "Gerald
+Keane, King's Coll.," on its fly-leaf. A pretty picture
+she made, with her handsome spaniels; and she was so
+intent on what she was reading&mdash;the fly-leaf, by the
+way&mdash;that she never heard the opening of the door, till
+a hand drew away her book. Then Fay started up,
+oversetting the puppies one over another, radiant and
+breathless.</p>
+
+<p>Keane took her hands and drew her near him.</p>
+
+<p>"You do not hate me now, then?"</p>
+
+<p>Fay put her head on one side with her old wilfulness.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do&mdash;when you go away without any notice,
+and hardly bid me good-bye. You would not have left
+one of your men pupils so unceremoniously."</p>
+
+<p>Keane smiled involuntarily, and drew her closer.</p>
+
+<p>"If you do not hate me, will you go a step farther&mdash;and
+love me? Little Fay, my own darling, will you
+come and brighten my life? It has been a saddened and
+a stern one, but it shall never throw a shade on yours."</p>
+
+<p>The wild little filly was conquered&mdash;at last, she came
+to hand docile and subdued, and acknowledged her
+master. She loved him, and told him so with that frankness
+and fondness which would have covered faults far
+more glaring and weighty than Little Fay's.</p>
+
+<p>"But you must never be afraid of me," whispered
+Keane, some time after.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!"</p>
+
+<p>"And you do not wish Sydie had never brought me
+here to make you all uncomfortable?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, please don't!" cried Fay, plaintively. "I was a
+child then, and I did not know what I said."</p>
+
+<p>"'Then,' being three months ago, may I ask what you
+are now?"</p>
+
+<p>"A child still in knowledge, but <i>your</i> child," whispered
+Fay, lifting her face to his, "to be petted and spoiled,
+and never found fault with, remember!"</p>
+
+<p>"My little darling, who would have the heart to find
+fault with you, whatever your sins?"</p>
+
+<p>"God bless my soul, what's this?" cried a voice in the
+doorway.</p>
+
+<p>There stood the General in wide-awake and shooting-coat,
+with a spade in one hand and a watering-pot in the
+other, too astonished to keep his amazement to himself.
+Fay would fain have turned and fled, but Keane smiled,
+kept one arm round her, and stretched out his hand to
+the governor.</p>
+
+<p>"General, I came once uninvited, and I am come again.
+Will you forgive me? I have a great deal to say to you,
+but I must ask you one question first of all. Will you
+give me your treasure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Eh! humph! What? Well&mdash;I suppose&mdash;yes,"
+ejaculated the General, breathless from the combined
+effects of amazement and excessive and vehement gardening.
+"But, bless my soul, Keane, I should as soon have
+thought of one of the stone cherubs, or that bronze
+Milton. Never mind, one lives and learns. Mind?
+Devil take me, what am I talking about? I don't mind
+at all; I'm very happy, only I'd set my heart on&mdash;you
+know what. More fool I. Fay, you little imp, come here.
+Are you fairly broken in by Keane, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Miss Fay, with her old mischief, but a new
+blush, "as he has promised never to use the curb."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"God bless you, then, my little pet," cried the General,
+kissing her some fifty times. Then he laughed till he
+cried, and dried his eyes and laughed again, and grunted,
+and growled, and shook both Keane's hands vehemently.
+"I was a great fool, sir, and I dare say you've managed
+much better. I <i>did</i> set my heart on the boy, you know,
+but it can't be helped now, and I don't wish it should.
+Be kind to her, that's all; for though she mayn't bear
+the curb, the whip from anybody she cares about would
+break her heart. She's a dear child, Keane&mdash;a very
+dear child. Be kind to her, that's all."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>On the evening of January 13th, beginning the Lent
+Term, Mr. Sydenham Morton sat in his own rooms with
+half a dozen spirits like himself, a delicious aroma surrounding
+them of Maryland and rum-punch, and a rapid
+flow of talk making its way through the dense atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>"To think of Granite Keane being caught!" shouted
+one young fellow. "I should as soon have thought of
+the Pyramids walking over to the Sphinx, and marrying
+her."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor devil! I pity him," sneered Henley of Trinity,
+aged nineteen.</p>
+
+<p>"He don't require much pity, my dear fellow; I think
+he's pretty comfortable," rejoined Sydie. "He did, to be
+sure, when he was trying to beat sense into your brain-box,
+but that's over for the present."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, tell us about the wedding," said Somerset of
+King's. "I was sorry I couldn't go down."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," began Sydie, stretching his legs and putting
+down his pipe, "she&mdash;<i>the</i> she was dressed in white tulle
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Bother the dress. Go ahead!"</p>
+
+<p>"The dress was no bother, it was the one subject in
+life to the women. You must listen to the dress, because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+I asked the prettiest girl there for the description of it to
+enlighten your minds, and it was harder to learn than six
+books of Horace. The bridesmaids wore tarlatane à la
+Princesse Stéphanie, trois jupes bouillonnées, jupe desous
+de soie glacée, guirlandes couleur dea yeux impériaux
+d'Eugénie, corsets décolletés garnis de ruches de ruban
+du&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake, hold your tongue!" cried Somerset.
+"That jargon's worse than the Yahoos'. The dead
+languages are bad enough to learn, but women's living
+language of fashion is ten hundred times worse. The
+twelve girls were dressed in blue and white, and thought
+themselves angels&mdash;we understand. Cut along."</p>
+
+<p>"Gunter was prime," continued Sydie, "and the governor
+was prime, too&mdash;splendid old buck; only when he
+gave her away he was very near saying, 'Devil take it!'
+which might have had a novel, but hardly a solemn,
+effect. Little Fay was delightful&mdash;for all the world like
+a bit of incarnated sunshine. Keane was granite all
+over, except his eyes, and they were lava; if we hadn't,
+for our own preservation, let him put her in a carriage
+and started 'em off, he might have become dangerous,
+after the manner of Etna, ice outside and red-hot coals
+within. The bridesmaids tears must have washed the
+church for a week, and made it rather a damp affair.
+One would scarcely think women were so anxious to
+marry, to judge from the amount of grief they get up at
+a friend's sacrifice. It looks uncommonly like envy;
+but it <i>isn't</i>, we're sure! The ball was like most other
+balls: alternate waltzing and flirtation, a vast lot of nonsense
+talked, and a vast lot of champagne drunk&mdash;Cupid
+running about in every direction, and a tremendous run
+on all the amatory poets&mdash;Browning and Tennyson
+being worked as hard as cab-horses, and used up pretty
+much as those quadrupeds&mdash;dandies suffering self-inflicted
+torture from tight boots, and saying, like Cranmer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+when he held his hand in the fire, that it was rather
+agreeable than otherwise, considering it drew admiration&mdash;spurs
+getting entangled in ladies' dresses, and ladies
+making use thereof for a display of amiability, which the
+dragoons are very much mistaken if they fancied continued
+into private life&mdash;girls believing all the pretty
+things said to them&mdash;men going home and laughing at
+them all&mdash;wallflowers very black, women engaged ten
+deep very sunshiny&mdash;the governor very glorious, and
+my noble self very fascinating. And now," said Sydie,
+taking up his pipe, "pass the punch, old boy, and never
+say I can't talk!"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc303.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc304a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_STORY_OF_A_CRAYON-HEAD" id="THE_STORY_OF_A_CRAYON-HEAD"></a>THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>A DOUBLED-DOWN LEAF IN A MAN'S LIFE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was dining with a friend, in his house on the
+Lung' Arno (he fills, never mind what, post
+in the British Legation), where I was passing
+an autumn month. The night was oppressively hot; a
+still, sultry sky brooded over the city, and the stars shining
+out from a purple mist on to the Campanile near, and
+the slopes of Bellosguardo in the distance. It was intensely
+hot; not all the iced wines on his table could
+remove the oppressive warmth of the evening air, which
+made both him and me think of evenings we had spent
+together in the voluptuous lassitude of the East, in days
+gone by, when we had travelled there, fresh to life, to
+new impressions, to all that gives "greenness to the grass,
+and glory to the flower."</p>
+
+<p>The Arno ran on under its bridge, and we leaned out
+of the balcony where we were sitting and smoking, while
+I tossed over, without thinking much of what I was doing,
+a portfolio of his sketches. Position has lost for art many
+good artists since Sir George Beaumont: my friend is
+one of them; his sketches are masterly; and had he been
+a vagrant Bohemian instead of an English peer, there
+might have been pictures on the walls of the R. A. to
+console one for the meretricious daubs and pet vulgarities
+of nursery episodes, hideous babies, and third-class carriage
+interiors, which make one's accustomed annual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+visit to the rooms that once saw the beauties of Reynolds,
+and Wilson, and Lawrence, a positive martyrdom to anybody
+of decent refinement and educated taste. The portfolio
+stood near me, and I took out a sketch or two now
+and then between the pauses of our conversation, looking
+lazily up the river, while the moonlight shone on Dante's
+city, that so long forgot, and has, so late, remembered
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! what a pretty face this is! Who's the original?"
+I asked him, drawing out a female head, done
+with great finish in pastel, under which was written, in
+his own hand, "Florelle." It was a face of great beauty,
+with a low Greek brow and bronze-dark hair, and those
+large, soft, liquid eyes that you only see in a Southern,
+and that looked at you from the sketch with an earnest,
+wistful regard, half childlike, half impassioned. He
+looked up, glanced at the sketch, and stretched out his
+hand hastily, but I held it away from him. "I want to
+look at it; it is a beautiful head; I wish we had the
+original here now. Who is she?"</p>
+
+<p>As I spoke&mdash;holding the sketch up where the light
+from the room within fell on what I had no doubt was a
+likeness of some fair face that had beguiled his time in
+days gone by, a souvenir of one of his loves more lasting
+than souvenirs of such episodes in one's life often are, if
+merely trusted to that inconstant capricieuse, Memory,&mdash;I
+might have hit him with a bullet rather than asked
+him about a mere etude à deux crayons, for he shuddered,
+and drank off some white Hermitage quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"I had forgotten that was in the portfolio," he said,
+hurriedly, as he took it from me and put it behind him,
+with its face against the wall, as though it had been the
+sketch of a Medusa.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you take it away for? I had not half done
+looking at it. Who is the original?"</p>
+
+<p>"One I don't care to mention."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Because?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because the sight of that picture gives me a twinge
+of what I ought to be hardened against&mdash;regret."</p>
+
+<p>"Regret! Is any woman worth that?"</p>
+
+<p>"She was."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe it; and I fancied you and I thought
+alike on such points. Of all the women for whom we
+feel twinges of conscience or self-reproach in melancholy
+moments, how many <i>loved us</i>? Moralists and poets sentimentalize
+over it, and make it a stalking-horse whereby
+to magnify our sins and consign us more utterly to perdition,
+while they do for themselves a little bit of poetic
+morality cheaply; but in reality there are uncommonly
+few women who can love, to begin with, and in the
+second, vanity, avarice, jealousy, desires for pretty toilettes,
+one or other, or all combined, have quite as much
+to do with their 'sacrifice' for us as anything."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite true; but&mdash;there are women and women, perhaps,
+and it was not of that sort of regret that I spoke."</p>
+
+<p>"Of what sort, then?"</p>
+
+<p>He made me no reply: he broke the ash off his Manilla,
+and smoked silently some moments, leaning over the
+balcony and watching the monotonous flow of the Arno,
+with deeper gloom on his face than I remembered to have
+seen there any time before. I was sorry I had chanced to
+light upon a sketch that had brought him back such
+painful recollections of whatever kind they might be,
+and I smoked too, sending the perfumed tobacco out into
+the still sultry night that was brooding over Florence.</p>
+
+<p>"Of what sort?" said he, abruptly, after some minutes'
+pause. "Shall I tell you? Then you can tell <i>me</i> whether
+I was a fool who made one grand mistake, or a sensible
+man of the world who kept himself from a grand folly.
+I have been often in doubt myself."</p>
+
+<p>He leaned back, his face in shadow, so that I could not
+see it, while the Arno's ebb and flow was making mournful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+river-music under our windows,&mdash;while the purple
+glories of the summer night deepened round Giotto's
+Tower, where, in centuries past, the Immortal of Florence
+had sat dreaming of the Paradiso, the mortals passing by
+whispering him as "the man who had seen hell," and the
+light within the room shone on the olives and grapes, the
+cut-glass and silver claret-jugs, the crimson Montepulciano
+and the white Hermitage, on the table, as he told
+me the story of the head in crayons.</p>
+
+<p>"Two years ago I went into the south of France. I
+was chargé d'Affaires at &mdash;&mdash; then, you remember, and
+the climate had told upon me. I was not over-well, and
+somebody recommended me the waters of Eaux Bonnes.
+The waters I put little faith in, but in the air of the
+Pyrenees, in the change from diplomacy to a life <i>en rase
+campagne</i>, I put much, and I went to Eaux Bonnes
+accordingly, for July and August, with a vow to forswear
+any society I might find at the baths&mdash;I had had only
+too much of society as it was&mdash;and to spend my days in
+the mountains with my sketching-block and my gun.
+But I did not like Eaux Bonnes; it was intensely warm.
+There were several people who knew me really; no end
+of others who got hold of my name, and wanted me to
+join their riding-parties, and balls, and picnics. That
+was not what I wanted, so I left the place and went on to
+Luz, hoping to find solitude there. That valley of Luz&mdash;you
+know it?&mdash;is it not as lovely as any artist's dream of
+Arcadia, in the evening, when the sunset light has passed
+off the meadows and corn-lands of the lower valley, and
+just lingers golden and rosy on the crests of the mountains,
+while the glow-worms are coming out among the
+grasses, and the lights are being lit in the little homesteads
+nestling among their orchards one above another
+on the hill-sides, and its hundred streams are rushing
+down the mountains and under the trees, foaming, and
+tumbling, and rejoicing on their way! When I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+had my fill of ambition and of pleasure, I shall go and
+live at Luz, I think.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>When!</i> Well! you are quite right to repeat it ironically;
+that time will never come, I dare say, and why
+should it? I am not the stuff to cogitate away my years
+in country solitudes. If prizes are worth winning, they
+are worth working for till one's death; a man should
+never give up the field while he has life left in him.
+Well! I went to Luz, and spent a pleasant week or so
+there, knocking over a few chamois or izards, or sketching
+on the sides of the Pic du Midi, or Tourmalet, but
+chiefly lying about under the great beech-trees in the
+shade, listening to the tinkle of the sheep-bells, like an
+idle fellow, as I meant to be for the time I had allotted
+myself. One day&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped and blew some whiffs from his Manilla into
+the air. He seemed to linger over the prelude to his
+story, and shrink from going on with the story itself, I
+thought; and he smothered a sigh as he raised himself.</p>
+
+<p>"How warm the night is; we shall have a tempest.
+Reach me that wine, there's a good fellow. No, not the
+Amontillado, the Château Margaux, please; one can't
+drink hot dry wines such a night as this. But to satisfy
+your curiosity about this crayon study.&mdash;One day I
+thought I would go to Gavarnie. I had heard a good
+deal, of course, about the great marble wall, and the
+mighty waterfalls, the rocks of Marboré, and the Brêche
+de Roland, but, as it chanced, I had never been up to the
+Cercle, nor, indeed, in that part of the Midi at all, so I
+went. The gods favored me, I remember; there were no
+mists, the sun was brilliant, and the great amphitheatre
+was for once unobscured; the white marble flashing brown
+and purple, rose and golden, in the light; the cascades
+tumbling and leaping down into the gigantic basin; the
+vast plains of snow glittering in the sunshine; the twin
+rocks standing in the clear air, straight and fluted as any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+two Corinthian columns hewn and chiselled by man.
+Good Heaven! before a scene like Gavarnie, what true
+artist must not fling away his colors and his brushes in
+despair and disgust with his own puerility and impotence?
+What can be transferred to canvas of such a
+scene as that? What does the best beauty of Claude, the
+grandest sublimity of Salvator, the greatest power of
+Poussin, look beside Nature when she reigns as she reigns
+at Gavarnie? I am an art worshipper, as you know: but
+there are times in my life, places on earth, that make me
+ready to renounce art for ever!</p>
+
+<p>"The day was beautiful, and thinking I knew the
+country pretty well, I took no guides. I hate them when
+I can possibly dispense with them. But the mist soon
+swooped down over the Cercle, and I began to wish I had
+had one when I turned my horse's head back again. You
+know the route, of course? Through the Chaos&mdash;Heaven
+knows it is deserving of its name;&mdash;down the break-neck
+little bridle-path, along the Gave, and over the Scia
+bridge to St. Sauveur. You know it? Then you know
+that it is much easier to break your neck down it than to
+find your way by it, though by some hazard I did not
+break my neck, nor the animal's knees either, but managed
+to get over the bridge without falling into the torrent,
+and to pick my way safely down into more level
+ground; once there, I thought I should easily enough find
+my way to St. Sauveur, but I was mistaken: the mists
+had spread over the valley, a heavy storm had come up,
+and, somehow or other, I lost the way, and could not tell
+where I was, whether St. Sauveur was to the left or the
+right, behind me or in front of me. The horse, a miserable
+little Pyrenean beast, was too frightened by the lightning
+to take the matter into his hands as he had done on
+the road through the Chaos, and I saw nothing for it but
+to surrender and come to grief in any way the elements
+best pleased; swearing at myself for not having stayed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+at the inn at Gavarnie or Gedre; wishing myself at the
+vilest mountain auberge that ever sheltered men and
+mules pêle-mêle; and calling myself hard names for not
+having listened to my landlady's dissuasions of that morning
+as I left her door, from my project of going to
+Gavarnie without a guide, which seemed to her the acme
+of all she had ever known or heard of English strangers'
+fooleries. The storm only increased, the great black
+rocks echoing the roll of the thunder, and the Gave lashing
+itself into fury in its narrow bed; happily I was on
+decently level ground, and the horse being, I suppose,
+tolerably used to storms like it, I pushed him on at last,
+by dint of blows and conjurations combined, to where, in
+the flashes of the lightning, I saw what looked to me like
+the outline of a homestead: it stood in a cleft between
+two shelving sides of rock, and a narrow bridle-path led
+up to it, through high yews and a tangled wilderness of
+rhododendrons, boxwood, and birch&mdash;one of those green
+slopes so common in the Pyrenees, that look in full sunlight
+doubly bright and Arcadian-like, from the contrast
+of the dark, bare, perpendicular rocks that shut them in.
+I could see but little of its beauty then in the fog that
+shrouded both it and me, but I saw the shape and semblance
+of a house, and urging the horse up the ascent,
+thundered on its gate-panels with my whip-handle till the
+rocks round echoed.</p>
+
+<p>"There was no answer, and I knocked a little louder,
+if possible, than before. I was wet to the skin with that
+wretched storm, and swore not mildly at the inhospitable
+roof that would not admit me under it. I knocked again,
+inclined to pick up a piece of granite and beat the panel
+in; and at last a face&mdash;an old woman's weather-beaten
+face, but with black southern eyes that had lost little of
+their fire with age&mdash;looked through a grating at me and
+asked me what I wanted.</p>
+
+<p>"'I want shelter if you can give it me,' I answered her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+'I have lost my way coming from Gavarnie, and am
+drenched through. I will pay you liberally if you will
+give me an asylum till the weather clears.'</p>
+
+<p>"Her eyes blazed like coals through the little grille.</p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu, we take no money here&mdash;have you mistaken
+it for an inn? Come in if you want shelter, in Heaven's
+name! The Holy Virgin forbid we should refuse refuge
+to any!'</p>
+
+<p>"And she crossed herself and uttered some conjurations
+to Mary to protect them from all wolves in sheep's clothing,
+and guard their dwelling from all harm, by which I suppose
+she thought I spoke fairly and looked harmless, but
+might possibly be a thief or an assassin, or both in one.
+She unlocked the gate, and calling to a boy to take my
+horse into a shed, admitted me under a covered passageway
+into the house, which looked like part, and a very
+ruined part, too, of what had probably been, in the times
+of Henri-Quatre and his grandfather, a feudal chateâu
+fenced in by natural ramparts from the rocks that surrounded
+it, shutting in the green slope on which it stood,
+with only one egress, the path through which I had
+ascended, into the level plain below. She marshalled me
+through this covered way into an interior passage, dark
+and vaulted, cheerless enough, and opened a low oak door,
+ushering me into a chamber, bare, gloomy, yet with something
+of lost grandeur and past state lingering about its
+great hearth, its massive walls, its stained windows, and
+its ragged tapestry hangings. The woman went up to one
+of the windows and spoke with a gentleness to which I
+should have never thought her voice could have been
+attuned with its harsh patois.</p>
+
+<p>"'Mon enfant, v'là un m'sieu étranger qui vient chercher
+un abri pour un petit peu. Veux-tu lui parler?'</p>
+
+<p>"The young girl she spoke to turned, rose, and, coming
+forward, bade me welcome with the grace, simplicity, and
+the na&iuml;ve freedom from embarrassment of a child, looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+up in my face with her soft clear eyes. She was like&mdash;&mdash;No
+matter! you have seen that crayon-head, it is but a
+portrayal of a face whose expression Raphael and Sassoferrato
+themselves would have failed to render in its
+earnest, innocent, elevated regard. She was very young&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Standing with reluctant feet</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where the brook and river meet&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Womanhood and childhood fleet.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Good Heavens, I am quoting poetry! what will you think
+of me, to have gone back to the Wertherian and Tennysonian
+days so far as to repeat a triplet of Longfellow's?
+No man quotes <i>those</i> poets after his salad days, except in
+a moment of weakness. Caramba! why <i>has</i> one any
+weaknesses at all? we ought not to have any; we live in
+an atmosphere that would kill them all if they were not
+as obstinate and indestructible as all other weeds whose
+seeds will linger and peer up and spoil the ground, let one
+root them out ever so! I owed you an apology for that
+lapse into Longfellow, and I have made it. Am I to go
+on with this story?"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed as he spoke, and his laugh was by no
+means heartfelt. I told him to go on, and he lighted
+another Manilla and obeyed me, while the Arno murmured
+on its way, and the dusky, sultry clouds brooded
+nearer the earth, and the lights were lit in the distant
+windows of the palace of the Marchese Acqua d'Oro, that
+fairest of Florentines, who rouges so indiscriminately and
+flirts her fan so inimitably, to one of whose balls we were
+going that night.</p>
+
+<p>He settled himself back in his chair, with his face
+darkened again by the shadow cast on it from the pillar
+of the balcony; and took his cigar out of his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"She looked incongruous in that bare and gloomy
+room, out of place with it, and out of keeping with the
+old woman&mdash;a French peasant-woman, weather-beaten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+and bronzed, such as you see any day by the score riding
+to market or sitting knitting at their cottage-doors. It
+was impossible that the girl could be either daughter or
+grand-daughter, or any relation at all to her. In that
+room she looked more as one of these myrtles might do,
+set down in the stifling gloomy horrors of a London street
+than anything else, save that in certain traces about the
+chamber, as I told you, there were relics of a faded
+grandeur which harmonized better with her. I can see
+her now, as she stood there with a strange foreign grace,
+an indescribable patrician delicacy mingled with extreme
+youthfulness and na&iuml;veté, like an old picture in costume,
+like one of Raphael's child-angels in face&mdash;poor little
+Florelle!</p>
+
+<p>"'You would stay till the storm is over, monsieur?
+you are welcome to shelter if you will,' she said, coming
+forward to me timidly yet frankly. 'Cazot tells me you
+are a stranger, and our mountain storms are dangerous
+if you have no guide.'</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know who Cazot was, but I presumed her
+to be the old woman, who seemed to be portress, mistress,
+domestic, cameriste, and all else in her single person, but
+I thanked her for her permitted shelter, and accepted her
+invitation to remain till the weather had cleared, as you
+can imagine. When you have lost your way, any asylum
+is grateful, however desolate and tumble-down. They
+made me welcome, she and the old peasant-woman, with
+that simple, unstrained, and unostentatious hospitality
+which is, after all, the true essence of good breeding, and
+of which your parvenu knows nothing, when he keeps
+you waiting, and shows you that you are come at an
+inapropos moment, in his fussy fear lest everything
+should not be <i>comme il faut</i> to do due credit to <i>him</i>. Old
+Cazot set before me some simple refreshment, a <i>grillade
+de châtaignes</i>, some maize and milk, and a dish of trout
+just caught in the Gave below, while I looked at my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+châtelaine, marvelling how that young and delicate creature
+could come to be shut up with an old peasant on a
+remote hill-side. I did my best to draw her out and learn
+her history; she was shy at first of a complete stranger,
+as was but natural, but I spoke of Garvarnie, of the
+beauty of the Pyrenees, or Tourmalet, and the Lac Bleu,
+and, warming with enthusiasm for her birthplace, the girl
+forgot that I was a foreign tourist, unknown to her, and
+indebted to her for an hour's shelter, and before my impromptu
+supper was over I had drawn from her, by a few
+questions which she was too much of a child and had too
+little to conceal not to answer with a child's ingenuousness,
+the whole of her short history, and the explanation of her
+anomalous position. Her name was Florelle de l'Heris,
+a name once powerful enough among the nobles of the
+Midi, and the old woman, Madame Cazot, was her father's
+foster-sister. Of her family, beggared in common with
+the best aristocracy of France, none were now left; they
+had dwindled and fallen away, till of the once great
+house of L'Heris this child remained alone its representative:
+her mother had died in her infancy, and her father,
+either too idle or too broken-hearted to care to retrieve
+his fortunes, lived the life of a hermit among these ruins
+where I now found his daughter, educating her himself
+till his death, which occurred when she was only twelve
+years old, leaving her to poverty and obscurity, and such
+protection and companionship as her old nurse Cazot
+could afford her. Such was the story Florelle de l'Heris
+told me as I sat there that evening waiting till the clouds
+should clear and the mists roll off enough to let me go to
+St. Sauveur&mdash;a story told simply and pathetically, and
+which Cazot, sitting knitting in a corner, added to by a
+hundred gesticulations, expletives, appeals to the Virgin,
+and prolix addenda, glad, I dare say, of any new confident,
+and disposed to regard me with gratitude for my
+sincere praises of her fried trout. It was a story which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+seemed to me to suit the delicate beauty of the flower I
+had found in the wilderness, and read more like a chapter
+of some versified novelette, like 'Lucille,' than a <i>bonâ
+fide</i> page out of the book of one's actual life, especially
+in a life like mine, of essentially material pleasures and
+emphatically substantial and palpable ambitions. But
+there <i>are</i> odd stories in real life!&mdash;strange pathetic ones,
+too&mdash;stranger, often, than those that found the plot and
+underplot of a novel or the basis of a poem; but when
+such men as I come across them they startle us, they look
+bizarre and unlike all the other leaves of the book that
+glitter with worldly aphorisms, philosophical maxims, and
+pungent egotisms, and we would fain cut them out; they
+have the ring of that Arcadia whose golden gates shut
+on us when we outgrew boyhood, and in which, <i>en
+revanche</i>, we have sworn ever since to disbelieve&mdash;keeping
+our word sometimes, perhaps to our own hindrance&mdash;Heaven
+knows!</p>
+
+<p>"I stayed as long as I could that evening, till the weather
+had cleared up so long, and the sun was shining again so
+indisputably, that I had no longer any excuse to linger
+in the dark-tapestried room, with the chestnuts sputtering
+among the wood-ashes, and Madame Cazot's needles clicking
+one continual refrain, and the soft gazelle eyes of my
+young châtelaine glancing from my sketches to me with
+that mixture of shyness and fearlessness, innocence and
+candor, which gave so great a charm to her manner. She
+was a new study to me, both for my palette and my mind&mdash;a
+pretty fresh toy to amuse me while I should stay in
+the Midi. I was not going to leave without making sure
+of a permission to return. I wanted to have that face
+among my pastels, and when I had thanked her for her
+shelter and her welcome, I told her my name, and asked
+her leave to come again where I had been so kindly received.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come again, monsieur? Certainly, if you care to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+come. But you will find it a long way from Luz, I fear,'
+she said, na&iuml;vely, looking up at me with her large clear
+fawn-like eyes&mdash;eyes so cloudless and untroubled <i>then</i>&mdash;as
+she let me take her hand, and bade me adieu et bonsoir.</p>
+
+<p>"I reassured her on that score, you can fancy, and left
+her standing in the deep-embrasured window, a great stag-hound
+at her feet, and the setting sun, all the brighter for
+its past eclipse, bathing her in light. I can always see
+her in memory as I saw her then, poor child!&mdash;&mdash;Faugh!
+How hot the night is! Can't we get more air anyhow?</p>
+
+<p>"'If you come again up here, m'sieu, you will be the
+first visitor the Nid de l'Aigle has seen for four years,'
+said old Cazot, as she showed me out through the dusky-vaulted
+passage. She was a cheerful, garrulous old
+woman, strong in her devotion to the De l'Heris of the
+bygone past; stronger even yet in her love for their single
+orphan representative of the beggared present. 'Visitors!
+Is it likely we should have any, m'sieu? Those that would
+suit me would be bad company for Ma'amselle Florelle,
+and those that should seek her never do. I recollect the
+time, m'sieu, when the highest in all the departments were
+glad to come to the bidding of a De l'Heris; but generations
+have gone since then, and lands and gold gone too,
+and, if you cannot feast them, what care people for you?
+That is true in the Pyrenees, m'sieu, as well as in the rest
+of the world. I have not lived eighty years without finding
+out that. If my child yonder were the heiress of the
+De l'Heris, there would be plenty to court and seek her;
+but she lives in these poor broken-down ruins with me, an
+old peasant woman, to care for her as best I can, and not
+a soul takes heed of her save the holy women at the convent,
+where, maybe, she will seek refuge at last!'</p>
+
+<p>"She let me out at the gate where I had thundered for
+admittance two hours before, and, giving her my thanks
+for her hospitality&mdash;money she would not take&mdash;I wished
+her good day, and rode down the bridle-path to St. Sauveur,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+and onwards to Luz, thinking at intervals of that fair
+young life that had just sprung up, and was already destined
+to wither away its bloom in a convent. Any destiny
+would be better to proffer to her than that. She interested
+me already by her childlike loveliness and her strange
+solitude of position, and I thought she would while away
+some of the long summer hours during my stay in the
+Midi when I was tired of chamois and palette, and my
+lazy dolce under the beech-wood shades. At any rate,
+she was newer and more charming than the belles of Eaux
+Bonnes.</p>
+
+<p>"The next morning I remembered her permission and
+my promise, and I rode out through the town again, up
+the mountain-road, to the Nid de l'Aigle; glad of anything
+that gave me an amusement and a pursuit. I never
+wholly appreciate the far niente, I think; perhaps I have
+lived too entirely in the world&mdash;and a world ultra-cold
+and courtly, too&mdash;to retain much patience for the meditative
+life, the life of trees and woods, sermons in stones,
+and monologues in mountains. I am a restless, ambitious
+man; I must have a <i>pursuit</i>, be it of a great
+aim or a small, or I grow weary, and my time hangs
+heavily on hand. Already having found Florelle de
+l'Heris among these hills reconciled me more to my <i>pro
+tempo</i> banishment from society, excitement, and pleasure,
+and I thanked my good fortune for having lighted upon
+her. She was very lovely, and I always care more for
+the physical than the intellectual charms of any woman.
+I do not share some men's visionary requirements on their
+mental score; I ask but material beauty, and am content
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>"I rode up to the Nid de l'Aigle: by a clearer light it
+stood on a spot of great picturesqueness, and before the
+fury of the revolutionary peasantry had destroyed what
+was the then habitable and stately château, must have
+been a place of considerable extent and beauty, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+the feudal times, fenced in by the natural ramparts of its
+shelving rocks, no doubt all but impregnable. There
+were but a few ruins now that held together and had a
+roof over them&mdash;the part where Madame Cazot and the
+last of the De l'Heris lived; it was perfectly solitary;
+there was nothing to be heard round it but the foaming
+of the river, the music of the sheep-bells from the flocks
+that fed in the clefts and on the slopes of grass-land, and
+the shout of some shepherd-boy from the path below; but
+it was as beautiful a spot as any in the Pyrenees, with its
+overhanging beech-woods, its wilderness of wild-flowers,
+its rocks covered with that soft gray moss whose tint defies
+one to repeat it in oil or water colors, and its larches and
+beeches drooping over into the waters of the Gave. In
+such a home, with no companions save her father, old
+Cazot, and her great stag-hound, and, occasionally, the
+quiet recluses of St. Marie Purificatrice, with everything
+to feed her native poetry and susceptibility, and nothing
+to teach her anything of the actual and ordinary world,
+it were inevitable that the character of Florelle should
+take its coloring from the scenes around her, and that she
+should grow up singularly childlike, imaginative, and
+innocent of all that in any other life she would unavoidably
+have known. Well educated she was, through her
+father and the nuns, but it was a semi-religious and peculiar
+education, of which the chief literature had been the
+legendary and sacred poetry of France and Spain, the
+chief amusement copying the illuminated missals lent her
+by the nuns, or joining in the choral services of the convent;
+an education that taught her nothing of the world
+from which she was shut out, and encouraged all that was
+self-devoted, visionary, and fervid in her nature, leaving
+her at seventeen as unconscious of evil as the youngest
+child. I despair of making you imagine what Florelle
+then was. Had I never met her, I should have believed
+in her as little as yourself, and would have discredited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+the existence of so poetic a creation out of the world of
+fiction; her ethereal delicacy, her sunny gayety when anything
+amused her, her intense sensitiveness, pained in a
+moment by a harsh word, pleased as soon by a kind one,
+her innocence of all the blots and cruelties, artifices and
+evils, of that world beyond her Nid de l'Aigle, made a
+character strangely new to me, and strangely winning,
+but which to you I despair of portraying: I could not
+have <i>imagined</i> it. Had I never seen her, and had I met
+with it in the pages of a novel, I should have put it aside
+as a graceful but impossible conception of romance.</p>
+
+<p>"I went up that day to the Nid de l'Aigle, and Florelle
+received me with pleasure; perhaps Madame Cazot had
+instilled into her some scepticism that 'a grand seigneur,'
+as the woman was pleased to term me, would trouble himself
+to ride up the mountains from Luz merely to repeat
+his thanks for an hour's shelter and a supper of roasted
+chestnuts. She was a simple-minded, good-hearted old
+woman, who had lived all her life among the rocks and
+rivers of the Hautes-Pyrenées, her longest excursion a
+market-day to Luz or Bagnères. She looked on her
+young mistress and charge as a child&mdash;in truth, Florelle
+was but little more&mdash;and thought my visit paid simply
+from gratitude and courtesy, never dreaming of attributing
+it to 'cette beauté héréditaire des L'Heris,' which
+she was proud of boasting was an inalienable heirloom to
+the family.</p>
+
+<p>"I often repeated my visits; so often, that in a week
+or so the old ruined château grew a natural resort in the
+long summer days, and Florelle watched for my coming
+from the deep-arched window where I had seen her first,
+or from under the boughs of the great copper beech that
+grew before the gate, and looked for me as regularly as
+though I were to spend my lifetime in the valley of Luz.
+Poor child! I never told her my title, but I taught her
+to call me by my christian name. It used to sound very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+pretty when she said it, with her long Southern pronunciation&mdash;prettier
+than it ever sounds now from the lips
+of Beatrice Acqua d'Oro yonder, in her softest moments,
+when she plays at sentiment. She had great natural
+talent for art, hitherto uncultivated, of course, save by
+such instructions as one of the women at the convent,
+skilful at illuminating, had occasionally given her. I
+amused myself with teaching her to transfer to paper and
+canvas the scenery she loved so passionately. I spent
+many hours training this talent of hers that was of very
+unusual calibre, and, with due culture, might have ranked
+her with Elisabetta Sirani or Rosa Bonheur. Sitting
+with her in the old room, or under the beech-trees, or by
+the side of the torrents that tore down the rocks into the
+Gave, it pleased me to draw out her unsullied thoughts,
+to spread her mind out before me like a book&mdash;a pure
+book enough, God knows, with not even a stain of the
+world upon it&mdash;to make her eyes glisten and glow and
+dilate, to fill them with tears or laughter at my will, to
+wake up her young life from its unconscious, untroubled,
+childish repose to a new happiness, a new pain, which she
+felt but could not translate, which dawned in her face for
+me, but never spoke in its true language to her, ignorant
+then of its very name&mdash;it amused me. Bah! our amusements
+are cruel sometimes, and costly too!</p>
+
+<p>"It was at that time I took the head in pastels which
+you have seen, and she asked me, in innocent admiration
+of its loveliness, if she was <i>indeed</i> like that?&mdash;This night
+is awfully oppressive. Is there water in that carafe? Is
+it iced? Push it to me. Thank you.</p>
+
+<p>"I was always welcome at the Nid de l'Aigle. Old Cazot,
+with the instinct of servants who have lived with
+people of birth till they are as proud of their master's
+heraldry as though it were their own, discerned that I
+was of the same rank as her adored House of De l'Heris&mdash;if
+indeed she admitted any equal to them&mdash;and with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+all the cheery familiarity of a Frenchwoman treated me
+with punctilious deference, being as thoroughly imbued
+with respect and adoration for the aristocracy as any of
+those who died for the white lilies in the Place de la
+Révolution. And Florelle&mdash;Florelle watched for me,
+and counted her hours by those I spent with her. You
+are sure I had not read and played with women's hearts
+so long&mdash;women, too, with a thousand veils and evasions
+and artifices, of which she was in pure ignorance even of
+the existence&mdash;without having this heart, young, unworn,
+and unoccupied, under my power at once, plastic to mould
+as wax, ready to receive any impressions at my hands,
+and moulded easily to my will. Florelle had read no
+love stories to help her to translate this new life to which
+I awoke her, or to put her on her guard against it. I
+went there often, every day at last, teaching my pupil the
+art which she was only too glad and too eager to learn,
+stirring her vivid imagination with descriptions of that
+brilliant outside world, of whose pleasures, gayeties and
+pursuits she was as ignorant as any little gentian flower
+on the rocks; keeping her spell-bound with glimpses of
+its life, which looked to her like fairyland, bizarre bal
+masqué though it be to us; and pleasing myself with
+awakening new thoughts, new impressions, new emotions,
+which swept over her tell-tale face like the lights and
+shades over meadow-land as the sun fades on and off it.
+She was a new study, a new amusement to me, after the
+women of our world, and I beguiled my time with her,
+not thoughtlessly, as I might have done, not too hastily,
+as I <i>should</i> have done ten years before, but pleased with
+my new amusement, and more charmed with Florelle than
+I at first knew, though I confess I soon wished to make
+her love me, and soon tried my best to make her do so&mdash;an
+easy task when one has had some practice in the rose-hued
+atmosphere of the boudoir, among the most difficile
+and the most brilliant coquettes of Europe! Florelle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+with a nature singularly loving, and a mind singularly
+imaginative, with no rival for me even in her fancy, soon
+lavished on me all the love of which her impassioned and
+poetic character was capable. She did not know it, but
+I did. She loved me, poor child!&mdash;love more pure, unselfish,
+and fond than I ever won before, than I shall ever
+win again.</p>
+
+<p>"Basta! why need you have lighted on that crayon-head,
+and make me rake up this story? I loathe looking
+at the past. What good ever comes of it? A wise man
+lives only in his present. 'La vita è appunto una memoria,
+una speranza, un punto,' writes the fool of a poet,
+as though the bygone memories and the unrealized hopes
+were worth a straw! It is that very present 'instant'
+that he despises which is available, and in which, when
+we are in our senses, we absorb ourselves, knowing that
+that alone will yield a fruit worth having. What are
+the fruits of the others? only Dead Sea apples that
+crumble into ash.</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that Florelle loved me; that I, and I alone,
+filled both her imagination and her heart. I would not
+precipitately startle her into any avowal of it. I liked
+to see it dawn in her face and gleam in her eyes, guilelessly
+and unconsciously. It was a new pleasure to me, a
+new charm in that book of Woman of which I had
+thought I knew every phase, and had exhausted every
+reading. I taught Florelle to love me, but I would not
+give her a name to my teaching till she found it herself.
+I returned it? O yes, I loved her, selfishly, as most
+people, men or women, do love, let them say what they
+will; <i>very</i> selfishly, perhaps&mdash;a love that was beneath
+her&mdash;a love for which, had she seen into my heart, she
+might have disdained and hated me, if her soft nature
+could have been moved to so fierce a thing as hate&mdash;a
+love that sought its own gratification, and thought nothing
+of her welfare&mdash;a love <i>not</i> worthy of her, as I sometimes
+felt then, as I believe now.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I had been about six weeks in the Pyrenees since the
+day I lost myself en route from Gavarnie; most of the
+days I had spent three or four hours, often more, at the
+Nid de l'Aigle, giving my painting lessons to Florelle, or
+being guided by her among the beech-wooded and mountain
+passes near her home. The dreariest fens and flats
+might have gathered interest from such a guide, and the
+glorious beauties of the Midi, well suited to her, gained
+additional poetry from her impassioned love for them,
+and her fond knowledge of all their legends, superstitions,
+histories, and associated memories, gathered from the oral
+lore of the peasantry, the cradle songs of Madame Cazot,
+and the stories of the old chronicles of the South. Heavens!
+what a wealth of imagination, talent, genius, lay in
+her if <i>I</i> had not destroyed it!</p>
+
+<p>"At length the time drew near when my so-called
+sojourn at the Baths must end. One day Florelle and
+I were out sketching, as usual; she sat under one of the
+great beeches, within a few feet of one of the cascades
+that fell into the Gave du Pau, and I lay on the grass by
+her, looking into those clear gazelle eyes that met mine
+so brightly and trustfully, watching the progress of her
+brush, and throwing twigs and stones into the spray of
+the torrent. I can remember the place as though it were
+yesterday, the splash of the foam over the rocks, the
+tinkle of the sheep-bells from the hills, the scent of the
+wild flowers growing round, the glowing golden light that
+spread over the woodlands, touching even the distant
+crest of Mount Aigu and the Pic du Midi. Strange how
+some scenes will stamp themselves on the camera of the
+brain never to be effaced, let one try all that one may.</p>
+
+<p>"There, that morning, I, for the first time since we had
+met, spoke of leaving Luz, and of going back to that life
+which I had so often amused her by describing. Happy
+in her present, ignorant of how soon the scenes so familiar
+and dear to her would tire and pall on me, and infinitely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+too much of a child to have looked beyond, or speculated
+upon anything which I had not spoken of to her, it had
+not presented itself to her that this sort of life could not
+go on for ever; that even she would not reconcile me long
+to the banishment from my own world, and that in the
+nature of things we must either become more to each other
+than we were now, or part as strangers, whom chance had
+thrown together for a little time. She loved me, but, as I
+say, so innocently and uncalculatingly, that she never knew
+it till I spoke of leaving her; then she grew very pale,
+her eyes filled with tears, and shunned mine for the first
+time, and, as an anatomist watches the quiver of pain in
+his victim, so I watched the suffering of mine. It was
+her first taste of the bitterness of life, and while I inflicted
+the pain I smiled at it, pleased in my egotism to see
+the power I had over her. It was cruel, I grant it, but
+in confessing it I only confess to what nine out of ten men
+have felt, though they may conceal or deny it.</p>
+
+<p>"'You will miss me, Florelle?' I asked her. She looked
+at me reproachfully, wistfully, piteously, the sort of look
+I have seen in the eyes of a dying deer; too bewildered by
+this sudden mention of my departure to answer in words.
+No answer was needed with eyes so eloquent as hers, but
+I repeated it again. I knew I gave pain, but I knew, too,
+I should soon console her. Her lips quivered, and the
+tears gathered in her eyes; she had not known enough of
+sorrow to have learnt to dissemble it. I asked her if she
+loved me so much that she was unwilling to bid me farewell.
+For the first time her eyes sank beneath mine, and
+a hot painful color flushed over her face. Poor child! if
+ever I have been loved by any woman, I was loved by her.
+Then I woke her heart from its innocent peaceful rest,
+with words that spoke a language utterly new to her. I
+sketched to her a life with me that made her cheeks
+glow, and her lips quiver, and her eyes grow dark. She
+was lovelier in those moments than any art could ever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+attempt to picture! She loved me, and I made her tell
+me so over and over again. She put her fate unhesitatingly
+into my hands, and rejoiced in the passion I vowed
+her, little understanding how selfishly I sought her, little
+thinking, in her ignorance of the evil of the world, that
+while she rejoiced in the fondness I lavished on her, and
+worshipped me as though I were some superior unerring
+godlike being, she was to me only a new toy, only a pursuit
+of the hour, a plaything, too, of which I foresaw I
+should tire! Isn't it Benjamin Constant who says,'Malheureux
+l'homme qui, dans le commencement d'un amour,
+prévoit avec une précision cruelle l'heure où il en sera
+lassé'?</p>
+
+<p>"As it happened, I had made that morning an appointment
+in Luz with some men I knew, who happened to be
+passing through it, and had stopped there that day to go
+up the Pic du Midi the next, so that I could spend only
+an hour or two with Florelle. I took her to her home,
+parted with her for a few hours, and went down the path.
+I remember how she stood looking after me under the
+heavy gray stone-work of the gateway, the tendrils of the
+ivy hanging down and touching her hair that glistened in
+the sunshine as she smiled me her adieux. My words had
+translated, for the first time, all the newly-dawned emotions
+that had lately stirred in her heart, while she knew
+not their name.</p>
+
+<p>"I soon lost sight of her through a sharp turn of the
+bridle-path round the rocks, and went on my way thinking
+of my new love, of how completely I held the threads
+of her fate in my hands, and how entirely it lay in my
+power to touch the chords of her young heart into acute
+pain or into as acute pleasure with one word of mine&mdash;of
+how utterly I could mould her character, her life, her
+fate, whether for happiness or misery, at my will. I loved
+her well enough, if only for her unusual beauty, to feel
+triumph at my entire power, and to feel a tinge of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+own poetry and tenderness of feeling stirring in me as I
+went on under the green, drooping, fanlike boughs of the
+pines, thinking of Florelle de l'Heris.</p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu! permettez-moi vous parle un p'tit mot?'</p>
+
+<p>"Madame Cazot's patois made me look up, almost
+startled for the moment, though there was nothing astonishing
+in her appearance there, in her accustomed spot
+under the shade of a mountain-ash and a great boulder
+of rock, occupied at her usual task, washing linen in the
+Gave, as it foamed and rushed over its stones. She raised
+herself from her work and looked up at me, shading her
+eyes from the light&mdash;a sunburnt, wrinkled, hardy old
+woman, with her scarlet capulet, her blue cloth jacket,
+and her brown woollen petticoat, so strange a contrast to
+the figure I had lately left under the gateway of the Nid
+de l'Aigle, that it was difficult to believe them even of the
+same sex or country.</p>
+
+<p>"She spoke with extreme deference, as she always did,
+but so earnestly, that I looked at her in surprise, and
+stopped to hear what it might be she had to say. She
+was but a peasant woman, but she had a certain dignity
+of manner for all that, caught, no doubt, from her long
+service with, and her pride in, the De l'Heris.</p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu, I have no right, perhaps, to address you; you
+are a grand seigneur, and I but a poor peasant woman.
+Nevertheless, I must speak. I have a charge to which I
+shall have to answer in the other world to God and to my
+master. M'sieu, pardon me what I say, but you love
+Ma'amselle Florelle?'</p>
+
+<p>"I stared at the woman, astonished at her interference
+and annoyed at her presumption, and motioned her aside
+with my stick. But she placed herself in the path&mdash;a
+narrow path&mdash;on which two people could not have stood
+without one or other going into the Gave, and stopped me
+resolutely and respectfully, shading her eyes from the
+sun, and looking steadily at my face.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu, a little while ago, in the gateway yonder,
+when you parted with Ma'amselle Florelle, I was coming
+out behind you to bring my linen to the river, and I saw
+you take her in your arms and kiss her many times, and
+whisper to her that you would come again "ce soir!"
+Then, m'sieu, I knew that you must love my little lady,
+or, at least, must have made her love you. I have
+thought her&mdash;living always with her&mdash;but a beautiful
+child still; but you have found her a beautiful woman,
+and loved her, or taught her love, m'sieu. Pardon me if
+I wrong your honor, but my master left her in my charge,
+and I am an ignorant old peasant, ill fitted for such a
+trust; but is this love of yours such as the Sieur de
+l'Heris, were he now on earth, would put his hand in
+your own and thank you for, or is it such that he would
+wash out its insult in your blood or his?'</p>
+
+<p>"Her words amazed me for a moment, first at the presumption
+of an interference of which I had never dreamt,
+next at the iron firmness with which this old woman,
+nothing daunted, spoke as though the blood of a race of
+kings ran in her veins. I laughed a little at the absurdity
+of this cross-questioning from her to me, and not
+choosing to bandy words with her, bade her move aside;
+but her eyes blazed like fire; she stood firm as the earth
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu, answer me! You love Ma'amselle Florelle&mdash;you
+have asked her in marriage?'</p>
+
+<p>"I smiled involuntarily:</p>
+
+<p>"'My good woman, men of my class don't marry every
+pretty face they meet; we are not so fond of the institution.
+You mean well, I know; at the same time, you
+are deucedly impertinent, and I am not accustomed to
+interference. Have the goodness to let me pass, if you
+please.'</p>
+
+<p>"But she would not move. She folded her arms across
+her chest, quivering from head to foot with passion, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+deep-set eyes flashing like coals under her bushy eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"'M'sieu, I understand you well enough. The house
+of the L'Heris is fallen, ruined, and beggared, and you
+deem dishonor may approach it unrebuked and unrevenged.
+Listen to me, m'sieu; I am but a woman, it is
+true, and old, but I swore by Heaven and Our Lady to
+the Sieur de l'Heris, when he lay dying yonder, years
+ago, that I would serve the child he left, as my forefathers
+had served his in peace and war for centuries, and keep
+and guard her as best I might dearer than my own heart's
+blood. Listen to me. Before this love of yours shall
+breathe another word into her ear to scorch and sully it;
+before your lips shall ever meet hers again; before you
+say again to a De l'Heris poor and powerless, what you
+would never have dared to say to a De l'Heris rich and
+powerful, I will defend her as the eagles by the Nid de
+l'Aigle defend their young. You shall only reach her
+across my dead body!'</p>
+
+<p>"She spoke with the vehemence and passionate gesticulation
+of a Southern; in her patois, it is true, and with
+rude eloquence, but there was an odd <i>timbre</i> of pathos in
+her voice, harsh though it was, and a certain wild dignity
+about her through the very earnestness and passion that
+inspired her. I told her she was mad, and would have
+put her out of my path, but, planting herself before me,
+she laid hold of my arm so firmly that I could not have
+pushed forwards without violence, which I would not
+have used to a woman, and a woman, moreover, as old as
+she was.</p>
+
+<p>"'Listen to one word more, m'sieu. I know not what
+title you may bear in your own country, but I saw a
+coronet upon your handkerchief the other day, and I can
+tell you are a grand seigneur&mdash;you have the air of it, the
+manner. M'sieu, you can have many women to love you;
+cannot you spare this one? you must have many pleasures,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+pursuits, enjoyments in your world, can you not
+leave me this single treasure? Think, m'sieu! If
+Ma'amselle Florelle loves you now, she will love you only
+the dearer as years go on; and <i>you</i>, you will tire of her,
+weary of her, want change, fresh beauty, new excitement&mdash;you
+must know that you will, or why should you
+shrink from the bondage of marriage?&mdash;you will weary
+of her; you will neglect her first and desert her afterwards;
+what will be the child's life <i>then</i>? Think! You
+have done her cruel harm enough now with your wooing
+words, why will you do her more? What is your love
+beside hers? If you have heart or conscience, you cannot
+dare to contrast them together; <i>she</i> would give up everything
+for you, and <i>you</i> would give up nothing! M'sieu,
+Florelle is not like the women of your world; she is innocent
+of evil as the holy saints; those who meet her should
+guard her from the knowledge, and not lead her to it.
+Were the Sieur De l'Heris living now, were her House
+powerful as I have known them, would you have dared or
+dreamt of seeking her as you do now? M'sieu, he who
+wrongs trust, betrays hospitality, and takes advantage of
+that very purity, guilelessness, and want of due protection
+which should be the best and strongest appeal to
+every man of chivalry and honor&mdash;he, whoever he be,
+the De l'Heris would have held, as what he is, a coward!
+Will you not now have pity upon the child, and let her go?'</p>
+
+<p>"I have seldom been moved in, never been swayed
+from, any pursuit or any purpose, whether of love, or
+pleasure, or ambition; but something in old Cazot's words
+stirred me strangely, more strangely still from the daring
+and singularity of the speaker. Her intense love for
+her young charge gave her pathos, eloquence, and even a
+certain rude majesty, as she spoke; her bronzed wrinkled
+features worked with emotions she could not repress, and
+hot tears fell over her hard cheeks. I felt that what she
+said was true; that as surely as the night follows the day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+would weariness of it succeed to my love for Florelle,
+that to the hospitality I had so readily received I had, in
+truth, given but an ill return, and that I had deliberately
+taken advantage of the very ignorance of the world and
+faith in me which should have most appealed to my
+honor. I knew that what she said was true, and this
+epithet of 'coward' hit me harder from the lips of a
+woman, on whom her sex would not let me avenge it,
+with whom my conscience would not let me dispute it,
+than it would have done from any man. <i>I</i> called a coward
+by an old peasant woman! absurd idea enough, wasn't
+it? It is a more absurd one still that I could not listen
+to her unmoved, that her words touched me&mdash;how or why
+I could not have told&mdash;stirred up in me something of
+weakness, unselfishness, or chivalrousness&mdash;I know not
+what exactly&mdash;that prompted me for once to give up my
+own egotistical evanescent passions and act to Florelle as
+though all the males of her house were on earth to make
+me render account of my acts. At old Cazot's words I
+shrank for once from my own motives and my own desires,
+shrank from classing Florelle with the <i>cocottes</i> of my
+world, from bringing her down to their level and
+their life.</p>
+
+<p>"'You will have pity on her, m'sieu, and go?' asked
+old Cazot, more softly, as she looked in my face.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not answer her, but put her aside out of my way,
+went down the mountain-path to where my horse was left
+cropping the grass on the level ground beneath a plane-tree,
+and rode at a gallop into Luz without looking back
+at the gray-turreted ruins of the Nid de l'Aigle.</p>
+
+<p>"And I left Luz that night without seeing Florelle de
+l'Heris again&mdash;a tardy kindness&mdash;one, perhaps, as cruel
+as the cruelty from which old Cazot had protected her.
+Don't you think I was a fool, indeed, for once in my life,
+to listen to an old woman's prating? Call me so if you
+like, I shall not dispute it; we hardly know when we are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+fools, and when wise men! Well! I have not been much
+given to such weaknesses.</p>
+
+<p>"I left Luz, sending a letter to Florelle, in which I
+bade her farewell, and entreated her to forget me&mdash;an
+entreaty which, while I made it, I felt would not be
+obeyed&mdash;one which, in the selfishness of my heart, I dare
+say, I hoped might not be. I went back to my old diplomatic
+and social life, to my customary pursuits, amusements,
+and ambitions, turning over the leaf of my life
+that contained my sojourn in the Pyrenees, as you turn
+over the page of a romance to which you will never recur.
+I led the same life, occupied myself with my old ambitions,
+and enjoyed my old pleasures; but I could not
+forget Florelle as wholly as I wished and tried to do. I
+had not usually been troubled with such memories; if
+unwelcome, I could generally thrust them aside; but
+Florelle I did not forget; the more I saw of other women
+the sweeter and brighter seemed by contrast her sensitive,
+delicate nature, unsullied by the world, and unstained by
+artifice and falsehood. The longer time went on, the
+more I regretted having given her up&mdash;perhaps on no
+better principle than that on which a child cares most for
+the toy he cannot have; perhaps because, away from her,
+I realized I had lost the purest and the strongest love I
+had ever won. In the whirl of my customary life I sometimes
+wondered how she had received my letter, and how
+far the iron had burnt into her young heart&mdash;wondered
+if she had joined the Sisters of Sainte Marie Purificatrice,
+or still led her solitary life among the rocks and beech-woods
+of Nid de l'Aigle. I often thought of her, little
+as the life I led was conducive to regretful or romantic
+thoughts. At length my desire to see her again grew
+ungovernable. I had never been in the habit of refusing
+myself what I wished; a man is a fool who does, if his
+wishes are in any degree attainable. And at the end of
+the season I went over to Paris, and down again once<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+more into the Midi. I reached Luz, lying in the warm
+golden Pyrenean light as I had left it, and took once
+more the old familiar road up the hills to the Nid de
+l'Aigle. There had been no outward change from the
+year that had flown by; there drooped the fan-like
+branches of the pines; there rushed the Gave over its
+rocky bed; there came the silvery sheep-bell chimes
+down the mountain-sides; there, over hill and wood,
+streamed the mellow glories of the Southern sunlight.
+There is something unutterably painful in the sight of
+any place after one's lengthened absence, wearing the
+same smile, lying in the same sunlight. I rode on,
+picturing the flush of gladness that would dawn in Florelle's
+face at the sight of me, thinking that Mme. Cazot
+should not part me from her again, even, I thought, as I
+saw the old gray turrets above the beech-woods, if I paid
+old Cazot's exacted penalty of marriage! I loved Florelle
+more deeply than I had done twelve months before.
+'L'absence allument les grandes passions et éteignent les
+petites,' they say. It had been the reverse with me.</p>
+
+<p>"I rode up the bridle-path and passed through the old
+gateway. There was an unusual stillness about the place;
+nothing but the roar of the torrent near, and the songs of
+the birds in the branches speaking in the summer air.
+My impatience to see Florelle, or to hear her, grew ungovernable.
+The door stood open. I groped my way
+through the passage and pushed open the door of the old
+room. Under the oriel window, where I had seen her
+first, she lay on a little couch. I saw her again&mdash;but
+<i>how</i>! My God! to the day of my death I shall never
+forget her face as I saw it then; it was turned from
+me, and her hair streamed over her pillows, but as
+the sunlight fell upon it, I knew well enough what was
+written there. Old Cazot, sitting by the bed with her
+head on her arms, looked up, and came towards me,
+forcing me back.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'You are come at last, to see her die. Look on your
+work&mdash;look well at it&mdash;and then go; with my curse upon
+you!'</p>
+
+<p>"I shook off her grasp, and forcing my way towards
+the window, threw myself down by Florelle's bed; till
+then I never knew how well I loved her. My voice awoke
+her from her sleep, and, with a wild cry of joy, she started
+up, weak as she was, and threw her arms round my neck,
+clinging to me with her little hands, and crying to me
+deliriously not to leave her while she lived&mdash;to stay with
+her till death should take her; where had I been so long?
+why had I come so late? <i>So late!</i>&mdash;those piteous words!
+As I held her in my arms, unconscious from the shock,
+and saw the pitiless marks that disease, the most hopeless
+and the most cruel, had made on the face that I had left
+fair, bright, and full of life as any child's, I felt the full
+bitterness of that piteous reproach, 'Why had I come so
+late?'</p>
+
+<p>"What need to tell you more. Florelle de l'Heris was
+dying, and I had killed her. The child that I had loved
+so selfishly had loved me with all the concentrated tenderness
+of her isolated and impassioned nature; the letter
+I wrote bidding her farewell had given her her death-blow.
+They told me that from the day she received that
+letter everything lost its interest for her. She would sit
+for hours looking down the road to Luz, as though watching
+wearily for one who never came, or kneeling before
+the pictures I had left as before some altar, praying to
+Heaven to take care of me, and bless me, and let her see
+me once again before she died. Consumption had killed
+her mother in her youth; during the chill winter at the
+Nid de l'Aigle the hereditary disease settled upon her.
+When I found her she was dying fast. All the medical
+aid, all the alleviations, luxuries, resources, that money
+could procure, to ward off the death I would have given
+twenty years of my life to avert, I lavished on her, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+they were useless; for my consolation they told me that,
+used a few months earlier, they would have saved her!
+She lingered three weeks, fading away like a flower
+gathered before its fullest bloom. Each day was torture
+to me. I knew enough of the disease to know from the
+first there was no hope for her or me. Those long terrible
+night-hours, when she lay with her head upon my shoulder,
+and her little hot thin hands in mine, while I listened,
+uncertain whether every breath was not the last, or
+whether life was not already fled! By God! I cannot
+think of them!</p>
+
+<p>One of those long summer nights Florelle died; happy
+with me, loving and forgiving me to the last; speaking
+to the last of that reunion in which <i>she</i>, in her innocent
+faith, believed and hoped, according to the promise of her
+creed!&mdash;died with her hands clasped round my neck, and
+her eyes looking up to mine, till the last ray of light was
+quenched in them&mdash;died while the morning dawn rose in
+the east and cast a golden radiance on her face, the herald
+of a day to which she never awoke!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>There was a dead silence between us; the Arno splashed
+against the wall below, murmuring its eternal song beneath
+its bridge, while the dark heavy clouds drifted over
+the sky with a sullen roll of thunder. He lay back in
+his chair, the deep shadow of the balcony pillar hiding
+his face from me, and his voice quivered painfully as he
+spoke the last words of his story. He was silent for many
+minutes, and so was I, regretting that my careless question
+had unfolded a page out of his life's history written
+in characters so painful to him. Such skeletons dwell in
+the hearts of most; hands need be tender that disentomb
+them and drag out to daylight ashes so mournful and so
+grievous, guarded so tenaciously, hidden so jealously.
+Each of us is tender over his own, but who does not think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+his brother's fit subject for jest, for gibe, for mocking
+dance of death?</p>
+
+<p>He raised himself with a laugh, but his lips looked
+white as death as he drank down a draught of the Hermitage.</p>
+
+<p>"Well! what say you: is the maxim right, <i>y-a-t-il
+femmes et femmes</i>? Caramba! why need you have pitched
+upon that portfolio?&mdash;There are the lights in the Acqua
+d'Oro's palace; we must go, or we shall get into disgrace."</p>
+
+<p>We went, and Beatrice Acqua d'Oro talked very ardent
+Italian to him, and the Comtesse Bois de Sandal remarked
+to me what a brilliant and successful man Lord &mdash;&mdash; was,
+but how unimpressionable!&mdash;as cold and as
+glittering as ice. Nothing had ever made him <i>feel</i>, she
+was quite certain, pretty complimentary nonsense though
+he often talked. What would the Marchesa and the
+Comtesse have said, I wonder, had I told them of that
+little grave under the Pyrenean beech-woods? So much
+does the world know of any of us! In the lives of all
+men are doubled-down pages written on in secret, folded
+out of sight, forgotten as they make other entries in the
+diary, and never read by their fellows, only glanced at
+by themselves in some midnight hour of solitude.</p>
+
+<p>Basta! they are painful reading, my friends. Don't
+you find them so? Let us leave the skeletons in the
+closet, the pictures in the portfolio, the doubled-down
+pages in the locked diary, and go to Beatrice Acqua
+d'Oro's, where the lights are burning gayly. What is
+Madame Bois de Sandal, <i>née</i> Dashwood, singing in the
+music room?</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The tender grace of a day that is dead</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Will never come back to me!</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>That is the burden of many songs sung in this world,
+for some dead flowers strew most paths, and grass grows<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+over myriad graves, and many leaves are folded down in
+many lives, I fear. And&mdash;retrospection is very idle, my
+good fellow, and regret is as bad as the tic, and flirting is
+deucedly pleasant; the white Hermitage we drank to-night
+is gone, we know, but are there no other bottles left
+of wine every whit as good? Shall we waste our time
+sighing after spilt lees? Surely not. And yet&mdash;ah me!&mdash;the
+dead fragrance of those vines that yielded us the
+golden nectar of our youth!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc336.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></p>
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc337a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="THE_BEAUTY_OF_VICQ_DAZYR" id="THE_BEAUTY_OF_VICQ_DAZYR"></a>THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR;</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>OR,</div>
+
+<h3>"NOT AT ALL A PROPER PERSON."</h3>
+
+
+<p>Bon ami, do you consider the possession of sisters
+an agreeable addition to anybody's existence?
+<i>I</i> hold it very intensely the reverse.
+Who pats a man down so spitefully as his sisters? Who
+refuses so obstinately to see any good in the Nazarene
+they have known from their nurseries? Who snubs him
+so contumaciously, when he's a little chap in jackets and
+they young ladies already out? Who worries him so
+pertinaciously to marry their pet friend, "who has ten
+thousand a year, dear! Red hair? I'm sure she has
+not! It's the most lovely auburn! But you never see
+any beauty in <i>refined</i> women!" Who, if you incline
+towards a pretty little ineligible, rakes up so laboriously
+every scrap of gossip detrimental to her, and pours into
+your ear the delightful intelligence that she has been
+engaged to Powell of the Grays, is a shocking flirt, wears
+false teeth, is full five years older than she says she is,
+and has most objectionable connections? Who, I should
+like to know, does any and all of these things, my good
+fellow, so amiably and unremittingly as your sisters?
+till&mdash;some day of grace, perhaps&mdash;you make a telling
+speech at St. Stephen's, and fling a second-hand aroma of
+distinction upon them; or marry a co-heiress and lady-in-her-own-right,
+and they <i>raffolent</i> of that charming
+creature, speculating on the desirability of being invited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+to your house when the men are down for September.
+Then, what a dear fellow you become! they always <i>were</i>
+so fond of you! a little wild! oh, yes! but they are <i>so</i>
+glad you are changed, and think more seriously now! it
+was only from a <i>real</i> interest in your welfare that they
+used to grieve, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>My sisters were my natural enemies, I remember, when
+I was in the daisy age and exposed to their thraldom;
+they were so blandly superior, so ineffably condescending,
+and wielded, with such smiling dexterity, that feminine
+power of torture known familiarly as "nagging!" Now,
+of course, they leave me in peace; but from my earliest
+to my emancipated years they were my natural enemies.
+I might occasionally excite the enmity, it is possible. I
+remember, when I was aged eight, covering Constance, a
+stately brunette, with a mortifying amount of confusion,
+by asking her, as she welcomed a visitor with effusion,
+why she said she was delighted to see her when she had
+cried "There's that odious woman again!" as we saw the
+carriage drive up. I have a criminal recollection of
+taking Gwendolina's fan, fresh from Howell and James's,
+and stripping it of its gold-powdered down before her
+face ere she could rush to its rescue, as an invaluable
+medium in the manufacture of mayflies. I also have a
+dim and guilty recollection of saying to the Hon. George
+Cursitt, standing then in the interesting position of my
+prospective brother-in-law, "Mr. Cursitt, Agneta doesn't
+care one straw for you. I heard her saying so last night
+to Con; and that if you weren't so near the title, she
+would never have accepted you;" which revelation inopportunely
+brought that desirable alliance to an end, and
+Olympian thunders on my culprit's head.</p>
+
+<p>I had my sins, doubtless, but they were more than
+avenged on me; my sisters were my natural enemies, and
+I never knew of any man's who weren't so, more or less.
+Ah! my good sirs, those domesticities are all of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+horrid bores, and how any man, happily and thrice
+blessedly free from them, can take the very worst of them
+voluntarily on his head by the Gate of Marriage (which
+differs thus remarkably from a certain Gate at Jerusalem,
+that at the one the camels kneel down to be lightened of
+all <i>their</i> burdens ere they can pass through it; at the
+other, the poor human animal kneels down to be loaded
+with all <i>his</i> ere he is permitted to enter), does pass my
+comprehension, I confess. I might amply avenge the
+injuries of my boyhood received from <i>mesdemoiselles mes
+s[oe]urs</i>. Could I not tell Gwendolina of the pot of money
+dropped by her caro sposo over the Cesarewitch Stakes?
+Could I not intimate to Agneta where her Right Honorable
+lord and master spent the small hours last night,
+when popularly supposed to be nodding on the Treasury
+benches in the service of the state? Could I not rend
+the pride of Constance, by casually asking monsieur her
+husband, as I sip her coffee in her drawing-room this
+evening, who was that very pretty blonde with him at the
+Crystal Palace yesterday? the blonde being as well known
+about town as any other star of the demi-monde. Of
+course I could: but I am magnanimous; I can too
+thoroughly sympathize with those poor fellows. My
+vengeance would recoil on innocent heads, so I am magnanimous
+and silent.</p>
+
+<p>My sisters have long ceased to be mesdemoiselles, they
+have become mesdames, in that transforming crucible of
+marriage in which, assuredly, all that glitters is not gold,
+but in which much is swamped, and crushed, and fused
+with uncongenial metal, and from which the elixir of
+happiness but rarely exhales, whatever feminine alchemists,
+who patronize the hymeneal furnace, may
+choose to assure us to the contrary. My sisters are indisputably
+very fine women, and develop in full bloom
+all those essential qualities which their moral and mental
+trainers sedulously instilled into them when they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+limited to the school-room and thorough-bass, Garcia and
+an "expurgated" Shakespeare, the society of Mademoiselle
+Colletmonté and Fräulein von Engel, and the occasional
+refection of a mild, religious, respectably-twaddling fiction
+of the milk-and-water, pious-tendency, nursery-chronicling,
+and grammar-disregarding class, nowadays indited for
+the mental improvement of a commonplace generation
+in general, and growing young ladies in particular. My
+sisters are women of the world to perfection; indeed, for
+talent in refrigerating with a glance; in expressing disdain
+of a toilette or a ton by an upraised eyebrow; in
+assuming a various impenetrable plaît-il? expression at a
+moment's notice; in sweeping past intimate friends with
+a charming unconsciousness of their existence, when such
+unconsciousness is expedient or desirable; in reducing an
+unwished-for intruder into an instantaneous and agonizing
+sense of his own de trop-ism and insignificance&mdash;in all
+such accomplishments and acquirements necessary to
+existence in all proper worlds, I think they may be
+matched with the best-bred lady to be found any day,
+from April to August, between Berkeley Square and
+Wilton Crescent. Constance, now Lady Maréchale, is of
+a saintly turn, and touched with fashionable fanaticism,
+pets evangelical bishops and ragged school-boys, drives to
+special services, and is called our noble and Christian
+patroness by physicians and hon. secs., holds doctrinal
+points and strong tracts, mixed together in equal proportion,
+an infallible chloride of lime for the disinfectance
+of our polluted globe, and appears to receive celestial
+telegrams of indisputable veracity and charming acrimony
+concerning the destiny of the vengeful contents of
+the Seven Vials. Agneta, now Mrs. Albany Protocol, is
+a Cabinet Ministress, and a second Duchesse de Longueville
+(in her own estimation at the least); is "strengthening
+her party" when she issues her dinner invitations,
+whispers awfully of a "crisis" when even penny-paper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
+leaders can't get up a breeze, and spends her existence in
+"pushing" poor Protocol, who, thorough Englishman that
+he is, considers it a point of honor to stand still in all
+paths with praiseworthy Britannic obstinacy and opticism.
+Gwendolina, now Lady Frederic Farniente, is a butterfly
+of fashion, has delicate health, affects dilettanteism, is
+interested by nothing, has many other charming minauderies,
+and lives in an exclusive circle&mdash;so tremendously
+exclusive, indeed, that it is possible she may at last draw
+the <i>cordon sanitaire</i> so <i>very</i> tight, that she will be left alone
+with the pretty woman her mirrors reflect.</p>
+
+<p>They have each of them attained to what the world
+calls a "good position"&mdash;an eminence the world dearly
+reveres; if you can climb to it, <i>do</i>; never mind what dirt
+may cling to your feet, or what you may chance to pull
+down in your ascent, so questions will be asked you at
+the top, when you wave your flag victoriously from a
+plateau at a good elevation. They haven't all their ambitions&mdash;who
+has? If a fresh Alexander conquered the
+world he would fret out his life for a standing-place to be
+able to try Archimedes' little experiment on his newly-won
+globe. Lady Maréchale dies for entrance to certain
+salons which are closed to her; she is but a Baronet's
+wife, and, though so heavenly-minded, has <i>some</i> weaknesses
+of earth. Mrs. Protocol grieves because she thinks
+a grateful country ought to wreathe her lord's brow with
+laurels&mdash;<i>Anglicè</i>, strawberry-leaves&mdash;and the country
+remains ungrateful, and the brows bare. Lady Frederic
+frets because her foe and rival, Lady Maria Fitz-Sachet,
+has footmen an inch taller than her own. They haven't
+all their ambitions satisfied. We are too occupied with
+kicking our dear friends and neighbors down off the rounds
+of the social ladder to advance ourselves always perhaps
+as entirely as we otherwise might do. But still they
+occupy "unexceptionable positions," and from those fortified
+and impregnable citadels are very severe upon those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+who are not, and very jealous of those who are, similarly
+favored by fortune. When St. Peter lets ladies through
+the celestial portals, he'll never please them unless he
+locks out all their acquaintance, and indulges them with
+a gratifying peep at the rejected candidates.</p>
+
+<p>The triad regard each other after the manner of ladies;
+that is to say, Lady Maréchale holds Mrs. Protocol and
+Lady Frederic "frivolous and worldly;" Lady Frederic
+gives them both one little supercilious expressive epithet,
+"<i>précieuses</i>;" Mrs. Protocol considers Lady Maréchale a
+"pharisee," and Lady Frederic a "butterfly;"&mdash;in a word,
+there is that charming family love to one another which
+ladies so delight to evince, that I suppose we must excuse
+them for it on the plea that</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">'Tis their nature to!</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>which Dr. Watts puts forward so amiably and grammatically
+in excuse for the bellicose propensities of the canine
+race, but which is never remembered by priest or layman
+in extenuation of the human.</p>
+
+<p>They dislike one another&mdash;relatives always do&mdash;still,
+the three Arms will combine their Horse, Line, and Field
+Batteries in a common cause and against a common enemy;
+the Saint, the Politician, and the Butterfly have several
+rallying-points in common, and when it comes to the question
+of extinguishing an ineligible, of combining a sneer
+with a smile, of blending the unexceptionably-courteous
+with the indescribably-contemptuous, of calmly shutting
+their doors to those who won't aggrandize them, and
+blandly throwing them open to those who will, it would be
+an invidious task to give the golden apple, and decide
+which of the three ladies most distinguishes herself in
+such social prowess.</p>
+
+<p>Need I say that I <i>don't</i> see very much of them?&mdash;severe
+strictures on society in general, with moral platitudes,
+over the luncheon wines at Lady Maréchale's; discourse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>
+redolent of blue-books, with vindictive hits at Protocol
+and myself for our disinclination to accept a "mission,"
+and our levity of life and opinions at "a period so full of
+social revolutions and wide-spread agitation as the present,"
+through the soup and fish at Agneta's; softly hissed
+acerbities and languidly yawned satires on the prettiest
+women of my acquaintance, over the coffee at Lady Frederic's;
+are none of them particularly inviting or alluring.
+And as they or similar conversational confections are invariably
+included in each of the three ladies' entertainments
+<i>en petit comité</i>, it isn't wonderful if I forswear their
+drawing-rooms. Chères dames, you complain, and your
+chosen defenders for you, that men don't affect your society
+nowadays save and except when making love to you.
+It isn't <i>our</i> fault, indeed: you bore us, and&mdash;what can
+we do?&mdash;we shrink as naturally and pardonably from
+voluntary boredom as from any other voluntary suffering,
+and shirk an air redolent of ennui from the same principle
+as we do an air redolent of diphtheria. Self-preservation
+is a law of nature, and female society consists too exclusively
+of milk-and-water, dashed here and there with citric
+acid of malice, to be either a recherché or refreshing beverage
+to palates that have tasted warmer spices or more
+wholesome tonics.</p>
+
+<p>So I don't see much of my triad of sisters unless accidentally,
+but last August I encountered them by chance
+at Vicq d'Azyr. Do you know Vicq d'Azyr? No? All
+right? when it is known universally it will be spoilt; it
+will soon be fashionable, dyspeptic, artificial, like the
+crowds that will flock to it; its warm, bubbling springs
+will be gathered into long upright glasses, and quaffed by
+yellow-visaged groups; brass bands will bray where now
+the thrushes, orioles, and nightingales have the woodlands
+to themselves; cavalcades of hired hacks will cut up its
+thyme-covered turf, and young ladies will sketch in tortured
+outline and miserable washes the glorious sweep of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+its mountains, the crimson tints of its forests, the rush of
+its tumbling torrents, the golden gleam of its southern
+sun. Vicq d'Azyr will be a Spa, and will be spoilt; dyspepsia
+and bronchia, vanities and flirtations, cares and
+conquests, physicians and intrigantes, real marchionesses
+puffing under asthma, fictitious marquises strewing chaff
+for pigeons, monde and demi-monde, grandes dames and
+dames d'industrie will float into it, a mighty army of
+butterflies with a locust power of destruction: Vicq d'Azyr
+will be no more, and in its stead we shall have&mdash;a Fashionable
+Bath. Vicq d'Azyr, however, is free <i>yet</i> from the
+hand of the spoiler, and is charming&mdash;its vine-clad hills
+stretching up in sunny slopes; its little homesteads nestling
+on the mountains' sides among the pines that load
+the air with their rich heavy perfume; its torrents foaming
+down the ravines, flinging their snowy spray far over
+the bows of arbutus and mountain-ash that bend across
+the brinks of their rushing courses; its dark-eyed peasant
+girls that dance at sunset under the linden-trees like living
+incarnations of Florian's pastorals; its sultry brilliant
+summer nights, when all is still, when the birds are sleeping
+among the ilex-leaves, and the wind barely stirs the
+tangled boughs of the woodland; when night is down on
+the mountains, wrapping hill and valley, crag and forest
+in one soft purple mist, and the silence around is only
+broken by the mystic music of the rushing waters, the
+soft whirr of the night-birds' wings, or the distant chime
+of a village clock faintly tolling through the air:&mdash;&mdash;Caramba,
+messieurs! I beg your pardon! I don't know
+why I poetize on Vicq d'Azyr. <i>I</i> went there to slay,
+not to sketch, with a rifle, not with a stylus, to kill
+izzards and chamois, not to indite a poem à la mode,
+with double-barrelled adjectives, no metre, and a "purpose;"
+nor to add my quota to the luckless loaded walls
+of the Academy by a pre-Raphaelite landscape of arsenical
+green, with the effete trammels of perspective<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+gallantry disregarded, and trees like Dr. Syntax's wife,
+"roundabout and rather squat," with just two-dozen-and-seven
+leaves apiece for liberal allowance. I went to Vicq
+d'Azyr, amongst other places, last August, for chamois-hunting
+with Dunbar, of the Queen's Bays, taking up our
+abode at the Toison d'Or, whither all artists, tourists, men
+who come for the sport, women who come for its scenery,
+or invalids who come for its waters (whose properties,
+<i>miserabile dictu!</i> are just being discovered as a panacea
+for every human ill&mdash;from a migraine to an "incurable
+pulmonary affliction"), seek accommodation if they can
+have it, since it is the only hotel in the place, though a
+very good one; is adorned with a balcony running round
+the house, twined and buried in honeysuckle and wild
+clematis, which enchants young ladies into instant promotion
+of it into their sketch-books; and gives you, what
+is of rather more importance, and what makes you ready
+to admire the clematis when, under gastronomic exasperation,
+you might swear at it as a harbor for tarantule&mdash;an
+omelette, I assure you, wellnigh as well cooked as you
+have it at Mivart's or Meurice's.</p>
+
+<p>At the Toison d'Or we took up our abode, and at the
+Toison d'Or we encountered my two elder sisters, Constance
+and Agneta, travelling for once on the same road,
+as they had left Paris together, and were together going
+on to the fashionable capital of a fashionable little toy
+duchy on the other side of the Rhine, when they should
+have finished with the wilder beauties and more unknown
+charms of Vicq d'Azyr and its environs. Each lady had
+her little train of husband, courier, valet, lady's-maid,
+small dog, and giant jewel-box. I have put the list in
+the inverse ratio of their importance, I believe. Your
+husband <i>versus</i> your jewel-box? Of course, my dear
+madam; absurd! What's the value of a little simple
+gold ring against a dozen glittering circlets of diamonds,
+emeralds, rubies, and garnets?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Each lady was bent on recruiting herself at Vicq d'Azyr
+after the toils of the season, and of shining <i>après</i> with all
+the brilliance that a fair share of beauty, good positions,
+and money, fairly entitled them to expect, at the little
+Court of&mdash;we will call it Lemongenseidlitz&mdash;denominated
+by its charming Duchess, Princess Hélène of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz,
+the loveliest and most volage
+of all minor royalties. Each lady was strongly opposed
+to whatever the other wished; each thought the weather
+"sultry" when the other thought it "chilly," and <i>vice
+versâ</i>. Each considered her own ailments "unheard-of
+suffering, dear!&mdash;I could never make any one feel!" &amp;c.
+&amp;c.&mdash;and assured you, with mild disdain, that the other's
+malady was "purely nervous, entirely exaggerated, but
+she <i>will</i> dwell on it so much, poor darling!" Each related
+to you how admirably they would have travelled if
+<i>her</i> counsel had been followed, and described how the
+other <i>would</i> take the direction of everything, <i>would</i> confuse
+poor Chanderlos, the courier, till he hardly knew
+where he was, and <i>would</i> take the night express out of
+pure unkindness, just because she knew how ill it always
+made her (the speaker) feel to be torn across any country
+the whole night at that dreadful pace; each was dissatisfied
+with everything, pleased with nothing, and bored, as
+became ladies of good degree; each found the sun too
+hot or the wind too cold, the mists too damp or the air
+too dry, and both combined their forces to worry their
+ladies'-maids, find fault with the viands, drive their lords
+to the registering of an oath never to travel with women
+again, welcome us benignly, since they thought we might
+amuse them, and smile their sunniest on Dunbar&mdash;he's
+heir-prospective to the Gwynne Marquisate, and Lady
+Marqueterie, the Saint, is not above keeping one eye open
+for worldly distinctions, while Mrs. Albany Protocol,
+though a Radical, is, like certain others of the ultra-Liberal
+party, not above a personal kow-towing before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>
+those "ridiculous and ought-to-be exploded conservative
+institutions"&mdash;Rank and Title.</p>
+
+<p>At the Toison d'Or, I say, when, after knocking over
+izzards <i>ad libitum</i> in another part of the district, we descended
+one evening into the valley where Vicq d'Azyr
+lies nestled in the sunset light, with the pretty vendangeuses
+trooping down from the sloping vineyards, and
+the cattle winding homewards down the hill-side paths,
+and the vesper-bells softly chiming from the convent-tower
+rising yonder above its woods of linden and acacia&mdash;at
+the Toison d'Or, just alighting with the respective
+suites aforesaid, and all those portable embarrassments
+of books, tiger-skin rugs, flacons of bouquet, travelling-bags
+warranted to carry any and everything that the most
+fastidious can require en route from Piccadilly to Peru,
+with which ladies do love to encumber and embitter their
+own persons and their companions' lives, we met, as I
+have told you, mesdames mes s[oe]urs.</p>
+
+<p>"What! Dear me, how very singular! Never should
+have dreamt of meeting <i>you</i>; so much too quiet a place,
+I should have thought. No Kursaal <i>here</i>? Come for
+sport&mdash;oh! Take Spes, will you! Poor little dear, he's
+been barking the whole way because he couldn't see out
+of the window. Ah, Major Dunbar, charmed to see you!
+What an amusing rencontre, is it not?" And Lady Maréchale,
+slightly out of temper for so eminent a Christian
+at the commencement of her greeting, smoothed down
+her ruffled feathers and turned smilingly on Dunbar. I
+have said he will be one day Marquis of Gwynne.</p>
+
+<p>"By George, old fellow! <i>you</i> in this out-of-the-way
+place! That's all right. Sport good, here? Glad to
+hear it. The deuce take me, if ever I am lured into
+travelling in a <i>partie carrée</i> again."</p>
+
+<p>And Maréchale raised his eyebrows, and whispered
+confidentially to me stronger language than I may commit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
+to print, though, considering his provocation, it was
+surely as pardonable as Uncle Toby's.</p>
+
+<p>"The thing I dislike in this sort of hotels and places is
+the admixture of people with whom one is obliged to
+come in contact," said Constance, putting up her glass as
+she entered the long low room where the humble table
+d'hôte of the Toison d'Or was spread. Lady Maréchale
+talks sweetly of the equality of persons in the sight of
+Heaven, but I never heard her recognize the same upon
+the soil of earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly! One may encounter such very objectionable
+characters! <i>I</i> wished to dine in our own apartments,
+but Albany said no; and he is so positive, you
+know! This place seems miserably primitive," responded
+Agneta. Mrs. Protocol pets Rouges and Republicans of
+every country, talks liberalism like a feminine Sièyes or
+John Bright, projects a Reform Bill that shall bear the
+strongest possible family resemblance to the Décrets du 4
+Août, and considers "social distinctions <i>odious</i> between
+man and man;" but her practice is scarcely consistent
+with her theory, seeing that she is about as tenacious and
+resentful of objectionable contact as a sea-anemone.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is that, I wonder?" whispered Lady Maréchale,
+acidulating herself in readiness, after the custom of English
+ladies when catching sight of a stranger whom they
+"don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder! All alone&mdash;how very queer!" echoed
+Mrs. Protocol, drawing her black lace shawl around her,
+with that peculiar movement which announces a woman's
+prescience of something antagonistic to her, that is to be
+repelled <i>d'avance</i>, as surely as a hedgehog's transfer of
+itself into a prickly ball denotes a sense of a coming
+enemy, and a need of caution and self-protection.</p>
+
+<p>"Who is that deucedly handsome woman?" whispered
+Maréchale to me.</p>
+
+<p>"What a charming creature!" echoed Dunbar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The person referred to was the only woman at the table
+d'hôte besides my sisters&mdash;a sister-tourist, probably; a
+handsome&mdash;nay more, a beautiful woman, about eight-and-twenty,
+distinguished-looking, brilliant, with a figure
+voluptuously perfect as was ever the Princess Borghese's.
+To say a woman looks a lady, means nothing in our day.
+"That young lady will wait on you, sir," says the shopman,
+referring to the shopwoman who will show you your
+gloves. "Hand the 'errings to that lady, Joe," you hear
+a fishmonger cry, as you pass his shop-door, referring by
+his epithet to some Mrs. Gamp or Betsy Priggs in search
+of that piscatory cheer at his stall. Heaven forbid we
+should give the abused and degenerate title to any woman
+deserving of the name! Generalize a thing, and it is
+vulgar. "A gentleman of my acquaintance," says
+Spriggs, an auctioneer and house-agent, to Smith, a collector
+of the water-rate. "A man I know," says Pursang,
+one of the Cabinet, to Greville Tempest, who is heir
+to a Dukedom, and has intermarried with a royal house.
+The reason is plain enough. Spriggs thinks it necessary
+to inform Smith, who otherwise might remain ignorant
+of so signal a fact, that he actually does know a gentleman,
+or rather what he terms such. Pursang knows that
+Tempest would never suspect him of being <i>lié</i> with men
+who were anything else; the one is proud of the fine English,
+the other is content with the simple phrase! Heaven
+forbid, I say, we should, nowadays, call any woman a
+lady who is veritably such; let us fall back on the dignified,
+definitive, courtly last-century-name of gentlewoman.
+I should be glad to see that name revived; it draws a line
+that snobbissimi cannot pass, and has a grand simplicity
+about it that will not attract Spriggs, Smith, and Spark,
+and Mesdames S., leurs femmes!</p>
+
+<p>Our sister-tourist, then, at the Toison d'Or, looked, to
+my eyes at the least, much more than a "lady," she
+looked an <i>aristocrate jusqu'au bout des ongles</i>, a beautiful,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+brilliant, dazzling brunette, with lovely hazel eyes, flashing
+like a tartaret falcon's under their arched pencilled
+eyebrows, quite an unhoped godsend in Vicq d'Azyr,
+where only stragglers resort as yet, though&mdash;alas for my
+Arcadia&mdash;my sister's pet physician, who sent them
+thither, is about, I believe, to publish a work, entitled
+"The Water-Spring in the Wilderness; or, A Scamper
+through Spots Unknown," which will do a little advertising
+of himself opportunely, and send hundreds next
+season to invade the wild woodlands and sunny valleys
+he inhumanly drags forth into the gas-glare of the world.</p>
+
+<p>The brilliant hazel eyes were opposite to me at dinner,
+and were, I confess, more attractive to me than the stewed
+pigeons, the crisp frog-legs, and the other viands prepared
+by the (considering we were in the heart of one of the
+most remote provinces) really not bad cook of the Toison
+d'Or. Lady Maréchale and Mrs. Protocol honored her
+with that stare by which one woman knows so well how
+to destroy the reputation of another without speech; they
+had taken her measurement by some method of feminine
+geometry unknown to us, and the result was apparently
+not favorable to her, for over the countenances of the two
+ladies gathered that expression of stiff dignity and virtuous
+disdain, in the assuming of which, as I have observed
+before, they are inimitable proficients. "Evidently not
+a proper person!" was written on every one of their lineaments.
+Constance and Agneta had made up their
+minds with celerity and decision as to her social status,
+with, it is to be presumed, that unerring instinct which
+leads their sex to a conclusion so instantaneously, that,
+according to a philosopher, a woman will be at the top of
+the staircase of Reasoning by a single spring, while a
+man is toiling slowly up the first few steps.</p>
+
+<p>"You are intending to remain here some days, madame?"
+asked the fair stranger, with a charming smile,
+of Lady Maréchale&mdash;a pleasant little overture to chance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>
+ephemeral acquaintance, such as a table d'hôte surely
+well warrants.</p>
+
+<p>But the pleasant little overture was one to which Lady
+Maréchale was far too English to respond. With that
+inimitable breeding for which our countrymen and women
+are continentally renowned, she bent her head with
+stately stiffness, indulged herself with a haughty stare at
+the offender, and turned to Agneta, to murmur in English
+her disgust with the <i>cuisine</i> of the really unoffending
+Toison d'Or.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Spes would eat nothing. Fenton must make
+him some panada. But perhaps there was nothing better
+than goat's milk in the house! What could Dr. Berkeley
+be thinking of? He described the place quite as though
+it were a second Meurice's or Badischer Hof!"</p>
+
+<p>A look of amusement glanced into the sparkling, yet
+languid eyes of my opposite neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>"English!" she murmured to herself, with an almost
+imperceptible but sufficiently scornful elevation of her
+arched eyebrows, and a slight smile, just showing her
+white teeth, as I addressed her in French; and she answered
+me with the ease, the aplomb, the ever suave
+courtesy of a woman of the world, with that polish which
+gives the most common subjects a brilliance never their
+own, and that vivacity which confers on the merest trifles
+a spell to amuse and to charm. She was certainly a very
+lovely creature, and a very charming one, too; frank,
+animated, witty, with the tone of a woman who has seen
+the world and knows it. Dunbar adored her, at first
+sight; he is an inflammable fellow, and has been ignited
+a thousand times at far less provocation. Maréchale prepared
+for himself fifty conjugal orations by the recklessness
+with which, under the very eyes of madame, he devoted
+himself to another woman. Even Albany Protocol,
+dull, somnolent, and superior to such weaknesses, as becomes
+a president of many boards and a chairman of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>
+many committees, opened his eyes and glanced at her;
+and some young Cantabs and artists at the other end of
+the table stopped their own conversation, envying Dunbar
+and myself, I believe, for our juxtaposition with the <i>belle
+inconnue</i>; while my sisters sat trifling with the wing of a
+pigeon, in voluntary starvation (they would have had
+nothing to complain of, you see, if they had suffered
+themselves to dine well!), with strong disapprobation
+marked upon their lineaments, of this lovely vivacious
+unknown, whoever she might be, talking exclusively to
+each other, with a certain expression of sarcastic disdain
+and offended virtue, hinting far more forcibly than words
+that they thought already the "very worst" of her.</p>
+
+<p>So severe, indeed, did they look, that Dunbar, who is a
+good-natured fellow, and thinks&mdash;and thinks justly&mdash;that
+Constance and Agneta are very fine women, left me
+to discuss, Hoffmann, Heine, and the rest of Germany's
+satirical poets, with my opposite neighbor, and endeavored
+to thaw my sisters; a very difficult matter when once
+those ladies are iced. He tried Paris, but only elicited a
+monosyllabic remark concerning its weather; he tried
+Vicq d'Azyr, and was rewarded for his trouble by a withering
+sarcasm on the unlucky Toison d'Or; he tried chit-chat
+on mutual acquaintances, and the unhappy people
+he chanced to name were severally dismissed with a cutting
+satire appended to each. Lady Maréchale and Mrs.
+Protocol were in one of those freezing and unassailable
+moods in which they sealed a truce with one another,
+and, combining their forces against a common foe, dealt
+out sharp, spherical, hard-hitting little bullets of speech
+from behind the abatis in which they intrenched themselves.</p>
+
+<p>At last he, in despair, tried Lemongenseidlitz, and the
+ladies thawed slightly&mdash;their anticipations from that
+fashionable little quarter were couleur de rose. They
+would meet their people of the best <i>monde</i>, all their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
+dearest&mdash;that is of course their most fashionable&mdash;friends;
+the dear Duchess of Frangipane, the Millamonts
+those charming people, M. le Marquis de Croix-et-Cordon,
+Sir Henry Pullinger, Mrs. Merivale-Delafield, were all
+there; that delightful person, too, the Graf von Rosenläu,
+who amused them so much at Baden last year, was, as of
+course Dunbar knew, Master of the Horse to the Prince
+of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz; they would be well received
+at the Court. Which last thing, however, they
+did not <i>say</i>, though they might imply, and assuredly fully
+thought it; since Lady Maréchale already pictured herself
+gently awakening his Serene Highness to the spiritual
+darkness of his soul in legitimatizing gaming-tables
+in his duchy, and Mrs. Protocol already beheld herself
+closeted with his First Minister, giving that venerable
+Metternich lessons in political economy, and developing
+to him a system for filling his beggared treasury to overflowing,
+without taxing the people a kreutzer&mdash;a problem
+which, though it might have perplexed Kaunitz, Colbert,
+Pitt, Malesherbes, Talleyrand, and Palmerston put together,
+offered not the slightest difficulty to <i>her</i> enterprising
+intellect. Have I not said that Sherlock states
+women are at the top of the staircase while we are toiling
+up the first few steps?</p>
+
+<p>"The Duchess&mdash;Princess Hélène is a lovely woman, I
+think. Winton saw her at the Tuileries last winter, and
+raved about her beauty," said Dunbar, finding he had hit
+at last on an acceptable subject, and pursuing it with
+more zeal than discretion; for if there be one thing, I
+take it, more indiscreet than another, it is to praise
+woman to woman.</p>
+
+<p>Constance coughed and Agneta smiled, and both assented.
+"Oh yes&mdash;very lovely, they believed!"</p>
+
+<p>"And very lively&mdash;up to everything, I think I have
+heard," went on Dunbar, blandly, unconscious of the
+meaning of cough, smile, and assent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Very lively!" sighed the Saint.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Very</i> lively!" smiled the Politician.</p>
+
+<p>"As gay a woman as Marie Antoinette," continued
+Dunbar, too intent on the truffles to pay en même temps
+much heed to the subject he was discussing. "She's
+copied the Trianon, hasn't she?&mdash;has fêtes and pastorals
+there, acts in comedies herself, shakes off etiquette and
+ceremonial as much as she can, and all that sort of thing,
+I believe?"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Maréchale leaned back in her chair, the severe
+virtue and dignified censure of a British matron and a
+modern Lucretia expressed in both attitude and countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"A second Marie Antoinette?&mdash;too truly and unfortunately
+so, I have heard! Levity in <i>any</i> station sufficiently
+reprehensible, but when exhibited in the persons
+of those whom a higher power has placed in exalted
+positions, it is most deeply to be deplored. The evil and
+contagion of its example become incalculable; and even
+when, which I believe her excusers are wont to assert of
+Princess Hélène, it is merely traceable to an over-gayety
+of spirit and an over-carelessness of comment and censure,
+it should be remembered that we are enjoined to
+abstain from every <i>appearance</i> of evil!"</p>
+
+<p>With which Constance shook out her phylacteries,
+represented by the thirty-guinea bracade-silk folds of her
+skirt (a dress I heard her describe as "very plain!&mdash;serviceable
+for travelling"), and glanced at my opposite
+neighbor with a look which said, "You are evidently not
+a proper person, but you hear for once what a proper
+person thinks!"</p>
+
+<p>Our charming companion did hear it, for she apparently
+understood English very well. She laughed a little&mdash;a
+sweet, low, ringing laugh&mdash;(I was rather in love with
+her, I must say&mdash;I am still)&mdash;and spoke with a slight
+pretty accent.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"True, madame! but ah! what a pity your St. Paul
+did not advise, too, that people should not go by appearances,
+and think evil where evil is not!"</p>
+
+<p>Lady Maréchale gave stare number two with a curl of
+her lip, and bent her head stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>"What a very strange person!" she observed to Agneta,
+in a murmur, meant, like a stage aside, to be duly
+heard and appreciated by the audience. And yet my
+sisters are thought very admirably bred women, too!
+But then, a woman alone&mdash;a foreigner, a stranger&mdash;surely
+no one would exact courtesy to such, from "ladies
+of position?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you ever seen Princess Hélène, the Duchess of
+Lemongenseidlitz, may I ask?" Maréchale inquired, hastily,
+to cover his wife's sneer. He's a very good fellow,
+and finds the constant and inevitable society of a saint
+slightly trying, and a very heavy chastisement for a few
+words sillily said one morning in St. George's.</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen her, monsieur&mdash;yes!"</p>
+
+<p>"And is she a second Marie Antoinette?"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed gayly, showing her beautiful white teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, bah, monsieur! many would say that is a great
+deal too good a comparison for her! A second Louise de
+Savoie&mdash;a second Duchesse de Chevreuse&mdash;nay, a second
+Lucrezia Borgia, some would tell you. She likes pleasure&mdash;who
+does not, though, except those with whom 'les
+raisins sont trop verts et bons pour des goujats?'"</p>
+
+<p>"What an insufferably bold person!" murmured Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"Very disagreeable to meet this style of people!" returned
+Agneta.</p>
+
+<p>And both stiffened themselves with a little more starch;
+and we know that British wheats produce the stiffest
+starch in the world!</p>
+
+<p>"Who, indeed!" cried Maréchale, regardless of madame's
+frown. "You know this for truth, then, of Princess
+Hélène?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Ah, bah, monsieur! who knows anything for truth?"
+laughed the lovely brunette. "The world dislikes truth
+so much, it is obliged to hide itself in out-of-the-way
+corners, and very rarely comes to light. Nobody knows
+the truth about her. Some think her, as you say, a second
+Marie Antoinette, who is surrendered to dissipation and
+levity, cares for nothing, and would dance and laugh
+over the dead bodies of the people. Others judge her as
+others judged Marie Antoinette; discredit the gossip, and
+think she is but a lively woman, who laughs at forms,
+likes to amuse herself, and does not see why a court
+should be a prison! The world likes the darker picture
+best; let it have it! I do not suppose it will break her
+heart!"</p>
+
+<p>And the fair stranger laughed so sweetly, that every
+man at the dinner-table fell in love with her on the spot;
+and Lady Maréchale and Mrs. Protocol sat throughout
+the remainder of the meal in frozen dignity and unbreakable
+silence, while the lovely brunette talked with and
+smiled on us all with enchanting gayety, wit, and abandon,
+chatting on all sorts of topics of the day.</p>
+
+<p>Dinner over, she was the first to rise from the table,
+and bowed to us with exquisite grace and that charming
+smile of hers, of which the sweetest rays fell upon <i>me</i>, I
+swear, whether you consider the oath an emanation of
+personal vanity or not, my good sir. My sisters returned
+her bow and her good evening to them with that pointed
+stare which says so plainly, "You are not my equal, how
+dare you insult me by a courtesy?"</p>
+
+<p>And scarcely had we begun to sip our coffee up-stairs
+in the apartments Chanderlos had secured for the miladies
+Anglaises, than the duo upon her began as the two ladies
+sat with Spes between them on a sofa beside one of the
+windows opening on the balcony that ran round the
+house. A chance inadvertent assent of Dunbar's, à propos
+of&mdash;oh, sin unpardonable!&mdash;the beauty of the incognita's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span>
+eyes, touched the valve and unloosened the hot springs
+that were seething below in silence. "A handsome
+woman!&mdash;oh yes, a gentleman's beauty, I dare say!&mdash;but
+a very odd person!" commenced Mrs. Protocol.
+"A very strange person!" assented Mrs. Maréchale.
+"Very free manners!" added Agneta. "Quite French!"
+chorused Constance. "She has diamond rings&mdash;paste,
+no doubt!" said the Politician. "And rouges&mdash;the
+color's much too lovely to be natural!" sneered the
+Saint. "Paints her eyebrows, too!" "Not a doubt&mdash;and
+tints her lashes!" "An adventuress, I should say!"
+"Or worse!" "Evidently not a proper person!" "Certainly
+not!"</p>
+
+<p>Through the soft mellow air, hushed into evening
+silence, the words reached me, as I walked through the
+window on to the balcony, and stood sipping my coffee
+and looking lazily over the landscape wrapped in sunset
+haze, over the valley where the twilight shadows were
+deepening, and the mountains that were steeped yet in a
+rose-hued golden radiance from the rays that had sunk
+behind them.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear ladies," I cried, involuntarily, "can't you
+find anything a little more kindly to say of a stranger
+who has never done you any harm, and who, fifty to one,
+will never cross your path again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bravo!" echoed Maréchale, who has never gone as
+quietly in the matrimonial break as Protocol, and indeed
+will never be thoroughly broken in&mdash;"bravo! women are
+always studying to make themselves attractive; it's a
+pity they don't put down among the items a trifle of
+generosity and charity, it would embellish them wonderfully."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Maréchale beat an injured tattoo with the spoon
+on her saucer, and leaned back with the air of a martyr,
+and drawing in her lips with a smile, whose inimitable
+sneer any lady might have envied&mdash;it was quite priceless!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is the first time, Sir George, I should presume, that
+a husband and a brother were ever heard to unite in upbraiding
+a wife and a sister with her disinclination to
+associate with, or her averseness to countenance, an improper
+person!"</p>
+
+<p>"An improper person!" I cried. "But, my dear Constance,
+who ever told you that this lady you are so desperately
+bitter upon has any fault at all, save the worst
+fault in her own sex's eyes&mdash;that of beauty? I see
+nothing in her; her manners are perfect; her tone&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You must pardon me if I decline taking your verdict
+on so delicate a question," interrupted Lady Maréchale,
+with withering satire. "Very possibly you see nothing
+objectionable in her&mdash;nothing, at least, that <i>you</i> would
+call so! Your views and mine are sufficiently different
+on every subject, and the women with whom I believe
+you have chiefly associated are not those who are calculated
+to give you very much appreciation for the more
+refined classes of our sex! Very possibly the person in
+question is what <i>you</i>, and Sir George too, perhaps, find
+charming; but you must excuse me if I really cannot, to
+oblige you, stoop to countenance any one whom my intuition
+and my knowledge of the world both declare so very
+evidently what she should not be. She will endeavor,
+most probably, if she remain here, to push herself into
+our acquaintance, but if you and my husband should
+choose to insult us by favoring her efforts, Agneta and I,
+happily, can guard ourselves from the objectionable companionship
+into which those who <i>should</i> be our protectors
+would wish to force us!"</p>
+
+<p>With which Lady Maréchale, with a little more martyrdom
+and an air of extreme dignity, had recourse to
+her <i>flacon</i> of Viola Montana, and sank among the sofa
+cushions, a model of outraged and Spartan virtue. I set
+down my coffee-cup, and lounged out again to the peace
+of the balcony; Maréchale shrugged his shoulders, rose,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span>
+and followed me. Lo! on the part of the balcony that
+ran under <i>her</i> windows, leaning on its balustrade, her
+white hand, white as the flowers, playing with the clematis
+tendrils, the "paste" diamond flashing in the last
+rays of the setting sun, stood our "dame d'industrie&mdash;or
+worse!" She was but a few feet farther on; she must
+have heard Lady Maréchale's and Mrs. Protocol's duo on
+her demerits; she <i>had</i> heard it, without doubt, for she
+was laughing gayly and joyously, laughter that sparkled
+all over her <i>riante</i> face and flashed in her bright falcon
+eyes. Laughing still, she signed me to her. I need not
+say that the sign was obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Chivalrous knight, I thank you! You are a Bayard
+of chivalry; you defend the absent! What a miracle, mon
+Dieu! Tell your friends from me not to speak so loudly
+when their windows are open; and, for yourself, rest assured
+your words of this evening will not be forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>"I am happy, indeed, if I have been fortunate enough
+to obtain a chance remembrance, but do not give me too
+much praise for so simple a service; the clumsiest Cimon
+would be stirred into chivalry under such inspiration as I
+had&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The beautiful hazel eyes flashed smilingly on me under
+their lashes. (<i>Those</i> lashes tinted! Heaven forgive the
+malice of women!) She broke off a sprig of the clematis,
+with its long slender leaves and fragrant starry flowers,
+and gave it to me.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Tenez, mon ami</i>, if ever you see me again, show me that
+faded flower, and I shall remember this evening at Vicq
+d'Azyr. Nay, do not flatter yourself&mdash;do not thrust it in
+your breast; it is no gage d'amour! it is only a reward for
+loyal service, and a souvenir to refresh my own memory,
+which is treacherous sometimes, though not in gratitude
+to those who serve me. Adieu, mon Bayard&mdash;et bonsoir!"</p>
+
+<p>But I retained the hand that had given me my clematis-spray.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Meet you again! But will not that be to-morrow? If I
+am not to see you, as your words threaten, till the clematis
+be faded and myself forgotten, let me at least, I beseech
+you, know where, who, by what name&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She drew her hand away with something of a proud,
+surprised gesture; then she laughed again that sweet, ringing,
+mocking laugh:</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, Bayard, it is too much to ask! Leave the future
+to hazard; it is always the best philosophy. Au revoir!
+Adieu&mdash;perhaps for a day, perhaps for a century!"</p>
+
+<p>And the bewitching mystery floated away from me and
+through the open window of her room. You will imagine
+that my "intuition" did not lead me to the conclusion to
+which Lady Maréchale's led her, or assuredly should I
+have followed the donor of the clematis, despite her prohibition.
+Even with my "intuition" pointing where it
+did, I am not sure what I might have done if, in her salon,
+I had not caught sight of a valet and a lady's maid in
+waiting with her coffee, and they are not such spectators
+as one generally selects.</p>
+
+<p>The servants closed her windows and drew down their
+Venetian blinds, and I returned to my coffee. Whether the
+two ladies within had overheard her conversation as she
+had heard theirs, I cannot say, but they looked trebly
+refrigerated, had congealed themselves into the chilliest
+human ice that is imaginable, and comported themselves
+towards me fully as distantly as though I had brought
+a dozen ballet-girls in to dinner with them, or introduced
+them to my choicest acquaintance from the Château des
+Fleurs.</p>
+
+<p>"A man's taste is so pitiably low!" remarked Lady
+Maréchale, in her favorite stage aside to Mrs. Protocol;
+to which that other lady responded, "Disgracefully so!"</p>
+
+<p>Who <i>was</i> my lovely unknown with the bright falcon
+eyes and the charming laugh, with her strange freedom that
+yet was <i>not</i>, somehow, free, and her strange fascination? I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span>
+bade my man ask Chanderlos her name&mdash;couriers know
+everything generally&mdash;but neither Mills nor Chanderlos
+gave me any information. The people of the house did
+not know, or said they did not; they only knew she had
+servants in attendance who came with her, who revealed
+nothing, and paid any price for the best of everything.
+Are impertinent questions ever asked where money is
+plentiful?</p>
+
+<p>I was dressing the next morning something later than
+usual, when I heard the roll of a carriage in the courtyard
+below. I looked through the half-open persiennes
+with a semi-presentiment that it was my sweet foreigner
+who was leaving ere I could presume on my clematis or
+improve our acquaintance. True enough, she it was, leaving
+Vicq d'Azyr in a travelling-carriage, with handsome
+roans and servants in imperial-blue liveries. Who the
+deuce could she be?</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Constance," said I, as I bade Lady Maréchale
+good morning, "your <i>bête noire</i> won't 'press herself into
+your acquaintance,' as you were dreading last night, and
+won't excite Maréchale and me to any more high treason.
+Won't you chant a Te Deum? She left this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"So I perceived," answered Lady Maréchale, frigidly;
+by which I suppose <i>she</i> had not been above the weakness
+of looking through <i>her</i> persiennes.</p>
+
+<p>"What a pity you and Agneta agitated yourselves with
+such unnecessary alarm! It must have cost you a great
+deal of eau-de-Cologne and sal-volatile, I am afraid, last
+night. Do you think she contaminated the air of the
+salle-à-manger, because I will order Mills to throw some
+disinfectant about before you go down?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no inclination to jest upon a person of that
+stamp," rejoined Lady Maréchale, with immense dignity,
+settling her turquoise wristband-studs.</p>
+
+<p>"'That stamp of persons!' What! Do you think she
+is an adventuress, an intrigante, 'or worse' still, then? I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span>
+hoped her dashing equipage might have done something
+towards cleansing her character. Wealth <i>is</i> a universal
+purifier generally."</p>
+
+<p>"Flippant impertinence!" murmured Lady Maréchale,
+disgustedly, to Mrs. Protocol, as she swept onwards down
+the staircase, not deigning me a glance, much less a response,
+stiffening herself with a little extra starch of
+Lucretian virtue and British-matronly dignity, which
+did not grow limp again throughout breakfast, while she
+found fault with the chocolate, considered the <i>petits pains</i>
+execrable, condemned the sardines as uneatable, petted
+Spes, kept Maréchale and me at Coventry, and sighed
+over their enforced incarceration, by Dr. Berkeley's
+orders, in Vicq d'Azyr, that kept them in this stupid
+place away from Lemongenseidlitz.</p>
+
+<p>Their anticipations from Lemongenseidlitz were charmingly
+golden and rose-tinted. They looked forward to
+consolidating their friendship with the dear Duchess in
+its balmy air, to improving a passing acquaintance into
+an intimate one with that charming person the Baroness
+Liebenfrauenmilch, Mistress of the Robes to Princess
+Hélène, and to being very intimate at the Court, while
+the Pullingers (their bosom-friends and very dear rivals)
+would be simply presented, and remain in chagrin, uninvited
+to the state balls and palace festivities. And what
+more delightful than that last clause? for what sauce
+invented, from Carême to Soyer, flavors our own <i>plats</i> so
+deliciously, I should like to know, as thinking that our
+beloved next-door neighbor is doomed to a very dry cutlet?</p>
+
+<p>As Pérette, in a humbler fashion, built visions from the
+pot of milk, so mesdames mes s[oe]urs, from the glittering
+court and capital of Lemongenseidlitz, erected brilliant
+châteaux en Espagne of all their sayings and doings in
+that fashionable little city whither they were bound, and
+into which they had so many invaluable passports. They
+were impatient to be journeying from our humble, solitary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span>
+valley, and after a month of Vicq d'Azyr, they departed
+for their golden land, and I went with them, as I had
+slain izzards almost <i>ad nauseam</i>, and Dunbar's expiration
+of leave had taken him back to Dublin.</p>
+
+<p>It was five o'clock when we reached its Reidenscher Hof,
+nine when we had finished dinner. It was stupid work
+yawning over coffee and <i>Galignani</i>. What was to be done?
+Maréchale proposed the Opera, and for the first time in his
+life was unopposed by his wife. Constance was in a suave,
+benignant mood; she was thinking of her Graf von Rosenläu,
+of the Pullingers, and of the sweet, adroit manner
+in which she would&mdash;when she had captivated him and
+could proffer such hints&mdash;awaken his Serene Highness
+to a sense of his moral guilt in not bringing to instant
+capital punishment every agent in those Satanus-farmed
+banks that throve throughout his duchy. Lady Maréchale
+and Mrs. Protocol assented, and to the little miniature
+gayly-decorated Opera House we drove. They were in the
+middle of the second act of "Ernani." "Ernani" was
+stale to us all, and we naturally lorgné'd the boxes in lieu
+of the stage. I had turned my glass on the left-hand
+stage-box, and was going steadily round, when a faint cry
+of dismay, alarm, amazement, horror, broke, muffled and
+low, from mesdames mes s[oe]urs. Their lorgnons were riveted
+on one spot; their cheeks were blanched; their hands
+were tremulous; if they had beheld a spiritual visitant,
+no consternation more profound, more intense, could have
+seized both with its iron hand. <i>My</i> sisters too! the chilliest,
+the calmest, the most impenetrable, the most unassailable
+of mortals!</p>
+
+<p>"And we called her, in her hearing, not a proper person?"
+gasped Lady Maréchale.</p>
+
+<p>"We thought her a lorette! an intrigante! a dame
+d'industrie!" echoed Mrs. Protocol.</p>
+
+<p>"Who wore paste jewels!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who came from the Rue Bréda!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Who wanted to know us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Whom we wouldn't know!"</p>
+
+<p>I turned my Voightlander where their Voightlanders
+turned; there, in the royal box, leaning back in the fauteuil
+that marked her rank, there, with her lovely hazel
+eyes, her witching smile, her radiant beauty, matchless
+as the pearls gleaming above her brow, there sat the
+"adventuress&mdash;or worse!" of Vicq d'Azyr; the "evidently
+a not proper person" of my discerning sisters&mdash;H.S.H.
+Princess Hélène, Grand-Duchess of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz!
+Great Heavens! how had we never
+guessed her before? How had we never divined her
+identity? How had we never remembered all we had
+heard of her love of laisser-aller, her taste for adventure,
+her delight in travelling, when she could, unattended and
+incognita? How had we never put this and that together,
+and penetrated the metamorphosis?</p>
+
+<p>"<i>And I called her not a proper person!</i>" gasped Lady
+Maréchale, again shrinking back behind the azure curtains;
+the projectiles she had shot with such vindictive
+severity, such delighted acrimony, from the murderous
+mortar of malice, recoiling back upon her head for once,
+and crushing her to powder. What reception would they
+have <i>now</i> at the Court? Von Rosenläu would be powerless;
+the Pullingers themselves would be better off!
+Pérette's pot of milk was smashed and spilt! "Adieu,
+veau, vache, cochon, couvée!"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>When the pitcher lies shivered into fragments, and the
+milk is spilt, you know, poor Pérette's dreams are shivered
+and spilt with them. "I have not seen you at the palace
+yet?" asked her Grace of Frangipane. "We do not see
+you at the Court, mesdames?" asked M. de la Croix-et-Cordons.
+"How did it happen you were not at the Duchess's
+ball last night?" asked "those odious Pullingers." And
+what had my sister to say in reply? My clematis secured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span>
+<i>me</i> a charming reception&mdash;how charming I don't feel
+called upon to reveal&mdash;but Princess Hélène, with that
+calm dignity which easily replaced, when she chose, her
+witching <i>abandon</i>, turned the tables upon her detractors,
+and taught them how dangerous it may be to speak ill&mdash;of
+the wrong people.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc365.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cc366a.png" alt="* * * * *" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUATORZE" id="A_STUDY_A_LA_LOUIS_QUATORZE"></a>A STUDY À LA LOUIS QUATORZE:</h2>
+
+<h3>PENDANT TO A PORTRAIT BY MIGNARD.</h3>
+
+
+<p>She was surpassingly fair, Madame la Marquise.
+Mignard's portraits of her may fully rival his
+far-famed Portrait aux Amours. One of them
+has her painted as Venus Victrix, in the fashion of the
+day; one of them, as herself, as Léontine Opportune de
+Vivonne de Rennecourt, Marquise de la Rivière, with her
+crève-c[oe]urs, and her diamonds, and her gay smile, showing
+her teeth, white and gleaming as the pearls mingled with
+her curls à la mode Montespan. Not Louise de la Beaume-le-Blanc,
+when the elm-boughs of St. Germain first flung
+their shadow on her golden head, before it bent for the
+Carmelite veil before the altar in the Rue St. Jacques;
+not Henriette d'Angleterre, when she listened to the trouvères'
+romances sung under her balcony at St. Cloud,
+before her young life was quenched by the hand of Morel
+and the order of Monsieur; not Athénaïs de Mortemart,
+when the liveries of lapis lazuli blue dashed through the
+streets of Paris, and the outriders cleared her path with
+their whips, before the game was lost, and the iron spikes
+were fastened inside the Montespan bracelets;&mdash;none of
+them, her contemporaries and acquaintances, eclipsed in
+loveliness Madame la Marquise. Had she but been fair
+instead of dark, the brown Bourbon eyes would have
+fallen on her of a surety; she would have outshone the
+lapis lazuli liveries with a royal guard of scarlet and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span>
+gold, and her friend Athénaïs would have hated her as
+that fair lady hated "la sotte Fontanges" and "Saint
+Maintenon;" for their sex, in all ages, have remembered
+the sage's precept, "Love as though you will one day
+hate," and invariably carry about with them, ready for
+need, a little essence of the acid of Malice, to sour in an
+instant the sugared cream of their loves and their friendships
+if occasion rise up and the storm-cloud of rivalry
+loom in the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>She was a beauty, Madame la Marquise, and she knew
+it, as she leaned out over the balcony of her château of
+Petite Forêt, that lay close to Clagny, under the shadow
+of the wood of Ville d'Avrée, outside the gates of Versailles,
+looking down on her bosquets, gardens, and terraces
+designed by Le Nôtre; for though she was alone,
+and there was nothing but her little dog Osmin to admire
+her white skin, and her dark eyes, and her beautiful
+hands and arms, and her diamond pendants that glittered
+in the moonlight, she smiled, her flashing triumphant
+smile, as she whispered to herself, "He is mine&mdash;mine!
+Bah! how can he help himself?" and pressed the ruby
+agraffe on her bosom with the look of a woman who
+knew no resistance, and brooked no reluctance to worship
+at her shrine.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing ever opposed Madame la Marquise, and life
+went smoothly on with her. If Bossuet ever reproved her,
+it was in those <i>anathèmes cachés sous des fleurs d'oranger</i>
+in which that politic priest knew how to deal when expedient,
+however haughty and relentless to the world in
+general. M. le Marquis was not a savage eccentricity like
+M. de Pardaillon de Gondran, would never have dreamt
+of imitating the eccentricity of going into mourning, but
+if the Bourbon eye <i>had</i> fallen on his wife, would have
+said, like a loyal peer of France, that all his household
+treasures were the King's. Disagreeables fled before the
+scintillations of her smiles, as the crowd fled before her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span>
+gilded carriage and her Flanders horses; and if ever a
+little fit of piety once in a while came over her, and Conscience
+whispered a mal à propos word in her delicate ear,
+she would give an enamelled lamp to Sainte Marie Réparatrice,
+by the advice of the Comtesse de Soubise and
+the Princesse de Monaco (who did such expiatory things
+themselves, and knew the comfort they afforded), and
+emerge from her repentance one of the most radiant of all
+the brilliant butterflies that fluttered their gorgeous wings
+in the Jardin de Flore under the sunny skies of Versailles.</p>
+
+<p>The moonlight glittered on the fountains, falling with
+measured splash into their marble basins; the lime-leaves,
+faintly stirred by the sultry breezes, perfumed the night
+with their voluptuous fragrance, and the roses, twining
+round the carved and gilded balustrade, shook off their
+bowed head drops of dew, that gleamed brightly as the
+diamonds among the curls of the woman who leaned
+above, resting her delicate rouged cheek on her jewelled
+hand, alone&mdash;a very rare circumstance with the Marquise
+de la Rivière. Osmin did not admire the rare solitude,
+for he rattled his silver bells and barked&mdash;an Italian
+greyhound's shrill, fretful bark&mdash;as his quick ears caught
+the distant sound of steps coming swiftly over the turf
+below, and his mistress smiled as she patted his head:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Osmin!&mdash;here he is?"</p>
+
+<p>A man came out from under the heavy shadow of lime
+sand chestnuts, whose darkness the moon's rays had no
+power to pierce, crossed the lawn just under the balcony,
+and, coming up the terrace-steps, stood near her&mdash;a man,
+young, fair, handsome, whose age and form the uniform
+of a Captain of the Guards would have suited far better
+than the dark robes of a priest, which he wore; his lips
+were pressed closely together, and his face was pale with
+a pallor that consorted painfully with the warm passionate
+gleam of his eyes.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"So! You are late in obeying my commands, monsieur!"</p>
+
+<p>Surely no other man in France would have stood silent
+beside her, under the spell of her dazzling glances, with
+such a picture before him as Madame la Marquise, in her
+azure silk and her point d'Angleterre, with her diamond
+pendants shaking among her hair, and her arched eyebrows
+lifted imperiously! But he did; his lips pressed
+closer, his eyes gleaming brighter. She changed her tone;
+it was soft, seductive, reproachful, and the smile on her
+lips was tender&mdash;as tender as it ever could be with the
+mockery that always lay under it; and it broke at last
+the spell that bound him, as she whispered, "Ah! Gaston,
+you love me no longer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not love you? O God!"</p>
+
+<p>They were but five words, but they told Madame la
+Marquise of a passion such as she had never roused,
+despite all her fascinations and intrigues, in the lovers
+that crowded round her in the salons within, or at Versailles,
+over the trees yonder, where love was gallantry,
+and all was light comedy, with nothing so foolish as
+tragedy known.</p>
+
+<p>He clasped her hands so closely that the sharp points
+of the diamond rings cut his own, though he felt them
+not.</p>
+
+<p>"Not love you? Great Heaven! Not love you? Near
+you, I forget my oath, my vows, my God!&mdash;I forget all,
+save you, whom I adore, as, till I met you, I adored my
+Church. Torture endured with you were dearer than
+Paradise won alone! Once with you, I have no strength,
+you bow me to your will as the wind bows the lime-leaf.
+Oh! woman, woman! could you have no mercy, that with
+crowds round you daily worshipping your slightest smile,
+you must needs bow <i>me</i> down before your glance, as you
+bow those who have no oaths to bind them, no need to
+scourge themselves in midnight solitude for the mere crime<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>
+of Thought? Had you no mercy, that with all hearts
+yours, you must have mine to sear it and destroy it?
+Have you not lives enough vowed to you, that you seek
+to blast mine for ever? I was content, untroubled, till
+I met you; no woman's glance stirred my heart, no
+woman's eyes haunted my vigils, no woman's voice came
+in memory between my soul and prayer! What devil
+tempted you to throw your spells over me&mdash;could you
+not leave <i>one</i> man in peace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah bah! the tempted love the game of temptation
+generally full as well as the tempters!" thought Madame
+la Marquise, with an inward laugh.</p>
+
+<p>Why did she allow such language to go unrebuked?
+Why did she, to whom none dared to breathe any but
+words the most polished, and love vows the most honeyed,
+permit herself to be addressed in such a strain? Possibly
+it was very new to her, such energy as this, and such an
+outbreak of passion amused her. At any rate she only
+drew her hands away, and her brilliant brown eyes filled
+with tears;&mdash;tears <i>were</i> to be had at Versailles when
+needed, even her friend Montespan knew how to use them
+as the worst weapons against the artillery of the Evêque
+de Comdom&mdash;and her heart heaved under the filmy lace.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Gaston! what words! 'What devil tempted me?'
+I know scarcely whether love be angel or devil; he seems
+either or both! But you love me little, unless in that
+name you recognize a plea for every madness and every
+thought!"</p>
+
+<p>The scarlet blood flushed over his face, and his eyes
+shone and gleamed like fire, while he clenched his hands
+in a mortal anguish.</p>
+
+<p>"Angel or devil? Ay! which, indeed! The one when
+it comes to us, the other when it leaves us! You have
+roused love in me I shall bear to my grave; but what
+gage have I that you give it me back? How do I know
+but that even now you are trifling with me, mocking at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span>
+me, smiling at the beardless priest who is unlearned in all
+the gay gallantries of libertine churchmen and soldierly
+courtiers? My Heaven! how know, as I stand beside
+you, whether you pity or disdain me, love or scorn me?"</p>
+
+<p>The passionate words broke in a torrent from his lips,
+stirred the stillness of the summer eve with a fiery anguish
+little akin to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I not love you?"</p>
+
+<p>Her answer was simple; but as Léontine de Rennecourt
+spoke it, leaning her cheek against his breast, with her
+eyes dazzling as the diamonds in her hair, looking up into
+his by the light of the stars, they had an eloquence far
+more dangerous than speech, and delirious to the senses
+as magician's perfumes. His lips lingered on hers, and
+felt the loud fast throbs of the heart she had won as he
+bent over her, pressing her closer and closer to him&mdash;vanquished
+and conquered, as men in all ages and of all
+creeds have been vanquished and conquered by women,
+all other thoughts fleeing away into oblivion, all fears
+dying out, all vows forgotten in the warm, living life of
+passion and of joy, that, for the first time in a brief life,
+flooded his heart with its golden voluptuous light.</p>
+
+<p>"You love me? So be it," he murmured; "but beware
+what you do, my life lies in your hands, and you must
+be mine till death part us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Till my fancy change rather!" thought Madame la
+Marquise, as she put her jewelled hand on his lips, her
+hair softly brushing his cheek, with a touch as soft, and
+an odor as sweet, as the leaves of one of the roses
+twining below.</p>
+
+<p>Two men strolling below under the limes of Petite
+Forêt&mdash;discussing the last scandals of Versailles, talking
+of the ascendency of La Fontanges, of the Spanish dress
+his Majesty had reassumed to please her, of the Brinvilliers'
+Poudre de Succession, of the new château given to
+Père de la Chaise, of D'Aubigny's last extravagance and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span>
+Lauzun's last mot, and the last gossip about Bossuet and
+Mademoiselle de Mauléon, and all the chit-chat of that
+varied day, glittering with wit and prolific of poison&mdash;glanced
+up to the balcony by the light of the stars.</p>
+
+<p>"That cursed priest!" muttered the younger, le Vicomte
+de Saint-Elix, as he struck the head off a lily with his
+delicate cane.</p>
+
+<p>"In a fool's paradise! Ah-ha! Madame la Marquise!"
+laughed the other&mdash;the old Duc de Clos-Vougeot&mdash;taking
+a chocolate sweetmeat out of his emerald-studded bonbonnière
+as they walked on, while the lime-blossoms shook
+off in the summer night wind and dropped dead on the
+grass beneath, laughing at the story of the box D'Artagnan
+had found in Lauzun's rooms when he seized his
+papers, containing the portraits of sixty women of high
+degree who had worshipped the resistless Captain of the
+Guard, with critical and historical notices penned under
+each; notices D'Artagnan and his aide could not help
+indiscreetly retailing, in despite of the Bourbon command
+of secrecy&mdash;secrecy so necessary where sixty beauties and
+saints were involved!</p>
+
+<p>"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc de Clos-Vougeot,
+tapping his bonbonnière, enamelled by Petitot: the Duc
+was old, and knew women well, and knew the value and
+length of a paradise dependent on that most fickle of
+butterflies&mdash;female fidelity; he had heard Ninon de
+Lenclos try to persuade Scarron's wife to become a coquette,
+and Scarron's wife in turn beseech Ninon to discontinue
+her coquetteries; had seen that, however different
+their theories and practice, the result was the same; and
+already guessed right, that if Paris had been universally
+won by the one, its monarch would eventually be won by
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>"A fool's paradise!"</p>
+
+<p>The courtier was right, but the priest, had he heard
+him, would never have believed; <i>his</i> heaven shone in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span>
+those dazzling eyes: till the eyes closed in death, his
+heaven was safe! He had never loved, he had seen
+nothing of women; he had come straight from the monastic
+gloom of a Dominican abbey, in the very heart of the
+South, down in Languedoc, where costly missals were his
+only idol, and rigid pietists, profoundly ignorant of the
+ways and thoughts of their brethren of Paris, had reared
+him up in anchorite rigidity, and scourged his mind with
+iron philosophies and stoic-like doctrines of self-mortification
+that would have repudiated the sophistries and
+ingenuities of Sanchez, Escobar, and Mascarenhas, as
+suggestions of the very Master of Evil himself. From
+the ascetic gloom of that Languedoc convent he had been
+brought straight, by superior will, into the glare of the
+life at Versailles, that brilliant, gorgeous, sparkling,
+bizarre life, scintillating with wit, brimful of intrigue,
+crowded with the men and women who formed the Court
+of that age and the History of the next; where he found
+every churchman an <i>abbé galant</i>, and heard those who
+performed the mass jest at it with those who attended it;
+where he found no lines marked of right and wrong, but
+saw them all fused in a gay, tangled web of two court
+colors&mdash;Expediency and Pleasure. A life that dazzled
+and tired his eyes, as the glitter of lights in a room dazzles
+and tires the eyes of a man who comes suddenly in from
+the dark night air, till he grew giddy and sick, and in
+the midst of the gilded salons, or soft confessions of titled
+sinners, would ask himself if indeed he could be the same
+man who had sat calm and grave with the mellow sun
+streaming in on his missal-page in the monastic gloom of
+the Languedoc abbey but so few brief months before,
+when all this world of Versailles was unknown? The
+same man? Truly not&mdash;never again the same, since
+Madame la Marquise had bent her brown eyes upon him,
+been amused with his singular difference from all those
+around her, had loved him as women loved at Versailles,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span>
+and bowed him down to her feet, before he guessed the
+name of the forbidden language that stirred in his heart
+and rushed to his lips, untaught and unbidden.</p>
+
+<p>"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc, sagaciously tapping
+his gold bonbonnière. But many a paradise like it has
+dawned and faded, before and since the Versailles of Louis
+Quatorze.</p>
+
+<p>He loved, and Madame la Marquise loved him. Through
+one brief tumult of struggle he passed: struggle between
+the creed of the Dominican abbey, where no sin would
+have been held so thrice accursed, so unpardonable, so
+deserving of the scourge and the stake as this&mdash;and the
+creed of the Bourbon Court, where churchmen's gallantries
+were every-day gossip; where the Abbé de Rancé, ere he
+founded the saintly gloom of La Trappe, scandalized
+town and court as much as Lauzun; where the Père de
+la Chaise smiled complacently on La Fontanges' ascendancy;
+where three nobles rushed to pick up the handkerchief
+of that royal confessor, who washed out with holy
+water the royal indiscretions, as you wash off grains of
+dust with perfumed water; where the great and saintly
+Bishop of Condom could be checked in a rebuking harangue,
+and have the tables turned on him by a mischievous
+reference to Mademoiselle de Mauléon; where life
+was intrigue for churchmen and laymen alike, and where
+the abbé's rochet and the cardinal's scarlet covered the
+same vices as were openly blazoned on the gold aiglettes
+of the Garde du Corps and the costly lace of the Chambellan
+du Roi. A storm, brief and violent as the summer
+storms that raged over Versailles, was roused between the
+conflicting thoughts at war within him, between the principles
+deeply rooted from long habit and stern belief, and
+the passions sprung up unbidden with the sudden growth
+and gorgeous glow of a tropical flower&mdash;a storm, brief
+and violent, a struggle, ended that night, when he stood
+on the balcony with the woman he loved, felt her lips<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span>
+upon his, and bowed down to her feet delirious and
+strengthless.</p>
+
+<p>"I have won my wager with Adeline; I have vanquished
+<i>mon beau</i> De Launay," thought Madame la Marquise,
+smiling, two days after, as she sat, en negligé, in
+her broidered chair, pulling Osmin's ears, and stirring
+the frothy chocolate handed to her by her negro, Azor,
+brought over in the suite of the African embassy from
+Ardra, full of monkeyish espièglerie, and covered with
+gems&mdash;a priceless dwarf, black as ink, and but two feet
+high, who could match any day with the Queen's little
+Moor. "He amuses me with his vows of eternal love.
+Eternal love?&mdash;how <i>de trop</i> we should find it, here in
+Versailles! But it is amusing enough to play at for a
+season. No, that is not half enough&mdash;he adores! This
+poor Gaston!"</p>
+
+<p>So in the salons of Versailles, and in the world, where
+Ninon reigned, by the Court ladies, while they loitered
+in the new-made gardens of Marly, among other similar
+things jested of was this new amour of Madame de la
+Rivière for the young Père de Launay. "She was always
+eccentric, and he <i>was</i> very handsome, and would have
+charming manners if he were not so grave and so silent,"
+the women averred; while the young nobles swore that
+these meddling churchmen had always the best luck,
+whether in amatory conquest, or on fat lands and rich
+revenues. What the Priest of Languedoc thought a love
+that would outlast life, and repay him for peace of conscience
+and heaven both lost, was only one of the passing
+bubbles of gossip and scandal floating for an hour, amidst
+myriads like it, on the glittering, fast-rushing, diamond-bright
+waters of life at Versailles!</p>
+
+<p>A new existence had dawned for him; far away in the
+dim dusky vista of forgotten things, though in reality
+barely distant a few short months, lay the old life in
+Languedoc, vague and unremembered as a passed dream;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span>
+with its calm routine, its monastic silence, its unvarying
+alternations of study and prayer, its iron-bound thoughts,
+its rigid creed. It had sunk away as the peaceful gray
+twilight of a summer's night sinks away before the fiery
+burst of an artificial illumination, and a new life had
+dawned for him, radiant, tumultuous, conflicting, delicious&mdash;that
+dazzled his eyes with the magnificence of boundless
+riches and unrestricted extravagance; that charmed
+his intellect with the witty coruscations, the polished
+esprit, of an age unsurpassed for genius, grace, and wit;
+and that swayed alike his heart, his imagination, and his
+passions with the subtle intoxication of this syren of Love,
+whose forbidden song had never before, in faintest echo,
+fallen on his ear.</p>
+
+<p>Far away in the dim, lifeless, pulseless past, sank the
+memory of the old Dominican abbey, of all it had taught
+him, of all it had exacted, in its iron, stoical, merciless
+creed. A new life had arisen for him, and Gaston de
+Launay, waking from the semi-slumber of the living
+death he had endured in Languedoc, and liked because
+he knew no other, was happy&mdash;happy as a prisoner is in
+the wild delight with which he welcomes the sunlight
+after lengthened imprisonment, happy as an opium-eater
+is in the delicious delirium that succeeds the lulling softness
+of the opiate.</p>
+
+<p>"He loves me, poor Gaston! Bah! But how strangely
+he talks! If love were this fiery, changeless, earnest
+thing with us that it is with him, what in the world should
+we do with it? We should have to get a lettre de cachet
+for it, and forbid it the Court; send it in exile to Pignerol,
+as they have just done Lauzun. Love in earnest? We
+should lose the best spice for our wine, the best toy for
+our games, and, mon Dieu! what embroilments there
+would be! Love in earnest? Bagatell! Louise de la
+Vallière shows us the folly of that; but for its Quixotisms
+she would now be at Vaujours, instead of buried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span>
+alive in that Rue St. Jacques, with nothing to do but to
+weep for 'Louison,' count her beads, and listen to M. de
+Condom's merciless eloquence! Like the king,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">J'aime qu'on m'aime, mais avec de l'esprit.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>People have no right to reproach each other with inconstancy;
+one's caprices are not in one's own keeping; and
+one can no more help where one's fancy blows, than that
+lime-leaf can help where the breeze chooses to waft it.
+But poor Gaston! how make <i>him</i> comprehend that?"
+thought Madame la Marquise, as she turned, and smiled,
+and held out her warm, jewelled hands, and listened once
+again to the words of the man who was in her power as
+utterly as the bird in the power of the snake when it has
+once looked up into the fatal eyes that lure it on to its
+doom.</p>
+
+<p>"You will love me ever?" he would ask, resting his
+lips on her white low brow.</p>
+
+<p>"Ever!" would softly answer Madame la Marquise.</p>
+
+<p>And her lover believed her: should his deity lie? He
+believed her! What did he, fresh from the solitude of
+his monastery, gloomy and severe as that of the Trappist
+abbey, with its perpetual silence, its lowered glances, its
+shrouded faces, its ever-present "memento mori," know
+of women's faith, of women's love, of the sense in which
+<i>they</i> meant that vow "for ever"? He believed her, and
+never asked what would be at the end of a path strewn
+with such odorous flowers. Alone, it is true, in moments
+when he paused to think, he stood aghast at the abyss
+into which he had fallen, at the sin into which, a few
+months before, haughty and stern in virtue against the
+temptation that had never entered his path, he would
+have defied devils in legion to have lured him, yet into
+which he had now plunged at the mere smile of a woman!
+Out of her presence, out of her spells, standing by himself
+under the same skies that had blooded over his days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span>
+of peace in Languedoc, back on his heart, with a sickening
+anguish, would come the weight of his sin; the burden
+of his broken oaths, the scorch of that curse eternal
+which, by his creed, he held drawn down on him here
+and hereafter; and Gaston de Launay would struggle
+again against this idolatrous passion, which had come
+with its fell delusion betwixt him and his God; struggle&mdash;vainly,
+idly&mdash;struggle, only to hug closer the sin he
+loved while he loathed; only to drink deeper of the
+draught whose voluptuous perfume was poison; only to
+forget all, forsake all, dare all, at one whisper of her
+voice, one glance of her eyes, one touch of the lips whose
+caress he held would be bought by a curse through
+eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Few women love aught "for ever," save, perchance,
+diamonds, lace, and their own beauty, and Madame la
+Marquise was not one of those few; certainly not&mdash;she
+had no desire to make herself singular in her generation,
+and could set fashions much more likely to find disciples,
+without reverting to anything so eccentric, plebeian, and
+out of date. Love <i>one</i> for ever! She would have thought
+it as terrible waste of her fascinations, as for a jewel to
+shine in the solitude of its case, looked on by only one
+pair of eyes, or for a priceless enamel, by Petitot, to be
+only worn next the heart, shrouded away from the light
+of day, hidden under the folds of linen and lace.</p>
+
+<p>"Love one for ever?"&mdash;Madame la Marquise laughed
+at the thought, as she stood dressed for a ball, after assisting
+at the representation of a certain tragedy, called
+"Bérénice" (in which Mesdames Deshoulières and De
+Sévigné, despite their esprit, alone of all Paris and the
+Court could see no beauty), and glanced in the mirror at
+her radiant face, her delicate skin, her raven curls, with
+their pendants shaking, her snow-white arms, and her
+costly dress of the newest mode, its stomacher gleaming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span>
+one mass of gems. "Love one for ever? The droll idea!
+Is it not enough that I have loved him once?"</p>
+
+<p>It was more than enough for his rivals, who bitterly
+envied him; courtly abbés, with polished smiles, and
+young chanoines, with scented curls and velvet toques,
+courtiers, who piqued themselves on reputations only
+second to Lauzun's, and men of the world, who laughed
+at this new caprice of Madame la Marquise, alike bore
+no good will to this Languedoc priest, and gave him a
+significant sneer, or a compliment that roused his blood
+to fire, and stung him far worse than more open insult,
+when they met in the salons, or crossed in the corridors,
+at Versailles or Petite Forêt.</p>
+
+<p>"Those men! those men! Should he ever lose her to
+any one of them?" he would think over and over again,
+clenching his hand, in impotent agony of passion that he
+had not the sword and the license of a soldier to strike
+them on the lips with his glove for the smile with which
+they dared to speak her name; to make them wash out
+in blood under the trees, before the sun was up, the laugh,
+the mot, the delicate satire, which were worse to bear
+than a blow to the man who could not avenge them.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardieu! Madame must be very unusually faithful
+to her handsome Priest; she has smiled on no other for
+two months! What unparalleled fidelity!" said the
+Vicomte de Saint-Elix, with petulant irritation.</p>
+
+<p>"Jealous, Léonce?" laughed the old Duc, whom he
+spoke to, tapping the medallion portrait on his bonbonnière.
+"Take comfort: when the weather has been so
+long fixed, it is always near a change. Ah! M. de Launay
+overhears! He looks as if he would slay us. Very
+unchristian in a priest!"</p>
+
+<p>Gaston de Launay overheard, as he stood by a <i>croisée</i>
+at Petite Forêt, playing with Osmin&mdash;he liked even the
+dog, since the hand he loved so often lay on its slender
+neck, and toyed with its silver chain. And, sworn as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span>
+was to the service of his Church, sole mistress as his
+Church had been, till Léontine de Rennecourt's eyes had
+lured him to his desertion of her, apostate in his own eyes
+as such a thought confessed him to have grown, he now
+loathed the garb of a priest, that bound his hands from
+vengeance, and made him powerless before insult as a
+woman. Fierce, ruthless longing for revenge upon these
+men seized on him; devilish desires, the germ of which
+till that hour he never dreamt slumbered within him,
+woke up into dangerous, vigorous life. Had he lived in
+the world, its politic reserve, its courtly sneer, its light
+gallantries, that passed the time and flattered amour-propre,
+its dissimulated hate that smiled while plotting, and
+killed with poisoned bonbons, would never have been
+learnt by him; and having long lived out of it, having
+been suddenly plunged into its whirl, not guessing its
+springs, ignorant of its diplomacies, its suave lies, termed
+good breeding, its légères philosophies, he knew nothing
+of the wisdom with which its wise men forsook their loves
+and concealed their hatreds. Both passions now sprung
+up in him at one birth, both the stronger for the long
+years in which a chill, artificial, but unbroken calm, had
+chained his very nature down, and fettered into an iron
+monotony, an unnatural and colorless tranquillity, a character
+originally impetuous and vivid, as the frosts of a
+winter chill into one cold, even, glassy surface, the rapids
+of a tumultuous river. With the same force and strength
+with which, in the old days in Languedoc, he had idolized
+and served his Church, sparing himself no mortification,
+believing every iota of her creed, carrying out her
+slightest rule with merciless self-examination, so&mdash;the
+tide once turned the other way&mdash;so the priest now loved,
+so he now hated.</p>
+
+<p>"He is growing exigeant, jealous, presuming; he
+amuses me no longer&mdash;he wearies. I must give him his
+congé," thought Madame la Marquise. "This play at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+eternal passion is very amusing for a while, but, like all
+things, gets tiresome when it has lasted some time. What
+does not? Poor Gaston, it is his provincial ideas, but he
+will soon rub such off, and find, like us all, that sincerity
+is troublesome, ever de trop, and never profitable. He
+loves me&mdash;but bah! so does Saint-Elix, so do they all,
+and a jealous husband like M. de Nesmond, <i>le drôle!</i>
+could scarcely be worse than my young De Launay is
+growing!"</p>
+
+<p>And Madame la Marquise glanced at her face in the
+mirror, and wished she knew Madame de Maintenon's
+secret for the Breuvage Indien; wished she had one of
+the <i>clefs de faveur</i> to admit her to the Grande Salle du
+Parlement; wished she had the <i>couronne d'Agrippine</i>
+her friend Athénaïs had just shown her; wished Le Brun
+were not now occupied on the ceiling of the King's Grande
+Galerie, and were free to paint the frescoes of her own
+new-built chapel; wished a thousand unattainable things,
+as spoilt children of fortune will do, and swept down her
+château staircase a little out of temper&mdash;she could not
+have told why&mdash;to receive her guests at a fête given in
+honor of the marriage of Mademoiselle de Blois and the
+Prince de Conti.</p>
+
+<p>There was the young Comte de Vermandois, who would
+recognize in the Dauphin no superiority save that of his
+"<i>frère aine</i>;" there was "<i>le petit bossu</i>," Prince Eugene,
+then soliciting the rochet of a Bishop, and equally ridiculed
+when he sought a post in the army; there was M.
+de Louvois, who had just signed the order for the Dragonades;
+there was the Palatine de Bavière, with her German
+brusquerie, who had just clumsily tried to insult
+Madame de Montespan by coming into the salon with a
+great turnspit, led by a similar ribbon and called by the
+same name, in ridicule of the pet Montespan poodle;
+there was La Montespan herself, with her lovely gold
+hair, her dove's eyes, and her serpent's tongue; there was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span>
+Madame de Sévigné and Madame de Grignan the Duchesse
+de Richelieu and the Duchesse de Lesdiguières;
+there was Bussy Rabutin and Hamilton. Who was there
+not that was brilliant, that was distinguished, that was
+high in rank and famed in wit at the fête of Madame la
+Marquise?&mdash;Madame la Marquise, who floated through
+the crowd that glittered in her salon and gardens, who
+laughed and smiled, showing her dazzling white teeth,
+who had a little Cupid gleaming with jewels (emblematic
+enough of Cupid as he was known at Versailles) to present
+the Princesse de Conti with a bridal bouquet whose
+flowers were of pearls and whose leaves were of emeralds;
+who piqued herself that the magnificence of her fête was
+scarcely eclipsed by His Majesty himself; who yielded
+the palm neither to La Vallière's lovely daughter, nor to
+her friend Athénaïs, nor to any one of the beauties who
+shone with them, and whose likeness by Mignard laughed
+down from the wall where it hung, matchless double of
+her own matchless self.</p>
+
+<p>The Priest of Languedoc watched her, the relentless
+fangs of passion gnawing his heart, as the wolf the Spartan.
+For the first time he was forgotten! His idol
+passed him carelessly, gave him no glance, no smile, but
+lavished a thousand coquetries on Saint-Elix, on De
+Rohan-Soubise, on the boy Vermandois,&mdash;on any who
+sought them. Once he addressed her. Madame la Marquise
+shrugged her snow-white shoulders, and arched her
+eyebrows with petulant irritation, and turned to laugh
+gayly at Saint-Elix, who was amusing her, and La Montespan,
+and Madame de Thianges, with some gay mischievous
+scandal concerning Madame de Lesdiguières and the
+Archbishop of Paris; for scandals, if not wholly new
+are ever diverting when concerning an enemy, especially
+when dressed and served up with the piquant sauce
+of wit.</p>
+
+<p>"I no longer then, madame, lead a dog's life in jealousy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span>
+of this priest?" whispered Saint-Elix, after other whispers,
+in the ear of Madame la Marquise. The Vicomte
+adored her, not truly in Languedoc fashion, but very
+warmly&mdash;à la mode de Versailles.</p>
+
+<p>The Marquise laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not! You know I bet Mme. de Montevreau
+that I would conquer him. I have won now. Hush!
+He is close. There will be a tragedy, <i>mon ami</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"M. le Vicomte, if you have the honor of a noble, the
+heart of a man, you fight me to-night. I seek no shelter
+under my cloth!"</p>
+
+<p>Saint-Elix turned as he heard the words, laughed
+scornfully, and signed the speaker away with an insolent
+sneer:</p>
+
+<p>"Bah! <i>Révérend Père!</i> we do not fight with women
+and churchmen!"</p>
+
+<p>The fête was ended at last, the lights that had gleamed
+among the limes and chestnuts had died out, the gardens
+and salons were emptied and silent, the little Cupid had
+laid aside his weighty jewelled wings, the carriages with
+their gorgeous liveries, their outriders, and their guards
+of honor, had rolled from the gates of Petite Forêt to
+the Palace of Versailles. Madame la Marquise stood
+alone once more in the balcony of her salons, leaning her
+white arms on its gilded balustrade, looking down on to
+the gardens beneath, silvered with the breaking light of
+the dawn, smiling, her white teeth gleaming between her
+parted rose-hued lips, and thinking&mdash;of what? Who
+shall say?</p>
+
+<p>Still, still as death lay the gardens below, that an hour
+ago had been peopled with a glittering crowd, re-echoing
+with music, laughter, witty response, words of intrigue.
+Where the lights had shone on diamonds and pearl-broidered
+trains, on softly rouged cheeks, and gold-laced
+coats, on jewelled swords and broideries of gold, the gray
+hue of the breaking day now only fell on the silvered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span>
+leaves of the limes, the turf wet with dew, he drooped
+heads of the Provence roses; and Madame la Marquise,
+standing alone, started as a step through the salon within
+broke the silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Madame, will you permit me a word <i>now</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Gaston de Launay took her hands off the balustrade,
+and held them tight in his, while his voice sounded, even
+in his own ears, strangely calm, yet strangely harsh:</p>
+
+<p>"Madame, you love me no longer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur, I do not answer questions put to me in such
+a manner."</p>
+
+<p>She would have drawn her hands away, but he held
+them in a fierce grasp till her rings cut his skin, as they
+had done once before.</p>
+
+<p>"No trifling! Answer&mdash;yes or no!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well! 'no,' then, monsieur. Since you <i>will</i> have the
+truth, do not blame me if you find it uncomplimentary
+and unacceptable."</p>
+
+<p>He let go her hands and reeled back, staggered, as if
+struck by a shot.</p>
+
+<p>"Mon Dieu! it is true&mdash;you love me no longer! And
+you tell it me <i>thus</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Madame la Marquise, for an instant, was silenced and
+touched; for the words were uttered with the faint cry of
+a man in agony, and she saw, even by the dim twilight
+of dawn, how livid his lips turned, how ashy gray grew
+the hue of his face. But she smiled, playing with
+Osmin's new collar of pearls and coral.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell it you 'thus'? I would not have told it you
+'thus,' monsieur, if you had been content with a hint, and
+had not evinced so strong a desire for candor undisguised;
+but if people will not comprehend a delicate suggestion,
+they must be wounded by plainer truths&mdash;it is their own
+fault. Did you think I was like a little shepherdess in a
+pastoral, to play the childish game of constancy without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span>
+variations? Had you presumption enough to fancy you
+could amuse me for ever&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped her, his voice broken and hoarse, as he
+gasped for breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Silence! Woman, have you no mercy? For you&mdash;for
+such as you&mdash;I have flung away heaven, steeped
+myself in sin, lost my church, my peace, my all&mdash;forfeited
+all right to the reverence of my fellows, all hope
+for the smile of my God! For you&mdash;for such as you&mdash;I
+have become a traitor, a hypocrite, an apostate, whose
+prayers are insults, whose professions are lies, whose oaths
+are perjury! At your smile, I have flung away eternity;
+for your kiss, I have risked my life here, my life hereafter;
+for your love, I held no price too vast to pay;
+weighed with it, honor, faith, heaven, all seemed valueless&mdash;all
+were forgotten! You lured me from tranquil
+calm, you broke in on the days of peace which but for
+you were unbroken still, you haunted my prayers, you
+placed yourself between Heaven and me, you planned to
+conquer my anchorite's pride, you wagered you would
+lure me from my priestly vows, and yet you have so little
+mercy, that when your bet is won, when your amusement
+grows stale, when the victory grows valueless, you can
+turn on me with words like these without one self-reproach?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ma foi, monsieur! it is you who may reproach yourself,
+not I," cried his hearer, insolently. "Are you so
+very provincial still, that you are ignorant that when a
+lover has ceased to please he has to blame his own lack
+of power to retain any love he may have won, and is far
+too well-bred to utter a complaint? Your language is
+very new to me. Most men, monsieur, would be grateful
+for my slightest preference; I permit none to rebuke me
+for either giving or withdrawing it."</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of Madame la Marquise sparkled angrily, and
+the smile on her lips was a deadly one, full of irony, full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span>
+of malice. As he beheld it, the scales fell at last from
+the eyes of Gaston de Launay, and he saw what this
+woman was whom he had worshipped with such mad,
+blind, idolatrous passion.</p>
+
+<p>He bowed his head with a low, broken moan, as a man
+stunned by a mortal blow; while Madame la Marquise
+stood playing with the pearl-and-coral chain, and smiling
+the malicious and mischievous smile that showed her
+white teeth, as they are shown in the portrait by
+Mignard.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Comme les hommes sont fous!</i>" laughed Madame la
+Marquise.</p>
+
+<p>He lifted his eyes, and looked at her as she stood in
+the faint light of the dawn, with her rich dress, her gleaming
+diamonds, her wicked smile, her matchless beauty;
+and the passion in him broke out in a bitter cry:</p>
+
+<p>"God help me! My sin has brought home its curse!"</p>
+
+<p>He bent over her, his burning lips scorching her own
+like fire, holding her in one last embrace, that clasped
+her in a vice of iron she had no power to break.</p>
+
+<p>"Angel! devil! temptress! <i>This</i> for what I have
+deemed thee&mdash;<i>that</i> for what thou art!"</p>
+
+<p>He flung her from him with unconscious violence, and
+left her&mdash;lying where she fell.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>The gray silvery dawn rose, and broke into the warmth
+and sunlight of a summer day; the deer nestled in their
+couches under the chequered shadows of the woodlands
+round, and the morning chimes were rung in musical
+carillons from the campanile of the château; the Provence
+roses tossed their delicate heads, joyously shaking
+the dew off their scented petals; the blossoms of the limes
+fell in a fragrant shower on the turf below, and the boughs,
+swayed softly by the wind, brushed their leaves against
+the sparkling waters of the fountains; the woods and
+gardens of Petite Forêt lay, bright and laughing, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span>
+mellow sunlight of the new day to which the world was
+waking. And with his face turned up to the sky, clasped
+in his hand a medallion enamel on which was painted the
+head of a woman, the grass and ferns where he had fallen
+stained crimson with his life-blood, lay a dead man, while
+in his bosom nestled a little dog, moaning piteous, plaintive
+cries, and vainly seeking its best to wake him to the
+day that for him would never dawn.</p>
+
+<p>When her household, trembling, spread the news that
+the dead priest had been found lying under the limes,
+slain by his own hand, and it reached Madame la Marquise
+in her private chambers, she was startled, shocked,
+wept, hiding her radiant eyes in her broidered handkerchief,
+and called Azor, and bade him bring her her flask
+of scented waters, and bathed her eyes, and turned them
+dazzling bright on Saint-Elix, and stirred her chocolate
+and asked the news. "<i>On peut être êmue aux larmes et
+aimer le chocolat</i>," thought Madame la Marquise, with her
+friend Montespan;&mdash;while, without, under the waving
+shadow of the linden-boughs, with the sunlight streaming
+round him, the little dog nestling in his breast, refusing
+to be comforted, lay the man whom she had murdered.</p>
+
+<p>The portrait of Mignard still hangs on the walls of the
+château, and in its radiant colors Madame la Marquise
+still lives, fair type of her age, smiling her victorious
+smile, with the diamonds shining among her hair, and
+her brilliant eyes flashing defiance, irony, and coquetry
+as of yore, when she reigned amidst the beauties of Versailles;&mdash;and
+in the gardens beyond in the summer
+nights, the lime-boughs softly shake their fragrant flowers
+on the turf, and the moonlight falls in hushed and mournful
+calm, streaming through the network of the boughs
+on to the tangled mass of violets and ferns that has grown
+up in rank luxuriance over the spot where Gaston de
+Launay died.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired.</p>
+
+<p>The changes made in the text are indicated by dotted lines
+under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the
+original text will appear. Other than those, printer's inconsistencies
+in spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.</p>
+
+<p>The printed book contains many images that are purely decorative flourishes.
+Where these have been reproduced in this electronic version, the alternative
+text for these images is set to * * * * *. Readers who see this
+alternative text please be assured that the images are not
+illustrating the story.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady
+Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's
+Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
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+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: August 23, 2011 [EBook #37178]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Katherine Becker and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+book was produced from scanned images of public domain
+material from the Google Print project.)
+
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+
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,
+
+ LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES,
+
+ AND
+
+ OTHER STORIES.
+
+ BY "OUIDA,"
+
+ AUTHOR OF "IDALIA," "STRATHMORE," "CHANDOS,"
+ "GRANVILLE DE VIGNE," ETC.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1900.
+
+
+
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE,
+
+ AND OTHER STORIES.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+The Publishers have the pleasure of offering to the many admirers of the
+writings of "Ouida," the present volume of Contributions, which have
+appeared from time to time in the leading Journals of Europe, and which
+have recently been collected and revised by the author, for publication
+in book-form.
+
+They have also in press, to be speedily published, another similar
+volume of tales, from the same pen, together with an unpublished romance
+entitled "UNDER TWO FLAGS."
+
+Our editions of Ouida's Works are published by express arrangement with
+the author; and any other editions that may appear in the American
+market will be issued in violation of the courtesies usually extended
+both to authors and publishers.
+
+PHILADELPHIA, MAY, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE; OR, THE STORY OF A BROIDERED SHIELD 11
+
+ LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS; OR, OUR MALTESE PEERAGE 37
+
+ LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES; OR, THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.--
+ _In Three Seasons_:--
+ Season the First.--The Eligible 84
+ Season the Second.--The Ogre 121
+ Season the Third.--The Climax 164
+
+ A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUINZE; OR, PENDANT TO A PASTEL BY LA TOUR 211
+ I. The First Morning 212
+ II. The Second Morning 218
+ III. Midnight 227
+
+ "DEADLY DASH." A STORY TOLD ON THE OFF DAY. 235
+
+ THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING; OR, COACHES AND COUSINSHIP 265
+
+ THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD; OR, A DOUBLED-DOWN LEAF IN A MAN'S
+ LIFE 306
+
+ THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR; OR, NOT AT ALL A PROPER PERSON 339
+
+ A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUATORZE: PENDANT TO A PORTRAIT BY MIGNARD 368
+
+
+
+
+CECIL CASTLEMAINE'S GAGE;
+
+OR,
+
+THE STORY OF A BROIDERED SHIELD.
+
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of her county and her line, the
+handsomest of all the handsome women that had graced her race, when she
+moved, a century and a half ago, down the stately staircase, and through
+the gilded and tapestried halls of Lilliesford. The Town had run mad
+after her, and her face levelled politics, and was cited as admiringly
+by the Whigs at St. James's as by the Tories at the Cocoa-tree, by the
+beaux and Mohocks at Garraway's as by the alumni at the Grecian, by the
+wits at Will's as by the fops at Ozinda's.
+
+Wherever she went, whether to the Haymarket or the Opera, to the 'Change
+for a fan or the palace for a state ball, to Drury Lane to see Pastoral
+Philips's dreary dilution of Racine, or to some fair chief of her
+faction for basset and ombre, she was surrounded by the best men of her
+time, and hated by Whig beauties with virulent wrath, for she was a Tory
+to the backbone, indeed a Jacobite at heart; worshipped Bolingbroke,
+detested Marlborough and Eugene, believed in all the horrors of the
+programme said to have been plotted by the Whigs for the anniversary
+show of 1711, and was thought to have prompted the satire on those fair
+politicians who are disguised as _Rosalinda_ and _Nigranilla_ in the
+81st paper of the _Spectator_.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the greatest beauty of her day, lovelier still at
+four-and-twenty than she had been at seventeen, unwedded, though the
+highest coronets in the land had been offered to her; far above the
+coquetteries and minauderies of her friends, far above imitation of the
+affectations of "Lady Betty Modley's skuttle," or need of practising the
+Fan exercise; haughty, peerless, radiant, unwon--nay, more--untouched;
+for the finest gentleman on the town could not flatter himself that he
+had ever stirred the slightest trace of interest in her, nor boast, as
+he stood in the inner circle at the Chocolate-house (unless, indeed, he
+lied more impudently than Tom Wharton himself), that he had ever been
+honored by a glance of encouragement from the Earl's daughter. She was
+too proud to cheapen herself with coquetry, too fastidious to care for
+her conquests over those who whispered to her through Nicolini's song,
+vied to have the privilege of carrying her fan, drove past her windows
+in Soho Square, crowded about her in St. James's Park, paid court even
+to her little spaniel Indamara, and, to catch but a glimpse of her
+brocaded train as it swept a ball-room floor, would leave even their
+play at the Groom Porter's, Mrs. Oldfield in the green-room, a night
+hunt with Mohun and their brother Mohocks, a circle of wits gathered
+"within the steam of the coffeepot" at Will's, a dinner at Halifax's, a
+supper at Bolingbroke's,--whatever, according to their several tastes,
+made their best entertainment and was hardest to quit.
+
+The highest suitors of the day sought her smile and sued for her hand;
+men left the Court and the Mall to join the Flanders army before the
+lines at Bouchain less for loyal love of England than hopeless love of
+Cecil Castlemaine. Her father vainly urged her not to fling away offers
+that all the women at St. James's envied her. She was untouched and
+unwon, and when her friends, the court beauties, the fine ladies, the
+coquettes of quality, rallied her on her coldness (envying her her
+conquests), she would smile her slight proud smile and bow her stately
+head. "Perhaps she was cold; she might be; they were personnable men? Oh
+yes! she had nothing to say against them. His Grace of Belamour?--A
+pretty wit, without doubt. Lord Millamont?--Diverting, but a coxcomb. He
+had beautiful hands; it was a pity he was always thinking of them! Sir
+Gage Rivers?--As obsequious a lover as the man in the 'Way of the
+World,' but she had heard he was very boastful and facetious at women
+over his chocolate at Ozinda's. The Earl of Argent?--A gallant soldier,
+surely, but whatever he might protest, no mistress would ever rival with
+him the dice at the Groom Porter's. Lord Philip Bellairs?--A proper
+gentleman; no fault in him; a bel esprit and an elegant courtier;
+pleased many, no doubt, but he did not please her overmuch. Perhaps her
+taste was too finical, or her character too cold, as they said. She
+preferred it should be so. When you were content it were folly to seek a
+change. For her part, she failed to comprehend how women could stoop to
+flutter their fans and choose their ribbons, and rack their tirewomen's
+brains for new pulvillios, and lappets, and devices, and practise their
+curtsy and recovery before their pier-glass, for no better aim or stake
+than to draw the glance and win the praise of men for whom they cared
+nothing. A woman who had the eloquence of beauty and a true pride should
+be above heed for such affectations, pleasure in such applause!"
+
+So she would put them all aside and turn the tables on her friends, and
+go on her own way, proud, peerless, Cecil Castlemaine, conquering and
+unconquered; and Steele must have had her name in his thoughts, and
+honored it heartily and sincerely, when he wrote one Tuesday, on the
+21st of October, under the domino of his Church Coquette, "I say I do
+honor to those who _can be coquettes and are not such_, but I despise
+all who would be so, and, in despair of arriving at it themselves, hate
+and vilify all those who can." A definition justly drawn by his keen,
+quick graver, though doubtless it only excited the ire of, and was
+entirely lost upon, those who read the paper over their dish of bohea,
+or over their toilette, while they shifted a patch for an hour before
+they could determine it, or regretted the loss of ten guineas at crimp.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine was the beauty of the Town: when she sat at Drury Lane
+on the Tory side of the house, the devoutest admirer of Oldfield or Mrs.
+Porter scarcely heard a word of the _Heroic Daughter_, or the _Amorous
+Widow_, and the "beau fullest of his own dear self" forgot his
+silver-fringed gloves, his medallion snuff-box, his knotted cravat, his
+clouded cane, the slaughter that he planned to do, from gazing at her
+where she sat as though she were reigning sovereign at St. James's, the
+Castlemaine diamond's flashing crescent-like above her brow. At church
+and court, at park and assembly, there were none who could eclipse that
+haughty gentlewoman; therefore her fond women friends who had caressed
+her so warmly and so gracefully, and pulled her to pieces behind her
+back, if they could, so eagerly over their dainty cups of tea in an
+afternoon visit, were glad, one and all, when on "Barnabybright,"
+Anglice, the 22d (then the 11th) of June, the great Castlemaine chariot,
+with its three herons blazoned on its coroneted panels, its laced
+liveries and gilded harness, rolled over the heavy, ill-made roads down
+into the country in almost princely pomp, the peasants pouring out from
+the wayside cottages to stare at my lord's coach.
+
+It was said in the town that a portly divine, who wore his scarf as one
+of the chaplains to the Earl of Castlemaine, had prattled somewhat
+indiscreetly at Child's of his patron's politics; that certain cipher
+letters had passed the Channel enclosed in chocolate-cakes as soon as
+French goods were again imported after the peace of Utrecht; that
+gentlemen in high places were strongly suspected of mischievous designs
+against the tranquillity of the country and government; that the Earl
+had, among others, received a friendly hint from a relative in power to
+absent himself for a while from the court where he was not best trusted,
+and the town where an incautious word might be picked up and lead to
+Tower Hill, and amuse himself at his goodly castle of Lilliesford, where
+the red deer would not spy upon him, and the dark beech-woods would tell
+no tales. And the ladies of quality, her dear friends and sisters, were
+glad when they heard it as they punted at basset and fluttered their
+fans complacently. They would have the field for themselves, for a
+season, while Cecil Castlemaine was immured in her manor of Lilliesford;
+would be free of her beauty to eclipse them at the next birthday, be
+quit of their most dreaded rival, their most omnipotent leader of
+fashion; and they rejoiced at the whisper of the cipher letter, the
+damaging gossipry of the Whig coffee-houses, the bad repute into which
+my Lord Earl had grown at St. James's, at the misfortune of their
+friend, in a word, as human nature, masculine or feminine, will ever
+do--to its shame be it spoken--unless the _fomes peccati_ be more
+completely wrung out of it than it ever has been since the angel Gabriel
+performed that work of purification on the infant Mahomet.
+
+It was the June of the year '15, and the coming disaffection was
+seething and boiling secretly among the Tories; the impeachment of
+Ormond and Bolingbroke had strengthened the distaste to the new-come
+Hanoverian pack, their attainder had been the blast of air needed to
+excite the smouldering wood to flame, the gentlemen of that party in the
+South began to grow impatient of the intrusion of the distant German
+branch, to think lovingly of the old legitimate line, and to feel
+something of the chafing irritation of the gentlemen of the North, who
+were fretting like stag-hounds held in leash.
+
+Envoys passed to and fro between St. Germain, and Jacobite nobles,
+priests of the church that had fallen out of favor and was typified as
+the Scarlet Woman by a rival who, though successful, was still bitter,
+plotted with ecclesiastical relish in the task; letters were conveyed in
+rolls of innocent lace, plans were forwarded in frosted confections,
+messages were passed in invisible cipher that defied investigation. The
+times were dangerous; full of plot and counterplot, of risk and danger,
+of fomenting projects and hidden disaffection--times in which men,
+living habitually over mines, learned to like the uncertainty, and to
+think life flavorless without the chance of losing it any hour; and
+things being in this state, the Earl of Castlemaine deemed it prudent to
+take the counsel of his friend in power, and retire from London for a
+while, perhaps for the safety of his own person, perhaps for the
+advancement of his cause, either of which were easier insured at his
+seat in the western counties than amidst the Whigs of the capital.
+
+The castle of Lilliesford was bowered in the thick woods of the western
+counties, a giant pile built by Norman masons. Troops of deer herded
+under the gold-green beechen boughs, the sunlight glistened through the
+aisles of the trees, and quivered down on to the thick moss, and ferns,
+and tangled grass that grew under the park woodlands; the water-lilies
+clustered on the river, and the swans "floated double, swan and shadow,"
+under the leaves that swept into the water; then, when Cecil Castlemaine
+came down to share her father's retirement, as now, when her name and
+titles on the gold plate of a coffin that lies with others of her race
+in the mausoleum across the park, where winter snows and sumer sun-rays
+are alike to those who sleep within, is all that tells at Lilliesford
+of the loveliest woman of her time who once reigned there as mistress.
+
+The country was in its glad green midsummer beauty, and the
+musk-rosebuds bloomed in profuse luxuriance over the chill marble of the
+terraces, and scattered their delicate odorous petals in fragrant
+showers on the sward of the lawns, when Cecil Castlemaine came down to
+what she termed her exile. The morning was fair and cloudless, its
+sunbeams piercing through the darkest glades in the woodlands, the
+thickest shroud of the ivy, the deepest-hued pane of the mullioned
+windows, as she passed down the great staircase where lords and
+gentlewomen of her race gazed on her from the canvas of Lely and
+Jamesone, Bourdain and Vandyke, crossed the hall with her dainty step,
+so stately yet so light, and standing by the window of her own
+bower-room, was lured out on to the terrace overlooking the west side of
+the park.
+
+She made such a picture as Vandyke would have liked to paint, with her
+golden glow upon her, and the musk-roses clustering about her round the
+pilasters of marble--the white chill marble to which Belamour and many
+other of her lovers of the court and town had often likened her. Vandyke
+would have lingered lovingly on the hand that rested on her stag-hound's
+head, would have caught her air of court-like grace and dignity, would
+have painted with delighted fidelity her deep azure eyes, her proud
+brow, her delicate lips arched haughtily like a cupid's bow, would have
+picked out every fold of her sweeping train, every play of light on her
+silken skirts, every dainty tracery of her point-lace. Yet even painted
+by Sir Anthony, that perfect master of art and of elegance, though more
+finished it could have hardly been more faithful, more instinct with
+grace, and life, and dignity, than a sketch drawn of her shortly after
+that time by one who loved her well, which is still hanging in the
+gallery at Lilliesford, lighted up by the afternoon sun when it streams
+in through the western windows.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood on the terrace looking over the lawns and
+gardens through the opening vistas of meeting boughs and interlaced
+leaves to the woods and hills beyond, fused in a soft mist of green and
+purple, with her hand lying carelessly on her hound's broad head. She
+was a zealous Tory, a skilled politician, and her thoughts were busy
+with the hopes and fears, the chances for and against, of a cause that
+lay near her heart, but whose plans were yet immature, whose first blow
+was yet unstruck, and whose well-wishers were sanguine of a success they
+had not yet hazarded, though they hardly ventured to whisper to each
+other their previous designs and desires. Her thoughts were far away,
+and she hardly heeded the beauty round her, musing on schemes and
+projects dear to her party, that would imperil the Castlemaine coronet
+but would serve the only royal house the Castlemaine line had ever in
+their hearts acknowledged.
+
+She had regretted leaving the Town, moreover; a leader of the mode, a
+wit, a woman of the world, she missed her accustomed sphere; she was no
+pastoral Phyllis, no country-born Mistress Fiddy, to pass her time in
+provincial pleasures, in making cordial waters, in tending her
+beau-pots, in preserving her fallen rose-leaves, in inspecting the
+confections in the still-room; as little was she able, like many fine
+ladies when in similar exile, to while it away by scolding her
+tirewomen, and sorting a suit of ribbons, in ordering a set of gilded
+leather hangings from Chelsea for the state chambers, and yawning over
+chocolate in her bed till mid-day. She regretted leaving the Town, not
+for Belamour, nor Argent, nor any, of those who vainly hoped, as they
+glanced at the little mirror in the lids of their snuff-boxes, that they
+might have graven themselves, were it ever so faintly, in her thoughts;
+but for the wits, the pleasures, the choice clique, the accustomed
+circle to which she was so used, the courtly, brilliant town-life where
+she was wont to reign.
+
+So she stood on the terrace the first morning of her exile, her thoughts
+far away, with the loyal gentlemen of the North, and the banished court
+at St. Germain, the lids drooping proudly over her haughty eyes, and her
+lips half parted with a faint smile of triumph in the visions limned by
+ambition and imagination, while the wind softly stirred the rich lace of
+her bodice, and her fingers lay lightly, yet firmly, on the head of her
+stag-hound. She looked up at last as she heard the ring of a horse's
+hoofs, and saw a sorrel, covered with dust and foam, spurred up the
+avenue, which, rounding past the terrace, swept on to the front
+entrance; the sorrel looked wellnigh spent, and his rider somewhat worn
+and languid, as a man might do with justice who had been in boot and
+saddle twenty-four hours at the stretch, scarce stopping for a stoup of
+wine; but he lifted his hat, and bowed down to his saddle-bow as he
+passed her.
+
+"Was it the long-looked-for messenger with definite news from St.
+Germain?" wondered Lady Cecil, as her hound gave out a deep-tongued bay
+of anger at the stranger. She went back into her bower-room, and toyed
+absently with her flowered handkerchief, broidering a stalk to a
+violet-leaf, and wondering what additional hope the horseman might have
+brought to strengthen the good Cause, till her servants brought word
+that his Lordship prayed the pleasure of her presence in the
+octagon-room. Whereat she rose, and swept through the long corridors,
+entered the octagon-room, the sunbeams gathering about her rich dress as
+they passed through the stained-glass oriels, and saluted the new-comer,
+when her father presented him to her as their trusty and welcome friend
+and envoy, Sir Fulke Ravensworth, with her careless dignity and queenly
+grace, that nameless air which was too highly bred to be condescension,
+but markedly and proudly repelled familiarity, and signed a pale of
+distance beyond which none must intrude.
+
+The new-comer was a tall and handsome man, of noble presence, bronzed by
+foreign suns, pale and jaded just now with hard riding, while his dark
+silver-laced suit was splashed and covered with dust; but as he bowed
+low to her, critical Cecil Castlemaine saw that not Belamour himself
+could have better grace, not my Lord Millamont courtlier mien nor whiter
+hands, and listened with gracious air to what her father unfolded to her
+of his mission from St. Germain, whither he had come, at great personal
+risk, in many disguises, and at breathless speed, to place in their
+hands a precious letter in cipher from James Stuart to his well-beloved
+and loyal subject Herbert George, Earl of Castlemaine. A letter spoken
+of with closed doors and in low whispers, loyal as was the household,
+supreme as the Earl ruled over his domains of Lilliesford, for these
+were times when men mistrusted those of their own blood, and when the
+very figure on the tapestry seemed instinct with life to spy and
+betray--when they almost feared the silk that tied a missive should
+babble of its contents, and the hound that slept beside them should read
+and tell their thoughts.
+
+To leave Lilliesford would be danger to the Envoy and danger to the
+Cause; to stay as guest was to disarm suspicion. The messenger who had
+brought such priceless news must rest within the shelter of his roof;
+too much were risked by returning to the French coast yet awhile, or
+even by joining Mar or Derwentwater, so the Earl enforced his will upon
+the Envoy, and the Envoy thanked him and accepted.
+
+Perchance the beauty, whose eyes he had seen lighten and proud brow
+flush as she read the royal greeting and injunction, made a sojourn near
+her presence not distasteful; perchance he cared little where he stayed
+till the dawning time of action and of rising should arrive, when he
+should take the field and fight till life or death for the "White Rose
+and the long heads of hair." He was a soldier of fortune, a poor
+gentleman with no patrimony but his name, no chance of distinction save
+by his sword; sworn to a cause whose star was set forever; for many
+years his life had been of changing adventure and shifting chances, now
+fighting with Berwick at Almanza, now risking his life in some delicate
+and dangerous errand for James Stuart that could not have been trusted
+so well to any other officer about St. Germain; gallant to rashness, yet
+with much of the acumen of the diplomatist, he was invaluable to his
+Court and Cause, but, Stuart-like, men-like, they hastened to employ,
+but ever forgot to reward!
+
+Lady Cecil missed her town-life, and did not over-favor her exile in the
+western counties. To note down on her Mather's tablets the drowsy
+homilies droned out by the chaplain on a Sabbath noon, to play at
+crambo, to talk with her tirewomen of new washes for the skin, to pass
+her hours away in knotting?--she, whom Steele might have writ of when he
+drew his character of _Eudoxia_, could wile her exile with none of these
+inanities; neither could she consort with gentry who seemed to her
+little better than the boors of a country wake, who had never heard of
+Mr. Spectator and knew nothing of Mr. Cowley, countrywomen whose
+ambition was in their cowslip wines, fox-hunters more ignorant and
+uncouth than the dumb brutes they followed.
+
+Who was there for miles around with whom she could stoop to associate,
+with whom she cared to exchange a word? Madam from the vicarage, in her
+grogram, learned in syrups, salves, and possets? Country Lady
+Bountifuls, with gossip of the village and the poultry-yard? Provincial
+Peeresses, who had never been to London since Queen Anne's coronation? A
+squirearchy, who knew of no music save the concert of their stop-hounds,
+no court save the court of the county assize, no literature unless by
+miracle 't were Tarleton's Jests? None such as these could cross the
+inlaid oak parquet of Lilliesford, and be ushered into the presence of
+Cecil Castlemaine.
+
+So the presence of the Chevalier's messenger was not altogether
+unwelcome and distasteful to her. She saw him but little, merely
+conversing at table with him with that distant and dignified courtesy
+which marked her out from the light, free, inconsequent manners in vogue
+with other women of quality of her time; the air which had chilled half
+the softest things even on Belamour's lips, and kept the vainest coxcomb
+hesitating and abashed.
+
+But by degrees she observed that the Envoy was a man who had lived in
+many countries and in many courts, was well versed in the tongues of
+France and Italy and Spain--in their belles-lettres too, moreover--and
+had served his apprenticeship to good company in the salons of
+Versailles, in the audience-room of the Vatican, at the receptions of
+the Duchess du Maine, and with the banished family at St. Germain. He
+spoke with a high and sanguine spirit of the troublous times approaching
+and the beloved Cause whose crisis was at hand, which chimed in with her
+humor better than the flippancies of Belamour, the airy nothings of
+Millamont. He was but a soldier of fortune, a poor gentleman who, named
+to her in the town, would have had never a word, and would have been
+unnoted amidst the crowding beaux who clustered round to hold her fan
+and hear how she had been pleasured with the drolleries of _Grief a la
+Mode_. But down in the western counties she deigned to listen to the
+Prince's officer, to smile--a smile beautiful when it came on her proud
+lips, as the play of light on the opals of her jewelled stomacher--nay,
+even to be amused when he spoke of the women of foreign courts, to be
+interested when he told, which was but reluctantly, of his own perils,
+escapes, and adventures, to discourse with him, riding home under the
+beech avenues from hawking, or standing on the western terrace at curfew
+to watch the sunset, of many things on which the nobles of the Mall and
+the gentlemen about St. James's had never been allowed to share her
+opinions. For Lady Cecil was deeply read (unusually deeply for her day,
+since fine ladies of her rank and fashion mostly contented themselves
+with skimming a romance of Scuderi's, or an act of _Aurungzebe_); but
+she rarely spoke of those things, save perchance now and then to Mr.
+Addison.
+
+Fulke Ravensworth never flattered her, moreover, and flattery was a
+honeyed confection of which she had long been cloyed; he even praised
+boldly before her other women of beauty and grace whom he had seen at
+Versailles, at Sceaux, and at St. Germain; neither did he defer to her
+perpetually, but where he differed would combat her sentiments
+courteously but firmly. Though a soldier and a man of action, he had an
+admirable skill at the limner's art; could read to her the Divina
+Commedia, or the comedies of Lope da' Vega, and transfer crabbed Latin
+and abstruse Greek into elegant English for her pleasures and though a
+beggared gentleman of most precarious fortunes, he would speak of life
+and its chances, of the Cause and its perils, with a daring which she
+found preferable to the lisped languor of the men of the town, who had
+no better campaigns than laying siege to a prude, cared for no other
+weapons than their toilettes and snuff-boxes, and sought no other
+excitement than a _coup d'eclat_ with the lion-tumblers.
+
+On the whole, through these long midsummer days, Lady Cecil found the
+Envoy from St. Germain a companion that did not suit her ill, sought
+less the solitude of her bower-room, and listened graciously to him in
+the long twilight hours, while the evening dews gathered in the cups of
+the musk-roses, and the star-rays began to quiver on the water-lilies
+floating on the river below, that murmured along, with endless song,
+under the beechen-boughs. A certain softness stole over her, relaxing
+the cold hauteur of which Belamour had so often complained, giving a
+nameless charm, supplying a nameless something, lacking before, in the
+beauty of The Castlemaine.
+
+She would stroke, half sadly, the smooth feathers of her tartaret falcon
+Gabrielle when Fulke Ravensworth brought her the bird from the
+ostreger's wrist, with its azure velvet hood, and silver bells and
+jesses. She would wonder, as she glanced through Corneille or Congreve,
+Philips or Petrarca, what it was, this passion of love, of which they
+all treated, on which they all turned, no matter how different their
+strain. And now and then would come over her cheek and brow a faint
+fitful wavering flush, delicate and changing as the flush from the
+rose-hued reflexions of western clouds on a statue of Pharos marble, and
+then she would start and rouse herself, and wonder what she ailed, and
+grow once more haughty, calm, stately, dazzling, but chill as the
+Castlemaine diamonds that she wore.
+
+So the summer-time passed, and the autumn came, the corn-lands brown
+with harvest, the hazel-copses strewn with fallen nuts, the beech-leaves
+turning into reddened gold. As the wheat ripened but to meet the sickle,
+as the nuts grew but to fall, as the leaves turned to gold but to
+wither, so the sanguine hopes, the fond ambitions of men, strengthened
+and matured only to fade into disappointment and destruction! Four
+months had sped by since the Prince's messenger had come to
+Lilliesford--months that had gone swiftly with him as some sweet
+delicious dream; and the time had come when he had orders to ride north,
+secretly and swiftly, speak with Mr. Forster and other gentlemen
+concerned in the meditated rising, and convey despatches and
+instructions to the Earl of Mar; for Prince James was projecting soon to
+join his loyal adherents in Scotland, and the critical moment was close
+at hand, the moment when, to Fulke Ravensworth's high and sanguine
+courage, victory seemed certain; failure, if no treachery marred, no
+dissension weakened, impossible; the moment to which he looked for
+honor, success, distinction, that should give him claim and title to
+aspire--_where_? Strong man, cool soldier though he was, he shrank from
+drawing his fancied future out from the golden haze of immature hope,
+lest he should see it wither upon closer sight. He was but a landless
+adventurer, with nothing but his sword and his honor, and kings he knew
+were slow to pay back benefits, or recollect the hands that hewed them
+free passage to their thrones.
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood within the window of her bower-room, the red
+light of the October sun glittering on her gold-broidered skirt and her
+corsage sewn with opals and emeralds; her hand was pressed lightly on
+her bosom, as though some pain were throbbing there; it was new this
+unrest, this weariness, this vague weight that hung upon her; it was the
+perils of their Cause, she told herself; the risks her father ran: it
+was weak, childish, unworthy a Castlemaine! Still the pain throbbed
+there.
+
+Her hound, asleep beside her, raised his head with a low growl as a step
+intruded on the sanctity of the bower-room, then composed himself again
+to slumber, satisfied it was no foe. His mistress turned slowly; she
+knew the horses waited; she had shunned this ceremony of farewell, and
+never thought any would be bold enough to venture here without
+permission sought and gained.
+
+"Lady Cecil, I could not go upon my way without one word of parting.
+Pardon me if I have been too rash to seek it here."
+
+Why was it that his brief frank words ever pleased her better than
+Belamour's most honeyed phrases, Millamont's suavest periods? She
+scarcely could have told, save that there were in them an earnestness
+and truth new and rare to her ear and to her heart.
+
+She pressed her hand closer on the opals--the jewels of calamity--and
+smiled:
+
+"Assuredly I wish you God speed, Sir Fulke, and safe issue from all
+perils."
+
+He bowed low; then raised himself to his fullest height, and stood
+beside her, watching the light play upon the opals:
+
+"That is all you vouchsafe me?"
+
+"_All?_ It is as much as you would claim, sir, is it not? It is more
+than I would say to many."
+
+"Your pardon--it _is_ more than I should claim if prudence were ever by,
+if reason always ruled! I have no right to ask for, seek for, even wish
+for, more; such petitions may only be addressed by men of wealth and of
+high title; a landless soldier should have no pride to sting, no heart
+to wound; they are the prerogative of a happier fortune."
+
+Her lips turned white, but she answered haughtily; the crimson light
+flashing in her jewels, heirlooms priceless and hereditary, like her
+beauty and her pride:
+
+"This is strange language, sir! I fail to apprehend you."
+
+"You have never thought that I ran a danger deadlier than that which I
+have ever risked on any field? You have never guessed that I have had
+the madness, the presumption, the crime--it may be in your eyes--to love
+you."
+
+The color flushed to her face, crimsoning even her brow, and then fled
+back. Her first instinct was insulted pride--a beggared gentleman, a
+landless soldier, spoke to her of love!--of love!--which Belamour had
+barely had courage to whisper of; which none had dared to sue of her in
+return. He had ventured to feel this for her! he had ventured to speak
+of this to her!
+
+The Envoy saw the rising resentment, the pride spoken in every line of
+her delicate face, and stopped her as she would have spoken.
+
+"Wait! I know all you would reply. You think it infinite daring,
+presumption that merits highest reproof----"
+
+"Since you divined so justly, it were pity you subjected yourself and me
+to this most useless, most unexpected interview. Why----"
+
+"_Why?_ Because, perchance, in this life you will see my face no more,
+and you will think gently, mercifully of my offence (if offence it be to
+love you more than life, and only less than honor), when you know that I
+have fallen for the Cause, with your name in my heart, held only the
+dearer because never on my lips! Sincere love can be no insult to
+whomsoever proffered; Elizabeth Stuart saw no shame to her in the
+devotion of William Craven!"
+
+Cecil Castlemaine stood in the crimson glory of the autumn sunset, her
+head erect, her pride unshaken, but her heart stirred strangely and
+unwontedly. It smote the one with bitter pain, to think a penniless
+exile should thus dare to speak of what princes and dukes had almost
+feared to whisper; what had she done--what had she said, to give him
+license for such liberty? It stirred the other with a tremulous warmth,
+a vague, sweet pleasure, that were never visitants there before; but
+that she scouted instantly as weakness, folly, debasement, in the Last
+of the Castlemaines.
+
+He saw well enough what passed within her, what made her eyes so
+troubled, yet her brow and lips so proudly set, and he bent nearer
+towards her, the great love that was in him trembling in his voice:
+
+"Lady Cecil, hear me! If in the coming struggle I win distinction,
+honor, rank--if victory come to us, and the King we serve remember me in
+his prosperity as he does now in his adversity--if I can meet you
+hereafter with tidings of triumph and success, my name made one which
+England breathes with praise and pride, honors gained such as even you
+will deem worthy of your line--then--then--will you let me speak of
+what you refuse to hearken to now--then may I come to you, and seek a
+gentler answer?"
+
+She looked for a moment upon his face, as it bent towards her in the
+radiance of the sunset light, the hope that hopes all things glistening
+in his eyes, the high-souled daring of a gallant and sanguine spirit
+flushing his forehead, the loud throbs of his heart audible in the
+stillness around; and her proud eyes grew softer, her lips quivered for
+an instant.
+
+Then she turned towards him with queenly grace:
+
+"_Yes!_"
+
+It was spoken with stately dignity, though scarce above her breath; but
+the hue that wavered in her cheek was but the lovelier, for the pride
+that would not let her eyes droop nor her tears rise, would not let her
+utter one softer word. That one word cost her much. That single
+utterance was much from Cecil Castlemaine.
+
+Her handkerchief lay at her feet, a delicate, costly toy of lace,
+embroidered with her shield and chiffre; he stooped and raised it, and
+thrust it in his breast to treasure it there.
+
+"If I fail, I send this back in token that I renounce all hope; if I can
+come to you with honor and with fame, this shall be my gage that I may
+speak, that you will listen?"
+
+She bowed her noble head, ever held haughtily, as though every crown of
+Europe had a right to circle it; his hot lips lingered for a moment on
+her hand; then Cecil Castlemaine stood alone in the window of her
+bower-room, her hand pressed again upon the opals under which her heart
+was beating with a dull, weary pain, looking out over the landscape,
+where the golden leaves were falling fast, and the river, tossing sadly
+dead branches on its waves, was bemoaning in plaintive language the
+summer days gone by.
+
+Two months came and went, the beech-boughs, black and sear, creaked in
+the bleak December winds that sighed through frozen ferns and over the
+couches of shivering deer, the snow drifted up on the marble terrace,
+and icedrops clung where the warm rosy petals of the musk-rosebuds had
+nestled. Across the country came terrible whispers that struck the
+hearts of men of loyal faith to the White Rose with a bolt of ice-cold
+terror and despair. Messengers riding in hot haste, open-mouthed
+peasants gossiping by the village forge, horsemen who tarried for a
+breathless rest at alehouse-doors, Whig divines who returned thanks for
+God's most gracious mercy in vouchsafing victory to the strong, all told
+the tale, all spread the news of the drawn battle of Sheriff-Muir, of
+the surrender under Preston walls, of the flight of Prince James. The
+tidings came one by one to Lilliesford, where my Lord Earl was holding
+himself in readiness to co-operate with the gentlemen of the North to
+set up the royal standard, broidered by his daughter's hands, in the
+western counties, and proclaim James III. "sovereign lord and king of
+the realms of Great Britain and Ireland." The tidings came to
+Lilliesford, and Cecil Castlemaine clenched her white jewelled hands in
+passionate anguish that a Stuart should have fled before the traitor of
+Argyll, instead of dying with his face towards the rebel crew; that men
+had lived who could choose surrender instead of heroic death; that _she_
+had not been there, at Preston, to shame them with a woman's reading of
+courage and of loyalty, and show them how to fall with a doomed city
+rather than yield captive to a foe!
+
+Perhaps amidst her grief for her Prince and for his Cause mingled--as
+the deadliest thought of all--a memory of a bright proud face, that had
+bent towards her with tender love and touching grace a month before, and
+that might now be lying pale and cold, turned upwards to the winter
+stars, on the field of Sheriff-Muir.
+
+A year rolled by. Twelve months had fled since the gilded carriage of
+the Castlemaines, with the lordly blazonment upon its panels, its
+princely retinue and stately pomp, had come down into the western
+counties. The bones were crumbling white in the coffins in the Tower,
+and the skulls over Temple-bar had bleached white in winter snows and
+spring-tide suns; Kenmuir had gone to a sleep that knew no wakening, and
+Derwentwater had laid his fair young head down for a thankless cause;
+the heather bloomed over the mounds of dead on the plains of
+Sheriff-Muir, and the yellow gorse blossomed under the city walls of
+Preston.
+
+Another summer had dawned, bright and laughing, over England; none the
+less fair for human lives laid down, for human hopes crushed out;
+daisies powdering the turf sodden with human blood, birds carolling
+their song over graves of heaped-up dead. The musk-roses tossed their
+delicate heads again amidst the marble pilasters, and the
+hawthorn-boughs shook their fragrant buds into the river at Lilliesford,
+the purple hills lay wrapped in sunny mist, and hyacinth-bells mingled
+with the tangled grass and fern under the woodland shades, where the red
+deer nestled happily. Herons plumed their silvery wings down by the
+water-side, swallows circled in sultry air above the great bell-tower,
+and wood-pigeons cooed with soft love-notes among the leafy branches.
+Yet the Countess of Castlemaine, last of her race, sole owner of the
+lands that spread around her, stood on the rose-terrace, finding no joy
+in the sunlight about her, no melody in the song of the birds.
+
+She was the last of her name; her father, broken-hearted at the news
+from Dumblain and Preston, had died the very day after his lodgment in
+the Tower. There was no heir male of his line, and the title had passed
+to his daughter; there had been thoughts of confiscation and attainder,
+but others, unknown to her, solicited what she scorned to ask for
+herself, and the greed of the hungry "Hanoverian pack" spared the lands
+and the revenues of Lilliesford. In haughty pride, in lonely mourning,
+the fairest beauty of the Court and Town withdrew again to the solitude
+of her western counties, and tarried there, dwelling amidst her women
+and her almost regal household, in the sacred solitude of grief, wherein
+none might intrude. Proud Cecil Castlemaine was yet prouder than of
+yore; alone, sorrowing for her ruined Cause and exiled King, she would
+hold converse with none of those who had had a hand in drawing down the
+disastrous fate she mourned, and only her staghound could have seen the
+weariness upon her face when she bent down to him, or Gabrielle the
+falcon felt her hand tremble when it stroked her folded wings. She stood
+on the terrace, looking over her spreading lands, not the water-lilies
+on the river below whiter than her lips, pressed painfully together.
+Perhaps she repented of certain words, spoken to one whom now she would
+never again behold--perhaps she thought of that delicate toy that was to
+have been brought back in victory and hope, that now might lie stained
+and stiffened with blood next a lifeless heart, for never a word in the
+twelve months gone by had there come to Lilliesford as tidings of Fulke
+Ravensworth.
+
+Her pride was dear to her, dearer than aught else; she had spoken as was
+her right to speak, she had done what became a Castlemaine; it would
+have been weakness to have acted otherwise; what was he--a landless
+soldier--that he should have dared as he had dared? Yet the sables she
+wore were not solely for the dead Earl, not solely for the lost Stuarts
+the hot mist that would blind the eyes of Cecil Castlemaine, as hours
+swelled to days, and days to months, and she--the flattered beauty of
+the Court and Town--stayed in self-chosen solitude in her halls of
+Lilliesford, still unwedded and unwon.
+
+The noon-hours chimed from the bell-tower, and the sunny beauty of the
+morning but weighed with heavier sadness on her heart; the song of the
+birds, the busy hum of the gnats, the joyous ring of the silver bell
+round her pet fawn's neck, as it darted from her side under the drooping
+boughs--none touched an answering chord of gladness in her. She stood
+looking over her stretching woodlands in deep thought, so deep that she
+heard no step over the lawn beneath, nor saw the frightened rush of the
+deer, as a boy, crouching among the tangled ferns, sprang up from his
+hiding-place under the beechen branches, and stood on the terrace before
+her, craving her pardon in childish, yet fearless tones. She turned,
+bending on him that glance which had made the over-bold glance of
+princes fall abashed. The boy was but a little tatterdemalion to have
+ventured thus abruptly into the presence of the Countess of Castlemaine;
+still it was with some touch of a page's grace that he bowed before her.
+
+"Lady, I crave your pardon, but my master bade me watch for you, though
+I watched till midnight."
+
+"Your master?"
+
+A flush, warm as that on the leaves of the musk-roses, rose to her face
+for an instant, then faded as suddenly. The boy did not notice her
+words, but went on in an eager whisper, glancing anxiously round, as a
+hare would glance fearing the hunters.
+
+"And told me when I saw you not to speak his name, but only to give you
+this as his gage, that though all else is lost he has not forgot _his_
+honor nor _your_ will."
+
+Cecil Castlemaine spoke no word, but she stretched out her hand and took
+it--her own costly toy of cambric and lace, with her broidered shield
+and coronet.
+
+"Your master! Then--he lives?"
+
+"Lady, he bade me say no more. You have his message; I must tell no
+further."
+
+She laid her hand upon his shoulder, a light, snow-white hand, yet one
+that held him now in a clasp of steel.
+
+"Child! answer me at your peril! Tell me of him whom you call your
+master. Tell me all--quick--quick!"
+
+"You are his friend?"
+
+"His friend? My Heaven! Speak on!"
+
+"He bade me tell no more on peril of his heaviest anger; but if you
+_are_ his friend, I sure may speak what you should know without me. It
+is a poor friend, lady, who has need to ask whether another be dead or
+living!"
+
+The scarlet blood flamed in the Countess's blanched face, she signed him
+on with impetuous command; she was unused to disobedience, and the
+child's words cut her to the quick.
+
+"Sir Fulke sails for the French coast to-morrow night," the boy went on,
+in tremulous haste. "He was left for dead--our men ran one way, and
+Argyll's men the other--on the field of Sheriff-Muir; and sure if he had
+not been strong indeed, he would have died that awful night, untended,
+on the bleak moor, with the winds roaring round him, and his life ebbing
+away. He was not one of those who _fled_; you know that of him if you
+know aught. We got him away before dawn, Donald and I, and hid him in a
+shieling; he was in the fever then, and knew nothing that was done to
+him, only he kept that bit of lace in his hand for weeks and weeks, and
+would not let us stir it from his grasp. What magic there was in it we
+wondered often, but 'twas a magic, mayhap, that got him well at last; it
+was an even chance but that he'd died, God bless him! though we did what
+best we could. We've been wandering in the Highlands all the year,
+hiding here and tarrying there. Sir Fulke sets no count upon his life.
+Sure I think he thanks us little for getting him through the fever of
+the wounds, but he could not have borne to be pinioned, you know, lady,
+like a thief, and hung up by the brutes of Whigs, as a butcher hangs
+sheep in the shambles! The worst of the danger's over--they've had
+their fill of the slaughter; but we sail to-morrow night for the French
+coast--England's no place for my master."
+
+Cecil Castlemaine let go her hold upon the boy, and her hand closed
+convulsively upon the dainty handkerchief--her gage sent so faithfully
+back to her!
+
+The child looked upon her face; perchance, in his master's delirium, he
+had caught some knowledge of the story that hung to that broidered toy.
+
+"If you _are_ his friend, madame, doubtless you have some last word to
+send him?"
+
+Cecil Castlemaine, whom nothing moved, whom nothing softened, bowed her
+head at the simple question, her heart wrestling sorely, her lips set
+together in unswerving pride, a mist before her haughty eyes, the
+broidered shield upon her handkerchief--the shield of her stately and
+unyielding race--pressed close against her breast.
+
+"You have no word for him, lady?"
+
+Her lips parted; she signed him away. Was this child to see her yielding
+to such weakness? Had she, Countess of Castlemaine, no better pride, no
+better strength, no better power of resolve, than this?
+
+The boy lingered.
+
+"I will tell Sir Fulke then, lady, that the ruined have no friends?"
+
+Whiter and prouder still grew the delicate beauty of her face; she
+raised her stately head, haughtily as she had used to glance over a
+glittering Court, where each voice murmured praise of her loveliness and
+reproach of her coldness; and placed the fragile toy of lace back in the
+boy's hands.
+
+"Go, seek your master, and give him this in gage that their calamity
+makes friends more dear to us than their success. Go, he will know its
+meaning!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In place of the noon chimes the curfew was ringing from the bell-tower,
+the swallows were gone to roost amidst the ivy, and the herons slept
+with their heads under their silvery wings among the rushes by the
+riverside, the ferns and wild hyacinths were damp with evening dew, and
+the summer starlight glistened amidst the quivering woodland leaves.
+There was the silence of coming night over the vast forest glades, and
+no sound broke the stillness, save the song of the grasshopper stirring
+the tangled grasses, or the sweet low sigh of the west wind fanning the
+bells of the flowers. Cecil Castlemaine stood once more on the
+rose-terrace, shrouded in the dense twilight shade flung from above by
+the beech-boughs, waiting, listening, catching every rustle of the
+leaves, every tremor of the heads of the roses, yet hearing nothing in
+the stillness around but the quick, uncertain throbs of her heart
+beating like the wing of a caged bird under its costly lace. Pride was
+forgotten at length, and she only remembered--fear and love.
+
+In the silence and the solitude came a step that she knew, came a
+presence that she felt. She bowed her head upon her hands; it was new to
+her this weakness, this terror, this anguish of joy; she sought to calm
+herself, to steel herself, to summon back her pride, her strength; she
+scorned herself for it all!
+
+His hand touched her, his voice fell on her ear once more, eager,
+breathless, broken.
+
+"Cecil! Cecil! is this true? Is my ruin thrice blessed, or am I mad, and
+dream of heaven?"
+
+She lifted her head and looked at him with her old proud glance, her
+lips trembling with words that all her pride could not summon into
+speech; then her eyes filled with warm, blinding tears, and softened to
+new beauty;--scarce louder than the sigh of the wind among the
+flower-bells came her words to Fulke Ravensworth's ear, as her royal
+head bowed on his breast.
+
+"Stay, stay! Or, if you fly, your exile shall be my exile, your danger
+my danger!"
+
+The kerchief is a treasured heirloom to her descendants now, and fair
+women of her race, who inherit from her her azure eyes and her queenly
+grace, will recall how the proudest Countess of their Line loved a
+ruined gentleman so well that she was wedded to him at even, in her
+private chapel, at the hour of his greatest peril, his lowest fortune,
+and went with him across the seas till friendly intercession in high
+places gained them royal permission to dwell again at Lilliesford
+unmolested. And how it was ever noticeable to those who murmured at her
+coldness and her pride, that Cecil Castlemaine, cold and negligent as of
+yore to all the world beside, would seek her husband's smile, and love
+to meet his eyes, and cherish her beauty for his sake, and be restless
+in his absence, even for the short span of a day, with a softer and more
+clinging tenderness than was found in many weaker, many humbler women.
+
+They are gone now the men and women of that generation, and their voices
+come only to us through the faint echo of their written words. In summer
+nights the old beech-trees toss their leaves in the silvery light of the
+stars, and the river flows on unchanged, with the ceaseless, mournful
+burden of its mystic song, the same now as in the midsummer of a century
+and a half ago. The cobweb handkerchief lies before me with its
+broidered shield; the same now as long years since, when it was
+treasured close in a soldier's breast, and held by him dearer than all
+save his honor and his word. So, things pulseless and passionless
+endure, and human life passes away as swiftly as a song dies off from
+the air--as quickly succeeded, and as quickly forgot! Ronsard's refrain
+is the refrain of our lives:
+
+ Le temps s'en va, le temps s'en va, ma dame!
+ Las! le temps, non; mais _nous_ nous, en allons!
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE GRAND AND THE MARCHIONESS;
+
+OR,
+
+OUR MALTESE PEERAGE.
+
+
+All first things are voted the best: first kisses, first _toga virilis_,
+first hair of the first whisker; first speeches are often so superior
+that members subside after making them, fearful of eclipsing themselves;
+first money won at play must always be best, as always the dearest
+bought; and first wives are always so super-excellent, that, if a man
+lose one, he is generally as fearful of hazarding a second as a trout of
+biting twice.
+
+But of all first things commend me to one's first uniform. No matter
+that we get sick of harness, and get into mufti as soon as we can now;
+there is no more exquisite pleasure than the first sight of one's self
+in shako and sabretasche. How we survey ourselves in the glass, and ring
+for hot water, that the handsome housemaid may see us in all our glory,
+and lounge accidentally into our sisters' schoolroom, that the
+governess, who is nice looking and rather flirty, may go down on the
+spot before us and our scarlet and gold, chains and buttons! One's first
+uniform! Oh! the exquisite sensation locked up for us in that first box
+from Sagnarelli, or Bond Street!
+
+I remember _my_ first uniform. I was eighteen--as raw a young cub as you
+could want to see. I had not been licked into shape by a public school,
+whose tongue may be rough, but cleans off grievances and nonsense better
+than anything else. I had been in that hotbed of effeminacy, Church
+principles and weak tea, a Private Tutor's, where mamma's darlings are
+wrapped up, and stuffed with a little Terence and Horace to show grand
+at home; and upon my life I do believe my sister Julia, aged thirteen,
+was more wide awake and up to life than I was, when the governor, an old
+rector, who always put me in mind of the Vicar of Wakefield, got me
+gazetted to as crack a corps as any in the Line.
+
+The ----th (familiarly known in the Service as the "Dare Devils," from
+old Peninsular deeds) were just then at Malta, and with, among other
+trifles, a chest protector from my father, and a recipe for
+milk-arrowroot from my Aunt Matilda who lived in a constant state of
+catarrh and of cure for the same, tumbled across the Bay of Biscay, and
+found myself in Byron's confounded "little military hot-house," where
+most military men, some time or other, have roasted themselves to death,
+climbing its hilly streets, flirting with its Valetta belles, drinking
+Bass in its hot verandas, yawning with ennui in its palace, cursing its
+sirocco, and being done by its Jew sharpers.
+
+From a private tutor's to a crack mess at Malta!--from a convent to a
+casino could hardly be a greater change. Just at first I was as much
+astray as a young pup taken into a stubble-field, and wondering what the
+deuce he is to do there; but as it is a pup's nature to sniff at birds
+and start them, so is it a boy's nature to snatch at the champagne of
+life as soon as he catches sight of it, though you may have brought him
+up on water from his cradle. I took to it, at least, like a retriever to
+water-ducks, though I was green enough to be a first-rate butt for many
+a day, and the practical jokes I had passed on me would have furnished
+the _Times_ with food for crushers on "The Shocking State of the Army"
+for a twelvemonth. My chief friend and ally, tormentor and initiator,
+was a little fellow, Cosmo Grandison; in Ours he was "Little Grand" to
+everybody, from the Colonel to the baggage-women. He was seventeen, and
+had joined about a year. What a pretty boy he was, too! All the fair
+ones in Valetta, from his Excellency's wife to our washerwomen, admired
+that boy, and spoilt him and petted him, and I do not believe there was
+a man of Ours who would have had heart to sit in court-martial on Little
+Grand if he had broken every one of the Queen's regulations, and set
+every General Order at defiance. I think I see him now--he was new to
+Malta as I, having just landed with the Dare Devils, _en route_ from
+India to Portsmouth--as he sat one day on the table in the mess-room as
+cool as a cucumber, in spite of the broiling sun, smoking, and swinging
+his legs, and settling his forage-cap on one side of his head, as
+pretty-looking, plucky, impudent a young monkey as ever piqued himself
+on being an old hand, and a knowing bird not to be caught by any chaff
+however ingeniously prepared.
+
+"Simon," began Little Grand (my "St. John," first barbarized by Mr. Pope
+for the convenience of his dactyles and hexameters into Sinjin, being
+further barbarized by this little imp into Simon)--"Simon, do you want
+to see the finest woman in this confounded little pepper-box? You're no
+judge of a woman, though, you muff--taste been warped, perhaps, by
+constant contemplation of that virgin Aunt Minerva--Matilda, is it? all
+the same."
+
+"Hang your chaff," said I; "you'd make one out a fool."
+
+"Precisely, my dear Simon; just what you are!" responded Little Grand,
+pleasantly, "Bless your heart, I've been engaged to half a dozen women
+since I joined. A man can hardly help it, you see; they've such a way of
+drawing you on, you don't like to disappoint them, poor little dears,
+and so you compromise yourself out of sheer benevolence. There's such a
+run on a handsome man--it's a great bore. Sometimes I think I shall
+shave my head, or do something to disfigure myself, as Spurina did. Poor
+fellow, I feel for him! Well, Simon, you don't seem curious to know who
+my beauty is?"
+
+"One of those Mitchell girls of the Twenty-first? You waltzed with 'em
+all night; but they're too tall for you, Grand."
+
+"The Mitchell girls!" ejaculated he, with supreme scorn. "Great
+maypoles! they go about with the Fusiliers like a pair of colors. On
+every ball-room battlefield one's safe to see _them_ flaunting away, and
+as everybody has a shot at 'em, their hearts must be pretty well riddled
+into holes by this time. No, mine's rather higher game than that. My
+mother's brother-in-law's aunt's sister's cousin's cousin once removed
+was Viscount Twaddle, and I don't go anything lower than the Peerage."
+
+"What, is it somebody you've met at his Excellency's?"
+
+"Wrong again, beloved Simon. It's nobody I've met at old Stars and
+Garters', though his lady-wife could no more do without me than without
+her sal volatile and flirtations. No, _she_ don't go there; she's too
+high for that sort of thing--sick of it. After all the European Courts,
+Malta must be rather small and slow. I was introduced to her yesterday,
+and," continued Little Grand, more solemnly than was his wont, "I do
+assure you she's superb, divine; and I'm not very easy to please."
+
+"What's her name?" I asked, rather impressed with this view of a lady
+too high for old Stars and Garters, as we irreverently termed her
+Majesty's representative in her island of Malta.
+
+Little Grand took his pipe out of his lips to correct me with more
+dignity.
+
+"Her _title_, my dear Simon, is the Marchioness St. Julian."
+
+"Is that an English peerage, Grand?"
+
+"Hum! What! Oh yes, of course! What else should it be, you owl!"
+
+Not being in a condition to decide this point, I was silent, and he went
+on, growing more impressive at each phrase:
+
+"She is splendid, really! And I'm a very _difficile_ fellow, you know;
+but such hair, such eyes, one doesn't see every day in those sun-dried
+Mitchells or those little pink Bovilliers. Well, yesterday, after that
+confounded luncheon (how I hate all those complimentary affairs!--one
+can't enjoy the truffles for talking to the ladies, nor enjoy the ladies
+for discussing the truffles), I went for a ride with Conran out to Villa
+Neponte. I left him there, and went down to see the overland steamers
+come in. While I was waiting, I got into talk, somehow or other, with a
+very agreeable, gentleman-like fellow, who asked me if I'd only just
+come to Malta, and all that sort of thing--you know the introductory
+style of action--till we got quite good friends, and he told me he was
+living outside this wretched little hole at the Casa di Fiori, and
+said--wasn't it civil of him?--said he should be very happy to see me if
+I'd call any time. He gave me his card--Lord Adolphus Fitzhervey--and a
+man with him called him 'Dolph.' As good luck had it, my weed went out
+just while we were talking, and Fitzhervey was monstrously pleasant,
+searched all over him for a fusee, couldn't find one, and asked me to go
+up with him to the Casa di Fiori and get a light. Of course I did, and
+he and I and Guatamara had some sherbet and a smoke together, and then
+he introduced me to the Marchioness St. Julian, his sister--by Jove!
+such a magnificent woman, Simon, _you_ never saw one like her, I'll
+wager. She was uncommonly agreeable, too, and _such_ a smile, my boy!
+She seemed to like me wonderfully--not rare that, though, you'll
+say--and asked me to go and take coffee there to-night after mess, and
+bring one of my chums with me; and as I like to show you life, young
+one, and your taste wants improving after Aunt Minerva, you may come, if
+you like. Hallo! there's Conran. I say, don't tell _him_. I don't want
+any poaching on my manor."
+
+Conran came in at that minute; he was then a Brevet-Major and Captain in
+Ours, and one of the older men who spoilt Little Grand in one way, as
+much as the women did in another. He was a fine, powerful fellow, with
+eyes like an eagle's, and pluck like a lion's; he had a grave look, and
+had been of late more silent and self-reticent than the other
+roistering, debonnair, light-hearted "Dare Devils;" but though, perhaps,
+tired of the wild escapades which reputation had once attributed to him,
+was always the most lenient to the boy's monkey tricks, and always the
+one to whom he went if his larks had cost him too dear, or if he was in
+a scrape from which he saw no exit. Conran had recently come in for a
+good deal of money, and there were few bright eyes in Malta that would
+not have smiled kindly on him; but he did not care much for any of them.
+There was some talk of a love-affair before he went to India, that was
+the cause of his hard-heartedness, though I must say he did not look
+much like a victim to the _grande passion_, in my ideas, which were
+drawn from valentines and odes in the "Woman, thou fond and fair
+deceiver" style; in love that turned its collars down and let its hair
+go uncut and refused to eat, and recovered with a rapidity proportionate
+to its ostentation; and I did not know that, if a man has lost his
+treasure, he _may_ mourn it so deeply that he may refuse to run about
+like Harpagon, crying for his _cassette_ to an audience that only laughs
+at his miseries.
+
+"Well, young ones," said Conran, as he came in and threw down his cap
+and whip, "here you are, spending your hours in pipes and bad wine. What
+a blessing it is to have a palate that isn't blase, and that will
+swallow all wine just because it _is_ wine! That South African goes
+down with better relish, Little Grand, than you'll find in Chateau
+Margaux ten years hence. As soon as one begins to want touching up with
+olives, one's real gusto is gone."
+
+"Hang olives, sir! they're beastly," said Little Grand; "and I don't
+care who pretends they're not. Olives are like sermons and wives,
+everybody makes a wry face, and would rather be excused 'em, Major; but
+it's the custom to call 'em good things, and so men bolt 'em in
+complaisance, and while they hate the salt-water flavor, descant on the
+delicious rose taste!"
+
+"Quite true, Little Grand! but one takes olives to enhance the wine; and
+so, perhaps, other men's sermons make one enjoy one's racier novel, and
+other men's wives make one appreciate one's liberty still better. Don't
+abuse olives; you'll want them figuratively and literally before you've
+done either drinking or living!"
+
+"Oh! confound it, Major," cried Little Grand, "I do hope and trust a
+spent ball may have the kindness to double me up and finish me off
+before then."
+
+"You're not philosophic, my boy."
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" ejaculated Little Grand, piously. "I've an uncle, a
+very great philosopher, beats all the sages hollow, from Bion to Buckle,
+and writes in the Metaphysical Quarterly, but I'll be shot if he don't
+spend so much time in trying to puzzle out what life is, that all his
+has slipped away without his having _lived_ one bit. When I was staying
+with him one Christmas, he began boring me with a frightful theory on
+the non-existence of matter. I couldn't stand that, so I cut him short,
+and set him down to the luncheon-table; and while he was full swing with
+a Strasbourg pate and Comet hock, I stopped him and asked him if, with
+them in his mouth, he believed in matter or not? He was shut up, of
+course; bless your soul, those theorists always are, if you're down upon
+'em with a little fact!"
+
+"Such as a Strasbourg pate?--that _is_ an unanswerable argument with
+most men, I believe," said Conran, who liked to hear the boy chatter.
+"What are you going to do with yourself to-night, Grand?"
+
+"I am going to--ar--hum--to a friend of mine," said Little Grand, less
+glibly than usual.
+
+"Very well; I only asked, because I would have taken you to Mrs.
+Fortescue's with me; they're having some acting proverbs (horrible
+exertion in this oven of a place, with the thermometer at a hundred and
+twenty degrees); but if you've better sport it's no matter. Take care
+what friends you make, though, Grand; you'll find some Maltese
+acquaintances very costly."
+
+"Thank you. I should say I can take care of myself," replied Little
+Grand, with immeasurable scorn and dignity.
+
+Conran laughed, struck him across the shoulders with his whip, stroked
+his own moustaches, and went out again, whistling one of Verdi's airs.
+
+"I don't want him bothering, you know," explained Little Grand; "she's
+such a deuced magnificent woman!"
+
+She was a magnificent woman, this Eudoxia Adelaida, Marchioness St.
+Julian; and proud enough Little Grand and I felt when we had that soft,
+jewelled hand held out to us, and that bewitching smile beamed upon us,
+and that joyous presence dazzling in our eyes, as we sat in the
+drawing-room of that Casa di Fiori. She was about thirty-five, I should
+say (boys always worship those who might have been schoolfellows of
+their mothers), tall and stately, and imposing, with the most beautiful
+pink and white skin, with a fine set of teeth, raven hair, and eyes
+tinted most exquisitely. Oh! she was magnificent, our Marchioness St.
+Julian! Into what unutterable insignificance, what miserable, washed-out
+shadows sank Stars and Garters' lady, and the Mitchell girls, and all
+the belles of La Valetta, whom we hadn't thought so very bad-looking
+before.
+
+There was a young creature sitting a little out of the radiance of
+light, reading; but we had no eyes for anybody except the Marchioness
+St. Julian. We were in such high society, too; there was her brother,
+Lord Adolphus, and his bosom Pylades, the Baron Guatamara; and there was
+a big fellow, with hooked nose and very curly hair, who was introduced
+to us as the Prince of Orangia Magnolia; and a little wiry fellow, with
+bits of red and blue ribbon, and a star or two in his button-hole, who
+was M. le Due de Saint-Jeu. We were quite dazzled with the coruscations
+of so much aristocracy, especially when they talked across to each
+other--so familiarly, too--of Johnnie (that we Lord Russell), and Pam,
+and "old Buck" (my godfather Buckingham, Lord Adolphus explained to us),
+and Montpensier and old Joinville; and chatted of when they dined at the
+Tuileries, and stayed at Compiegne, and hunted at Belvoir, and spent
+Christmas at Holcombe or Longleat. We were in such high society! How
+contemptible appeared Mrs. Maberly's and the Fortescue soirees; how
+infinitesimally small grew Charlie Ruthven, and Harry Villiers, and Grey
+and Albany, and all the other young fellows who thought it such great
+guns to be _au mieux_ with little Graziella, or invited to Sir George
+Dashaway's. _We_ were a cut above those things now--rather!
+
+That splendid Marchioness! There was a head for a coronet, if you like!
+And how benign she was! Grand sat on the couch beside her, and I on an
+ottoman on her left, and she leaned back in her magnificent toilette,
+flirting her fan like a Castilian, and flashing upon us her superb eyes
+from behind it; not speaking very much, but showing her white teeth in
+scores of heavenly smiles, till Little Grand, the _blase_ man of
+seventeen, and I the raw Moses of private tutelage, both felt that we
+had never come across anything like this; never, in fact, seen a woman
+worth a glance before.
+
+She listened to us--or rather to him; I was too awestruck to advance
+much beyond monosyllables--and laughed at him, and smiled encouragingly
+on my _gaucherie_ (and when a boy is _gauche_, how ready he is to
+worship such a helping hand!), and beamed upon us both with an
+effulgence compared with which the radiance of Helen, Galatea, Oenone,
+Messalina, Lais, and all the legendary beauties one reads about, must
+have been what the railway night-lamps that _never_ burn are to the
+prismatic luminaries of Cremorne. They were all uncommonly pleasant, all
+except the girl who was reading, whom they introduced as the Signorina
+da' Guari, a Tuscan, and daughter to Orangia Magnolia, with one of those
+marvellously beautiful faces that one sees in the most splendid
+painters' models of the Campagna, who never lifted her head scarcely,
+though Guatamara and Saint-Jeu did their best to make her. But all the
+others were wonderfully agreeable, and quite _fete'd_ Little Grand and
+me, at which, they, being more than double our age, and seemingly at
+home alike with Belgravia and Newmarket, the Faubourg and the Pytchley,
+we felt to grow at least a foot each in the aroma of this Casa di Fiori.
+
+"This is rather stupid, Doxie," began Lord Adolphus, addressing his
+sister; "not much entertainment for our guests. What do you say to a
+game of vingt-et-un, eh, Mr. Grandison?"
+
+Little Grand fixed his blue eyes on the Marchioness, and said he should
+be very happy, but, as for entertainment--_he_ wanted no other.
+
+"No compliments, _petit ami_," laughed the Marchioness, with a dainty
+blow of her fan. "Yes, Dolph, have vingt-et-un, or music, or anything
+you like. Sing us something, Lucrezia."
+
+The Italian girl thus addressed looked up with a passionate, haughty
+flush, and answered, with wonderfully little courtesy I considered, "I
+shall not sing to-night."
+
+"Are you unwell, fairest friend?" asked the Duc de Saint-Jeu, bending
+his little wiry figure over her.
+
+She shrank away from him, and drew back, a hot color in her cheeks.
+
+"Signore, I did not address _you_."
+
+The Marchioness looked angry, if those divine eyes could look anything
+so mortal. However, she shrugged her shoulders.
+
+"Well, my dear Lucrezia, we can't make you sing, of course, if you
+won't. I, for my part, always do any little thing I can to amuse
+anybody; if I fail, I fail; I have done my best, and my friends will
+appreciate the effort, if not the result. No, my dear Prince, do not
+tease her," said the Marchioness to Orangia Magnolia, who was arguing, I
+thought, somewhat imperatively for such a well-bred and courtly man,
+with Lucrezia; "we will have vingt-et-un, and Lucrezia will give us the
+delight of her voice some other evening, I dare say."
+
+We had vingt-et-un; the Marchioness would not play, but she sat in her
+rose velvet arm-chair, just behind Little Grand, putting in pretty
+little speeches, and questions, and bagatelles, and calling attention to
+the gambols of her darling greyhound Cupidon, and tapping Little Grand
+with her fan, till, I believe, he neither knew how the game went, nor
+what money he lost; and I, gazing at her, and cursing him for his facile
+tongue, never noticed my naturels, couldn't have said what the maximum
+was if you had paid me for it, and might, for anything I knew to the
+contrary, have been seeing my life slip away with each card as Balzac's
+hero with the Peau de Chagrin. Then we had sherbet, and wine, and cognac
+for those who preferred it; and the Marchioness gave us permission to
+smoke, and took a dainty hookah with an amber mouthpiece for her own use
+(divine she did look, too, with that hookah between her ruby lips!); and
+the smoke, and the cognac, and the smiles, unloosed our tongues, and we
+spake like very great donkeys, I dare say, but I'm sure with not a tenth
+part the wisdom that Balaam's ass developed in his brief and pithy
+conversation.
+
+However great the bosh we talked, though, we found very lenient
+auditors. Fitzhervey and Guatamara laughed at all our witticisms; the
+Prince of Orangia Magnolia joined in with a "Per Baccho!" and a "Bravo!"
+and little Saint-Jeu wheezed, and gave a faint echo of "Mon Dieu!" and
+"Tres bien, tres bien, vraiment!" and the Marchioness St. Julian laughed
+too, and joined in our nonsense, and, what was much more, bent a willing
+ear to our compliments, no matter how florid; and Saint-Jeu told us a
+story or two, more amusing than _comme il faut_, at which the
+Marchioness tried to look grave, and _did_ look shocked, but laughed for
+all that behind her fan; and Lucrezia da' Guari sat in shadow, as still
+and as silent as the Parian Euphrosyne on the console, though her
+passionate eyes and expressive face looked the very antipodes of silence
+and statuetteism, as she flashed half-shy, half-scornful, looks upon us.
+
+If the first part of the evening had been delightful, this was something
+like Paradise! It was such high society! and with just dash enough of
+Mabille and coulisses laisseraller to give it piquancy. How different
+was the pleasantry and freedom of these _real_ aristos, after the
+humdrum dinners and horrid bores of dances that those snobs of Maberlys,
+and Fortescues, and Mitchells, made believe to call Society!
+
+What with the wine, and the smoke, and the smiles, I wasn't quite clear
+as to whether I saw twenty horses' heads or one when I was fairly into
+saddle, and riding back to the town, just as the first dawn was rising,
+Aphrodite-like, from the far blue waves of the Mediterranean. Little
+Grand was better seasoned, but even he was dizzy with the parting words
+of the Marchioness, which had softly breathed the delicious passport,
+"Come to-morrow."
+
+"By Jupiter!" swore Little Grand, obliged to give relief to his
+feelings--"by Jupiter, Simon! did you ever see such a glorious,
+enchanting, divine, delicious, adorable creature? Faugh! who could look
+at those Mitchell girls after her? Such eyes! such a smile! such a
+figure! Talk of a coronet! no imperial crown would be half good enough
+for her! And how pleasant those fellows are! I like that little chaffy
+chap, the Duke; what a slap-up story that was about the bal de l'Opera.
+And Fitzhervey, too; there's something uncommonly thorough-bred about
+him, ain't there? And Guatamara's an immensely jolly fellow. Ah, myboy!
+that's something like society; all the ease and freedom of real rank; no
+nonsense about them, as there is about snobs. I say, what wouldn't the
+other fellows give to be in our luck? I think even Conran would warm up
+about her. But, Simon, she's deucedly taken with me--she is, upon my
+word; and she knows how to show it you, too! By George! one could die
+for a woman like that--eh?"
+
+"Die!" I echoed, while my horse stumbled along up the hilly road, and I
+swayed forward, pretty nearly over his head, while poetry rushed to my
+lips, and electric sparks danced before my eyes:
+
+ "To die for those we love! oh, there is power
+ In the true heart, and pride, and joy, for this
+ It is to live without the vanished light
+ That strength is needed!"
+
+"But I'll be shot if it shall be vanished light," returned Little Grand;
+"it don't look much like it yet. The light's only just lit, 'tisn't
+likely it's going out again directly; but she is a stunner! and----"
+
+"A stunner!" I shouted; "she's much more than that--she's an angel, and
+I'll be much obliged to you to call her by her right name, sir. She's a
+beautiful, noble, loving woman; the most perfect of all Nature's
+masterworks. She is divine, sir, and you and I are not worthy merely to
+kiss the hem of her garment."
+
+"Ain't we, though? I don't care much about kissing her dress; it's silk,
+and I don't know that I should derive much pleasure from pressing my
+lips on its texture; but her cheek----"
+
+ "Her cheek is like the Catherine pear,
+ The side that's next the sun!"
+
+I shouted, as my horse went down in a rut. "She's like Venus rising from
+the sea-shell; she's like Aurora, when she came down on the first ray of
+the dawn to Tithonus; she's like Briseis----"
+
+"Bother classics! she's like herself, and beats 'em all hollow. She's
+the finest creature ever seen on earth, and I should like to see the man
+who'd dare to say she wasn't. And--I say, Simon--_how much did you lose
+to-night_?"
+
+From sublimest heights I tumbled straight to bathos. The cold water of
+Grand's query quenched my poetry, extinguished my electric lights, and
+sobered me like a douche bath.
+
+"I don't know," I answered, with a sense of awe and horror stealing over
+me; "but I had a pony in my waistcoat-pocket that the governor had just
+sent me; Guatamara changed it for me, and--_I've only sixpence left_!"
+
+"Old boy," said Little Grand to me, the next morning, after early
+parade, "come in my room, and let's make up some despatches to the
+governors. You see," he continued, five minutes after,--"you see, we're
+both of us pretty well cleared out; I've only got half a pony, and you
+haven't a couple of fivers left. Now you know they evidently play rather
+high at the Casa di Fiori; do everything _en prince_, like nobs who've
+Barclays at their back; and one mustn't hang fire; horrid shabby that
+would look. Besides, fancy seeming mean before _her_! So I've been
+thinking that, though governors are a screwy lot generally, if we put it
+to 'em clearly the sort of set we've got into, and show 'em that we
+can't help, now that we are at Rome, doing as the Romans do, I should
+say they could hardly help bleeding a little--eh? Now, listen how I've
+put it. My old boy has a weakness for titles; he married my mother on
+the relationship to Viscount Twaddles (who doesn't know of her
+existence; but who does to talk about as 'our cousin'), and he'd eat up
+miles of dirt for a chance of coming to a strawberry-leaf; so I think
+this will touch him up beautifully. Listen! ain't I sublimely
+respectful? 'I'm sure, my dear father, you wilt be delighted to learn,
+that by wonderful luck, or rather I ought to say Providence, I have
+fallen on my feet in Malta, and got introduced to the very highest'
+(wait! let me stick a dash under very)--'the _very_ highest society
+here. They are quite tip-top. To show you what style, I need only
+mention Lord A. Fitzhervey, the Baron Guatamara, and the Marchioness St.
+Julian, as among my kindest friends. They have been yachting in the
+Levant, and are now staying in Malta: they are all most kind to me; and
+I know you will appreciate the intellectual advantages that such contact
+must afford me; at the same time you will understand that I can hardly
+enter such circles as a snob, and you will wish your son to comport
+himself as a gentleman; but gentlemanizing comes uncommon dear, I can
+tell you, with all the care in the world: and if you _could_ let me have
+another couple of hundred, I should vote you'--a what, Simon?--'an
+out-and-out brick' is the sensible style, but I suppose 'the best and
+kindest of parents' is the filial dodge, eh? There! 'With fond love to
+mamma and Florie, ever your affectionate son, COSMO GRANDISON.' Bravo!
+that's prime; that'll bring the yellows down, I take it. Here, old
+fellow, copy it to your governor; you couldn't have a more stunning
+effusion--short, and to the purpose, as cabinet councils ought to be,
+and ain't. Fire away, my juvenile."
+
+I did fire away; only I, of a more impressionable and poetic nature than
+Little Grand, gave a certain vent to my feelings in expatiating on the
+beauty, grace, condescension, &c., &c., of the Marchioness to my mother;
+I did _not_ mention the grivois stories, the brandy, and the hookah: I
+was quite sure they were the sign of that delirious ease and disregard
+of snobbish etiquette and convenances peculiar to the "Upper Ten," but I
+thought the poor people at home, in vicarage seclusion, would be too out
+of the world to fully appreciate such revelations of our _creme de la
+creme_; besides, my governor had James's own detestation of the divine
+weed, and considered that men who "made chimneys of their mouths" might
+just as well have the mark of the Beast at once.
+
+Little Grand and I were hard-up for cash, and _en attendant_ the
+governors' replies and remittances, we had recourse to the tender
+mercies and leather bags of napoleons, ducats, florins, and doubloons of
+a certain Spanish Jew, one Balthazar Miraflores, a shrivelled-skinned,
+weezing old cove, who was "most happy to lent anytink to his tear young
+shentlesmen, but, by Got! he was as poor as Job, he was indeed!" Whether
+Job ever lent money out on interest or not, I can't say; perhaps he did,
+as in the finish he ended with having quadrupled his cattle and lands,
+and all his goods--a knack usurers preserve in full force to this day;
+but all I can say is, that if he was not poorer than Mr. Miraflores, he
+was not much to be pitied, for he, miserly old shark, lived in his dark,
+dirty hole, like a crocodile embedded in Nile mud, and crushed the bones
+of all unwary adventurers who came within range of his great bristling
+jaws.
+
+Money, however, Little Grand and I got out of him in plenty, only for a
+little bit of paper in exchange; and at that time we didn't know that
+though the paper tax would be repealed at last, there would remain, as
+long as youths are green and old birds cunning, a heavy and a bitter tax
+on certain bits of paper to which one's hand is put, which Mr.
+Gladstone, though he achieve the herculean task of making draymen take
+kindly to vin ordinaire, and the popping of champagne corks a familiar
+sound by cottage-hearths, will never be able to include in his budgets,
+to come among the Taxes that are Repealed!
+
+Well, we had our money from old Balthazar that morning, and we played
+with it again that night up at the Casa di Fiori. Loo this time, by way
+of change. Saint-Jeu said he always thought it well to change your game
+as you change your loves: constancy, whether to cards or women, was most
+fatiguing. We liked Saint-Jeu very much, we thought him such a funny
+fellow. They said they did not care to play much--of course they didn't,
+when Guatamara had had ecarte with the Grand-Duke of Chaffsandlarkstein
+at half a million a side, and Lord Dolph had broken the bank at Homburg
+"just for fun--no fun to old Blanc, who farms it, though, you know." But
+the Marchioness, who was doubly gracious that night, told them they must
+play, because it amused her _chers petits amis_. Besides, she said, in
+her pretty, imperious way, she liked to see it--it amused her. After
+that, of course, there was no more hesitation; down we sat, and young
+Heavystone with us.
+
+The evening before we had happened to mention him, said he was a fellow
+of no end of tin, though as stupid an owl as ever spelt his own name
+wrong when he passed a military examination, and the Marchioness,
+recalling the name, said she remembered his father, and asked us to
+bring him to see her; which we did, fearing no rival in "old Heavy."
+
+So down we three sat, and had the evening before over again, with the
+cards, and the smiles, and wiles of our divinity, and Saint-Jeu's
+stories and Fitzhervey's cognac and cigars; with this difference, that
+we found loo more exciting than vingt-et-un. They played it so fast,
+too, it was like a breathless heat for the Goodwood Cup, and the
+Marchioness watched it, leaning alternately over Grand's, and Heavy's,
+and my chair, and saying, with such naive delight, "Oh, do take miss,
+Cosmo; I would risk it if I were you, Mr. Heavystone; _pray_ don't let
+my naughty brother win everything," that I'd have defied the stiffest of
+the Stagyrites or the chilliest of Calvinists to have kept their head
+cool with that syren voice in their ear.
+
+And La Lucrezia sat, as she had sat the night before, by the open
+window, still and silent, the Cape jasmines and Southern creepers
+framing her in a soft moonlight picture, contrast enough to the
+brilliantly lighted room, echoing with laughter at Saint-Jeu's stories,
+perfumed with Cubas and narghiles, and shrining the magnificent,
+full-blown, jewelled beauty of our Marchioness St. Julian, with which we
+were as rapidly, as madly, as unreasoningly, and as sentimentally in
+love as any boys of seventeen or eighteen ever could be. What greater
+latitude, you will exclaim, recalling certain buried-away episodes of
+_your_ hobbedehoyism, when you addressed Latin distichs to that
+hazel-eyed Hebe who presided over oyster patties and water ices at the
+pastrycook's in Eton; or ruined your governor's young plantations
+cutting the name of Adeliza Mary, your cousin, at this day a portly
+person in velvet and point, whom you can now call, with a thanksgiving
+in the stead of the olden tremor, Mrs. Hector M'Cutchin? Yes, we were in
+love in a couple of evenings, Little Grand vehemently and unpoetically,
+I shyly and sentimentally, according to our temperament, and as the fair
+Emily stirred feud between the two Noble Kinsmen, so the Marchioness St.
+Julian began to sow seeds of jealousy and detestation between us, sworn
+allies as we were. But "_le veritable amant ne connait point_
+_d'amis_," and as soon as we began to grow jealous of each other, Little
+Grand could have kicked me to the devil, and I could have kicked _him_
+with the greatest pleasure in life.
+
+But I was shy, Little Grand was blessed with all the audacity
+imaginable; the consequence was, that when our horses came round, and
+the Maltese who acted as cherub was going to close the gates of Paradise
+upon us, he managed to slip into the Marchioness's boudoir to get a
+tete-a-tete farewell, while I strode up and down the veranda, not
+heeding Saint-Jeu, who was telling me a tale, to which, in any other
+saner moments, I should have listened greedily, but longing to execute
+on Little Grand some fierce and terrible vengeance, to which the
+vendetta should be baby's play. Saint-Jeu left me to put his arm over
+Heavy's shoulder, and tell him if ever he came to Paris he should be
+transported to receive him at the Hotel de Millefleurs, and present him
+at the Tuileries; and I stood swearing to myself, and breaking off
+sprays of the veranda creepers, when I heard somebody say, very softly
+and low,--
+
+"Signore, come here a moment."
+
+It was that sweetly pretty mute whom we had barely noticed, absorbed as
+we were in the worship of our maturer idol, leaning out of the window,
+her cheeks flushed, her lips parted, her eyes sad and anxious. Of course
+I went to her, surprised at her waking up so suddenly to any interest in
+me. She put her hand on my coat-sleeve, and drew me down towards her.
+
+"Listen to me a moment. I hardly know how to warn you, and yet I must. I
+cannot sit quietly by and see you and your young friends being deceived
+as so many have been before you. Do not come here again---do not----"
+
+"Figlia mia! are you not afraid of the night-air?" said the Prince of
+Orangia Magnolia, just behind us.
+
+His words were kind, but there was a nasty glitter in his eyes.
+Lucrezia answered him in passionate Italian--of which I had no
+knowledge--with such fire in her eyes, such haughty gesticulation, and
+such a torrent of words, that I really began to think, pretty soft
+little dear as she looked, that she must positively be a trifle out of
+her mind, her silence before, and her queer speech to me, seemed such
+odd behavior for a young lady in such high society. She was turning to
+me again when Little Grand came out into the veranda, looking flushed,
+proud, and self-complaisant, as such a winner and slayer of women would
+do. My hand clenched on the jasmine, I thirsted to spring on him as he
+stood there with his provoking, self-contented smile, and his confounded
+coxcombical air, and his cursed fair curls--_my_ hair was dust-colored
+and as rebellious as porcupine-quills--and wash out in his blood or
+mine----A touch of a soft hand thrilled through my every nerve and
+fibre: the Marchioness was there, and signed me to her. Lucrezia, Little
+Grand, and all the rest of the universe vanished from my mind at the
+lightning of that angel smile and the rustle of that moire-antique
+dress. She beckoned me to her into the empty drawing-room.
+
+"Augustus" (I never thought my name could sound so sweet before), "tell
+me, what was my niece Lucrezia saying to you just now?"
+
+Now I had a sad habit of telling the truth; it was an out-of-the-world
+custom taught me, among other old-fashioned things, at home, though I
+soon found how inconvenient a _betise_ modern society considers it; and
+I blurted the truth out here, not distinctly or gracefully, though, as
+Little Grand would have done, for I was in that state of exaltation
+ordinarily expressed as not knowing whether one is standing in one's
+Wellingtons or not.
+
+The Marchioness sighed.
+
+"Ah, did she say that? Poor dear girl! She dislikes me so much, it is
+quite an hallucination, and yet, O Augustus, I have been to her like an
+elder sister, like a mother. Imagine how it grieves me," and the
+Marchioness shed some tears--pearls of price, thought I, worthy to drop
+from angel eyes--"it is a bitter sorrow to me, but, poor darling! she is
+not responsible."
+
+She touched her veiny temple significantly as she spoke, and I
+understood, and felt tremendously shocked at it, that the young, fair
+Italian girl was a fierce and cruel maniac, who had the heart (oh! most
+extraordinary madness did it seem to me; if _I_ had lost my senses I
+could never have harmed _her_!) to hate, absolutely hate, the noblest,
+tenderest, most beautiful of women!
+
+"I never alluded to it to any one," continued the Marchioness.
+"Guatamara and Saint-Jeu, though such intimate friends, are ignorant of
+it. I would rather have any one think ever so badly of me, than reveal
+to them the cruel misfortune of my sweet Lucrezia----"
+
+How noble she looked as she spoke!
+
+"But you, Augustus, you," and she smiled upon me till I grew as dizzy as
+after my first taste of milk-punch, "I have not the courage to let _you_
+go off with any bad impression of me. I have known you a very little
+while, it is true--but a few hours, indeed--yet there are affinities of
+heart and soul which overstep the bounds of time, and, laughing at the
+chill ties of ordinary custom, make strangers dearer than old
+friends----"
+
+The room revolved round me, the lights danced up and down, my heart beat
+like Thor's hammer, and my pulse went as fast as a favorite saving the
+distance. _She_ speaking so to me! My senses whirled round and round
+like fifty thousand witches on a Walpurgis Night, and down I went on my
+knees before my magnificent idol, raving away I couldn't tell you what
+now--the essence of everything I'd ever read, from Ovid to Alexander
+Smith. It must have been something frightful to hear, though Heaven
+knows I meant it earnestly enough. Suddenly I was pulled up with a
+jerk, as one throws an unbroken colt back on his haunches in the middle
+of his first start. _I thought I heard a laugh._
+
+She started up too. "Hush! another time! We may be overheard." And
+drawing her dress from my hands, which grasped it as agonisingly as a
+cockney grasps his saddle-bow, holding on for dear life over the Burton
+or Tedworth country, she stooped kindly over me, and floated away before
+_I_ was recovered from the exquisite delirium of my ecstatic trance.
+
+She loved me! This superb creature loved me! There was not a doubt of
+it; and how I got back to the barracks that night in my heavenly state
+of mind I could never have told. All I know is, that Grand and I never
+spoke a word, by tacit consent, all the way back; that I felt a fiendish
+delight when I saw his proud triumphant air, and thought how little he
+guessed, poor fellow!----And that Dream of One Fair Woman was as
+superior in rapture to the "Dream of Fair Women" as Tokay to the "Fine
+Fruity Port" that results from damsons and a decoction of sloes!
+
+The next day there was a grand affair in Malta to receive some foreign
+Prince, whose name I do not remember now, who called on us _en route_ to
+England. Of course all the troops turned out, and there was an
+inspection of us, and a grand luncheon and dinner, and ball, and all
+that sort of thing, which a month before I should have considered prime
+fun, but which now, as it kept me out of my paradise, I thought the most
+miserable bore that could possibly have chanced.
+
+"I say," said Heavy to me as I was getting into harness--"I say, don't
+you wonder Fitzhervey and the Marchioness ain't coming to the palace
+to-day? One would have thought Old Stars and Garters would have been
+sure to ask them."
+
+"Ask them? I should say so," I returned, with immeasurable disdain. "Of
+course he asked them; but she told me she shouldn't come, last night.
+She is so tired of such things. She came yachting with Fitzhervey solely
+to try and have a little quiet. She says people never give her a
+moment's rest when she is in Paris or London. She was sorry to
+disappoint Stars and Garters, but I don't think she likes his wife much:
+she don't consider her good ton."
+
+On which information Heavy lapsed into a state of profoundest awe and
+wonderment, it having been one of his articles of faith, for the month
+that we had been in Malta, that the palace people were exalted demigods,
+whom it was only permissible to worship from a distance, and a very
+respectful distance too. Heavy had lost some twenty odd pounds the night
+before--of course we lost, young hands as we were, unaccustomed to the
+society of that entertaining gentleman, Pam--and had grumbled not a
+little at the loss of his gold bobs. But now I could see that such a
+contemptibly pecuniary matter was clean gone from his memory, and that
+he would have thought the world well lost for the honor of playing cards
+with people who could afford to disappoint Old Stars and Garters.
+
+The inspection was over at last; and if any other than Conran had been
+my senior officer, I should have come off badly, in all probability, for
+the abominable manner in which I went through my evolutions. The day
+came to an end somehow or other, though I began to think it never would,
+the luncheon was ended, the bigwigs were taking their sieste, or
+otherwise occupied, and I, trusting to my absence not being noticed,
+tore off as hard as man can who has Cupid for his Pegasus. With a
+bouquet as large as a drum-head, clasped round with a bracelet, about
+which I had many doubts as to the propriety of offering to the possessor
+of such jewelry as the Marchioness must have, yet on which I thought I
+might venture after the scene of last night, I was soon on the veranda
+of the Casa di Fiori, and my natural shyness being stimulated into a
+distant resemblance of Little Grand's enviable brass, seeing the windows
+of the drawing-room open, I pushed aside the green venetians and entered
+noiselessly. The room did not look a quarter so inviting as the night
+before, though it was left in precisely a similar state. I do not know
+how it was, but those cards lying about on the floor, those sconces with
+the wax run down and dripping over them, those emptied caraffes that had
+diffused an odor not yet dissipated, those tables and velvet couches all
+_a tort et a travers_, did not look so very inviting after all, and even
+to my unsophisticated senses, scarcely seemed fit for a Peeress.
+
+There was nobody in the room, and I walked through it towards the
+boudoir; from the open door I saw Fitzhervey, Guatamara, and my
+Marchioness--but oh! what horror unutterable! doing--_que pensez-vous?_
+Drinking bottled porter!--and drinking bottled porter in a _peignoir_
+not of the cleanliest, and with raven tresses not of the neatest!
+
+Only fancy! she, that divine, _spirituelle_ creature, who had talked but
+a few hours before of the affinity of souls, to have come down, like any
+ordinary woman, to Guinness's stout, and a checked dressing-gown and
+unbrushed locks! To find your prophet without his silver veil, or your
+Leila dead drowned in a sack, or your Guinevere flown over with Sir
+Lancelot to Boulogne, or your long-esteemed Griselda gone off with your
+cockaded Jeames, is nothing to the torture, the unutterable anguish, of
+seeing your angel, your divinity, your bright particular star, your
+hallowed Arabian rose, come down to--Bottled Porter! Do not talk to me
+of Dore, sir, or Mr. Martin's pictures; their horrors dwindle into
+insignificance compared with the horror of finding an intimate liaison
+between one's first love and Bottled Porter!
+
+In my first dim, unutterable anguish, I should have turned and fled; but
+my syren's voice had not lost all its power, despite the stout and dirty
+dressing-gown, for she was a very handsome woman, and could stand such
+things as well as anybody. She came towards me, with her softest smile,
+glancing at the bracelet on the bouquet, apologizing slightly for her
+neglige:--"I am so indolent. I only dress for those I care to
+please--and I never hoped to see _you_ to-day." In short, magnetizing me
+over again, and smoothing down my outraged sensibilities, till I ended
+by becoming almost blind (_quite_ I could not manage) to the checked
+_robe de chambre_ and the unbrushed bandeaux, by offering her my
+braceleted bouquet, which was very graciously accepted, and even by
+sharing the atrocious London porter, "that horrid stuff," she called it,
+"how I hate it! but it is the only thing Sir Benjamin Brodie allows me,
+I am so very delicate, you know, my sensibilities so frightfully acute!"
+
+I had not twenty minutes to stay, having to be back at the barracks, or
+risk a reprimand, which, happily, the checked _peignoir_ had cooled me
+sufficiently to enable me to recollect. So I took my farewell--one not
+unlike Medora's and Conrad's, Fitzhervey and Guatamara having kindly
+withdrawn as soon as the bottled porter was finished--and I went out of
+the house in a very blissful state, despite Guinness and the unwelcome
+demi-toilette, which did not accord with Eugene Sue's and the Parlor
+Library's description of the general getting-up and stunning appearance
+of heroines and peeresses, "reclining, in robes of cloud-like tissue and
+folds of the richest lace, on a cabriole couch of amber velvet, while
+the air was filled with the voluptuous perfume of the flower-children of
+the South, and music from unseen choristers lulled the senses with its
+divinest harmony," &c., &c., &c.
+
+Bottled porter and a checked dressing-gown! Say what you like, sirs, it
+takes a very strong passion to overcome _those_. I have heard men
+ascribe the waning of their affections after the honeymoon to the
+constant sight of their wives--whom before they had only seen making
+papa's coffee with an angelic air and a toilette _tiree a quatre
+epingles_--everlastingly coming down too late for breakfast in a
+dressing-gown; and, upon my soul, if ever I marry, which Heaven in
+pitiful mercy forfend! and my wife make her appearance in one of those
+confounded _peignoirs_, I will give that much-run-after and
+deeply-to-be-pitied public character, the Divorce Judge, some more work
+to do--I will, upon my honor.
+
+However, the _peignoir_ had not iced me enough that time to prevent my
+tumbling out of the house in as delicious an ecstasy as if I had been
+eating some of Monte Cristo's "hatchis." As I went out, not looking
+before me, I came bang against the chest of somebody else, who, not
+admiring the rencontre, hit my cap over my eyes, and exclaimed, in not
+the most courtly manner you will acknowledge, "You cursed owl, take
+that, then! What are you doing here, I should like to know?"
+
+"Confound your impudence!" I retorted, as soon as my ocular powers were
+restored, and I saw the blue eyes, fair curls, and smart figure of my
+ancient Iolaues, now my bitterest foe--"confound your impertinence! what
+are _you_ doing here? you mean."
+
+"Take care, and don't ask questions about what doesn't concern you,"
+returned Little Grand, with a laugh--a most irritating laugh. There are
+times when such cachinnations sting one's ears more than a volley of
+oaths. "Go home and mind your own business, my chicken. You are a green
+bird, and nobody minds you, but still you'll find it as well not to come
+poaching on other men's manors."
+
+"Other men's manors! Mine, if you please," I shouted, so mad with him I
+could have floored him where he stood.
+
+"Phew!" laughed Little Grand, screwing up his lips into a contemptuous
+whistle, "you've been drinking too much Bass, my daisy; 'tis n't good
+for young heads--can't stand it. Go home, innocent."
+
+The insult, the disdainful tone, froze my blood. My heart swelled with a
+sense of outraged dignity and injured manhood. With a conviction of my
+immeasurable superiority of position, as the beloved of that divine
+creature, I emancipated myself from the certain sort of slavery I was
+generally in to Little Grand, and spoke as I conceived it to be the
+habit of gentlemen whose honor had been wounded to speak.
+
+"Mr. Grandison, you will pay for this insult. I shall expect
+satisfaction."
+
+Little Grand laughed again--absolutely grinned, the audacious young
+imp--and he twelve months younger than I, too!
+
+"Certainly, sir. If you wish to be made a target of, I shall be
+delighted to oblige you. I can't keep ladies waiting. It is always Place
+aux dames! with me; so, for the present, good morning!"
+
+And off went the young coxcomb into the Casa di Fiori, and I, only
+consoled by the reflection of the different reception he would receive
+to what mine had been (_he_ had a braceleted bouquet, too, the young
+pretentious puppy!), started off again, assuaging my lacerated feelings
+with the delicious word of Satisfaction. I felt myself immeasurably
+raised above the heads of every other man in Malta--a perfect hero of
+romance; in fact, fit to figure in my beloved Alexandre's most
+highly-wrought yellow-papered _roman_, with a duel on my hands, and the
+love of a magnificent creature like my Eudoxia Adelaida. She had become
+Eudoxia Adelaida to me now, and I had forgiven, if not forgotten, the
+dirty dressing-gown: the bottled porter lay, of course, at Brodie's
+door. If he would condemn spiritual forms of life and light to the
+common realistic aliments of horrible barmaids and draymen, she could
+not help it, nor I either. If angels come down to earth, and are
+separated from their natural nourishment of manna and nectar, they must
+take what they can get, even though it be so coarse and sublunary a
+thing as Guinness's XXX, must they not, sir? Yes, I felt very _exalte_
+with my affair of honor and my affair of the heart, Little Grand for my
+foe, and my Marchioness, for a love. I never stopped to remember that I
+might be smashing with frightful recklessness the Sixth and the Seventh
+Commandments. If Little Grand got shot, he must thank himself; he should
+not have insulted me; and if there was a Marquis St. Julian, why--I
+pitied him, poor fellow! that was all.
+
+Full of these sublime sensations--grown at least three feet in my
+varnished boots--I lounged into the ball-room, feeling supreme pity for
+ensigns who were chattering round the door, admiring those poor, pale
+garrison girls. _They_ had not a duel and a Marchioness; _they_ did not
+know what beauty meant--what life was!
+
+I did not dance--I was above that sort of thing now--there was not a
+woman worth the trouble in the room; and about the second waltz I saw my
+would-be rival talking to Ruthven, a fellow in Ours. Little Grand did
+not look glum or dispirited, as he ought to have done after the
+interview he must have had; but probably that was the boy's brass. He
+would never look beaten if you had hit him till he was black and blue.
+Presently Ruthven came up to me. He was not over-used to his business,
+for he began the opening chapter in rather school-boy fashion.
+
+"Hallo, Gus! so you and Little Grand have been falling out. Why don't
+you settle it with a little mill? A vast deal better than pistols. Duels
+always seem to me no fun. Two men stand up like fools, and----"
+
+"Mr. Ruthven," said I, very haughtily, "if your principal desires to
+apologize----"
+
+"Apologize! Bless your soul, no! But----"
+
+"Then," said I, cutting him uncommonly short indeed, "you can have no
+necessity to address yourself to me, and I beg to refer you to my friend
+and second, Mr. Heavystone."
+
+Wherewith I bowed, turned on my heel, and left him.
+
+I did not sleep that night, though I tried hard, because I thought it
+the correct thing for heroes to sleep sweetly till the clock strikes the
+hour of their duel, execution, &c., or whatever it may hap. Egmont
+slept, Argyle slept, Philippe Egalite, scores of them, but I could not.
+Not that I funked it, thank Heaven--I never had a touch of that--but
+because I was in such a delicious state of excitement, self-admiration,
+and heroism, which had not cooled when I found myself walking down to
+the appointed place by the beach with poor old Heavy, who was intensely
+impressed by being charged with about five quires of the best
+cream-laid, to be given to the Marchioness in case I fell. Little Grand
+and Ruthven came on the ground at almost the same moment, Little Grand
+eminently jaunty and most _confoundedly_ handsome. We took off our caps
+with distant ceremony; the Castilian hidalgos were never more stately;
+but, then, what Knights of the Round Table ever splintered spears for
+such a woman?
+
+The paces were measured, the pistols taken out of their case. We were
+just placed, and Ruthven, with a handkerchief in his hand, had just
+enumerated, in awful accents, "One! two!"--the "three!" yet hovered on
+his lips, when we heard a laugh--the third laugh that had chilled my
+blood in twenty-four hours. Somebody's hand was laid on Little Grand's
+shoulder, and Conran's voice interrupted the whole thing.
+
+"Hallo, young ones! what farce is this?"
+
+"Farce, sir!" retorted Little Grand, hotly--"farce! It is no farce. It
+is an affair of honor, and----"
+
+"Don't make me laugh, my dear boy," smiled Conran; "it is so much too
+warm for such an exertion. Pray, why are you and your once sworn friend
+making popinjays of each other?"
+
+"Mr. Grandison has grossly insulted me," I began, "and I demand
+satisfaction. I will not stir from the ground without it, and----"
+
+"You _sha'n't_," shouted Little Grand. "Do you dare to pretend I want to
+funk, you little contemptible----"
+
+Though it was too warm, Conran went off into a fit of laughter.
+
+I dare say our sublimity had a comic touch in it of which we never
+dreamt. "My dear boys, pray don't, it is too fatiguing. Come, Grand,
+what is it all about?"
+
+"I deny your right to question me, Major," retorted Little Grand, in a
+fury. "What have you to do with it? I mean to punish that young owl
+yonder--who didn't know how to drink anything but milk-and-water, didn't
+know how to say bo! to a goose, till I taught him--for very abominable
+impertinence, and I'll----"
+
+"My impertinence! I like that!" I shouted. "It is your unwarrantable,
+overbearing self-conceit, that makes you the laughing-stock of all the
+mess, which----"
+
+"Silence!" said Conran's still stern voice, which subdued us into
+involuntary respect. "No more of this nonsense! Put up those pistols,
+Ruthven. You are two hot-headed, silly boys, who don't know for what you
+are quarrelling. Live a few years longer, and you won't be so eager to
+get into hot water, and put cartridges into your best friends. No, I
+shall not hear any more about it. If you do not instantly give me your
+words of honor not to attempt to repeat this folly, as your senior
+officer I shall put you under arrest for six weeks."
+
+O Alexandra Dumas!--O Monte Cristo!--O heroes of yellow paper and pluck
+invincible! I ask pardon of your shades; I must record the fact,
+lowering and melancholy as it is, that before our senior officer our
+heroism melted like Vanille ice in the sun, our glories tumbled to the
+ground like twelfth-cake ornaments under children's fingers, and before
+the threat of arrest the lions lay down like lambs.
+
+Conran sent us back, humbled, sulky, and crestfallen, and resumed his
+solitary patrol upon the beach, where, before the sun was fairly up, he
+was having a shot at curlews. But if he was a little stern, he was no
+less kind-hearted; and in the afternoon of that day, while he lay, after
+his siesta, smoking on his little bed, I unburdened myself to him. He
+did not laugh at me, though I saw a quizzical smile under his black
+moustaches.
+
+"What is your divinity's name?" he asked, when I had finished.
+
+"Eudoxia Adelaida, Marchioness St. Julian."
+
+"The Marchioness St. Julian! Oh!"
+
+"Do you know her?" I inquired, somewhat perplexed by his tone.
+
+He smiled straight out this time.
+
+"I don't know _her_, but there are a good many Peeresses in Malta and
+Gibraltar, and along the line of the Pacific, as my brother Ned, in the
+_Belisarius_, will tell you. I could count two score such of my
+acquaintance off at this minute."
+
+I wondered what he meant. I dare say he knew all the Peerage; but that
+had nothing to do with me, and I thought it strange that all the
+Duchesses, and Countesses, and Baronesses should quit their
+country-seats and town-houses to locate themselves along the line of the
+Pacific.
+
+"She's a fine woman, St. John?" he went on.
+
+"Fine!" I reiterated, bursting into a panegyric, with which I won't bore
+you as I bored him.
+
+"Well, you're going there to-night, you say; take me with you, and we'll
+see what I think of your Marchioness."
+
+I looked at his fine figure and features, recalled certain tales of his
+conquests, remembered that he knew French, Italian, German, and Spanish,
+but, not being very able to refuse, acquiesced with a reluctance I could
+not entirely conceal. Conran, however, did not perceive it, and after
+mess took his cap, and went with me to the Casa di Fiori.
+
+The rooms were all right again, my Marchioness was _en grande tenue_,
+amber silk, black lace, diamonds, and all that sort of style. Fitzhervey
+and the other men were in evening dress, drinking coffee; there was not
+a trace of bottled porter anywhere, and it was all very brilliant and
+presentable. The Marchioness St. Julian rose with the warmest effusion,
+her dazzling white teeth showing in the sunniest of smiles, and both
+hands outstretched.
+
+"Augustus, _bien aime_, you are rather----"
+
+"Late," I suppose she was going to say, but she stopped dead short, her
+teeth remained parted in a stereotyped smile, a blankness of dismay came
+over her luminous eyes. She caught sight of Conran, and I imagined I
+heard a very low-breathed "Curse the fellow!" from courteous Lord Dolph.
+Conran came forward, however, as if he did not notice it; there was only
+that queer smile lurking under his moustaches. I introduced him to them,
+and the Marchioness smiled again, and Fitzhervey almost resumed his
+wonted extreme urbanity. But they were somehow or other wonderfully ill
+at ease--wonderfully, for people in such high society; and I was ill at
+ease too, from being only able to attribute Eudoxia Adelaida's evident
+consternation at the sight of Conran to his having been some time or
+other an old love of hers. "Ah!" thought I, grinding my teeth, "that
+comes of loving a woman older than one's self."
+
+The Major, however, seemed the only one who enjoyed himself. The
+Marchioness was beaming on him graciously, though her ruffled feathers
+were not quite smoothed down, and he was sitting by her with an intense
+amusement in his eyes, alternately talking to her about Stars and
+Garters, whom, by her answers, she did not seem to know so very
+intimately after all, and chatting with Fitzhervey about hunting, who,
+for a man that had hunted over every country, according to his own
+account, seemed to confuse Tom Edge with Tom Smith, the Burton with the
+Tedworth, a bullfinch with an ox-rail, in queer style, under Conran's
+cross-questioning. We had been in the room about ten minutes, when a
+voice, rich, low, sweet, rang out from some inner room, singing the
+glorious "Inflammatus." How strange it sounded in the Casa di Fiori!
+
+Conran started, the dark blood rose over the clear bronze of his cheek.
+He turned sharply on to the Marchioness. "Good Heaven! whose voice is
+that?"
+
+"My niece's," she answered, staring at him, and touching a hand-bell. "I
+will ask her to come and sing to us nearer. She has really a lovely
+voice."
+
+Conran grew pale again, and sat watching the door with the most
+extraordinary anxiety. Some minutes went by; then Lucrezia entered, with
+the same haughty reserve which her soft young face always wore when with
+her aunt. It changed, though, when her glance fell on Conran, into the
+wildest rapture I ever saw on any countenance. He fixed his eyes on her
+with the look Little Grand says he's seen him wear in battle--a
+contemptuous smile quivering on his face.
+
+"Sing us something, Lucrezia dear," began the Marchioness. "You
+shouldn't be like the nightingales, and give your music only to night
+and solitude."
+
+Lucrezia seemed not to hear her. She had never taken her eyes off
+Conran, and she went, as dreamily as that dear little _Amina_ in the
+"Sonnambula," to her seat under the jasmines in the window. For a few
+minutes Conran, who didn't seem to care two straws what the society in
+general thought of him, took his leave, to the relief, apparently, of
+Fitzhervey and Guatamara.
+
+As he went across the veranda--that memorable veranda!--I sitting in
+dudgeon near the other window, while Fitzhervey was proposing ecarte to
+Heavy, whom we had found there on our entrance, and the Marchioness had
+vanished into her boudoir for a moment, I saw the Roman girl spring out
+after him, and catch hold of his arm:
+
+"Victor! Victor! for pity's sake!--I never thought we should meet like
+this!"
+
+"Nor did I."
+
+"Hush! hush! you will kill me. In mercy, say some kinder words!"
+
+"I can say nothing that it would be courteous to you to say."
+
+I couldn't have been as inflexible, whatever her sins might have been,
+with her hands clasped on me, and her face raised so close to mine.
+Lucrezia's voice changed to a piteous wail:
+
+"You love me no longer, then?"
+
+"Love!" said Conran, fiercely--"love! How dare you speak to me of love?
+I held you to be fond, innocent, true as Heaven; as such, you were
+dearer to me than life--as dear as honor. I loved you with as deep a
+passion as ever a man knew--Heaven help me! I love you now! How am I
+rewarded? By finding you the companion of blackguards, the associate of
+swindlers, one of the arch-intrigantes who lead on youths to ruin with
+base smiles and devilish arts. Then you dare talk to me of love!"
+
+With those passionate words he threw her off him. She fell at his feet
+with a low moan. He either did not hear, or did not heed it; and I,
+bewildered by what I heard, mechanically went and lifted her from the
+ground. Lucrezia had not fainted, but she looked so wild, that I
+believed the Marchioness, and set her down as mad; but then Conran must
+be mad as well, which seemed too incredible a thing for me to
+swallow--our cool Major mad!
+
+"Where does he live?" asked Lucrezia of me, in a breathless whisper.
+
+"He? Who?"
+
+"Victor--your officer--Signor Conran."
+
+"Why, he lives in Valetta, of course."
+
+"Can I find him there?"
+
+"I dare say, if you want him."
+
+"Want him! Oh, Santa Maria! is not his absence death? Can I find him?"
+
+"Oh, yes, I dare say. Anybody will show you Conran's rooms."
+
+"Thank you."
+
+With that, this mysterious young lady left me, and I turned in through
+the window again. Heavy and the men were playing at lansquenet, that
+most perilous, rapid, and bewitching of all the resistless Card Circes.
+There was no Marchioness, and having done it once with impunity, I
+thought I might do it again, and lifted the amber curtain that divided
+the boudoir from the drawing-room. What did I behold? Oh! torture
+unexampled! Oh! fiendish agony! There was Little Grand--self-conceited,
+insulting, impertinent, abominable, unendurable Little Grand--on the
+amber satin couch, with the Marchioness leaning her head on his
+shoulder, and looking up in his thrice-confounded face with her most
+adorable smile, _my_ smile, that had beamed, and, as I thought, beamed
+only upon me!
+
+If Mephistopheles had been by to tempt me, I would have sold my soul to
+have wreaked vengeance on them both. Neither saw me, thank Heaven! and I
+had self-possession enough not to give them the cruel triumph of
+witnessing my anguish. I withdrew in silence, dropped the curtain, and
+rushed to bury my wrongs and sorrows in the friendly bosom of the gentle
+night. It was my first love, and I had made a fool of myself. The two
+are synonymous.
+
+How I reached the barracks I never knew. All the night long I sat
+watching the stars out, raving to them of Eudoxia Adelaida, and cursing
+in plentiful anathemas my late Orestes. How should I bear his impudent
+grin every mortal night of my life across the mess-table? I tore up into
+shreds about a ream of paper, inscribed with tender sonnets to my
+faithless idol. I trampled into fifty thousand shreds a rosette off her
+dress, for which, fool-like, I had begged the day before. I smashed the
+looking-glass, which could only show me the image of a pitiful donkey. I
+called on Heaven to redress my wrongs. Oh! curse it! never was a fellow
+at once so utterly done for and so utterly done brown!
+
+And in the vicarage, as I learnt afterwards, when my letter was received
+at home, there was great glorification and pleasure. My mother and the
+girls were enraptured at the high society darling Gussy was moving in;
+"but then, you know, mamma, dear Gussy's manners are so gentle, so
+gentleman-like, they are sure to please wherever he goes!" Wherewith my
+mother cried, and dried her eyes, and cried again, over that abominable
+letter copied from Little Grand's, and smelling of vilest tobacco.
+
+Then entered a rectoress of a neighboring parish, to whom my mother and
+the girls related with innocent exultation of my grand friends at Malta;
+how Lord A. Fitzhervey was my sworn ally, and the Marchioness St. Julian
+had quite taken me under her wing. And the rectoress, having a son of
+her own, who was not doing anything so grand at Cambridge, but
+principally sotting beer at a Cherryhinton public, smiled and was
+wrathful, and said to her lord at dinner:
+
+"My dear, did you ever hear of a Marchioness St. Julian?"
+
+"No, my love, I believe not--never."
+
+"Is there one in the peerage?"
+
+"Can't say, my dear. Look in Burke."
+
+So the rectoress got Burke and closed it, after deliberate inspection,
+with malignant satisfaction.
+
+"I thought not. How ridiculous those St. Johns are about that ugly boy
+Augustus. As if Tom were not worth a hundred of him!"
+
+I was too occupied with my own miseries then to think about Conran and
+Lucrezia, though some time after I heard all about it. It seems, that, a
+year before, Conran was on leave in Rome, and at Rome, loitering about
+the Campagna one day, he made a chance acquaintance with an Italian
+girl, by getting some flowers for her she had tried to reach and could
+not. She was young, enthusiastic, intensely interesting, and had only an
+old Roman nurse, deaf as a post and purblind, with her. The girl was
+Lucrezia da Guari, and Lucrezia was lovely as one of her own myrtle or
+orange flowers. Somehow or other Conran went there the next day, and the
+next, and the next, and so on for a good many days, and always found
+Lucrezia. Now, Conran had at bottom a touch of unstirred romance, and,
+moreover, his own idea of what sort of woman he could love. Something in
+this untrained yet winning Campagna flower answered to both. He was old
+to trust his own discernment, and, after a month or two's walks and
+talks, Conran, one of the proudest men going, offered himself and his
+name to a Roman girl of whom he knew nothing, except that she seemed to
+care for him as he had had a fancy to be cared for all his life. It was
+a deucedly romantic thing--however, he did it! Lucrezia had told him her
+father was a military officer, but somehow or other this father never
+came to light, and when he called at their house--or rather
+rooms--Conran always found him out, which he thought queer, but, on the
+whole, rather providential, and he set the accident down to a
+foreigner's roaming habits.
+
+The day Conran had really gone the length of offering to make an unknown
+Italian his wife, he went, for the first time in the evening, to Da
+Guari's house. The servant showed him in unannounced to a
+brightly-lighted chamber, reeking with wine and smoke, where a dozen men
+were playing trente et quarante at an amateur bank, and two or three
+others were gathered round what he had believed his own fair and pure
+Campagna flower. He understood it all; he turned away with a curse upon
+him. He wanted love and innocence; adventuresses he could have by the
+score, and he was sick to death of them. From that hour he never saw her
+again till he met her at the Casa di Fiori.
+
+The next day I went to Conran while he was breakfasting, and unburdened
+my mind to him. He looked ill and haggard, but he listened to me very
+kindly, though he spoke of the people at the Casa di Fiori in a hard,
+brief, curious manner.
+
+"Plenty have been taken in like you, Gus," he said "I was, years ago, in
+my youth, when I joined the Army. There are scores of such women, as I
+told you, down the line of the Pacific, and about here; anywhere, in
+fact, where the army and navy give them fresh pigeons to be gulled. They
+take titles that sound grand in boys' ears, and fascinate them till
+they've won all their money, and then--send them to the dogs. Your
+Marchioness St. Julian's real name is Sarah Briggs."
+
+I gave an involuntary shriek. Sarah Briggs finished me. It was the
+death-stroke, that could never be got over.
+
+"She was a ballet-girl in London," continued Conran; "then, when she was
+sixteen, married that Fitzhervey, _alias_ Briggs, _alias_ Smith, _alias_
+what you please, and set up in her present more lucrative employment
+with her three or four confederates. Saint-Jeu was expelled from Paris
+for keeping a hell in the Chaussee d'Antin, Fitzhervey was a leg at
+Newmarket, Orangia Magnolia a lawyer's clerk, who was had up for
+forgery, Guatamara is--by another name--a scoundrel of Rome. There is
+the history of your Maltese Peerage, Gussy. Well, you'll be wider awake
+next time. Wait, there is somebody at my door. Stay here a moment, I'll
+come back to you."
+
+Accordingly, I stayed in his bedroom, where I had found him writing, and
+he went into his sitting-room, of which, from the diminutiveness of his
+domicile, I commanded a full view, sit where I would. What was my
+astonishment to see Lucrezia! I went to his bedroom door; it was locked
+from the outside, so I perforce remained where I was, to, _nolens
+volens_, witness the finish of last night's interview.
+
+Stern to the last extent and deadly pale, Conran stood, too surprised to
+speak, and most probably at a loss for words.
+
+Lucrezia came up to him nevertheless with the abandonment of youth and
+southern blood.
+
+"Victor! Victor! let me speak to you. You shall listen; you shall not
+judge me unheard."
+
+"Signorina, I have judged you by only too ample evidence."
+
+He had recovered himself now, and was as cool as needs be.
+
+"I deny it. But you love me still?"
+
+"Love you? More shame on me! A laugh, a compliment, a caress, a
+cashmere, is as much as such women as you are worth. Love becomes
+ridiculous named in the same breath with you."
+
+She caught hold of his hand and crushed it in both her own.
+
+"Kill me you will. Death would have no sting from your hand, but never
+speak such words to _me_."
+
+His voice trembled.
+
+"How can I choose but speak them? You know that I believed you in Italy,
+and how on that belief I offered you my name--a name never yet stained,
+never yet held unworthy. I lost you, to find you in society which
+stamped you for ever. A lovely fiend, holding raw boys enchained, that
+your associates might rifle their purses with marked cards and cogged
+dice. I hoped to have found a diamond, without spot or flaw. I
+discovered my error too late; it was only glass, which all men were free
+to pick up and trample on at their pleasure."
+
+He tried to wrench his hand away, but she would not let it go.
+
+"Hush! hush! listen to me first. If you once thought me worthy of your
+love, you may, surely, now accord me pity. I shall not trouble you long.
+After this, you need see me no more. I am going back to my old convent.
+You and the world will soon forget me, but I shall remember you, and
+pray for you, as dearer than my own soul."
+
+Conran's head was bent down now, and his voice was thick, as he answered
+briefly,
+
+"Go on."
+
+This scene half consoled me for Eudoxia Adelaida--(I mean, O Heavens,
+Sarah Briggs!)--it was so exquisitely romantic, and Conran and Lucrezia
+wouldn't have done at all badly for Monte Cristo and that dear little
+Haidee. I was fearfully poetic in those days.
+
+"When I met you in Rome," Lucrezia went on, in obedience to his
+injunction, "two years ago, you remember I had only left my convent and
+lived with my father but a month or two. I told you he was an officer. I
+only said what I had been told, and I knew no more than you that he was
+the keeper of a gambling house."
+
+She shuddered as she paused, and leaned her forehead on Conran's hand.
+He did not repulse her, and she continued, in her broken, simple
+English:
+
+"The evening you promised me what I should have needed to have been an
+angel to be worthy of--your love and your name--that very evening, when
+I reached home, my father bade me dress for a soiree he was going to
+give. I obeyed him, of course. I knew nothing but what he told me, and I
+went down, to find a dozen young nobles and a few Englishmen drinking
+and playing on a table covered with green cloth. Some few of them came
+up to me, but I felt frightened; their looks, their tones, their florid
+compliments, were so different to yours. But my father kept his eye on
+me, and would not let me leave. While they were leaning over my chair,
+and whispering in my ear, _you_ came to the door of the salon, and I
+went towards you, and you looked cold, and harsh, as I had never seen
+you before, and put me aside, and turned away without a word. Oh,
+Victor! why did you not kill me then? Death would have been kindness.
+Your Othello was kinder to Desdemona; he slew her--he did not _leave_
+her. From that hour I never saw you, and from that hour my father
+persecuted me because I would never join in his schemes, nor enter his
+vile gaming-rooms. Yet I have lived with him, because I could not get
+away. I have been too carefully watched. We Italians are not free, like
+your happy English girls. A few weeks ago we were compelled to leave
+Rome, the young Contino di Firenze had been stilettoed leaving my
+father's rooms, and he could stay in Italy no longer. We came here, and
+joined that hateful woman, who calls herself Marchioness St. Julian;
+and, because she could not bend me to her will, gives out that I am her
+niece, and mad! I wonder I am _not_ mad, Victor. I wish hearts would
+break, as the romancers make them; but how long one suffers and lives
+on! Oh, my love, my soul, my life, only say that you believe me, and
+look kindly at me once again, then I will never trouble you again, I
+will only pray for you. But believe me, Victor. The Mother Superior of
+my convent will tell you it is the truth that I speak. Oh, for the love
+of Heaven, believe me! Believe me or I shall die!"
+
+It was not in the nature of man to resist her; there was truth in the
+girl's voice and face, if ever truth walked abroad on earth. And Conran
+did believe her, and told her so in a few unconnected words, lifting her
+up in his arms, and vowing, with most unrighteous oaths, that her father
+should never have power to persecute her again as long as he himself
+lived to shelter and take care of her.
+
+I was so interested in my Monte Cristo and Haidee (it was so like a
+chapter out of a book), that I entirely forgot my durance vile, and my
+novel and excessively disgraceful, though enforced, occupation of spy;
+and there I stayed, alternating between my interest in them and my
+agonies at the revelations concerning my Eudoxia Adelaida--oh, hang it!
+I mean Sarah Briggs--till, after a most confounded long time, Conran saw
+fit to take Lucrezia off, to get asylum for her with the Colonel's wife
+for a day or two, that "those fools might not misconstrue her." By which
+comprehensive epithet he, I suppose, politely designated "Ours."
+
+Then I went my ways to my own room, and there I found a scented,
+mauve-hued, creamy billet-doux, in uncommon bad handwriting, though,
+from my miserable Eudoxia Adelaida to the "friend and lover of her
+soul." Confound the woman!--how I swore at that daintily-perfumed and
+most vilely-scrawled letter. To think that where that beautiful
+signature stretched from one side to the other--"Eudoxia Adelaida St.
+Julian"--there _ought_ to have been that short, vile, low-bred, hideous,
+Billingsgate cognomen of "Sarah Briggs!"
+
+In the note she reproached me--the wretched hypocrite!--for my departure
+the previous night, "without one farewell to your Eudoxia, O cruel
+Augustus!" and asked me to give her a rendezvous at some vineyards lying
+a little way off the Casa di Fiori, on the road to Melita. Now, being a
+foolish boy, and regarding myself as having been loved and wronged,
+whereas I had only been playing the very common _role_ of pigeon, I
+could not resist the temptation of going, just to take one last look of
+that fair, cruel face, and upbraid her with being the first to sow the
+fatal seeds of lifelong mistrust and misery in my only too fond and
+faithful, &c. &c. &c.
+
+So, at the appointed hour, just when the sun was setting over the
+far-away Spanish shore, and the hush of night was sinking over the
+little, rocky, peppery, military-thick, Mediterranean isle, I found
+myself _en route_ to the vineyards; which, till I came to Malta, had
+been one of my delusions, Idea picturing them in wreaths and avenues,
+Reality proving them hop-sticks and parched earth. I drew near; it was
+quite dark now, the sun had gone to sleep under the blue waves, and the
+moon was not yet up. Though I knew she was Sarah Briggs, and an
+adventuress who had made game of me, two facts that one would fancy
+might chill the passion out of anybody, so mad was I about that woman,
+that, if I had met her then and there, I should have let her wheedle me
+over, and gone back to the Casa di Fiori with her and been fleeced
+again: I am sure I should, sir, and so would you, if, at eighteen, new
+to life, you had fallen in with Eudox----pshaw!--with Sarah Briggs, my
+Marchioness St Julian.
+
+I drew near the vineyards: my heart beat thick, I could not see, but I
+was certain I heard the rustle of her dress, caught the perfume of her
+hair. All her sins vanished: how could I upbraid her, though she were
+three times over Sarah Briggs? Yes, she was coming; I _felt_ her near;
+an electric thrill rushed through me as soul met soul. I heard a
+murmured "Dearest, sweetest!" I felt the warm clasp of two arms, but--a
+cold row of undress waistcoat-buttons came against my face, and a voice
+I knew too well cried out, as I rebounded from him, impelled thereto by
+a not gentle kick,--
+
+"The devil! get out! Who the deuce are you?"
+
+We both stopped for breath. At that minute up rose the silver moon, and
+in its tell-tale rays we glared on one another, I and Little Grand.
+
+That silence was sublime: the pause between Beethoven's andante
+allegro--the second before the Spanish bull rushes upon the torreador.
+
+"You little miserable wretch!" burst out Grand, slowly and terribly;
+"you little, mean, sneaking, spying, contemptible milksop! I should like
+to know what you mean by bringing out your ugly phiz at this hour, when
+you used to be afraid of stirring out for fear of nurse's bogies? And to
+dare to come lurking after me!"
+
+"After you, Mr. Grandison!" I repeated, with grandiloquence. "Really you
+put too much importance on your own movements. I came by appointment to
+meet the Marchioness St. Julian, whom, I presume, as you are well
+acquainted with her, you know in her real name of Sarah Briggs, and
+to----"
+
+"Sarah Briggs!--_you_ come by appointment?" stammered Little Grand.
+
+"Yes, sir; if you disbelieve my word of honor, I will condescend to show
+you my invitation."
+
+"You little ape!" swore Grand, coming back to his previous wrath; "it is
+a lie, a most abominable, unwarrantable lie! _I_ came by appointment,
+sir; you did no such thing. Look there!"
+
+And he flaunted before my eyes in the moonlight the fac-simile of my
+letter, verbatim copy, save that in his Cosmo was put in the stead of
+Augustus.
+
+"Look there!" said I, giving him mine.
+
+Little Grand snatched it, read it over once, twice, thrice, then drooped
+his head, with a burning color in his face, and was silent.
+
+The "knowing hand" was done!
+
+We were both of us uncommonly quiet for ten minutes, neither of us liked
+to be the first to give in.
+
+At last Little Grand looked up and held out his hand, no more nonsense
+about him now.
+
+"Simon, you and I have been two great fools; we can't chaff one another.
+She's a cursed actress, and--let's make it up, old boy."
+
+We made it up accordingly--when Little Grand was not conceited he was a
+very jolly fellow--and then I gave him my whole key to the mysteries,
+intricacies, and charms of our Casa di Fiori. We could not chaff one
+another, but poor Little Grand was pitiably sore then, and for long
+afterwards. He, the "old bird," the cool hand, the sharp one of Ours, to
+have been done brown, to be the joke of the mess, the laugh of all the
+men, down to the weest drummer-boy! Poor Little Grand! He was too done
+up to swagger, too thoroughly angry with himself to swear at anybody
+else. He only whispered to me, "Why the dickens could she want you and
+me to meet our selves?"
+
+"To give us a finishing hoax, I suppose," I suggested.
+
+Little Grand drew his cap over his eyes, and hung his head down in
+abject humiliation.
+
+"I suppose so. What fools we have been, Simon! And, I say, I've borrowed
+three hundred of old Miraflores, and it's all gone up at that devilish
+Casa; and how I shall get it from the governor, Heaven knows, for _I_
+don't."
+
+"I'm in the same pickle, Grand," I groaned. "I've given that old rascal
+notes of hand for two hundred pounds, and, if it don't drop from the
+clouds, I shall never pay it. Oh, I say, Grand, love comes deucedly
+expensive."
+
+"Ah!" said he, with a sympathetic shiver, "think what a pair of hunters
+we might have had for the money!" With which dismal and remorseful
+remembrance the old bird, who had been trapped like a young pigeon,
+swore mightily, and withdrew into humbled and disgusted silence.
+
+Next morning we heard, to our comfort--what lots of people there always
+are to tell us how to lock our stable-door when our solitary mare has
+been stolen--that, with a gentle hint from the police, the Marchioness
+St. Julian, with her _confreres_, had taken wing to the Ionian Isles,
+where, at Corfu or Cephalonia, they will re-erect the Casa di Fiori, and
+glide gently on again from vingt-et-un to loo, and from loo to
+lansquenet, under eyes as young and blinded as our own. They went
+without Lucrezia. Conran took her into his own hands. Any other man in
+the regiment would have been pretty well ridiculed at taking a bride out
+of the Casa di Fiori; but the statements made by the high-born Abbess of
+her Roman convert were so clear, and so to the girl's honor, and he had
+such a way of holding his own, of keeping off liberties from himself and
+anything belonging to him, and was, moreover, known to be of such
+fastidious honor, that his young wife was received as if she had been a
+Princess in her own right. With her respected parent Conran had a brief
+interview previous to his flight from Malta, in which, with a few gentle
+hints, he showed that worthy it would be wiser to leave his daughter
+unmolested for the future, and I doubt if Mr. Orangia Magnolia, _alias_
+Pepe Guari, would know his own child in the joyous, graceful,
+daintily-dressed mistress of Conran's handsome Parisian establishment.
+
+Little Grand and I suffered cruelly. We were the butts of the mess for
+many a long month afterwards, when every idiot's tongue asked us on
+every side after the health of the Marchioness St. Julian? when we were
+going to teach them lansquenet? how often we heard from the aristocratic
+members of the Maltese Peerage? with like delightful pleasantries, which
+the questioners deemed high wit. We paid for it, too, to that arch old
+screw Balthazar; but I doubt very much if the money were not well lost,
+and the experience well gained. It cured me of my rawness and Little
+Grand of his self-conceit, the only thing that had before spoilt that
+good-hearted, quick-tempered, and clever-brained little fellow. Oh,
+Pater and Materfamilias, disturb not yourselves so unnecessarily about
+the crop of wild oats which your young ones are sowing broadcast. Those
+wild oats often spring from a good field of high spirit, hot courage,
+and thoughtless generosity, that are the sign and basis of nobler
+virtues to come, and from them very often rise two goodly
+plants--Experience and Discernment.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES:
+
+OR,
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE FIRST.--THE ELIGIBLE.
+
+One of the kindest-natured persons that I ever knew on this earth, where
+kind people are as rare as black eagles or red deer, is Helena, Countess
+of Marabout, _nee_ De Boncoeur. She has foibles, she has weaknesses--who
+amongst us has not?--she will wear her dresses _decolletees_, though
+she's sixty, if Burke tells us truth; she will rouge and practise a
+thousand other little toilette tricks, but they are surely innocent,
+since they deceive nobody; and if you wait for a woman who is no
+artifices, I am afraid you shall have to forswear the sex _in toto_, my
+friends, and come growling back to your Diogenes' tub in the Albany,
+with your lantern still lit every day of your lives.
+
+Lady Marabout is a very charming person. As for her weaknesses, she is
+all the nicer for them, to my taste. I like people with weaknesses
+myself; those without them do look so dreadfully scornfully and
+unsympathizingly upon one from the altitude of their superiority, _de
+toute la hauteur de sa betise_, as a witty Frenchman says. Humanity was
+born with weaknesses. If I were a beggar, I might hope for a coin from
+a man with some; a man without any, I know, would shut up his
+porte-monnaie, with an intensified click, to make me feel trebly
+envious, and consign me to D 15 and his truncheon, on the score of
+vagrancy.
+
+Lady Marabout is a very charming person, despite her little foibles, and
+she gives very pleasant little dinners, both at her house in Lowndes
+Square and in her jointure villa at Twickenham, where the bad odors of
+Thames are drowned in the fragrance of the geraniums, piled in great
+heaps of red, white, and variegated blossom in the flowerbeds on the
+lawn. She has been married twice, but has only one son, by her first
+union--Carruthers, of the Guards--a very good fellow, whom his mother
+thinks perfection, though if she _did_ know certain scenes in her adored
+Philip's life, the good lady might hesitate before she endowed her son
+with all the cardinal virtues as she does at the present moment. She has
+no daughters, therefore you will wonder to hear that the prime misery,
+burden, discomfort, and worry of her life is chaperonage. But so it is.
+
+Lady Marabout is the essence of good nature; she can't say No: that
+unpleasant negative monosyllable was never heard to issue from her full,
+smiling, kind-looking lips: she is in a high position, she has an
+extensive circle, thanks to her own family and those of the baronet and
+peer she successively espoused; and some sister, or cousin, or friend,
+is incessantly hunting her up to bring out their girls, and sell them
+well off out of hand; young ladies being goods extremely likely to hang
+_on_ hand nowadays.
+
+"Of all troubles, the troubles of a chaperone are the greatest," said
+Lady Marabout to me at the wedding dejeuner of one of her protegees. "In
+the first place, one looks on at others' campaigns instead of conducting
+them one's self; secondly, it brings back one's own bright days to see
+the young things' smiles and blushes, like that girl's just now (I do
+hope she'll be happy!); and thirdly, one has all the responsibility, and
+gets all the blame if anything goes wrong. I'll never chaperone anybody
+again now I have got rid of Leila."
+
+So does Lady Marabout say twenty times; yet has she invariably some
+young lady under her wing, whose relatives are defunct, or invalided, or
+in India, or out of society somehow; and we all of us call her house The
+Yard, and her (among ourselves) not Lady Marabout but Lady Tattersall.
+The worries she has in her chaperone's office would fill a folio,
+specially as her heart inclines to the encouragement of romance, but her
+reason to the banishment thereof; and while her tenderness suffers if
+she thwarts her protegees' leanings, her conscience gives her neuralgic
+twinges if she abets them to unwise matches while under her dragonnage.
+
+"What's the matter, mother?" asked Carruthers, one morning. He's very
+fond of his mother, and will never let any one laugh at her in his
+hearing.
+
+"Matter? Everything!" replied Lady Marabout, concisely and
+comprehensively, as she sat on the sofa in her boudoir, with her white
+ringed hands and her _bien conserve_ look, and her kindly pleasant eyes
+and her rich dress; one could see what a pretty woman she has been, and
+that Carruthers may thank her for his good looks. "To begin with,
+Felicie has been so stupid as to marry; married the greengrocer (whom
+she will ruin in a week!), and has left me to the mercies of a stupid
+woman who puts pink with cerise, mauve with magenta, and sky-blue with
+azureline, and has no recommendation except that she is as ugly as the
+Medusa, and so will not tempt you to----"
+
+"Make love to her, as I did to Marie," laughed Carruthers. "Marie was a
+pretty little dear; it was very severe in you to send her away."
+
+Lady Marabout tried hard to look severe and condemnatory, but failed
+signally, nature had formed the smooth brow and the kindly eyes in far
+too soft a mould.
+
+"Don't jest about it, Philip; you know it was a great pain, annoyance,
+and scandal to me. Well! Felicie is gone, and Oakes was seen pawning
+some of my Mechlin the other day, so I have been obliged to discharge
+_her_; and they both of them suited me so well! Then Bijou is ill, poor
+little pet----"
+
+"With repletion of chicken panada?"
+
+"No; Bijou isn't such a gourmet. You judge him by yourself, I suppose;
+men always do! Then Lady Hautton told me last night that you were the
+wildest man on town, and at forty----"
+
+"You think I ought to _ranger_? So I will, my dear mother, some day; but
+at present I am--so very comfortable; it would be a pity to alter! What
+pains one's friends are always at to tell unpalatable things; if they
+would but be only half so eager to tell us the pleasant ones! I shall
+expect you to cut Lady Hautton if she speak badly of me, I can't afford
+to lose your worship, mother!"
+
+"My worship? How conceited you are, Philip! As for Lady Hautton, I
+believe she does dislike you, because you did not engage yourself to
+Adelina, and were selected aide-de-camp to her Majesty, instead of
+Hautton; still, I am afraid she spoke too nearly the truth."
+
+"Perhaps Marie has entered her service and told tales."
+
+But Lady Marabout wouldn't laugh, she always looks very grave about
+Marie.
+
+"My worst trouble," she began hastily, "is that your aunt Honiton is too
+ill to come to town; no chance of her being well enough to come at all
+this season; and of course the charge of Valencia has devolved on me.
+You know how I hate chaperoning, and I did _so_ hope I should be free
+this year; besides, Valencia is a great responsibility, very great; a
+girl of so much beauty always is; there will be sure to be so many men
+about her at once, and your aunt will expect me to marry her so very
+well. It is excessively annoying."
+
+"My poor dear mother!" cried Carruthers. "I grant you _are_ an object of
+pity. You are everlastingly having young fillies sent you to break in,
+and they want such a tight hand on the ribbons."
+
+"And a tight hand, as you call it, I never had, and never shall have,"
+sighed Lady Marabout. "Valencia will be no trouble to me on that score,
+however; she has been admirably educated, knows all that is due to her
+position, and will never give me a moment's anxiety by any imprudence or
+inadvertence. But she is excessively handsome, and a beauty is a great
+responsibility when she first comes out."
+
+"Val was always a handsome child, if I remember. I dare say she is a
+beauty now. When is she coming up? because I'll tell the men to mark the
+house and keep clear of it," laughed Carruthers. "You're a dreadfully
+dangerous person, mother; you have always the best-looking girl in town
+with you. Fulke Nugent says if he should ever want such a thing as a
+wife when he comes into the title, he shall take a look at the Marabout
+Yearlings Sale."
+
+"Abominably rude of you and your friends to talk me over in your turf
+slang! I wish _you_ would come and bid at the sale, Philip; I should
+like to see you married--well married, of course."
+
+"My beloved mother!" cried Carruthers. "Leave me in peace, if you
+please, and catch the others if you can. There's Goodey, now; every
+chaperone and debutante in London has set traps for him for the last I
+don't know how many years; wouldn't he do for Valencia?"
+
+"Goodwood? Of course he would; he would do for any one; the Dukedom's
+the oldest in the peerage. Goodwood is highly eligible. Thank you for
+reminding me, Philip. Since Valencia is coming, I must do my best for
+her." Which phrase meant with Lady Marabout that she must be very
+lynx-eyed as to settlements, and a perfect dragon to all detrimental
+connections, must frown with Medusa severity on all horrors of younger
+sons, and advocate with all the weight of personal experience the
+advantage and agremens of a good position, in all of which
+practicalities she generally broke down, with humiliation unspeakable,
+immediately her heart was enlisted and her sympathies appealed to on the
+enemy's side. She sighed, played with her bracelets thoughtfully, and
+then, heroically resigning herself to her impending fate, brightened up
+a little, and asked her son to go and choose a new pair of
+carriage-horses for her.
+
+To look at Lady Marabout as she sat in her amber satin couch that
+morning, pleasant, smiling, well-dressed, well-looking, with the grace
+of good birth and the sunniness of good nature plainly written on her
+smooth brow and her kindly eyes, and wealth--delicious little
+god!--stamping itself all about her, from the diamond rings on her soft
+white fingers to the broidered shoe on the feet, of whose smallness she
+was still proud, one might have ignorantly imagined her to be the most
+happy, enviable, well-conditioned, easy-going dowager in the United
+Kingdom. But appearances are deceptive, and if we believe what she
+constantly asserted, Lady Marabout was very nearly worn into her grave
+by a thousand troubles; her almshouses, whose roofs would eternally blow
+off with each high wind; her dogs, whom she would overfeed; her ladies'
+maids, who were only hired to steal, tease, or scandalize her; the
+begging letter-writers, who distilled tears from her eyes and sovereigns
+from her purse, let Carruthers disclose their hypocrisies as he might;
+the bolder begging-letters, written by hon. secs., and headed by names
+with long handles, belonging to Pillars of the State and Lights of the
+Church, which compelled her to make a miserable choice between a
+straitened income or a remorseful conscience--tormented, in fine, with
+worries small and large, from her ferns, on which she spent a large
+fortune, and who drooped maliciously in their glass cases, with an
+ill-natured obstinacy characteristic of desperately-courted individuals,
+whether of the floral or the human world, to those marriageable young
+ladies whom she took under her wing to usher into the great world, and
+who were certain to run counter to her wishes and overthrow her plans,
+to marry ill, or not marry at all, or do something or other to throw
+discredit on her chaperoning abilities. She was, she assured us,
+_petrie_ with worries, small and large, specially as she was so
+eminently sunny, affable, and radiant a looking person, that all the
+world took their troubles to her, selected her as their confidante, and
+made her the repository of their annoyances; but her climax of misery
+was to be compelled to chaperone, and as a petition for some debutante
+to be intrusted to her care was invariably made each season, and "No"
+was a monosyllable into which her lips utterly refused to form
+themselves, each season did her life become a burden to her. There was
+never any rest for the soul of Helena, Countess of Marabout, till her
+house in Lowndes Square was shut up, and her charges off her hand, and
+she could return in peace to her jointure-villa at Twickenham, or to
+Carruthers' old Hall of Deepdene, and among her flowers, her birds, and
+her hobbies, throw off for a while the weary burden of her worries as a
+chaperone.
+
+"Valencia will give me little trouble, I hope. So admirably brought-up a
+girl, and so handsome as she is, will be sure to marry soon, and marry
+well," thought Lady Marabout, self-congratulatorily, as she dressed for
+dinner the day of her niece's arrival in town, running over mentally the
+qualifications and attractions of Valencia Valletort, while Felicie's
+successor, Mademoiselle Despreaux, whose crime was then to put pink
+with cerise, mauve with magenta, and sky-blue with azureline, gave the
+finishing touches to her toilette--"Valencia will give me no trouble;
+she has all the De Boncoeur beauty, with the Valletort dignity. Who
+would do for her? Let me see; eligible men are not abundant, and those
+that are eligible are shy of being marked as Philip would say--perhaps
+from being hunted so much, poor things! There is Fulke Nugent, heir to a
+barony, and his father is ninety--very rich, too--he would do; and
+Philip's friend, Caradoc, poor, I know, but their Earldom's the oldest
+peerage patent. There is Eyre Lee, too; I don't much like the man,
+supercilious and empty-headed; still he's an unobjectionable alliance.
+And there is Goodwood. Every one has tried for Goodwood, and failed. I
+should like Valencia to win him; he is decidedly the most eligible man
+in town. I will invite him to dinner. If he is not attracted by
+Valencia's beauty, nothing can attract him----_Despreaux! comme vous
+etes bete! Otez ces panaches, de grace!_"
+
+"Valencia will give me no trouble; she will marry at once," thought Lady
+Marabout again, looking across the dinner-table at her niece.
+
+If any young patrician might be likely to marry at once, it was the Hon.
+Valencia Valletort; she was, to the most critical, a beauty: her figure
+was perfect, her features were perfect, and if you complained that her
+large glorious eyes were a trifle too changeless in expression, that her
+cheek, exquisitely independent of Marechale powder, Blanc de Perle, and
+liquid rouge, though it was, rarely varied with her thoughts and
+feelings, why, you were very exacting, my good fellow, and should
+remember that nothing is quite perfect on the face of the earth--not
+even a racer or a woman--and that whether you bid at the Marabout
+yearling sales or the Rawcliffe, if you wish to be pleased you'd better
+leave a hypercritical spirit behind you, and not expect to get _all_
+points to your liking. The best filly will have something faulty in
+temper or breeding, symmetry or pace, for your friend Jack Martingale to
+have the fun of pointing out to you when your money is paid and the
+filly in your stall; and your wife will have the same, only Martingale
+will point _her_ flaws out behind your back, and only hint them to you
+with an all-expressive "Not allowed to smoke in the dining-room _now_!"
+"A little bit of a flirt, madame--n'est-ce pas, Charlie?" "Reins kept
+rather tight, eh, old fellow?" or something equally ambiguous,
+significant, and unpleasant.
+
+"I must consider, Philip, I have brought out the beauty of the season,"
+said Lady Marabout to Carruthers, eying her niece as she danced at her
+first ball at the Dowager-Duchess of Amandine's, and beginning to
+brighten up a little under the weight of her responsibilities.
+
+"I think you have, mother. Val's indisputably handsome. You must tell
+her to make play with Goodwood or Nugent."
+
+Lady Marabout unfurled her fan, and indignantly interrupted him:
+
+"My dear Philip! do you suppose I would teach Valencia, or any girl
+under my charge, to lay herself out for any man, whoever or whatever it
+might be? I trust your cousin would not stoop to use such manoeuvres,
+did I even stoop to counsel them. Depend upon it, Philip, it is
+precisely those women who try to 'make play,' as you call it, with your
+sex that fail most to charm them. It is abominable the way in which you
+men talk, as if we all hunted you down, and would drive you to St.
+George's _nolens volens_!"
+
+"So you would, mother," laughed Carruthers. "We 'eligible men' have a
+harder life of it than rabbits in a warren, with a dozen beagles after
+them. From the minute we're of age we're beset with traps for the
+unwary, and the spring-guns are so dexterously covered, with an
+inviting, innocent-looking turf of courtesies and hospitalities that
+it's next to a mural impossibility to escape them, let one retire into
+one's self, keep to monosyllables through all the courses of all the
+dinners and all the turns of all the valses, and avoid everything
+'compromising,' as one may. I've suffered, and can tell you. I suffer
+still, though I believe and hope they are beginning to look on me as an
+incurable, given over to the clubs, the coulisses, and the cover-side.
+There's a fellow that's known still more of the _peines fortes et dures_
+than I. Goodwood's coming to ask for an introduction to Val, I would
+bet."
+
+He was coming for that purpose, and, though Lady Marabout had so
+scornfully and sincerely repudiated her son's counsel relative to making
+play with Goodwood, blandly ignorant of her own weaknesses like a good
+many other people, Lady Marabout was not above a glow of chaperone
+gratification when she saw the glance of admiration which the Pet
+Eligible of the season bestowed on Valencia Valletort. Goodwood was a
+good-looking fellow--a clever fellow--though possibly he shone best
+alone at a mess luncheon, in a chat driving to Hornsey Wood, round the
+fire in a smoking-room, on a yacht deck, or anywhere where ladies of the
+titled world were not encountered, he having become afraid of them by
+dint of much persecution, as any October partridge of a setter's nose.
+He was passably good-looking, ordinarily clever, a very good fellow as I
+say, and--he was elder son of his Grace of Doncaster, which fact would
+have made him the desired of every unit of the _beau sexe_, had he been
+hideous as the Veiled Prophet or Brutal Gilles de Rayes. The Beauty
+often loves the Beast in our day, as in the days of fairy lore. We see
+that beloved story of our petticoat days not seldom acted out, and when
+there is no possibility of personal transmogrification and amelioration
+for the Beast moreover; only--the Beauty has always had whispered in
+her little ear the title she will win, and the revenues she will gain,
+and the cloth of gold she will wear, if she caresses Bruin the
+enamoured, swears his ugly head is god-like, and vows fidelity
+unswerving!
+
+Goodwood was no uncouth Bruin, and he had strawberry-leaves in his gift;
+none of your lacquered, or ormolu, or silver-gilt coronets, such as are
+cast about nowadays with a liberality that reminds one of flinging a
+handful of halfpence from a balcony, where the nimblest beggar is first
+to get the prize; but of the purest and best gold; and Goodwood had been
+tried for accordingly by every woman he came across for the last dozen
+years. Women of every style and every order had primed all their rifles,
+and had their shot at him, and done their best to make a centre and
+score themselves as winner: belles and bas bleus, bewitching widows and
+budding debutantes, fast young ladies who tried to capture him in the
+hunting-field by clearing a bullfinch; saintly young ladies, who
+illuminated missals, and hinted they would like to take his conversion
+in hand; brilliant women, who talked at him all through a long rainy
+day, when Perthshire was flooded, and the black-fowl unattainable; showy
+women, who _pose'd_ for him whole evenings in their opera-boxes, whole
+mornings in their boudoir--all styles and orders had set at him, till he
+had sometimes sworn in his haste that all women were man-traps, and that
+he wished to Heaven he were a younger son in the Foreign Office, or a
+poor devil in the Line, or anything, rather than what he was; the Pet
+Eligible of his day.
+
+"Goodwood is certainly struck with her," thought Lady Marabout, as
+Despreaux disrobed her that night, running over with a retrogressive
+glance Valencia Valletort's successes at her first ball. "Very much
+struck, indeed, I should say. I will issue cards for another 'At Home.'
+As for 'making play' with him, as Philip terms it, of course that is
+only a man's nonsense. Valencia will need none of those trickeries, I
+trust; still, it is any one's duty to make the best alliance possible
+for such a girl, and--dear Adeliza would be very pleased."
+
+With which amiable remembrance of her sister (whom, conceiving it her
+duty to love, Lady Marabout persuaded herself that she _did_ love, from
+a common feminine opticism that there's an eleventh commandment which
+makes it compulsory to be attached to relatives _n'importe_ of whatever
+degree of disagreeability, though Lady Honiton was about the most odious
+hypochondriac going, in a perpetual state of unremitting battle with the
+whole outer world in general, and allopathists, homoeopathists, and
+hydropathists in especial), the most amiable lady in all Christendom
+bade Despreaux bring up her cup of coffee an hour earlier in the
+morning, she had so much to do! asked if Bijou had had some panada set
+down by his basket in case he wanted something to take in the night;
+wished her maid good night, and laid her head on her pillow as the dawn
+streamed through the shutters, already settling what bridal presents she
+should give her niece Valencia, when she became present Marchioness of
+Goodwood and prospective Duchess of Doncaster before the altar rails of
+St. George's.
+
+"That's a decidedly handsome girl, that cousin of yours, Phil," said
+Goodwood, on the pavement before her Grace of Amandine's, in Grosvenor
+Place, at the same hour that night.
+
+"I think she _is_ counted like me!" said Carruthers. "Of course she's
+handsome; hasn't she De Boncoeur blood in her, my good fellow? We're all
+of us good-looking, always have been, thank God! If you're inclined to
+sacrifice, Goodwood, now's your time, and my mother'll be delighted.
+She's brought out about half a million of debutantes, I should say, in
+her time, and all of 'em have gone wrong, somehow; wouldn't go off at
+all, like damp gunpowder, or would go off too quick in the wrong
+direction, like a volunteer's rifle charge; married ignominiously, or
+married obstinately, or never excited pity in the breast of any man, but
+had to retire to single-blessedness in the country, console themselves
+with piety and an harmonium, and spread nets for young clerical victims.
+Give her a triumph at last, and let her have glory for once, as a
+chaperone, in catching _you_!"
+
+Goodwood gave a little shiver, and tried to light a Manilla, which
+utterly refused to take light, for the twelfth time in half a minute.
+
+"Hold your tongue! If the Templars' Order were extant, wouldn't I take
+the vows and bless them! What an unspeakable comfort and protection that
+white cross would be to us, Phil, if we could stick it on our coats, and
+know it would say to every woman that looked at us, 'No go, my pretty
+little dears--not to be caught!' Marriage! I can't remember any time
+that that word wasn't my bugbear. When I was but a little chicken, some
+four years old, I distinctly remember, when I was playing with little
+Ida Keane on the terrace, hearing her mother simper to mine, 'Perhaps
+darling Goodwood may marry my little Ida some day, who knows?' I never
+would play with Ida afterwards; instinct preserved me; she's six or
+seven-and thirty now, and weighs ten stone, I'm positive. Why _won't_
+they let us alone? The way journalists and dowagers, the fellows who
+want to write a taking article, and the women who want to get rid of a
+taking daughter, all badger us, in public and private, about marriage
+just now, is abominable, on my life; the affair's _ours_, I should say,
+not theirs, and to marry isn't the ultimatum of a man's existence, nor
+anything like it."
+
+"I hope not! It's more like the extinguisher. Good night, old fellow."
+And Carruthers drove away in his hansom, while Goodwood got into his
+night-brougham, thinking that for the sake of the title, the evil
+(nuptial) day _must_ come, sooner or later, but dashed off to forget
+the disagreeable obligation over the supper-table of the most sparkling
+empress of the demi-monde.
+
+Lady Marabout had her wish; she brought out the belle of the season, and
+when a little time had slipped by, when the Hon. Val had been presented
+at the first Drawing-room, and shone there despite the worry, muddle,
+and squeeze incidental to that royal and fashionable ceremony, and she
+had gathered second-hand from her son what was said in the clubs
+relative to this new specimen of the Valletort beauty, she began to be
+happier under her duties than she had ever been before, and wrote
+letters to "dearest Adeliza," brimful of superlative adjectives and
+genuine warmth.
+
+"Valencia will do me credit: I shall see her engaged before the end of
+June; she will have only to choose," Lady Marabout would say to herself
+some twenty times in the pauses of the morning concerts, the morning
+parties, the bazaar committees, the toilette consultations, the
+audiences to religious beggars, whose name was Legion and rapacity
+unmeasured, the mass of unanswered correspondence whose debt lay as
+heavily on Lady Marabout as his chains on a convict, and were about as
+little likely to be knocked off, and all the other things innumerable
+that made her life in the season one teetotum whirl of small worries and
+sunshiny cares, from the moment she began her day, with her earliest cup
+of Mocha softened with cream from that pet dairy of hers at Fernditton,
+where, according to Lady Marabout, the cows were constantly _in articulo
+mortis_, but the milk invariably richer than anywhere else, an
+agricultural anomaly which presented no difficulties to _her_ reason.
+Like all women, she loved paradoxes, defied logic recklessly, and would
+clear at a bound a chasm of solecisms that would have kept Plato in
+difficulties about crossing it, and in doubt about the strength of his
+jumping-pole, all his life long.
+
+"She will do me great credit," the semi-consoled chaperone would say to
+herself with self-congratulatory relief; and if Lady Marabout thought
+now and then, "I wish she were a trifle--a trifle more--demonstrative,"
+she instantly checked such an ungrateful and hypercritical wish, and
+remembered that a heart is a highly treacherous and unadvisable
+possession for any young lady, and a most happy omission in her anatomy,
+though Lady Marabout had, she would confess to herself on occasions with
+great self-reproach, an unworthy and lingering weakness for that
+contraband article, for which she scorned and scolded herself with the
+very worst success.
+
+Lady Marabout _had_ a heart herself; to it she had had to date the
+greatest worries, troubles, imprudences, and vexations of her life; she
+had had to thank it for nothing, and to dislike it for much; it had made
+her grieve most absurdly for other people's griefs; it had given her a
+hundred unphilosophical pangs at philosophic ingratitude from people who
+wanted her no longer; it had teased, worried, and plagued her all her
+life long, had often interfered in the most meddling and inconvenient
+manner between her and her reason, her comfort and her prudence; and yet
+she had a weakness for the same detrimental organ in other people--a
+weakness of which she could no more have cured herself than of her
+belief in the detection-defying powers of liquid rouge, the potentiality
+of a Liliputian night-bolt against an army of burglars, the miraculous
+properties of sal volatile, the efficacy of sermons, and such-like
+articles of faith common to feminine orthodoxy. A weakness of which she
+never felt more ignominiously convicted and more secretly ashamed than
+in the presence of Miss Valletort, that young lady having a lofty and
+magnificent disdain for all such follies, quite unattainable to ordinary
+mortals, which oppressed Lady Marabout with a humiliating sense of
+inferiority to her niece of eighteen summers. "So admirably educated! so
+admirably brought up!" she would say to herself over and over again,
+and if heretic suggestions that the stiffest trained flowers are not
+always the best, that the upright and spotless arum-lily isn't so
+fragrant as the careless, brilliant, tangled clematis; that rose-boughs,
+tossing free in sunshine and liberty, beat hollow the most
+carefully-pruned standard that ever won a medal at Regent's Park, with
+such-like allegories, arising from contemplation of her conservatory or
+her balcony flowers, _would_ present themselves, Lady Marabout repressed
+them dutifully, and gratefully thought how many pounds' weight lighter
+became the weary burden of a chaperone's responsibilities when the
+onerous charge had been educated "on the best system."
+
+"Goodwood's attentions _are_ serious, Philip, say what you like," said
+the Countess to her son, as determinedly as a theologian states his pet
+points with wool in his ears, that he may not hear any Satan-inspired,
+rational, and mathematical disproval of them, with which you may rashly
+seek to soil his tympana and smash his arguments--"Goodwood's attentions
+_are_ serious, Philip, say what you like," said her ladyship, at a
+morning party at Kew, eating her Neapolitan ice, complacently glancing
+at the "most eligible alliance of the season," who was throwing the
+balls at lawn-billiards, and talking between whiles to the Hon. Val with
+praiseworthy and promising animation.
+
+"Serious indeed, mother, if they tend matrimony-wards!" smiled
+Carruthers. "It's a very serious time indeed for unwary sparrows when
+they lend an ear to the call-bird, and think about hopping on to the
+lime-twigs. I should think it's from a sense of compunction for the net
+you've led us into, that you all particularize our attentions, whenever
+they point near St. George's, by that very suggestive little adjective
+'serious!' Yes, I am half afraid poor Goodey is a little touched. He
+threw over our Derby sweepstakes up at Hornsey Wood yesterday to go and
+stifle himself in Willis's rooms at your bazaar, and buy a guinea cup
+of Souchong from Valencia; and, considering he's one of the best shots
+in England, I don't think you could have a more conclusive, if you could
+have a more poetic, proof of devoted renunciation. _I_'d fifty times
+rather get a spear in my side, a la Ivanhoe, for a woman than give up a
+Pigeon-match, a Cup-day, or a Field-night!"
+
+"You'll never do either!" laughed Lady Marabout, who made it one of her
+chief troubles that her son would not marry, chiefly, probably, because
+if he _had_ married she would have been miserable, and thought no woman
+good enough for him, would have been jealous of his wife's share of his
+heart, and supremely wretched, I have no doubt, at his throwing himself
+away, as she would have thought it, had his handkerchief lighted on a
+Princess born, lovely as Galatea, and blessed with Venus's cestus.
+
+"Never, _plaise a Dieu_!" responded her son, piously over his ice; "but
+if Goodwood's serious, what's Cardonnel? _He_'s lost his head, if you
+like, after the Valletort beauty."
+
+"Major Cardonnel!" said Lady Marabout, hastily. "Oh no, I don't think
+so. I hope not--I trust not."
+
+"Why so? He's one of the finest fellows in the Service."
+
+"I dare say; but you see, my dear Philip, he's not--not--desirable."
+
+Carruthers stroked his moustaches and laughed:
+
+"Fie, fie, mother! if all other Belgraviennes are Mammon-worshippers, I
+thought you kept clear of the paganism. I thought your freedom from it
+was the only touch by which you weren't 'purely feminine,' as the lady
+novelists say of their pet bits of chill propriety."
+
+"Worship Mammon! Heaven forbid!" ejaculated Lady Marabout. "But there
+are duties, you see, my dear; your friend is a very delightful man, to
+be sure; I like him excessively, and if Valencia felt any _great_
+preference for him----"
+
+"You'd feel it _your_ duty to counsel her to throw him over for
+Goodwood."
+
+"I never said so, Philip," interrupted Lady Marabout, with as near an
+approach to asperity as she could achieve, which approach was less like
+vinegar than most people's best honey.
+
+"But you implied it. What are 'duties' else, and why is poor Cardonnel
+'not desirable'?"
+
+Lady Marabout played a little tattoo with her spoon in perplexity.
+
+"My dear Philip, you know as well as I do what I mean. One might think
+you were a boy of twenty to hear you!"
+
+"My dear mother, like all disputants, when beaten in argument and driven
+into a corner, you resort to vituperation of your opponent!" laughed
+Carruthers, as he left her and lounged away to pick up the stick with
+which pretty Flora Elmers had just knocked the pipe out of Aunt Sally's
+head on to the velvet lawn of Lady George Frangipane's dower-house,
+leaving his mother by no means tranquillized by his suggestions.
+
+"Dear me!" thought Lady Marabout, uneasily, as she conversed with the
+Dowager-Countess of Patchouli on the respective beauties of two new
+pelargonium seedlings, the Leucadia and the Beatrice, for which her
+gardener had won prizes the day before at the Regent's Park Show--"dear
+me! why is there invariably this sort of cross-purposes in everything?
+It will be so grievous to lose Goodwood (and he _is_ decidedly struck
+with her; when he bought that rosebud yesterday of her at the bazaar,
+and put it in the breast of his waistcoat, I heard what he said, and it
+was no nonsense, no mere flirting complaisance either)--it would be so
+grievous to lose him; and yet if Valencia really care for Cardonnel--and
+sometimes I almost fancy she does--I shouldn't know which way to advise.
+I thought it would be odd if a season could pass quietly without my
+having some worry of this sort! With fifty men always about Valencia, as
+they are, how _can_ I be responsible for any mischief that may happen,
+though, to hear Philip talk, one would really imagine it was _my_ fault
+that they lost their heads, as he calls it! As if a forty-horse
+steam-power could stop a man when he's once off down the incline into
+love! The more you try to pull him back the more impetus you give him to
+go headlong down. I wish Goodwood would propose, and we could settle the
+affair definitively. It is singular, but she has had no offers hardly
+with all her beauty. It is very singular, in _my_ first season I had
+almost as many as I had names on my tablets at Almack's. But men don't
+marry now, they say. Perhaps 'tisn't to be wondered at, though I
+wouldn't allow it to Philip. Poor things! they lose a very great many
+pleasant things by it, and get nothing, I'm sure, nine times out of ten,
+except increased expenses and unwelcome worries. I don't think I would
+have married if I'd been a man, though I'd never admit it, of course, to
+one of them. There are plenty of women who know too much of their own
+sex ever to wonder that a man doesn't marry, though of course we don't
+say so; 'twouldn't be to our interest. Sculptors might as well preach
+iconoclasm, or wine-merchants tee-totalism, as women misoganism, however
+little in our hearts we may marvel at it. Oh, my dear Lady Patchouli!
+you praise the Leucadia too kindly--you do indeed--but if you really
+think so much of it, let me send you some slips. I shall be most happy,
+and Fenton will be only too proud; it is his favorite seedling."
+
+Carruthers was quite right. One fellow at least had lost his head after
+the beauty of the season, and he was Cardonnel, of the--Lancers, as fine
+a fellow, as Philip said, as any in the Queen's, but a dreadful
+detrimental in the eyes of all chaperones, because he was but the fourth
+son of one of the poorest peers in the United Kingdom, a fact which
+gave him an aegis from all assaults matrimonial, and a freedom from all
+smiles and wiles, traps and gins, which Goodwood was accustomed to tell
+him he bitterly envied him, and on which Cardonnel had fervently
+congratulated himself, till he came under the fire of the Hon. Val's
+large luminous eyes one night, when he was levelling his glass from his
+stall at Lady Marabout's box, to take a look at the new belle, as
+advised to do by that most fastidious female critic, Vane Steinberg.
+Valencia Valletort's luminous eyes had gleamed that night under their
+lashes, and pierced through the lenses of his lorgnon. He saw her, and
+saw nothing but her afterwards, as men looking on the sun keep it on
+their retina to the damage and exclusion of all other objects.
+
+Physical beauty, even when it is a little bit soulless, is an admirable
+weapon for instantaneous slaughter, and the trained and pruned standard
+roses show a very effective mass of bloom; though, as Lady Marabout's
+floral tastes and experiences told her, they don't give one the lasting
+pleasure that a careless bough of wild rose will do, with its untutored
+grace and its natural fragrance. With the standard you see we keep in
+the artificial air of the horticultural tent, and are never touched out
+of it for a second; its perfume seems akin to a bouquet, and its destiny
+is, we are sure, to a parterre. The wild-rose fragrance breathes of the
+hill-side and the woodlands, and brings back to us soft touches of
+memory, of youth, of a fairer life and a purer air than that in which we
+are living now.
+
+The Hon. Val did _not_ have as many offers as her aunt and chaperone had
+on the first flush of her pride in her anticipated. Young ladies,
+educated on the "best systems," are apt to be a trifle wearisome, and
+_don't_, somehow or other, take so well as the sedulous efforts of their
+pruners and trainers--the rarefied moral atmosphere of the
+conservatories, in which they are carefully screened from ordinary air,
+and the anxiety evinced lest the flower should ever forget itself, and
+sway naturally in the wind--deserve. But Cardonnel had gone mad after
+her, that perfect face of hers had done for him; and whatever Goodwood
+might be, _he_ was serious--he positively haunted the young beauty like
+her own shadow--he was leaning on the rails every morning of his life
+that she took her early ride--he sent her bouquets as lavishly as if
+he'd been a nursery gardener. By some species of private surveillance,
+or lover's clairvoyance, he knew beforehand where she would go, and was
+at the concert, fete, morning party, bazaar, or whatever it happened to
+be, as surely as was Lady Marabout herself. Poor Cardonnel was serious,
+and fiercely fearful of his all-powerful and entirely eligible rival;
+though greater friends than he and Goodwood had been, before this girl's
+face appeared on the world of Belgravia, never lounged arm-in-arm into
+Pratt's, or strolled down the "sweet shady side of Pall-Mall."
+
+Goodwood's attentions were very marked, too, even to eyes less willing
+to construe them so than Lady Marabout's. Goodwood himself, if chaffed
+on the subject, vouchsafed nothing; laughed, stroked his moustaches, or
+puffed his cigar, if he happened to have that blessed resource in all
+difficulties, and comforter under all embarrassments, between his lips
+at the moment; but decidedly he sought Valencia Valletort more, or, to
+speak more correctly, he shunned her less than he'd ever done any other
+young lady, and one or two Sunday mornings--_mirabile dictu!_--he was
+positively seen at St. Paul's, Knightsbridge, in the seat behind Lady
+Marabout's sittings. A fact which, combining as it did a brace of
+miracles at once, of early rising and unusual piety, set every
+Belgravienne in that fashionable sanctuary watching over the top of her
+illuminated prayer-book, to the utter destruction of her hopes and
+interruption of her orisons.
+
+Dowagers began to tremble behind their fans, young ladies to quake over
+their bouquets; the topic was eagerly discussed by every woman from
+Clarges Street to Lowndes Square; their Graces of Doncaster smiled well
+pleased on Valencia--she was unquestionable blood, and they so wished
+dear Goodwood to settle! There was whispered an awful whisper to the
+whole female world; whispered over matutinal chocolate, and luncheon
+Strasbourg pates, ball-supper Moets', and demi-monde-supper Silleri,
+over Vane Steinberg's cigar and Eulalie Rosiere's cigarette, over the
+_Morning Post_ in the clubs, and _Le Follet_ in the boudoir, that--the
+Pet Eligible would--marry! That the Pet Prophecy of universal smash was
+going to be fulfilled could hardly have occasioned greater
+consternation.
+
+The soul of Lady Marabout had been disquieted ever since her son's
+suggestions at Lady George Frangipane's morning party, and she began to
+worry: for herself, for Valencia, for Goodwood, for Cardonnel, for her
+responsibilities in general, and for her "dearest Adeliza's" alternate
+opinions of her duenna qualifications in particular. Lady Marabout had
+an intense wish, an innocent wish enough, as innocent and very similar
+in its way to that of an Eton boy to make a centre at a rifle-contest,
+viz., to win the Marquis of Goodwood; innocent, surely, for though
+neither the rifle prize nor the Pet Eligible could be won without
+mortification unspeakable to a host of unsuccessful aspirants, if we
+decree that sort of thing sinful and selfish, as everything natural
+seems to me to get decreed nowadays, we may as well shut up at once; if
+we may not try for the top of the pole, why erect poles at all,
+monsieur? If we must not do our best to pass our friend and brother, we
+must give up climbing forever, and go on all fours placably with Don and
+Pontos.
+
+Everybody has his ambition: one sighs for the Woolsack, another for the
+Hunt Cup; somebody longs to be First Minister, somebody else pines to be
+first dancer; one man plumes himself on a new fish-sauce, another on a
+fresh reform bill; A. thirsts to get a single brief, B. for the time
+when he shall be worried with no briefs at all; C. sets his hopes on
+being the acrobat at Cremorne, D. on being the acrobat of the Tuileries;
+fat bacon is Hodge the hedger's _summum bonum_, and Johannisberg _pur_
+is mine; Empedocles thinks notoriety everything, and Diogenes thinks
+quiet everything--each has his own reading of ambition, and Lady
+Marabout had hers; the Duchess of Doncaster thirsted for the Garter for
+her husband, Lady Elmers's pride was to possess the smallest terrier
+that ever took daisy tea and was carried in a monkey-muff, her Grace of
+Amandine slaved night and day to bring her party in and throw the
+ministry out. Lady Marabout sighed but for one thing--to win the Pet
+Eligible of the season, and give eclat for once to one phase of her
+chaperone's existence.
+
+Things were nicely in train. Goodwood was beginning to bite at that very
+handsome fly the Hon. Val, and promised to be hooked and landed without
+much difficulty before long, and placed, hopelessly for him,
+triumphantly for her, in the lime-basket of matrimony. Things were
+beautifully in train, and Lady Marabout was for once flattering herself
+she should float pleasantly through an unruffled and successful season,
+when Carruthers poured the one drop of _amari aliquid_ into her
+champagne-cup by his suggestion of Cardonnel's doom. And then Lady
+Marabout begun to worry.
+
+She who could not endure to see a fly hurt or a flower pulled
+needlessly, had nothing for it but to worry for Cardonnel's destiny, and
+puzzle over the divided duties which Carruthers had hinted to her. To
+reject the one man because he was not well off did seem to her
+conscience, uncomfortably awakened by Phil's innuendoes, something more
+mercenary than she quite liked to look at; yet to throw over the other,
+future Duke of Doncaster, the eligible, the darling, the yearned-for of
+all May Fair and Belgravia, seemed nothing short of madness to inculcate
+to Valencia; a positive treason to that poor absent, trusting, "dearest
+Adeliza," who, after the visions epistolarily spread out before her,
+would utterly refuse to be comforted if Goodwood any way failed to
+become her son-in-law, and, moreover, the heaviest blow to Lady Marabout
+herself that the merciless axe of that brutal headsman Contretemps could
+deal her.
+
+"I do not know really what to do or what to advise," would Lady Marabout
+say to herself over and over again (so disturbed by her onerous burden
+of responsibilities that she would let Despreaux arrange the most
+outrageous coiffures, and, never noticing them, go out to dinner with
+emeralds on blue velvet, or something as shocking to feminine nerves in
+her temporary aberration), forgetting one very great point, which,
+remembered, would have saved her all trouble, that nobody asked her to
+do anything, and not a soul requested her advice. "But Goodwood is
+decidedly won, and Goodwood must not be lost; in our position we owe
+something to society," she would invariably conclude these mental
+debates; which last phase, being of a vagueness and obscure application
+that might have matched it with any Queen's speech or electional address
+upon record, was a mysterious balm to Lady Marabout's soul, and spoke
+volumes to _her_, if a trifle hazy to you and to me.
+
+But Lady Marabout, if she was a little bit of a sophist, had not worn
+her eye-glass all these years without being keen-sighted on some
+subjects, and, though perfectly satisfied with her niece's conduct with
+Goodwood, saw certain symptoms which made her tremble lest the
+detrimental Lancer should have won greater odds than the eligible
+Marquis.
+
+"Arthur Cardonnel is excessively handsome! Such very good style!
+Isn't it a pity they're all so poor! His father played away
+everything--literally everything. The sons have no more to marry upon,
+any one of them, than if they were three crossing-sweepers," said her
+ladyship, carelessly, driving home from St. Paul's one Sunday morning.
+
+And, watching the effect of her stray arrow, she had beheld an actual
+flush on the beauty's fair, impassive cheek, and had positively heard a
+smothered sigh from an admirably brought-up heart, no more given
+ordinarily to such weaknesses than the diamond-studded heart pendent
+from her bracelet, the belle's heart and the bracelet's heart being both
+formed alike, to fetch their price, and bid to do no more:--power of
+volition would have been as inconvenient in, and interfered as greatly
+with, the sale of one as of the other.
+
+"She does like him!" sighed Lady Marabout over that Sabbath's luncheon
+wines. "It's always my fate--always; and Goodwood, never won before,
+will be thrown--actually thrown--away, as if he were the younger son of
+a Nobody!" which horrible waste was so terrible to her imagination that
+Lady Marabout could positively have shed tears at the bare prospect, and
+might have shed them, too, if the Hon. Val, the butler, two footmen, and
+a page had not inconveniently happened to be in the room at the time, so
+that she was driven to restrain her feelings and drink some Amontillado
+instead. Lady Marabout is not the first person by a good many who has
+had to smile over sherry with a breaking heart. Ah! lips have quivered
+as they laughed over Chambertin, and trembled as they touched the bowl
+of a champagne-glass. Wine has assisted at many a joyous festa enough,
+but some that has been drunk in gayety has caught gleams, in the eyes of
+the drinkers, of salt water brighter than its brightest sparkles: water
+that no other eyes can see. Because we may drink Badminton laughingly
+when the gaze of Society the Non-Sympathetic is on us, do you think we
+must never have tasted any more bitter dregs? _Va-t'en, becasse!_ where
+have you lived! Nero does not always fiddle while Rome is burning from
+utter heartlessness, believe me, but rather--sometimes,
+perhaps--because his heart is aching!
+
+"Goodwood will propose to-night, I fancy, he is so very attentive,"
+thought Lady Marabout, sitting with her sister chaperones on the cosy
+causeuses of a mansion in Carlton Terrace, at one of the last balls of
+the departing season. "I never saw dear Valencia look better, and
+certainly her waltzing is----Ah! good evening, Major Cardonnel! Very
+warm to-night, is it not? I shall be so glad when I am down again at
+Fernditton. Town, in the first week of July, is really not habitable."
+
+And she furled her fan, and smiled on him with her pleasant eyes, and
+couldn't help wishing he hadn't been on the Marchioness Rondeletia's
+visiting list, he _was_ such a detrimental, and he was ten times
+handsomer than Goodwood!
+
+"Will Miss Valletort leave you soon?" asked Cardonnel, sitting down by
+her.
+
+"_Ah! monsieur, vous etes la!_" thought Lady Marabout, as she answered,
+like a guarded diplomatist as she was, that it was not all settled at
+present what her niece's post-season destiny would be, whether Devon or
+Fernditton, or the Spas, with her mother, Lady Honiton; and then
+unfurled her fan again, and chatted about Baden and her own indecision
+as to whether she should go there this September.
+
+"May I ask you a question, and will you pardon me for its plainness?"
+asked Cardonnel, when she'd exhausted Baden's desirable and
+non-desirable points.
+
+Lady Marabout shuddered as she bent her head, and thought, "The creature
+is never going to confide in me! He will win me over if he do, he looks
+so like his mother! And what shall I say to Adeliza!"
+
+"Is your niece engaged to Goodwood or not?"
+
+If ever a little fib was tempting to any lady, from Eve downward, it was
+tempting to Lady Marabout now! A falsehood would settle everything,
+send Cardonnel off the field, and clear all possibility of losing the
+"best match of the season." Besides, if not engaged to Goodwood actually
+to-night, Val would be, if she liked, to-morrow, or the next day, or
+before the week was over at the furthest--would it be such a falsehood
+after all? She colored, she fidgeted her fan, she longed for the little
+fib!--how terribly tempting it looked! But Lady Marabout is a bad hand
+at prevarication, and she hates a lie, and she answered bravely, with a
+regretful twinge, "Engaged? No; not----"
+
+"Not yet! Thank God!"
+
+Lady Marabout stared at him and at the words muttered under his
+moustaches:
+
+"Really, Major Cardonnel, I do not see why you----"
+
+"Should thank Heaven for it? Yet I do--it is a reprieve. Lady Marabout,
+you and my mother were close friends; will you listen to me for a
+second, while we are not overheard? That I have loved your niece--had
+the madness to love her, if you will--you cannot but have seen; that she
+has given me some reasonable encouragement it is no coxcombry to say,
+though I have known from the first what a powerful rival I had against
+me; but that Valencia loves me and does not love him, I believe--nay, I
+_know_. I have said nothing decided to her; when all hangs on a single
+die we shrink from hazarding the throw. But I must know my fate
+to-night. If she come to you--as girls will, I believe, sometimes--for
+countenance and counsel, will you stand my friend?--will you, for the
+sake of my friendship with your son, your friendship with my mother,
+support my cause, and uphold what I believe Valencia's heart will say in
+my favor?"
+
+Lady Marabout was silent: no Andalusian ever worried her fan more
+ceaselessly in coquetry than she did in perplexity. Her heart was
+appealed to, and when that was enlisted, Lady Marabout was lost!
+
+"But--but--my dear Major Cardonnel, you are aware----" she began, and
+stopped. I should suppose it may be a little awkward to tell a man to
+his face he is "not desirable!"
+
+"I am aware that I cannot match with Goodwood? I am; but I know, also,
+that Goodwood's love cannot match with mine, and that your niece's
+affection is not his. That he may win her I know women too well not to
+fear, therefore I ask _you_ to be my friend. If she refuse me, will you
+plead for me?--if she ask for counsel, will you give such as your own
+heart dictates (I ask no other)--and, will you remember that on
+Valencia's answer will rest the fate of a man's lifetime?"
+
+He rose and left her, but the sound of his voice rang in Lady Marabout's
+ears, and the tears welled into her eyes: "Dear, dear! how like he
+looked to his poor dear mother! But what a position to place me in! Am I
+_never_ to have any peace?"
+
+Not at this ball, at any rate. Of all the worried chaperones and
+distracted duennas who hid their anxieties under pleasant smiles or
+affable lethargy, none were a quarter so miserable as Helena, Lady
+Marabout. Her heart and her head were enlisted on opposite sides; her
+wishes pulled one way, her sympathies another; her sense of justice to
+Cardonnel urged her to one side, her sense of duty to "dearest Adeliza"
+urged her to the other; her pride longed for one alliance, her heart
+yearned for the other. Cardonnel had confided in her and appealed to
+her; _sequitur_, Lady Marabout's honor would not allow her to go against
+him: yet, it was nothing short of grossest treachery to poor Adeliza,
+down there in Devon, expecting every day to congratulate her daughter on
+a prospective duchy won, to counsel Valencia to take one of these
+beggared Cardonnels, and, besides--to lose all her own laurels, to lose
+the capture of Goodwood!
+
+No Guelphs and Ghibelins, no Royalists and Imperialists, ever fought so
+hard as Lady Marabout's divided duties.
+
+"Valencia, Major Cardonnel spoke to me to-night," began that
+best-hearted and most badgered of ladies, as she sat before her
+dressing-room fire that night, alone with her niece.
+
+Valencia smiled slightly, and a faint idea crossed Lady Marabout's mind
+that Valencia's smile was hardly a pleasant one, a trifle too much like
+the play of moonbeams on ice.
+
+"He spoke to me about you."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"Perhaps you can guess, my dear, what he said?"
+
+"I am no clairvoyante, aunt;" and Miss Val yawned a little, and held out
+one of her long slender feet to admire it.
+
+"Every woman, my love, becomes half a clairvoyante when she is in love,"
+said Lady Marabout, a little bit impatiently; she hadn't been brought up
+on the best systems herself, and though she admired the refrigeration
+(on principle), it irritated her just a little now and then. "Did
+he--did he say anything to _you_ to-night?"
+
+"Oh yes!"
+
+"And what did you answer him, my love?"
+
+"What would you advise me?"
+
+Lady Marabout sighed, coughed, played nervously with the tassels of her
+peignoir, crumpled Bijou's ears with a reckless disregard to that
+priceless pet's feelings, and wished herself at the bottom of the
+Serpentine. Cardonnel had trusted her, she couldn't desert _him_; poor
+dear Adeliza had trusted her, she couldn't betray _her_; what was right
+to one would be wrong to the other, and to reconcile her divided duties
+was a Danaid's labor. For months she had worried her life out lest her
+advice should be asked, and now the climax was come, and asked it was.
+
+"What a horrible position!" thought Lady Marabout.
+
+She waited and hesitated till the pendule had ticked off sixty seconds,
+then she summoned her courage and spoke:
+
+"My dear, advice in such matters is often very harmful, and always very
+useless; plenty of people have asked my counsel, but I never knew any of
+them take it unless it chanced to chime in with their fancy. A woman's
+best adviser is her own heart, specially on such a subject as this. But
+before I give my opinion, may I ask if you have accepted him?"
+
+Lady Marabout's heart throbbed quick and fast as she put the momentous
+question, with an agitation for which she would have blushed before her
+admirably nonchalante niece; but the tug of war was coming, and if
+Goodwood should be lost!
+
+"You have accepted him?" she asked again.
+
+"No! I--refused him."
+
+The delicate rose went out of the Hon. Val's cheeks for once, and she
+breathed quickly and shortly.
+
+Goodwood was _not_ lost then!
+
+Was she sorry--was she glad? Lady Marabout hardly knew; like Wellington,
+she felt the next saddest thing after a defeat is a victory.
+
+"But you love him, Valencia?" she asked, half ashamed of suggesting such
+weakness, to this glorious beauty.
+
+The Hon. Val unclasped her necklet as if it were a chain, choking her,
+and her face grew white and set: the coldest will feel on occasion, and
+all have _some_ tender place that can wince at the touch.
+
+"Perhaps; but such folly is best put aside at once. Certainly I prefer
+him to others, but to accept him would have been madness, absurdity. I
+told him so!"
+
+"You told him so! If you had the heart to do so, Valencia, he has not
+lost much in losing you!" burst in Lady Marabout, her indignation
+getting the better of her judgment, and her heart, as usual, giving the
+coup de grace to her reason. "I am shocked at you! Every tender-hearted
+woman feels regret for affection she is obliged to repulse, even when
+she does not return it; and you, who love this man----"
+
+"Would you have had me accept him, aunt?"
+
+"Yes," cried Lady Marabout, firmly, forgetting every vestige of "duty,"
+and every possibility of dear Adeliza's vengeance, "if you love him, I
+would, decidedly. When I married my dear Philip's father, he was what
+Cardonnel is, a cavalry man, as far off his family title then as
+Cardonnel is off his now."
+
+"The more reason I should not imitate your imprudence, my dear aunt;
+death might not carry off the intermediate heirs quite so courteously in
+this case! No, I refused Major Cardonnel, and I did rightly; I should
+have repented it by now had I accepted him. There is nothing more silly
+than to be led away by romance. You De Boncoeurs _are_ romantic, you
+know; we Valletorts are happily free from the weakness. I am very tired,
+aunt, so good night."
+
+The Hon. Val went, the waxlight she carried shedding a paler shade on
+her handsome face, whiter and more set than usual, but held more
+proudly, as if it already wore the Doncaster coronet; and Lady Marabout
+sighed as she rang for her maid.
+
+"Of course she acted wisely, and I ought to be very pleased; but that
+poor dear fellow!--his eyes _are_ so like his mother's!"
+
+"I congratulate you, mother, on a clear field. You've sent poor Arthur
+off very nicely," said Carruthers, the next morning, paying his general
+visit in her boudoir before the day began, which is much the same time
+in Town as in Greenland, and commences, whatever almanacs may say,
+about two or half-past P.M. "Cardonnel left this morning for Heaven
+knows where, and is going to exchange, Shelleto tells me, into the
+----th, which is ordered to Bengal, so _he_ won't trouble you much more.
+When shall I be allowed to congratulate my cousin as the future Duchess
+of Doncaster?"
+
+"Pray, don't tease me, Philip. I've been vexed enough about your friend.
+When he came to me this morning, and asked me if there was no hope, and
+I was obliged to tell him there was none, I felt wretched," said Lady
+Marabout, as nearly pettishly as she ever said anything; "but I am
+really not responsible, not in the least. Besides, even you must admit
+that Goodwood is a much more desirable alliance, and if Valencia had
+accepted Cardonnel, pray what would all Belgravia have said? Why, that,
+disappointed of Goodwood, she took the other out of pure pique! We owe
+something to society, Philip, and something to ourselves."
+
+Carruthers laughed:
+
+"Ah, my dear mother, you women will never be worth all you ought to be
+till you leave off kowtow-ing to 'what will be said,' and learn to defy
+that terrible oligarchy of the Qu'en dira-t-on?"
+
+"When will Goodwood propose?" wondered Lady Marabout, fifty times a day,
+and Valencia Valletort wondered too. Whitebait was being eaten, and
+yachts being fitted, manned, and victualled, outstanding Ascot debts
+were being settled, and outstanding bills were being passed hurriedly
+through St. Stephen's; all the clockwork of the season was being wound
+up for the last time previous to a long standstill, and going at a deuce
+of a pace, as if longing to run down, and give its million wheels and
+levers peace; while everybody who'd anything to settle, whether monetary
+or matrimonial, personal or political, was making up his mind about it
+and getting it off his hands, and some men were being pulled up by
+wide-awake Jews to see what they were "made of," while others were
+pulled up by adroit dowagers to know what they had "meant" before the
+accounts of the season were scored out and settled. "Had Goodwood
+proposed?" asked all Belgravia. "Why hadn't Goodwood proposed?" asked
+Lady Marabout and Valencia. Twenty most favorable opportunities for the
+performance of that ceremony had Lady Marabout made for him
+"accidentally on purpose" the last fortnight; each of those times she
+had fancied the precious fish hooked and landed, and each time she had
+seen him, free from the hook, floating on the surface of society.
+
+"He _must_ speak definitely to-morrow," thought Lady Marabout. But the
+larvae of to-morrow burst into the butterfly of to-day, and to-day passed
+into the chrysalis of yesterday, and Goodwood was always very nearly
+caught, and never _quite_!
+
+"Come up-stairs, Philip; I want to show you a little Paul Potter I
+bought the other day," said Lady Marabout one morning, returning from a
+shopping expedition to Regent Street, meeting her son at her own door
+just descending from his tilbury. "Lord Goodwood calling, did you say,
+Soames? Oh, very well."
+
+And Lady Marabout floated up the staircase, but signed to her footman to
+open the door, not of the drawing-room, but of her own boudoir.
+
+"The Potter is in my own room, Philip; you must come in here if you wish
+to see it," said that adroit lady, for the benefit of Soames. But when
+the door was shut, Lady Marabout lowered her voice confidentially: "The
+Potter isn't here, dear; I had it hung in the little cabinet through the
+drawing-rooms, but I don't wish to go up there for a few moments--you
+understand."
+
+Carruthers threw himself in a chair, and laughed till the dogs Bijou,
+Bonbon, and Pandore all barked in a furious concert.
+
+"I understand! So Goody's positively coming to the point up there, is
+he?"
+
+"No doubt he is," said Lady Marabout, reprovingly. "Why else should he
+come in when I was not at home? There is nothing extraordinary in it.
+The only thing I have wondered at is his having delayed so long."
+
+"If a man had to hang himself, would you wonder he put off pulling the
+bolt?"
+
+"I don't see any point in your jests at all!" returned Lady Marabout.
+"There is nothing ridiculous in winning such a girl as Valencia."
+
+"No; but the question here is not of winning her, but of buying her. The
+price is a little high--a ducal coronet and splendid settlements, a
+wedding-ring and bondage for life; but he will buy her, nevertheless.
+Cardonnel couldn't pay the first half of the price, and so he was swept
+out of the auction-room. You are shocked, mother! Ah, truth _is_
+shocking sometimes, and always _maladroit_; one oughtn't to bring it
+into ladies' boudoirs."
+
+"Hold your tongue, Philip! I will not have you so satirical. Where do
+you take it from? Not from me, I am sure! Hark! there is Goodwood going!
+That is his step on the stairs, I think! Dear me, Philip, I wish you
+sympathized with me a little more, for I _do_ feel happy, and I can't
+help it; dear Adeliza will be so gratified."
+
+"My dear mother, I'll do my best to be sympathetic, I'll go and
+congratulate Goodwood as he gets in his cab, if you fancy I ought; but,
+you see, if I were in Dahomey beholding the head of my best friend
+coming off, I couldn't quite get up the amount of sympathy in their
+pleasure at the refreshing sight the Dahomites might expect from me, and
+so----"
+
+But Lady Marabout missed the comparison of herself to a Dahomite, for
+she had opened the door and was crossing to the drawing-rooms, her eyes
+bright, her step elastic, her heart exultant at the triumph of her
+manoeuvres. The Hon. Val was playing with some ferns in an etagere at
+the bottom of the farthest room, and responded to the kiss her aunt
+bestowed on her about as much as if she had been one of the statuettes
+on the consoles.
+
+"Well, love, _what did he say_?" asked Lady Marabout, breathlessly, with
+eager delight and confident anticipation.
+
+Like drops of ice on warm rose-leaves fell each word of the intensely
+chill and slightly sulky response on Lady Marabout's heart.
+
+"He said that he goes to Cowes to-morrow for the Royal Yacht Squadron
+dinner, and then on in the _Anadyomene_ to the Spitzbergen coast for
+walruses. He left a P. P. C. card for you."
+
+"_Walruses!_" shrieked Lady Marabout.
+
+"Walruses," responded the Hon. Val.
+
+"And said no more than that?"
+
+"No more than that!"
+
+The Pet Eligible had flown off uncaught after all! Lady Marabout needed
+no further explanation--_tout fut dit_. They were both silent and
+paralyzed. Do you suppose Pompey and Cornelia had much need of words
+when they met at Lesbos after the horrible deroute of Pharsalia?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I'm in your mother's blackest books for ever, Phil," said Goodwood to
+Carruthers in the express to Southampton for the R.Y.C. Squadron Regatta
+of that year, "but I can't help it. It's no good to badger us into
+marriage; it only makes us double, and run to earth. I _was_ near
+compromising myself with your cousin, I grant, but the thing that
+chilled me was, she's too _studied_. It's all got up beforehand, and
+goes upon clockwork, and it don't interest one accordingly; the
+mechanism's perfect, but we know when it will raise its hand, and move
+its eyes, and bow its head, and when we've looked at its beauty once we
+get tired of it. That's the fault in Valencia, and in scores of them,
+and as long as they _won't_ be natural, why, they can't have much chance
+with us!"
+
+Which piece of advice Carruthers, when he next saw his mother, repeated
+to her, for the edification of all future debutantes, adding a small
+sermon of his own:
+
+"My dear mother, I ask you, is it to be expected that we can marry just
+to oblige women and please the newspapers? Would you have me marched off
+to Hanover Square because it would be a kindness to take one of Lady
+Elmers' marriageable daughters, or because a leading journal fills up an
+empty column with farcical lamentation on our dislike to the bondage? Of
+course you wouldn't; yet, for no better reasons, you'd have chained poor
+Goodwood, if you could have caught him. Whether a man likes to marry or
+not is certainly his own private business, though just now it's made a
+popular public discussion. Do you wonder that we shirk the institution?
+If we have not fortune, marriage cramps our energies, our resources, our
+ambitions, loads us with petty cares, and trebles our anxieties. To one
+who rises with such a burden on his shoulders, how many sink down in
+obscurity, who, but for the leaden weight of pecuniary difficulties with
+which marriage has laden their feet, might have climbed the highest
+round in the social ladder? On the other side, if we have fortune, if we
+have the unhappy happiness to be eligible, is it wonderful that we are
+not flattered by the worship of young ladies who love us for what we
+shall give them, that we don't feel exactly honored by being courted for
+what we are worth, and that we're not over-willing to give up our
+liberty to oblige those who look on us only as good speculations? What
+think you, eh?"
+
+Lady Marabout looked up and shook her head mournfully:
+
+"My dear Philip, you are right. I see it--I don't dispute it; but when a
+thing becomes personal, you know philosophy becomes difficult. I have
+such letters from poor dear Adeliza--such letters! Of course she thinks
+it is all my fault, and I believe she will break entirely with me. It is
+so very shocking. You see all Belgravia coupled their names, and the
+very day that he went off to Cowes in that heartless, abominable manner,
+if an announcement of the alliance as arranged did not positively appear
+in the _Court Circular_! It did indeed! I am sure Anne Hautton was at
+the bottom of it; it would be just like her. Perhaps poor Valencia
+cannot be pitied after her treatment of Cardonnel, but it is very hard
+on _me_."
+
+Lady Marabout is right: when a thing becomes personal, philosophy
+becomes difficult. When your gun misses fire, and a fine cock bird
+whirrs up from the covert and takes wing unharmed, never to swell the
+number of your triumphs and the size of your game-bag, could you by any
+chance find it in your soul to sympathize with the bird's gratification
+at your mortification and its own good luck? I fancy not.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;
+
+OR
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE SECOND--THE OGRE.
+
+"If there be one class I dislike more than another, it is that class;
+and if there be one person in town I utterly detest, it is that man!"
+said our friend Lady Marabout, with much unction, one morning, to an
+audience consisting of Bijou, Bonbon, and Pandore, a cockatoo, an Angora
+cat, and a young lady sitting in a rocking-chair, reading the magazines
+of the month. The dogs barked, the cockatoo screamed, the cat purred a
+vehement affirmative, the human auditor looked up, and laughed:
+
+"What is the class, Lady Marabout, may I ask?"
+
+"Those clever, detestable, idle, good-for-nothing, fashionable,
+worthless men about town, who have not a penny to their fortune, and
+spend a thousand a year on gloves and scented tobacco--who are seen at
+everybody's house, and never at their own--who drive horses fit for a
+Duke's stud, and haven't money enough to keep a donkey on thistles--who
+have handsome faces and brazen consciences--who are positively leaders
+of ton, and yet are glad to write feuilletons before the world is up to
+pay their stall at the Opera--who give a guinea for a bouquet, and
+can't pay a shilling of their just debts,--I detest the class, my dear!"
+
+"So it seems, Lady Marabout. I never heard you so vehement. And who is
+the particular scapegoat of this type of sinners?"
+
+"Chandos Cheveley."
+
+"Chandos Cheveley? Isn't he that magnificent man Sir Philip introduced
+to me at the Amandines' breakfast yesterday? Why, Lady Marabout, his
+figure alone might outbalance a multitude of sins!"
+
+"He is handsome enough. _Did_ Philip introduce him to you, my dear? I
+wonder! It was very careless of him. But men _are_ so thoughtless; they
+will know anybody themselves, and they think we may do the same. The men
+called here while we were driving this morning. I am glad we were out:
+he very seldom comes to _my_ house."
+
+"But why is he so dreadful? The Amandines are tremendously exclusive, I
+thought."
+
+"Oh, he goes everywhere! No party is complete without Chandos Cheveley,
+and I have heard that at September or Christmas he has more invitations
+than he could possibly accept; but he is a most objectionable man, all
+the same--a man every one dreads to see come near her daughters. He has
+extreme fascination of manner, but he has not a farthing! How he lives,
+dresses, drives the horses he does, is one of those miracles of London
+men's lives which _we_ can never hope to puzzle out. Philip says he
+likes him, but Philip never speaks ill of anybody, except a woman now
+and then, who teases him; but the man is my detestation--has been for
+years. I was annoyed to see his card: it is the first time he has called
+this season. He knows I can't endure his class or him."
+
+With which Lady Marabout wound up a very unusually lengthy and
+uncharitable disquisition, length and uncharitableness being both out of
+her line; and Lady Cecil Ormsby rolled her handkerchief into a ball,
+threw it across the room for Bonbon, the spaniel puppy, and laughed till
+the cockatoo screamed with delight:
+
+"Dear Lady Marabout, do forgive me, but it is such fun to hear you
+positively, for once, malicious! Who is your Horror, genealogically
+speaking? this terrible--what's his name?--Chandos Cheveley?"
+
+"The younger son of a younger son of one of the Marquises of Danvers, I
+believe, my dear; an idle man about town, you know, with not a sou to be
+idle upon, who sets the fashion, but never pays his tailor. I am never
+malicious, I hope, but I do consider men of that stamp very
+objectionable."
+
+"But what is Sir Philip but a man about town?"
+
+"My son! Of course he is a man about town. My dear, what else should he
+be? But if Philip likes to lounge all his days away in a club-window, he
+has a perfect right; he has fortune. Chandos Cheveley is not worth a
+farthing, and yet yawns away his day in White's as if he were a
+millionnaire; the one can support his _far niente_, the other cannot.
+There are gradations in everything, my love, but in nothing more than
+among the men, of the same set and the same style, whom one sees in
+Pall-Mall."
+
+"There are chestnut horses and horse-chestnuts, chevaliers and
+chevaliers d'industrie, rois and rois d'Yvetot, Carrutherses and Chandos
+Cheveleys!" laughed Lady Cecil. "I understand, Lady Marabout. Il y a
+femmes et femmes--men about town and men about town, I shall learn all
+the classes and distinctions soon. But how is one to know the sheep that
+may be let into the fold from the wolves in sheep's clothing, that must
+be kept out of it? Your Ogre is really very distinguished-looking."
+
+"Distinguished? Oh yes, my love; but the most distinguished men are the
+most objectionable sometimes. I assure you, my dear Cecil, I have seen
+an elder son whom sometimes I could hardly have told from his own valet,
+and a younger of the same family with the style of a D'Orsay. Why, did I
+not this very winter, when I went to stay at Rochdale, take Fitzbreguet
+himself, whom I had not chanced to see since he was a child, for one of
+the men out of livery, and bid him bring Bijou's basket out of the
+carriage. I did indeed--_I_ who hate such mistakes more than any one!
+And Lionel, his second brother, has the beauty of an Apollo and the _air
+noble_ to perfection. One often sees it; it's through the doctrine of
+compensation, I suppose, but it's very perplexing, and causes endless
+_embrouillements_."
+
+"When the mammas fall in love with Lord Fitz's coronet, and the
+daughters with Lord Lionel's face, I suppose?" interpolated Lady Cecil.
+
+"Exactly so, dear. As for knowing the sheep from the wolves, as you call
+them," went on Lady Marabout, sorting her embroidery silks, "you may
+very soon know more of Chandos Cheveley's class--(this Magenta braid is
+good for nothing; it's a beautiful color, but it fades immediately)--you
+meet them in the country at all fast houses, as they call them nowadays,
+like the Amandines'; they are constantly invited, because they are so
+amusing, or so dead a shot, or so good a whip, and live on their
+invitations, because they have no _locale_ of their own. You see, all
+the women worth nothing admire, and all the women worth anything shun,
+them. They have a dozen accomplishments, and not a single reliable
+quality; a hundred houses open to them, and not a shooting-box of their
+own property or rental. You will meet this Chandos Cheveley everywhere,
+for instance, as though he were somebody desirable. You will see him in
+his club-window, as though he were born only to read the papers; in the
+Ride, mounted on a much better animal than Fitzbreguet, though the one
+pays treble the price he ought, and the other, I dare say, no price at
+all; at Ascot, on Amandine's or Goodwood's drag, made as much of among
+them all as if he were an heir-apparent to the throne; and yet, my love,
+that man hasn't a penny, lives Heaven knows where, and how he gets money
+to keep his cab and buy his gloves is, as I say, one of those mysteries
+of settling days, whist-tables, periodical writing, Baden _coups de
+bonheur_, and such-like fountains of such men's fortunes which we can
+never hope to penetrate--and very little we should benefit if we could!
+My dearest Cecil! if it is not ten minutes to five! We must go and drive
+at once."
+
+Lady Ormsby was a great pet of Lady Marabout's; she had been so from a
+child; so much so, that when, the year after Valencia Valletort's
+discomfiture (a discomfiture so heavy and so public, that that young
+beauty was seized with a fit of filial devotion, attended her mamma to
+Nice, and figured not in Belgravia the ensuing season, and even Lady
+Marabout's temper had been slightly soured by it, as you perceive),
+another terrible charge was shifted on her shoulders by an appeal from
+the guardians of the late Earl of Rosediamond's daughter for her to be
+brought out under the Marabout wing, she had consented, and surrendered
+herself to be again a martyr to responsibility for the sake of Cecil and
+Cecil's lost mother. The young lady was a beauty; she was worse, she was
+an heiress; she was worse still, she was saucy, wayward, and notable for
+a strong will of her own--a more dangerous young thorough-bred was never
+brought to a gentler Rarey; and yet she was the first charge of this
+nature that Lady Marabout had ever accepted in the whole course of her
+life with no misgivings and with absolute pleasure. First, she was very
+fond of Cecil Ormsby; secondly, she longed to efface her miserable
+failure with Valencia by a brilliant success, which should light up all
+the gloom of her past of chaperonage; thirdly, she had a sweet and
+long-cherished diplomacy nestling in her heart to throw her son and Lord
+Rosediamond's daughter together, for the eventual ensnaring and
+fettering of Carruthers, which policy nothing could favor so well as
+having the weapon for that deadly purpose in her own house through
+April, May, and June.
+
+Cecil Ormsby was a beauty and an heiress--spirited, sarcastic,
+brilliant, wilful, very proud; altogether, a more spirited young filly
+never needed a tight hand on the ribbons, a light but a firm seat, and a
+temperate though judicious use of the curb to make her endure being
+ridden at all, even over the most level grass countries of life. And
+yet, for the reasons just mentioned, Lady Marabout, who never had a
+tight hand upon anything, who is to be thrown in a moment by any wilful
+kick or determined plunge, who is utterly at the mercy of any filly that
+chooses to take the bit between her own teeth and bolt off, and is
+entirely incapable of using the curb, even to the most ill-natured and
+ill-trained Shetland that ever deserved to have its mouth sawed,--Lady
+Marabout undertook the jockeyship without fear.
+
+"I dare say you wonder, after my grief with Valencia, that I have
+consented to bring another girl out, but when I heard it was poor
+Rosediamond's wish--his dying wish, one may almost say--that Cecil
+should make her debut with me, what _was_ I to do, my dear?" she
+explained, half apologetically, to Carruthers, when the question was
+first agitated. Perhaps, too, Lady Marabout had in her heart been
+slightly sickened of perfectly trained young ladies brought up on the
+best systems, and admitted to herself that the pets of the foreign
+houses may _not_ be the most attractive flowers after all.
+
+So Lady Cecil Ormsby was installed in Lowndes Square, and though she was
+the inheritor of her mother's wealth, which was considerable, and
+possessor of her own wit and beauty, which were not inconsiderable
+either, and therefore a prize to fortune-hunters and a lure to
+misogamists, as Lady Marabout knew very well how to keep the first off,
+and had her pet project of numbering her refractory son among the
+converted second, she rather congratulated herself than otherwise in
+having the pleasure and eclat of introducing her; and men voted the
+Marabout Yearlings Sale of that season, since it comprised Rosediamond's
+handsome daughter, as dangerous as a horse-dealer's auction to a young
+greenhorn, or a draper's "sale, without reserve, at enormous sacrifice,"
+to a lady with a soul on bargains bent.
+
+"How very odd! Just as we have been talking of him, there is that man
+again! I must bow to him, I suppose; though if there _be_ a person I
+dislike----" said Lady Marabout, giving a frigid little bend of her head
+as her barouche, with its dashing roans, rolled from her door, and a
+tilbury passed them, driving slowly through the square.
+
+Cecil Ormsby bowed to its occupant with less severity, and laughed under
+the sheltering shadow of her white parasol-fringe.
+
+"The Ogre has a very pretty trap, though, Lady Marabout, and the most
+delicious gray horse in it! Such good action!"
+
+"If its action is good, my love, I dare say it is more than could be
+said of its master's actions. He is going to call on that Mrs.
+Marechale, very probably; he was always there last season."
+
+And Lady Marabout shook her head and looked grave, which, combined with
+the ever-damnatory demonstrative conjunction, blackened Mrs. Marechale's
+moral character as much as Lady Marabout could blacken any one's, she
+loving as little to soil her own fingers and her neighbors' reputations
+with the indelible Italian chalk of scandal as any lady I know; being
+given, on the contrary, when compelled to draw any little social croquis
+of a back-biting nature, to sketch them in as lightly as she could, take
+out as many lights as possible, and rub in the shadows with a very
+chary and pitying hand, except, indeed, when she took the portrait of
+such an Ogre as Chandos Cheveley, when I can't say she was quite so
+merciful, specially when policy and prejudice combined to suggest that
+it would be best (and not unjust) to use the blackest Conte crayons
+obtainable.
+
+The subject of it would not have denied the correctness of the
+silhouette Lady Marabout had snipped out for the edification of Lady
+Cecil, had he caught a glimpse of it: he had no habitation, nor was ever
+likely to have any, save a bachelor's suite in a back street; he had
+been an idle man for the last twenty years, with not a sou to be idle
+upon; the springs of his very precarious fortunes, his pursuits, habits,
+reputation, ways and means, were all much what she had described them;
+yet he set the fashion much oftener than Goodwood, and dukes and
+millionnaires would follow the style of his tie, or the shape of his
+hat; he moved in the most brilliant circles as Court Circulars have it,
+and all the best houses were open to him. At his Grace of Amandine's,
+staying there for the shooting, he would alter the stud, find fault with
+the claret, arrange a Drive for deer in the forest, and flirt with her
+Grace herself, as though, as Lady Marabout averred, he had been
+Heir-apparent or Prince Regent, who honored the Castle by his mere
+presence, Amandine all the while swearing by every word he spoke,
+thinking nothing well done without Cheveley, and submitting to be set
+aside in his own Castle, with the greatest gratification at the
+extinction.
+
+But that Chandos Cheveley was not worth a farthing, that he was but a
+Bohemian on a brilliant scale, that any day he might disappear from that
+society where he now glittered, never to reappear, everybody knew; how
+he floated there as he did, kept his cab and his man, paid for his stall
+at the Opera, his club fees, and all the other trifles that won't wait,
+was an eternal puzzle to every one ignorant of how expensively one may
+live upon nothing if one just gets the knack, and of how far a
+fashionable reputation, like a cake of chocolate, will go to support
+life when nothing more substantial is obtainable. Lady Marabout had
+sketched him correctly enough, allowing for a little politic bitterness
+thrown in to counteract Carruthers's thoughtlessness in having
+introduced him to Rosediamond's daughter (that priceless treasure for
+whom Lady Marabout would fain have had a guard of Janissaries, if they
+would not have been likely to look singular and come expensive); and
+ladies of the Marabout class did look upon him as an Ogre, guarded their
+daughters from his approach at a ball as carefully, if not as
+demonstratively, as any duck its ducklings from the approach of a
+water-rat, did not ask him to their dinners, and bowed to him chillily
+in the Ring. Others regarded him as harmless, from his perfect
+pennilessness; what danger was there in the fascinations of a man whom
+all Belgravia knew hadn't money enough to buy dog-skin gloves, though he
+always wore the best Paris lavender kid? While others, the pretty
+married women chiefly, from her Grace of Amandine downwards to Mrs.
+Marechale, of Lowndes Square, flirted with him, fearfully, and
+considered Chandos Cheveley what nobody ever succeeded in disproving
+him, the most agreeable man on town, with the finest figure, the best
+style, and the most perfect bow, to be seen in the Park any day between
+March and July. But then, as Lady Marabout remarked on a subsequent
+occasion, a figure, a style, and a bow are admirable and enviable
+things, but they're not among the cardinal virtues, and don't do to live
+upon; and though they're very good buoys to float one on the smooth
+sparkling sea of society, if there come a storm, one may go down,
+despite them, and become helpless prey to the sharks waiting below.
+
+"Philip certainly admires her very much; he said the other day there
+was something in her, and that means a great deal from him," thought
+Lady Marabout, complacently, as she and Cecil Ormsby were wending their
+way through some crowded rooms. "Of course I shall not influence Cecil
+towards him; it would not be honorable to do so, since she might look
+for a higher title than my son's; still, if it should so fall out,
+nothing would give me greater pleasure, and really nothing would seem
+more natural with a little judicious manage----"
+
+"May I have the honor of this valse with you?" was spoken in, though not
+to, Lady Marabout's ear. It was a soft, a rich, a melodious voice
+enough, and yet Lady Marabout would rather have heard the hiss of a
+Cobra Capella, for the footmen _might_ have caught the serpent and
+carried it off from Cecil Ormsby's vicinity, and she couldn't very well
+tell them to rid the reception-chambers of Chandos Cheveley.
+
+Lady Marabout vainly tried to catch Cecil's eye, and warn her of the
+propriety of an utter and entire repudiation of the valse in question,
+if there were no "engaged" producible to softly chill the hopes and
+repulse the advances of the aspirant; but Lady Cecil's soul was
+obstinately bent saltatory-wards; her chaperone's ocular telegram was
+lost upon her, and only caught by the last person who should have seen
+it, who read the message off the wires to his own amusement, but
+naturally was not magnanimous enough to pass it on.
+
+"I ought to have warned her never to dance with that detestable man. If
+I could but have caught her eye even now!" thought Lady Marabout,
+restlessly. The capella _would_ have been much the more endurable of the
+two; the serpent couldn't have passed its arm round Rosediamond's
+priceless daughter and whirled her down the ball-room to the music of
+Coote and Timney's band, as Chandos Cheveley was now doing.
+
+"Why did _you_ not ask her for that waltz, Philip?" cried the good lady,
+almost petulantly.
+
+Carruthers opened his eyes wide.
+
+"My dear mother, you know I never dance! I come to balls to oblige my
+hostesses and look at the women, but not to carry a seven-stone weight
+of tulle illusion and white satin, going at express pace, with the
+thermometer at 80 deg., and a dense crowd jostling one at every turn in
+the circle. _Bien oblige!_ that's not my idea of pleasure; if it were
+the Pyrrhic dance, now, or the Tarantella, or the Bolero, under a
+Castilian chestnut-tree----"
+
+"Hold your tongue! You might have danced for once, just to have kept her
+from Chandos Cheveley."
+
+"From the best waltzer in London? Not so selfish. Ask Amandine's wife if
+women don't like to dance with that fellow!"
+
+"I should be very sorry to mention his name to her, or any of her set,"
+responded Lady Marabout, getting upon certain virtuous stilts of her
+own, which she was given to mount on rare occasion and at distant
+intervals, always finding them very uncomfortable and unsuitable
+elevations, and being as glad to cast them off as a traveller to kick
+off the _echasses_ he has had to strap on over the sandy plains of the
+Landes.
+
+"What could possess you to introduce him to Cecil, Philip? It was
+careless, silly, unlike you; you know how I dislike men of
+his--his--objectionable stamp," sighed Lady Marabout, the white and gold
+namesakes in her coiffure softly trembling a gentle sigh in the perfumy
+zephyr raised by the rotatory whirl of the waltzers, among whom she
+watched with a horrible fascination, as one watches a tiger being pugged
+out of its lair, or a deserter being led out to be shot, Chandos
+Cheveley, waltzing Rosediamond's priceless daughter down the ball-room.
+
+"He is so dreadfully handsome! I wonder why it is that men and women,
+who have no fortune but their faces, will be so dangerously, so
+obstinately, so provokingly attractive as one sees them so often!"
+thought Lady Marabout, determining to beat an immediate retreat from the
+present salons, since they were infested by the presence of her Ogre, to
+Lady Hautton's house in Wilton Crescent.
+
+Lady Hautton headed charitable bazaars, belonged to the Cummingite
+nebulae, visited Homes and Hospitals (floating to the bedside of luckless
+feminine patients to read out divers edifying passages, whose effect
+must have been somewhat neutralized to the hearers, one would imagine,
+by the envy-inspiring rustle of her silks, the flash of her rings, and
+the chimes of her bracelets, chains, and chatelaine), looked on the
+"Amandine set" as lost souls, and hence "did not know" Chandos
+Cheveley--a fact which, though the Marabout and Hautton antagonism was
+patent to all Belgravia, served to endear her all at once to her foe;
+Lady Marabout, like a good many other people, being content to sink
+personal resentment, and make a truce with the infidels for the sake of
+enjoying a mutual antipathy--that closest of all links of union!
+
+Lady Marabout and Lady Hautton were foes, but they were dear Helena and
+dear Anne, all the same; dined at each other's tables, and smiled in
+each other's faces. They might be private foes, but they were public
+friends; and Lady Marabout beat a discreet retreat to the Hautton's
+salons--"so many engagements" is so useful a plea!--and from the Hautton
+she passed on to a ball at the Duke of Doncaster's; and, as at both, if
+Lady Cecil Ormsby did not move "a goddess from above," she moved a
+brilliant, sparkling, nonchalante, dangerous beauty, with some of her
+sex's faults, all her sex's witcheries, and more than her sex's
+mischief, holding her own royally, saucily, and proudly, and Chandos
+Cheveley was encountered no more, but happily detained at petit souper
+in a certain Section of the French Embassy, Lady Marabout drove
+homewards, in the gray of the morning, relieved, complacent, and
+gratified, dozing deliciously, till she was woke up with a start.
+
+"Lady Marabout, what a splendid waltzer your Ogre, Chandos Cheveley,
+is!"
+
+Lady Marabout opened her eyes with a jerk that set her feathers
+trembling, her diamonds scintillating, and her bracelets ringing an
+astonished little carillon.
+
+"My love, how you frightened me!"
+
+Cecil Ormsby laughed--a gay, joyous laugh, innocent of having disturbed
+a doze, a lapse into human weakness of which her chaperone never
+permitted herself to plead guilty.
+
+"Frightened you, did I? Why, your _bete noire_ is as terrible to you as
+Coeur de Lion to the Saracen children, or Black Douglas to the Lowland!
+And, really, I can't see anything terrible in him; he is excessively
+brilliant and agreeable, has something worth hearing to say to you,
+and his waltzing is----!"
+
+Lady Cecil Ormsby had not a word in her repertory--though it
+was an enthusiastic and comprehensive one, and embraced five
+languages--sufficiently commendatory to finish her sentence.
+
+"I dare say, dear! I never denied, or heard denied, his having every
+accomplishment under the sun. The only pity is, he has nothing more
+substantial!" returned Lady Marabout, a little bit tartly for _her_
+lips, only used to the softest (and most genuine) milk of roses.
+
+Lord Rosediamond's daughter laughed a little mournfully, and played with
+her fan.
+
+"Poor man! Brilliant and beggared, fashionable and friendless, courted
+and cashiered--a sad destiny! Do you know, Lady Marabout, I have half a
+mind to champion your Ogre!"
+
+"My love, don't talk nonsense!" said Lady Marabout, hastily, at which
+Lady Cecil only laughed still more softly and gayly again, and sprung
+down as the carriage stopped in Lowndes Square.
+
+"Rosediamond's daughter's deucedly handsome, eh, Cheveley? I saw you
+waltzing with her last night," said Goodwood at Lord's the next morning,
+watching a match between the Household Cavalry and the Zingari Eleven.
+
+"Yes, she is the best thing we have seen for some time," said Cheveley,
+glancing round to see if the Marabout liveries were on the ground.
+
+"Don't let the Amandine or little Marechale hear you say so, or you'll
+have a deuce of a row," laughed Goodwood. "She's worth a good deal, too;
+she's all her mother's property, and that's something, I know. The
+deaths in her family have kept her back two years or more, but now she
+_is_ out, I dare say Lady Tattersall will put her up high in the
+market."
+
+"No doubt. Why don't _you_ make the investment--she's much more
+attractive than that Valletort ice statue who hooked you so nearly last
+year? Fortescue's out! Well done, little Jimmy! Ah! there's the Marabout
+carriage. I am as unwelcome to that good lady, I know, as if I were
+Quasimodo or Quilp, and as much to be shunned, in her estimation, as
+Vidocq, armed to the teeth; nevertheless, I shall go and talk to them,
+if only in revenge for the telegraphic warning of 'dangerous' she shot
+at Lady Cecil last night when I asked her to waltz. Goodwood, don't you
+envy me my happy immunity from traps matrimonial?"
+
+"There is that man again--how provoking! I wish we had not come to see
+Philip's return match. He is positively coming up to talk to us,"
+thought Lady Marabout, restlessly, as her Ogre lifted his hat to her. In
+vain did she do her best to look severe, to look frigid, to chill him
+with a withering "good morning," (a little word, capable, if you notice,
+of expressing every gradation in feeling, from the nadir of delighted
+intimacy to the zero of rebuking frigidity;) her coldest ice was as warm
+as a pine-apple ice that has been melting all day under a refreshment
+tent at a horticultural fete? Her _role_ was _not_ chilliness, and never
+could be; she would have beamed benign on a headsman who had led her out
+to instant decapitation, and been no more able to help it than a peach
+to help its bloom or a claret its bouquet. She did her utmost to freeze
+Chandos Cheveley, but either she failed signally, or he, being blessed
+with the brazen conscience she had attributed to him, was steeled to all
+the tacit repulses of her looks, for he leant against the barouche-door,
+let her freeze him away as she might, and chatted to Cecil Ormsby,
+"positively," Lady Marabout remarked to that safest confidante, herself,
+"positively as if the man had been welcome at my house for the last ten
+years! If Cecil _would_ but second me, he couldn't do it; but she _will_
+smile and talk with him just as though he were Goodwood or Fitzbreguet!
+It is very disagreeable to be forced against one's will like this into
+countenancing such a very objectionable person; and yet what _can_ one
+do?"
+
+Which query she could by no means satisfactorily answer herself, being a
+regular female Nerva for clemency, utterly incapable of the severity
+with which that stern Catiline, Lady Hautton, would have signed the
+unwelcome intruder out of the way in a brace of seconds. And under
+Nerva's gentle rule, though Nerva was longing with all her heart to have
+the courage to call the lictors and say, "Away with him!" Cheveley leant
+against the door of the carriage unmolested, though decidedly undesired
+by one of its occupants, talked to by Lady Cecil, possibly because she
+found him as agreeable as her Grace of Amandine and Lillia Marechale had
+done before her, possibly only from that rule of contrariety which is
+such a pet motor-power with her sex; and Lady Marabout reclined among
+her cushions, tucked up in her tiger-skin in precisely that state of
+mind in which Fuseli said to his wife, "Swear, my dear, you don't know
+how much good it will do you," dreading in herself the possible advent
+of the Hautton carriage, for that ancient enemy and rigid pietist, of
+whose keen tongue and eminent virtue she always stood secretly in awe,
+to see this worthless and utterly objectionable member of that fast,
+graceless, and "very incorrect" Amandine set, absolutely _en sentinelle_
+at the door of her barouche!
+
+Does your best friend _ever_ come when you want him most? Doesn't your
+worst foe _always_ come when you want him least? Of course, at that
+juncture, the Hautton carriage came on the ground (Hautton was one of
+the Zingari Club, and maternal interest brought her foe to Lord's as it
+had brought herself), and the Hautton eye-glass, significantly and
+surprisedly raised, said as distinctly to Lady Marabout, as though
+elfishly endowed with vocal powers, "You allow _that_ man acquaintance
+with Rosediamond's daughter!" Lady Marabout was stung to the soul by the
+deserved rebuke, but she didn't know how on earth to get rid of the
+sinner! There he leaned, calmly, nonchalantly, determinedly, as if he
+were absolutely welcome; and Lady Cecil talked on to him as if he were
+absolutely welcome too.
+
+Lady Marabout felt branded in the eyes of all Belgravia to have Chandos
+Cheveley at her carriage-door, the most objectionable man of all his
+most objectionable class.
+
+"It is very strange!" she thought. "I have seen that man about town the
+last five-and-twenty years--ever since he was a mere boy, taken up and
+petted by Adeline Patchouli for some piece of witty Brummelian impudence
+he said to her on his first introduction--and he has never sought my
+acquaintance before, but always seemed to be quite aware of my dislike
+to him and all his set. It is very grievous he should have chosen the
+very season I have poor dear Rosediamond's daughter with me; but it is
+always my fate--if a thing can happen to annoy me it always will!"
+
+With which Lady Marabout, getting fairly distracted under the iron hand
+of adverse fate, and the ruthless surveillance of the Hautton glass,
+invented an impromptu necessity for immediate shopping at Lewis and
+Allonby's, and drove off the ground at the sole moment of interest the
+match possessed for her--viz., when Carruthers was rattling down
+Hautton's stumps, and getting innings innumerable for the Household.
+
+"Mais ce n'est que le premier pas qui coute;" the old proverb's so true
+we wear it threadbare with repeating it! Lady Marabout might as well
+have stayed on Lord's ground, and not lacerated her feelings by leaving
+at the very hour of the Household Cavalry's triumphs, for any good that
+she did thereby. The Hautton eye-glass had lighted on Chandos Cheveley,
+and Chandos Cheveley's eye-glass on Rosediamond's daughter;--and Cecil
+Ormsby arched her eyebrows, and gave her parasol a little impatient
+shake as they quitted Lord's.
+
+"Lady Marabout, I never could have believed you ill-natured; you
+interrupted my ball last night, and my conversation this morning! I
+shall scold you if you ever do so again. And now tell me (as curiosity
+is a weakness incidental to all women, no woman ought to refuse to
+relieve it in another) why _are_ you so prejudiced against that very
+handsome, and very amusing person?"
+
+"Prejudiced, my dear child! I am not in the least prejudiced," returned
+Lady Marabout. (Nobody ever admitted to a prejudice that _I_ ever heard.
+It's a plant that grows in all gardens, and is sedulously matted up,
+watered, and strengthened; but invariably disavowed by its sturdiest
+cultivators.) "As for Chandos Cheveley, I merely mentioned to you what
+all town knows about him; and the dislike I have to his class is one of
+principle, not of prejudice."
+
+Lady Cecil made a _moue mutine_:
+
+"Oh, Lady Marabout! if you go to 'principle,' _tout est perdu!_
+'Principle' has been made to bear the onus of every private pique since
+the world began, and has had to answer for more cruelties and injustice
+than any word in the language. The Romans flung the Christians to the
+lions 'on principle,' and the Europeans slew the Mahomedans 'on
+principle,' and 'principle' lighted the autos-da-fe, and signed to the
+tormentor to give a turn more to the rack! Please don't appeal to
+anything so severe and hypocritical. Come, what are the Ogre's sins?"
+
+Lady Marabout laughed, despite the subject.
+
+"Do you think I am a compiler of such catalogues, my love? Pray do not
+let us talk any more about Chandos Cheveley, he is very little worth it;
+all I say to you is, be as cool to him as you can, without rudeness, of
+course. I am never at home when he calls, and were I you, I would be
+always engaged when he asks you to waltz; his acquaintance can in no way
+benefit you."
+
+Lady Cecil gave a little haughty toss of her head, and lay back in the
+barouche.
+
+"_I_ will judge of that! I am not made for fetters of any kind, you
+know, and I like to choose my own acquaintance as well as to choose my
+own dresses. I cannot obey you either this evening, for he asked me to
+put him on my tablets for the first waltz at Lord Anisette's ball, and I
+consented. I had no 'engaged' ready, unless I had had a falsehood ready
+too, and _you_ wouldn't counsel that, Lady Marabout, I am very sure?"
+
+With which straightforward and perplexing question Cecil Ormsby
+successfully silenced her chaperone, by planting her in that
+disagreeable position known as between the horns of a dilemma; and Lady
+Marabout, shrinking alike from the responsibility of counselling a
+"necessary equivocation," as society politely terms its indispensable
+lies, and the responsibility of allowing Cecil acquaintance with the
+"very worst" of the Amandine set, sighed, wondered envyingly how Anne
+Hautton would act in her place, and almost began to wish somebody else
+had had the onerous stewardship of that brilliant and priceless jewel,
+Rosediamond's daughter, now that the jewel threatened to be possessed
+with a will of its own:--the greatest possible flaw in a gem of pure
+water, which they only want to scintillate brilliantly among the
+bijouterie of society, and let itself be placed passively in the setting
+most suitable for it, that can be conceived in the eyes of lady
+lapidaries intrusted with its sale.
+
+"It is very odd," thought Lady Marabout; "she seems to have taken a much
+greater fancy to that odious man than to Philip, or Goodwood, or Fitz,
+or any one of the men who admire her so much. I suppose I always _am_ to
+be worried in this sort of way! However, there can be no real danger;
+Chandos Cheveley is the merest butterfly flirt, and with all his faults
+none ever accused him of fortune-hunting. Still, they say he is
+wonderfully fascinating, and certainly he has the most beautiful voice I
+ever heard; and if Cecil should ever like him at all, I could never
+forgive myself, and what _should_ I say to General Ormsby?"
+
+The General, Cecil's uncle and guardian, is one of the best-humored,
+best-tempered, and most _laissez-faire_ men in the Service, but was, for
+all that, a perpetual dead weight on Lady Marabout's mind just then, for
+was not he the person to whom, at the end of the season, she would have
+to render up account of the successes and the shortcomings of her
+chaperone's career?
+
+"Do you think of proposing Chandos Cheveley as a suitable alliance for
+Cecil Ormsby, my dear Helena?" asked Lady Hautton, with that smile which
+was felt to be considerably worse than strychnine by her foes and
+victims, at a house in Grosvenor Place, that night.
+
+"God forbid!" prayed Lady Marabout, mentally, as she joined in the
+Hautton laugh, and shivered under the stab of the Hautton sneer, which
+was an excessively sharp one. Lady Hautton being one of a rather
+numerous class of eminent Christians, so panoplied in the armor of
+righteousness that they can tread, without feeling it, on the tender
+feet of others.
+
+The evening was spoiled to Lady Marabout; she felt morally and guiltily
+responsible for an unpardonable indiscretion:--with that man waltzing
+with Cecil Ormsby, her "graceful, graceless, gracious Grace" of Amandine
+visibly irritated with jealousy at the sight, and Anne Hautton
+whispering behind her fan with acidulated significance. Lady Marabout
+had never been more miserable in her life! She heard on all sides
+admiration of Rosediamond's daughter; she was gratified by seeing
+Goodwood, Fitzbreguet, Fulke Nugent, every eligible man in the room,
+suing for a place on her tablets; she had the delight of beholding
+Carruthers positively join the negligent beauty's train; and yet the
+night was a night of purgatory to Lady Marabout, for Chandos Cheveley
+had his first waltz, and several after it, and the Amandine set were
+there to gossip, and the Hautton clique to be shocked, at it.
+
+"Soames, tell Mason, when Mr. Chandos Cheveley calls, I am not at home,"
+said Lady Marabout at breakfast.
+
+"Yes, my lady," said Soames, who treasured up the order, and told it to
+Mr. Chandos Cheveley's man at the first opportunity, though, greatly to
+his honor, we must admit, he did _not_ imitate the mild formula of fib,
+and tell his mistress her claret was not corked when it was so
+incontestably.
+
+Cecil Ormsby lifted her head and looked across the table at her hostess,
+and the steady gaze of those violet eyes, which were Rosediamond's
+daughter's best weapons of war, so discomposed Lady Marabout, that she
+forgot herself sufficiently to proffer Bijou a piece of bread, an
+unparalleled insult, which that canine Sybarite did not forget all day
+long.
+
+"Not at home, sir," said Mason, as duly directed, when Cheveley's cab
+pulled up, a week or two after the general order, at the door.
+
+Cheveley smiled to himself as his gray had her head turned, and the
+wheel grated off the trottoir, while he lifted his hat to Cecil Ormsby,
+just visible between the amber curtains and above the balcony flowers of
+one of the windows of the drawing-room--quite visible enough for her
+return smile and bow to be seen in the street by Cheveley, in the room
+by Lady Marabout.
+
+"Some of Lady Tattersall's generalship!" he thought, as the gray trotted
+out of the square. "Well! I have no business there. Cecil Ormsby is not
+her Grace of Amandine, nor little Marechale, and the good lady is quite
+right to brand me 'dangerous' to her charge, and pronounce me
+'inadmissible' to her footman. I've very little title to resent her
+verdict."
+
+"My dearest Cecil, whatever possessed you to bow to that man!" cried
+Lady Marabout, in direst distress.
+
+"Is it not customary to bow to one's acquaintances--I thought it was?"
+asked Lady Cecil, with demure mischief.
+
+"But, my dear, from a window!--and when Mason is saying we are not at
+home!"
+
+"That isn't _Mason's_ fib, or _Mason's_ fault, Lady Marabout!" suggested
+Cecil, with wicked emphasis.
+
+"There is no falsehood or fault at all anywhere--everybody knows well
+enough what 'not at home' means," returned Lady Marabout, almost
+pettishly.
+
+"Oh yes," laughed the young lady, saucily. "It means 'I am at home and
+sitting in my drawing room, but I shall not rise to receive you, because
+you are not worth the trouble.' It's a polite cut direct, and a honeyed
+rudeness--a bitter almond wrapped up in a sugar dragee, like a good many
+other bonbons handed about in society."
+
+"My dear Cecil, you have some very strange ideas; you will get called
+satirical if you don't take care," said Lady Marabout, nervously.
+
+Cecil Ormsby's tone worried her, and made her feel something as she felt
+when she had a restive, half-broken pair of horses in her carriage, for
+the direction of whose next plunge or next kick nobody could answer.
+
+"And if I be--what then?"
+
+"My dear child, you could not anyhow get a more disadvantageous
+reputation! It may amuse gentlemen though it frightens half _them_; but
+it offends all women irremediably. You see, there are so few whom it
+doesn't hit somewhere," returned Lady Marabout, quite innocent of the
+neat satire of her own last sentence.
+
+Cecil Ormsby laughed, and threw herself down by her chaperone's side:
+
+"Never mind: I can bear their enmity; it is a greater compliment than
+their liking. The women whom women love are always quiet, colorless,
+inoffensive--foils. Lady Marabout, tell me, why did you give that
+general order to Mason?"
+
+"I have told you before, my dear. Because I have no wish to know Mr.
+Chandos Cheveley," returned Lady Marabout, as stiffly as she could say
+anything. "It is, as I said, not from prejudice, but from prin----"
+
+"Lady Marabout, if you use that word again, I will drive to uncle
+Ormsby's rooms in the Albany and stay with him for the season; I will,
+positively! I am sure all the gentlemen there will be delighted to have
+my society! Pray, what _are_ your Ogre's crimes? Did you ever hear
+anything dishonorable, mean, ungenerous, attributed to him? Did you ever
+hear he broke his word, or failed to act like a gentleman, or was a
+defaulter at any settling day?"
+
+Lady Marabout required some explanation of what a defaulter at a
+settling day might be, and, on receiving it, was compelled to confess
+that she never _had_ heard anything of that kind imputed to Chandos
+Cheveley.
+
+"Of course I have not, my dear. The man is a gentleman, everybody knows,
+however idle and improvident a one. If he could be accused of anything
+of that kind, he would not belong to such clubs, and associate with such
+men as he does. Besides, Philip would not know him; certainly would not
+think well of him, which I confess he does. But that is not at all the
+question."
+
+"_Ne vous en deplaise_, I think it very much and very entirely the
+question," returned Lady Cecil, with a toss of her haughty little head.
+"If you can bring nothing in evidence against a man, it is not right to
+send him to the galleys and mark him 'Forcat.'"
+
+"My dear Cecil, there is plenty in evidence against him," said Lady
+Marabout, with a mental back glance to certain stories told of the
+"Amandine set," "though not of that kind. A man may be perfectly
+unexceptionable in his conduct with his men friends, but very
+objectionable acquaintance for us to seek, all the same."
+
+"Ah, I see! Lord Goodwood may bet, and flirt, and lounge his days away,
+and be as fast a man as he likes, and it is all right; but if Mr.
+Cheveley does the same, it is all wrong, because he is not worth
+forgiving."
+
+"Naturally it is," returned Lady Marabout, seriously and naively. "But
+how very oddly you put things, my love; and why you should interest
+yourself in this man, when everything I tell you is to his disadvantage,
+I cannot imagine."
+
+A remark that showed Lady Marabout a skilful tactician, insomuch as it
+silenced Cecil--a performance rather difficult of accomplishment.
+
+"I am very glad I gave the order to Mason," thought that good lady. "I
+only wish we did not meet the man in society; but it is impossible to
+help that. We are all cards of one pack, and get shuffled together,
+whether we like it or not. I wish Philip would pay her more attention;
+he admires her, I can see, and he can make any woman like him in ten
+days when he takes the trouble; but he is so tiresome! She would be
+exactly suited to him; she has all he would exact--beauty, talent, good
+blood, and even fortune, though that he would not need. The alliance
+would be a great happiness to me. Well, he dines here to-night, and he
+gives that concert at his barracks to-morrow morning, purely to please
+Cecil, I am sure. I think it may be brought about with careful
+management."
+
+With which pleasant reflection she went to drive in the Ring, thinking
+that her maternal and duenna duties would be alike well fulfilled, and
+her chaperone's career well finished, if by any amount of tact,
+intrigue, finesses, and diplomacy she could live to see Cecil Ormsby
+sign herself Cecil Carruthers.
+
+"If that man were only out of town!" she thought, as Cheveley passed
+them in Amandine's mail-phaeton at the turn.
+
+Lady Marabout might wish Cheveley were out of town--and wish it devoutly
+she did--but she wasn't very likely to have her desire gratified till
+the general migration should carry him off in its tide to the deck of a
+yacht, a lodge in the Highlands, a German Kursaal, or any one of those
+myriad "good houses" where nobody was so welcome as he, the best shot,
+the best seat, the best wit, the best billiard-player, the best
+whist-player, and the best authority on all fashionable topics, of any
+man in England. Cheveley used to aver that he liked Lady Marabout,
+though she detested him; nay, that he liked her _for_ her detestation;
+he said it was cordial, sincere, and refreshing, therefore a treat in
+the world of Belgravia; still, he didn't like her so well as to leave
+Town in the middle of May to oblige her; and though he took her hint as
+it was meant, and pulled up his hansom no more at her door, he met her
+and Rosediamond's daughter at dinners, balls, concerts, morning-parties
+innumerable. He saw them in the Ring; he was seen by them at the Opera;
+he came across them constantly in the gyration of London life. Night
+after night Lady Cecil persisted in writing his name in her tablets;
+evening after evening a bizarre fate worried Lady Marabout, by putting
+him on the left hand of her priceless charge at a dinner-party. Day
+after day all the harmony of a concert was marred to her ear by seeing
+her Ogre talking of Beethoven and Mozart, chamber music and bravura
+music in Cecil's: morning after morning gall was poured into her
+luncheon sherry, and wormwood mingled in her vol-au-vent, by being told,
+with frank mischief, by her desired daughter-in-law, that she "had seen
+Mr. Cheveley leaning on the rails, smoking," when she had taken her
+after-breakfast canter.
+
+"Chandos Cheveley getting up before noon! He _must_ mean something
+unusual!" thought her chaperone.
+
+"Helena has set her heart on securing Cecil Ormsby for Carruthers. I
+hope she may succeed better than she did with poor Goodwood last
+season," laughed Lady Hautton, with her inimitable sneer, glancing at
+the young lady in question at a bazaar in Willis's Rooms, selling
+rosebuds for anything she liked to ask for them, and cigars tied up with
+blue ribbon a guinea the half-dozen, at the Marabout stall. Lady Hautton
+had just been paying a charitable visit to St. Cecilia's Refuge, of
+which she was head patroness, where, having floated in with much
+benignity, been worshipped by a select little toady troop, administered
+spiritual consolation with admirable condescension, and distributed
+illuminated texts for the adornment of the walls and refreshment of the
+souls, she was naturally in a Christian frame of mind towards her
+neighbors. Lady Marabout caught the remark--as she was intended to
+do--and thought it not quite a pleasant one; but, my good sir, did you
+ever know those estimable people, who spend all their time fitting
+themselves for another world, ever take the trouble to make themselves
+decently agreeable in the present one? The little pleasant courtesies,
+affabilities, generosities, and kindnesses, that rub the edge off the
+flint-stones of the Via Dolorosa, are quite beneath the attention of
+Mary the Saint, and only get attended to by Martha the Worldly, poor
+butterfly thing! who is fit for nothing more serviceable and profitable!
+
+Lady Marabout _had_ set her heart on Cecil Ormsby's filling that post of
+honor--of which no living woman was deserving in her opinion--that of
+"Philip's wife;" an individual who had been, for so many years, a fond
+ideal, a haunting anxiety, and a dreaded rival, en meme temps, to her
+imagination. She _was_ a little bit of a match-maker: she had, over and
+over again, arranged the most admirable and suitable alliances;
+alliances that would have shamed the scepticism of the world in general,
+as to the desirability of the holy bonds, and brought every refractory
+man to the steps of St. George's; alliances, that would have come off
+with the greatest eclat, but for one trifling hindrance and
+difficulty--namely, the people most necessary to the arrangements could
+never by any chance be brought to view them in the same light, and were
+certain to give her diplomacy the _croc-en-jambe_ at the very moment of
+its culminating glory and finishing finesses. She was a little bit of a
+match-maker--most kind-hearted women are; the tinder they play with is
+much better left alone, but _they_ don't remember that! Like children in
+a forest, they think they'll light a pretty bright fire, just for fun,
+and never remember what a seared, dreary waste that fire may make, or
+what a prairie conflagration it may stretch into before it's stopped.
+
+"Cecil Ormsby is a terrible flirt," said Lady Hautton, to another lady,
+glancing at the rapid sale of the rosebuds and cigars, the bunches of
+violets and the sprays of lilies of the valley, in which that brilliant
+beauty was doing such thriving business at such extravagant profits,
+while the five Ladies Hautton presided solemnly over articles of
+gorgeous splendor, which threatened to be left on hand, and go in a
+tombola, as ignominiously as a beauty after half a dozen seasons, left
+unwooed and unwon, goes to the pele-mele raffle of German Bad society,
+and is sold off at the finish to an unknown of the Line, or a Civil
+Service fellow, with five hundred a year.
+
+"Was Cecil a flirt?" wondered Lady Marabout. Lady Marabout was fain to
+confess to herself that she thought she was--nay, that she hoped she
+was. If it wasn't flirting, that way in which she smiled on Chandos
+Cheveley, sold him cigarettes, laughed with him over the ices and
+nectarines he fetched her, and positively invested him with the cordon
+d'honneur of a little bouquet of Fairy roses, for which twenty men sued,
+and he (give Satan his due) did not even ask--if it wasn't flirting,
+_what was it_? Lady Marabout shivered at the suggestion; and though she
+was, on principle, excessively severe on flirting, she could be very
+glad of what she didn't approve, when it aided her, on occasion--like
+most other people--and would so far have agreed with Talleyrand, as to
+welcome the worst crime (of coquetry) as far less a sin than the
+unpardonable blunder of encouraging an Ogre!
+
+"I can't send Cecil away from the stall, as if she were a naughty child,
+and I can't order the man out of Willis's Rooms," thought that unhappy
+and fatally-worried lady, as she presided behind her stall, an emphatic
+witness of the truth of the poeticism that "grief smiles and gives no
+sign," insomuch as she looked the fairest, sunniest, best-looking, and
+best-tempered Dowager that ever shrouded herself in Chantilly lace.
+
+"I do think those ineligible, detrimental, objectionable persons ought
+not to be let loose on society as they are," she pondered; "let them
+have their clubs and their mess breakfasts, their Ascot and their
+Newmarket, their lansquenet parties and their handicap pigeon matches,
+if they like; but to have them come amongst _us_ as they do, asked
+everywhere if they happen to have good blood and good style, free to
+waltz and flirt and sing, and show all sorts of attention to
+marriageable girls, while all the while they are no more available for
+anything serious than if they were club stewards or cabmen--creatures
+that live on their fashionable aroma, and can't afford to buy the very
+bottles of bouquets on their toilette-tables--fast men, too, who,
+knowing they can never marry themselves, make a practice of turning
+marriage into ridicule, and help to set all the rich men more dead
+against it than they are,--to have them come promiscuously among the
+very best people, with nothing to distinguish them as dangerous, or
+label them as 'ought to be avoided,'--it's dreadful! it's a social evil!
+it _ought_ to be remedied! They muzzle dogs in June, why can't they
+label Ogres in the season? I mustn't send poor little Bijou out for a
+walk in Kensington Gardens without a string, these men ought not to go
+about in society without restriction: a snap of Bijou's doesn't do half
+such mischief as a smile of theirs!"
+
+And Lady Marabout chatted across the stall to his Grace of Doncaster,
+and entrapped him into purchases of fitting ducal prodigality, and
+smiled on scores of people she didn't know, in pleasant _pro tempore_
+expediency that had, like most expediency in our day, its ultimate goal
+in their purses and pockets, and longed for some select gendarmerie to
+clear Willis's Rooms of her Cobra Capella, and kept an eye all the while
+on Cecil Ormsby--Cecil, selling off everything on the stall by sheer
+force of her bright violet eyes, receiving ten-pound notes for guinea
+trifles, making her Bourse rise as high as she liked, courted for a
+spray of mignonette as entreatingly as ever Law was courted in the Rue
+Quincampoix for Mississippi scrip, served by a Corps d'Elite, in whom
+she had actually enlisted Carruthers, Goodwood, Fulke Nugent,
+Fitzbreguet, and plenty of the most desirable and most desired men in
+town, yet of which--oh the obstinacy of women! she had actually made
+Chandos Cheveley, with those wicked little Fairy roses in his coat,
+positively the captain and the chief!
+
+"It is enough to break one's heart!" thought Lady Marabout, wincing
+under the Hautton glance, which she saw only the plainer because she
+_wouldn't_ see it at all, and which said with horrible distinctness,
+"There is that man, who can hardly keep his own cab, who floats on
+society like a pleasure-boat, without rudder, ballast, or anchors, of
+whom I have told you, in virtuous indignation and Christian charity,
+fifty thousand naughty stories, who visits that wicked, notorious little
+Marechale, who belongs to the Amandine set, who is everything that he
+ought not and nothing that he ought to be, who hasn't a penny he doesn't
+make by a well-made betting-book or a dashed-off magazine
+article,--there he is flirting all day at your own stall with
+Rosediamond's daughter, and you haven't the _savoir faire_, the strength
+of will, the tact, the proper feeling, to stop it!"
+
+To all of which charges Lady Marabout humbly bent her head,
+metaphorically speaking, and writhed, in secret, under the glance of her
+ancient enemy, while she talked and laughed with the Duke of Doncaster.
+C. Petronius, talking epicureanisms and witicisms, while the life-blood
+was ebbing away at every breath, was nothing to the suffering and the
+fortitude of Helena, Lady Marabout, turning a smiling, sunny, tranquil
+countenance to the world in front of her stall, while that world could
+see Chandos Cheveley admitted behind it!
+
+"I must do something to stop this!" thought Lady Marabout, with the
+desperation of a Charlotte Corday.
+
+"Is Cheveley going in for the Ormsby tin?" said Amandine to Eyre Lee.
+"Best thing he could do, eh? But Lady Tattersall and the trustees would
+cut rough, I am afraid."
+
+"What does Chandos mean with that daughter of Rosediamond's?" wondered
+her Grace, annoyedly. She had had him some time in her own rose chains,
+and when ladies have driven a lover long in that sort of harness, they
+could double-thong him with all the might of their little hands, if they
+fancy he is trying to break away.
+
+"Is Chandos Cheveley turning fortune-hunter? I suppose he would like
+Lady Cecil's money to pay off his Ascot losses," said Mrs. Marechale,
+with a malicious laugh. At Ascot, the day before, he had not gone near
+her carriage; the year before he had driven her down in her
+mail-phaeton: what would there be too black to say of him _now_?
+
+"I must do something to stop this!" determined Lady Marabout, driving
+homewards, and glancing at Cecil Ormsby, as that young lady lay back in
+the carriage, a little grave and dreamy after her day's campaign--signs
+of the times terrifically ominous to her chaperone, skilled in reading
+such meteorological omens. But how was the drag to be put on the wheel?
+That momentous question absorbed Lady Marabout through her toilette that
+evening, pursued her to dinner, haunted her through two soirees, kept
+her wide awake all night, woke up with her to her early coffee, and
+flavored the potted tongue and the volaille a la Richelieu she took for
+her breakfast. "I can't turn the man out of town, and I can't tell
+people to strike him off their visiting-lists, and I can't shut Cecil
+and myself up in this house as if it were a convent, and, as to speaking
+to her, it is not the slightest use. She has such a way of putting
+things that one can never deny their truth, or reason them away, as one
+can with other girls. Fond as I am of her, she's fearfully difficult to
+manage. Still I owe it as a sacred duty to poor Rosediamond and the
+General, who says he places such implicit confidence in me, to
+interfere. It is my duty; it can't be helped. I must speak to Chandos
+Cheveley himself. I have no right to consult my own scruples when so
+much is at stake," valorously determined Lady Marabout, resolved to
+follow stern moral rules, and, when right was right, to let "le diable
+prendre le fruit."
+
+To be a perfect woman of the world, I take it, ladies must weed out
+early in life all such little contemptible weaknesses as a dislike to
+wounding other people; and a perfect woman of the world, therefore, Lady
+Marabout was not, and never would be. Nohow could she acquire Anne
+Hautton's invaluable sneer--nohow could she imitate that estimable
+pietist's delightful way of dropping little icy-barbed sentences, under
+which I have known the bravest to shrink, frozen, out of her path. Lady
+Marabout was grieved if she broke the head off a flower needlessly, and
+she could not cure herself of the same lingering folly in disliking to
+say a thing that pained anybody; it is incidental to the De Boncoeur
+blood--Carruthers inherits it--and I have seen fellows spared through
+it, whom he could else have withered into the depths of their boots by
+one of his satirical mots. So she did not go to her task of speaking to
+Chandos Cheveley, armed at all points for the encounter, and taking
+pleasure in feeling the edge of her rapier, as Lady Hautton would have
+done. The Cobra was dangerous, and must be crushed, but Lady Marabout
+did not very much relish setting her heel on it; it was a glittering,
+terrible, much-to-be-feared, and much-to-be-abused serpent,--but it
+might _feel_ all the same, you see.
+
+"I dislike the man on principle, but I don't want to pain him," she
+thought, sighing for the Hautton stern _savoir faire_ and Achilles
+impenetrability, and goading herself on with the remembrance of duty and
+General Ormsby, when the opportunity she had resolved to seek presented
+itself accidentally at a breakfast at Lady George Frangipane's toy
+villa at Fulham, and she found herself comparatively alone in the
+rose-garden with Cheveley, for once without Cecil's terrible violet eyes
+upon her.
+
+"Will you allow me a few words with you, Mr. Cheveley?" she asked, in
+her blandest manner--the kindly hypocrite!
+
+The blow must be dealt, but it might as well be softened with a few
+chloroform fumes, and not struck savagely with an iron-spiked mace.
+
+Cheveley raised his eyes.
+
+"With me? With the greatest pleasure!"
+
+"He is a mere fortune-hunter. I will _not_ spare him, I am resolved,"
+determined Lady Marabout, as she toyed with her parasol-handle, remarked
+incidentally how unequalled Lady George was in roses, especially in the
+tea-rose, and dealt blow No. 1. "Mr. Cheveley, I am going to speak to
+you very frankly. I consider frankness in all things best, myself----"
+
+Cheveley bowed, and smiled slightly.
+
+"I wish he would answer, it would make it so much easier; he will only
+look at one with those eyes of his, and certainly they _are_ splendid!"
+thought Lady Marabout, as she went on quickly, on the same principle as
+the Chasseurs Indiens approach an abattis at double-quick. "When Lord
+Rosediamond died last year he left, as probably you are aware, his
+daughter in my sole care; it was a great responsibility--very great--and
+I feel, of course, that I shall have to answer to him for my discharge
+of it."
+
+Lady Marabout didn't say whether Rosediamond was accustomed to visit her
+per medium, and hear her account of her stewardship nightly through a
+table-claw; but we must suppose that he was. Cheveley bowed again, and
+didn't inquire, not being spiritually interested.
+
+"Why _won't_ he answer?" thought Lady Marabout. "That I have not been
+blind to your very marked attention to my dear Cecil, I think you must
+be aware, Mr. Cheveley, and it is on that subject, indeed, that I----"
+
+"Wished to speak to me? I understand!" said Cheveley as she paused, with
+that faint smile, half sad, half proud, that perplexed Lady Marabout.
+"You are about to insinuate to me gently that those attentions have been
+exceedingly distasteful to you, exceedingly unacceptable in me; you
+would remind me that Lady Cecil Ormsby is a beauty and an heiress, and
+that I am a fortune-hunter, whose designs are seen through and motives
+found out; you would hint to me that our intercourse must cease: is it
+not so?"
+
+Lady Marabout, cursed with that obstinate, ill-bred, unextinguishable
+weakness for truth incidental and ever fatal to the De Boncoeurs,
+couldn't say that it was _not_ what she was going to observe to him, but
+it was exceedingly unpleasant, now it was put in such plain,
+uncomplimentary terms, to admit to the man's face that she was about to
+tell him he was a mercenary schemer, whose attentions only sprang from a
+lawless passion for the _beaux yeux_ of Cecil's _cassette_.
+
+She would have told him all that, and much more, with greatest dignity
+and effect, if he hadn't anticipated her; but to have her weapon parried
+before it was fairly out of its sheath unnerved her arm at the outset.
+
+"What _would_ Anne Hautton do? Dear me! there never was anybody
+perpetually placed in such wretched positions as I am!" thought Lady
+Marabout, as she played with her parasol, and murmured something not
+very clear relative to "responsibility" and "not desirable," two words
+as infallibly a part of Lady Marabout's stock in trade as a sneer at the
+"swells" is of _Punch's_. How she sighed for some cold, nonchalant,
+bitter sentence, such as the Hautton repertoire could have supplied! how
+she scorned herself for her own weakness and lack of severity! But she
+would not have relished hurting a burglar's feelings, though she had
+seen him in the very act of stealing her jewel-boxes, by taxing him with
+the theft; and though the Ogre _must_ be crushed, the crushing began to
+give Lady Marabout neuralgic twinges. She was no more able to say the
+stern things she had rehearsed and resolved upon, than she was able to
+stab him with her parasol, or strangle him with her handkerchief.
+
+"I guessed rightly what you were about to say to me?" said Cheveley, who
+seemed somehow or other to have taken all the talk into his own hands,
+and to have become the master of the position. "I thought so. I do not
+wonder at your construction; I cannot blame you for your resolution.
+Lady Cecil has some considerable fortune, they say; it is very natural
+that you should have imagined a man like myself, with no wealth save a
+good name, which only serves to make lack of wealth more conspicuous,
+incapable of seeking her society for any better, higher, more
+disinterested motive than that of her money; it was not charitable,
+perhaps, to decide unhesitatingly that it was impossible I could be
+drawn to her by any other attraction, that it was imperative I must be
+dead to everything in her that gives her a nobler and a higher charm;
+but it was very natural, and one learns never to hope for the miracle of
+a charitable judgment, _even_ from Lady Marabout!"
+
+"My dear Mr. Cheveley, indeed you mistake!" began Lady Marabout,
+restlessly. That was a little bit of a story, he didn't mistake at all;
+but Lady Marabout, collapsing like an india-rubber ball under the prick
+of a sarcasm, shivered all over at his words, his voice, his slight sad
+smile. "The man is as dreadful as Cecil," she thought; "he puts things
+so horribly clearly!"
+
+"Mistake? I do not think I do. You have thought all this, and very
+naturally; but now hear me for a moment. I have sought Lady Cecil's
+society, that is perfectly true; we have been thrown together in
+society, very often accidentally; sometimes, I admit, through my own
+seeking. Few men could be with her and be steeled against her. I have
+been with her too much; but I sought her at first carelessly, then
+irresistibly and unconsciously, never with the motive you attribute to
+me. I am not as utterly beggared as you deem me, but neither am I
+entirely barren of honor. Believe me, Lady Marabout, my pride alone
+would be amply sufficient to raise a barrier between me and Cecil
+stronger than any that could be opposed to me by others. Yesterday I
+casually overheard words from Amandine which showed me that society,
+like you, has put but one construction on the attention I have paid
+her--a construction I might have foreseen had I not been unconsciously
+fascinated, and forgetful, for the time, of the infallible whispers of
+my kind friends. Her fortune, I know, was never numbered among her
+attractions for me; so little, that now that Amandine's careless words
+have reminded me of the verdict of society, I shall neither seek her nor
+see her again. Scores of men marry women for their money, and their
+money alone, but I am not one of them; with my own precarious fortunes,
+only escaping ruin because I am not rich enough to tempt ruin. I would
+never take advantage of any interest I may have excited in her, to speak
+to her of a passion that the world would tell her was only another name
+for avarice and selfishness. I dare not trust myself with her longer,
+perhaps. I am no god to answer for my self-control; but you need not
+fear; I will never seek her love--never even tell her of mine. I shall
+leave town to-morrow; what _I_ may suffer matters not. Lady Cecil is
+safe from me! Whatever you may have heard of my faults, follies, or
+vices, none ever told you, I think, that I broke my word?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"And when the man said that, my dear Philip, I assure you I felt as
+guilty as if I had done him some horrible wrong; he stood there with his
+head up, looking at me with his sad proud eyes--and they are
+beautiful!--till, positively, I could almost have cried--I could,
+indeed, for though I don't like him on principle, I couldn't help
+pitying him," said Lady Marabout, in a subsequent relation of the scene
+to her son. "Wasn't it a terrible position? I was as near as possible
+forgetting everything due to poor Rosediamond, and saying to him that I
+believed Cecil liked him and would never like anybody else, but, thank
+Heaven! I remembered myself, and checked myself in time. If it had been
+anybody but Chandos Cheveley, I should really have admired him, he spoke
+so nobly! When he lifted his hat and left me, though I _ought_ to have
+been glad (and I _was_ glad, of course) that Cecil would be free from
+the society of anybody so objectionable and so dangerous, I felt
+wretched for him--I did indeed. It _is_ so hard always to be placed in
+such miserable positions!"
+
+By which you will perceive that the triumphant crushing of Lady
+Marabout's Cobra didn't afford her the unmixed gratification she had
+anticipated.
+
+"I have done what was my duty to poor Rosediamond, and what General
+Ormsby's confidence merited," she solaced herself that day, feeling
+uncomfortably and causelessly guilty, she hardly knew why, when she saw
+Chandos Cheveley keeping sedulously with the "Amandine set," and read in
+Cecil's tell-tale face wonder, perplexity, and regret thereat, till the
+Frangipane fete came to an end. She had appeased the manes of the late
+Rosediamond, who, to her imagination, always appeared sitting up aloft
+keeping watch over the discharge of her chaperone's duties, but she had
+a secret and horrible dread that she had excited the wrath of
+Rosediamond's daughter. She had driven her Ogre off the scene, it is
+true, but she could not feel that she had altogether come off the best
+in the contest. Anne Hautton had congratulated her, indeed, on having
+"acted with decision _at last_," but then she had marred it all by
+asking if Carruthers was likely to be engaged to Cecil? And Lady
+Marabout had been forced to confess he was not; Philip, when pressed by
+her that very morning to be a little attentive to Cecil, having shaken
+his head and laughed:
+
+"She's a bewitching creature, mother, but she don't bewitch _me_! You
+know what Shakspeare says of wooing, wedding, and repentance. I've no
+fancy for the inseparable trio!"
+
+Altogether, Lady Marabout was far from peace and tranquillity, though
+the Cobra _was_ crushed, as she drove away from the Frangipane
+breakfast, and she was little nearer them when Cecil turned her eyes
+upon her with a question worse to Lady Marabout's ear than the roar of a
+Lancaster battery.
+
+"What have you said to him?"
+
+"My dear Cecil! What have I said to whom?" returned Lady Marabout, with
+Machiavellian surprise.
+
+"You know well enough, Lady Marabout! What have you said to him--to Mr.
+Cheveley?"
+
+Cecil's impetuosity invariably knocked Lady Marabout down at one blow,
+as a ball knocks down the pegs at lawn billiards. She rallied after the
+shock, but not successfully, and tried at coldness and decision, as
+recommended by Hautton prescriptions.
+
+"My dear Cecil, I have said to him what I think it my duty to say to
+him. Responsible as I am for you----"
+
+"Responsible for me, Lady Marabout? Indeed you are not. I am responsible
+for myself!" interrupted Lady Cecil, with that haughty arch of her
+eyebrows and that flush on her face before which Lady Marabout was
+powerless. "What have you said to him? I _will_ know!"
+
+"I said very little to him, indeed, my dear; he said it all himself."
+
+"What did he say himself?"
+
+"I _must_ tell her--she is so dreadfully persistent," thought the
+unhappy and badgered Peeress; and tell her she did, being a means of
+lessening the young lady's interest in the subject of discussion as
+little judicious as she could well have hit upon.
+
+Lady Cecil listened, silent for once, shading her face with her parasol,
+shading the tears that gathered on her lashes and rolled down her
+delicate flushed cheeks, at the recital of Chandos Cheveley's words,
+from her chaperone's sight.
+
+Lady Marabout gathered courage from the tranquillity with which her
+recital was heard.
+
+"You see, my love, Chandos Cheveley's own honor points in the same
+direction with my judgment," she wound up, in conclusion. "He has acted
+rightly at last, I allow, and if you--if you have for the moment felt a
+tinge of warmer interest in him--if you have been taken by the
+fascination of his manner, and invested him with a young girl's romance,
+you will soon see with us how infinitely better it is that you should
+part, and how impossible it is that----"
+
+Lady Cecil's eyes flashed such fire through their tears, that Lady
+Marabout stopped, collapsed and paralyzed.
+
+"It is by such advice as that you repay his nobility, his generosity,
+his honor!--it is by such words as those you reward him for acting as
+not one man in a hundred would have acted! Hush, hush, Lady Marabout, I
+thought better of you!"
+
+"Good Heavens! _where will it end?_" thought Lady Marabout,
+distractedly, as Rosediamond's wayward daughter sprang down at the door
+with a flush in her face, and a contemptuous anger in her eyes, that
+made Bijou, jumping on her, stop, stare, and whine in canine dismay.
+
+"And I fancied she was listening passively!" thought Lady Marabout.
+
+"Well! the man is gone to-day, that is one comfort. I am very thankful I
+acted as I did," reasoned that ever-worried lady in her boudoir the next
+morning. "I am afraid Cecil is really very fond of him, there were such
+black shadows under her eyes at breakfast, poor child! But it is much
+better as it is--much better. I should never have held up my head again
+if I had allowed her to make such a disadvantageous alliance. I can
+hardly bear to think of what would have been said, even now the danger
+is over!"
+
+While Lady Marabout was thus comforting herself over her embroidery
+silks, Cecil Ormsby was pacing into the Park, with old Twitters the
+groom ten yards behind her, taking her early ride before the world was
+up--it was only eleven o'clock; Cecil had been used to early rising, and
+would never leave it off, having discovered some recipe that made her
+independent of ordinary mortals' quantum of sleep.
+
+"Surely he will be here this morning to see me for the last time,"
+thought that young lady, as she paced up the New Ride under the
+Kensington Gardens trees, with her heart beating quickly under the gold
+aiglettes of her riding-jacket.
+
+"I must see her once more, and then----" thought Chandos Cheveley, as he
+leaned against the rails, smoking, as he had done scores of mornings
+before. His man had packed his things; his hansom was waiting at the
+gates to take him to the station, and his portmanteau was lettered
+"Ischl." He had only come to take one last look of the face that haunted
+him as no other had ever succeeded in doing. The ring of a horse's hoof
+fell on his ear. There she came, on her roan hack, with the sun glancing
+off her chestnut hair. He looked up to bow to her as she passed on, for
+the Ride had never been a rendezvous for more than a bow (Cecil's
+insurrectionary tactics had always been carried on before Lady
+Marabout's face), but the roan was pulled up by him that morning for
+the very first time, and Cecil's eyes fell on him through their lashes.
+
+"Mr. Cheveley--is it true you are going out of town?"
+
+"Quite true."
+
+If her voice quivered as she asked the question, he barely kept his own
+from doing the same as he answered it.
+
+"Will you be gone long?"
+
+"Till next season, at earliest."
+
+His promise to Lady Marabout was hard to keep! He would not have trusted
+his strength if he had known she would have done more than canter on
+with her usual bow and smile.
+
+Cecil was silent. The groom waited like a statue his ten yards behind
+them. She played with her reins nervously, the color coming and going
+painfully in her face.
+
+"Lady Marabout told me of--of some conversation you had with her
+yesterday?"
+
+Low as the words were, Cheveley heard them, and his hand, as it lay on
+the rails, shook like a girl's.
+
+Cecil was silent again; she looked at him, her eyes full of unshed
+tears, as the color burned in her face, and she drooped her head almost
+to a level with her hands as they played with the reins.
+
+"She told me--you----"
+
+She stopped again. Cecil was new to making proposals, though not to
+rejecting them. Cheveley set his teeth to keep in the words that rushed
+to his lips, and Cecil saw the struggle as she bent her head lower and
+lower to the saddle, and twisted the reins into a Gordian knot.
+
+"Do you--must we--why should----"
+
+Fragmentary monosyllables enough, but sufficient to fell his strength.
+
+"For God's sake do not tempt me!" he muttered. "You little know----"
+
+"I know all!" she whispered softly.
+
+"You cannot! My worthless life!--my honor! I could not take such a
+sacrifice, I would not!----"
+
+"But--if my peace----"
+
+She could not end her phrase, yet it said enough;--his hand closed on
+hers.
+
+"Your peace! Good God! in _my_ hands! I stay; then--let the world say
+what it likes!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Drive back; I have changed my mind about going abroad to-day," said
+Cheveley, as he got into his hansom at Albert Gate.
+
+"How soon she has got over it! Girls do," thought Lady Marabout, as
+Cecil Ormsby came in from her ride with the brightest bloom on her
+cheeks a June breeze ever fanned there. She laid her hat on the table,
+flung her gauntlets at Bijou, and threw herself on her knees by Lady
+Marabout, a saucy smile on her face, though her lashes were wet.
+
+"Dear Lady Marabout, I can forgive you now, but you will never forgive
+me!"
+
+Lady Marabout turned white as her point-lace cap, gave a little gasp of
+paralyzed terror, and pushed back her chair as though a shell had
+exploded on the hearth-rug.
+
+"Cecil! Good Heaven!--you don't mean----"
+
+"Yes I do," said Cecil, with a fresh access of color, and a low, soft
+laugh.
+
+Lady Marabout gasped again for breath:
+
+"General Ormsby!" was all she could ejaculate.
+
+"General Ormsby? What of him? Did you ever know uncle Johnnie refuse to
+please _me_? And if my money be to interfere with my happiness, and not
+promote it, as I conceive it its duty and purpose to do, why, I am of
+age in July, you know, and I shall make a deed of gift of it all to the
+Soldiers' Home or the Wellington College, and there is only one person
+who will care for me _then_."
+
+Lady Cecil was quite capable of carrying her threat into execution, and
+Lady Cecil had her own way accordingly, as she had had it from her
+babyhood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shall never hold up my head again! And what a horrible triumph for
+Anne Hautton! I am always the victim--always!" said Lady Marabout, that
+day two months, when the last guest at Cecil Ormsby's wedding dejeuner
+had rolled away from the house. "A girl who might have married anybody,
+Philip; she refused twenty offers this season--she did, indeed! It is
+heart-breaking, say what you like; you needn't laugh, it _is_. Why did I
+offer them Fernditton for this month, you say, if I didn't countenance
+the alliance? Nonsense! that is nothing to the purpose. Of course, I
+seemed to countenance it to a degree, for Cecil's sake, and I admire
+Chandos Cheveley, I confess (at least I should do, if I didn't dislike
+his class on principle); but, say what you like, Philip, it is the most
+terrible thing that could have happened for _me_. Those men _ought_ to
+be labelled, or muzzled, or done something with, and not be let loose on
+society as they are. He has a noble nature, you say. I don't say
+anything against his nature! She worships him? Well, I know she does.
+What is that to the point? He will make her happy? I am sure he will. He
+has the gentlest way with her possible. But how does that console _me_?
+Think what _you_ feel when an outsider, as you call it, beats all the
+favorites, upsets all your betting-books, and carries off the Doncaster
+Cup, and then realize, if you've any humanity in you, what _we_ feel
+under such a trial as this is to me! Only to think what Anne Hautton
+will always say!"
+
+Lady Marabout is not the only person to whom the first thought, the most
+dreaded ghost, the ghastliest skeleton, the direst aggravation, the
+sharpest dagger-thrust, under all troubles, is the remembrance of that
+one omnipotent Ogre--"QU'EN DIRA-T-ON?"
+
+"Laugh at her, mother," counselled Carruthers; and, _amis lecteurs_, I
+pass on his advice to you as the best and sole bowstring for strangling
+the ogre in question, which is the grimmest we have in all Bogeydom.
+
+
+
+
+LADY MARABOUT'S TROUBLES;
+
+OR,
+
+THE WORRIES OF A CHAPERONE.
+
+IN THREE SEASONS.
+
+
+SEASON THE THIRD.--THE CLIMAX.
+
+"My dear Philip, the most unfortunate thing has happened," said Lady
+Marabout, one morning; "really the greatest contretemps that could have
+occurred. I suppose I never _am_ to be quiet!"
+
+"What's the row _now_, madre carissima?" asked her son.
+
+"It is no row, but it is an annoyance. You have heard me speak of my
+poor dear friend Mrs. Montolieu; you know she married unhappily, poor
+thing, to a dreadful creature, something in a West India
+regiment--nobody at all. It is very odd, and it is very wrong, and there
+must be a great mistake somewhere, but certainly most marriages _are_
+unhappy."
+
+"And yet you are always recommending the institution! What an
+extraordinary obstinacy and opticism, my dear mother! I suppose you do
+it on the same principle as nurses recommend children nasty medicines,
+or as old Levett used to tender me dry biscuit _sans confiture_:
+''Tisn't so nice as marmalade, I know, Master Philip, but then, dear,
+it's _so_ wholesome!'"
+
+"Hold your tongue, Philip," cried Lady Marabout; "I don't mean it in
+that sense at all, and you know I don't. If poor Lilla Montolieu is
+unhappy, I am sure it is all her abominable odious husband's fault; she
+is the sweetest creature possible. But she has a daughter, and
+concerning that daughter she wrote to me about a month ago, and--I never
+was more vexed in my life--she wants me to bring her out this season."
+
+"A victim again! My poor dear mother, you certainly deserve a Belgravian
+testimonial; you shall have a statue set up in Lowndes Square
+commemorative of the heroic endurance of a chaperone's existence,
+subscribed for gratefully by the girls you married well, and
+penitentially by the girls you couldn't marry at all."
+
+Lady Marabout laughed a little, but sighed again:
+
+"'It is fun to you, but it is death to me'----"
+
+"As the women say when we flirt with them," interpolated Carruthers.
+
+"You see, poor dear Lilla didn't know what to do. There she is, in that
+miserable island with the unpronounceable name that the man is governor
+of; shut out of all society, with nobody to marry this girl to if she
+had her there, except their secretary, or a West Indian planter. Of
+course, no mother would ruin her daughter's prospects, and take her into
+such an out-of-the-world corner. She knew no one so well as myself, and
+so to me she applied. She is the sweetest creature! I would do anything
+to oblige or please her, but I can't help being very sorry she has
+pounced upon me. And I don't the least know what this girl is like, not
+even whether she is presentable. I dare say she was petted and spoiled
+in that lazy, luxurious, tropical life when she was little, and she has
+been brought up the last few years in a convent in France, the very last
+education _I_ should choose for a girl. Fancy, if I should find her an
+ignorant, unformed hoyden, or a lethargic, overgrown child, or an
+artificial French girl, who goes to confession every day, and carries
+on twenty undiscoverable love affairs--fancy, if she should be ugly, or
+awkward, or brusque, or gauche, as ten to one she will be--fancy, if I
+find her utterly unpresentable!--what in the world shall I do?"
+
+"Decline her," suggested Carruthers. "I wouldn't have a horse put in my
+tilbury that I'd never seen, and risk driving a spavined, wall-eyed,
+underbred brute through the Park; and I suppose the ignominy of the
+debut would be to you much what the ignominy of such a turn-out would be
+to me."
+
+"Decline her? I can't, my dear Philip! I agreed to have her a month ago.
+I have never seen you to tell you till now, you know; you've been so
+sworn to Newmarket all through the Spring Meetings. Decline her? she
+comes to-night!"
+
+"Comes to-night?" laughed Carruthers. "All is lost, then. We shall see
+the Countess of Marabout moving through London society with a West
+Indian, who has a skin like Othello; has as much idea of manners as a
+housemaid that suddenly turns out an heiress, and is invited by people
+to whom she yesterday carried up their hot water; reflects indelible
+disgrace on her chaperone by gaucheries unparalleled; throws glass or
+silver missiles at Soames's head when he doesn't wait upon her at
+luncheon to her liking, as she has been accustomed to do at the
+negroes----"
+
+"Philip, pray don't!" cried Lady Marabout, piteously.
+
+"Or, we shall welcome under the Marabout wing a young lady fresh from
+convent walls and pensionnaire flirtations, who astonishes a
+dinner-party by only taking the first course, on the score of jours
+maigres and conscientious scruples; who is visited by reverends peres
+from Farm Street, and fills your drawing-room with High Church curates,
+whom she tries to draw over from their 'mother's' to their 'sister's'
+open arms; who goes every day to early morning mass instead of taking
+an early morning canter, and who, when invited to sing at a soiree
+musicale, begins 'Sancta Maria adorata!'"
+
+"Philip, _don't_!" cried Lady Marabout. "Bark at him, Bijou, the
+heartless man! It is as likely as not little Montolieu may realize one
+of your horrible sketches. Ah, Philip, you don't know what the worries
+of a chaperone are!"
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" laughed Carruthers.
+
+"It is easy to make a joke of it, and very tempting, I dare say--one's
+woes always _are_ amusing to other people, they don't feel the smart
+themselves, and only laugh at the grimace it forces from one--but I can
+tell you, Philip, it is anything but a pleasant prospect to have to go
+about in society with a girl one may be ashamed of!--I don't know
+anything more trying; I would as soon wear paste diamonds as introduce a
+girl that is not perfectly good style."
+
+"But why not have thought of all this in time?"
+
+Lady Marabout sank back in her chair, and curled Bijou's ears, with a
+sigh.
+
+"My dear Philip, if everybody always thought of things in time, would
+there be any follies committed at all? It's precisely because repentance
+comes too late, that repentance is such a horrible wasp, with such a
+merciless sting. Besides, _could_ I refuse poor Lilla Montolieu, unhappy
+as she is with that bear of a man?"
+
+"I never felt more anxious in my life," thought Lady Marabout, as she
+sat before the fire in her drawing-room--it was a chilly April
+day--stirring the cream into her pre-prandial cup of tea, resting one of
+her small satin-slippered feet on Bijou's back, while the firelight
+sparkled on the Dresden figures, the statuettes, the fifty thousand
+costly trifles, in which the Marabout rooms equalled any in Belgravia.
+"I never felt more anxious--not on any of Philip's dreadful yachting
+expeditions, nor even when he went on that perilous exploring tour into
+Arabia Deserta, I do think. If she _should_ be unpresentable--and then
+poor dear Lilla's was not much of a match, and the girl will not have a
+sou, she tells me frankly; I can hardly hope to do anything for her.
+There is one thing, she will not be a responsibility like Valencia or
+Cecil, and what would have been a bad match for _them_ will be a good
+one for her. She must accept the first offer made her, if she have any
+at all, which will be very doubtful; few Benedicts bow to Beatrices
+nowadays, unless Beatrice is a good 'investment,' as they call it. She
+will soon be here. That is the carriage now stopped, I do think. How
+anxious I feel! Really it can't be worse for a Turkish bridegroom never
+to see his wife's face till after the ceremony than it is for one not to
+have seen a girl till one has to introduce her. If she shouldn't be good
+style!"
+
+And Lady Marabout's heart palpitated, possibly prophetically, as she set
+down her little Sevres cup and rose out of her arm-chair, with Bijou
+shaking his silver collar and bells, to welcome the new inmate of
+Lowndes Square, with her sunny smile and her kindly voice, and her soft
+beaming eyes, which, as I have often stated, would have made Lady
+Marabout look amiable at an Abruzzi bandit who had demanded her purse,
+or an executioner who had led her out to capital punishment, and now
+made her radiate, warm and bright, on a guest whose advent she dreaded.
+Hypocrisy, you say. Not a bit of it! Hypocrisy may be eminently
+courteous, but take my word for it, it's never _cordial_! There are
+natures who throw such golden rays around them naturally, as there are
+others who think brusquerie and acidity cardinal virtues, and deal them
+out as points of conscience; are there not sunbeams that shine kindly
+alike on fragrant violet tufts and barren brambles, velvet lawns and
+muddy trottoirs? are there not hail-clouds that send jagged points of
+ice on all the world pele-mele, as mercilessly on the broken rose as on
+the granite boulder?
+
+"She _is_ good style, thank Heaven!" thought Lady Marabout, as she went
+forward, with her white soft hands, their jewels flashing in the light,
+outstretched in welcome. "My dear child, how much you are like your
+mother! You must let me be fond of you for her sake, first, and
+then--for your own!"
+
+The conventional thought did not make the cordial utterance insincere.
+The two ran in couples--we often drive such pairs, every one of us--and
+if they entail insincerity, _Veritas, vale!_
+
+"Madre mia, I called to inquire if you have survived the anxiety of last
+night, and to know what _jeune sauvage_ or feir _religieuse_ you may
+have had sent you for the galvanizing of Belgravia?" said Carruthers,
+paying his accustomed visit in his mother's boudoir, and throwing
+macaroons at Bijou's nose.
+
+"My dear Philip, I hardly know; she puzzles me. She's what, if she were
+a man, I should classify as a detrimental."
+
+"Is she awkward?"
+
+"Not in the least. Perfect manners, wherever she learned them."
+
+"Brusque?"
+
+"Soft as a gazelle. Very like her mother."
+
+"Brown?"
+
+"Fair as that statuette, with a beautiful bloom; lovely gold hair, too,
+and hazel eyes."
+
+"What are the shortcomings, then?"
+
+"There are none; and it's that that puzzles me. She's been six years in
+that convent, and yet, I do assure you, her style is perfect. She's
+hardly eighteen, but she's the air of the best society. She is--a--well,
+_almost_ nobody, as people rank now, you know, for poor dear Lilla's
+marriage was not what she should have made, but the girl might be a
+royal duke's daughter for manner."
+
+"A premature artificial _femme du monde_? Bah! nothing more odious,"
+said Carruthers, poising a macaroon on Pandore's nose. "Make
+ready!--present!--fire! There's a good dog!"
+
+"No, nothing of that sort: very natural, frank, vivacious. Nothing
+artificial about her; very charming indeed! But she might be a young
+Countess, the queen of a _monde_ rather than a young girl just out of a
+French convent; and, you know, my dear Philip, that sort of wit and
+nonchalance may be admirable for Cecil Cheveley, assured of her
+position, but they're dangerous to a girl like this Flora Montolieu:
+they will make people remark her and ask who she is, and try to pull her
+to pieces, if they don't find her somebody they _dare_ not hit. I would
+much rather she were of the general pattern, pleasing, but nothing
+remarkable, well-bred, but nothing to envy, thoroughly educated, but
+monosyllabic in society; such a girl as that passes among all the rest,
+suits mediocre men (and the majority of men _are_ mediocre, you know, my
+dear Philip), and pleases women because she is a nice girl, and no
+rival; but this little Montolieu----"
+
+And Lady Marabout sighed with a prescience of coming troubles, while
+Carruthers laughed and rose.
+
+"Will worry your life out! I must go, for I have to sit in court-martial
+at two (for a mere trifle, a deuced bore to us, but _le service
+oblige_!), so I shall escape introduction to your little Montolieu
+to-day. Why _will_ you fill your house with girls, my dear mother?--it
+is fifty times more agreeable when you are reigning alone. Henceforth, I
+can't come in to lunch with you without going through the formula of a
+mild flirtation--women think you so ill-natured if you don't flirt a
+little with them, that amiable men like myself haven't strength of mind
+to refuse. You should keep _your_ house an open sanctuary for me, when
+you know I've no other in London except when I retreat into White's and
+the U. S.!"
+
+"She puzzles me!" pondered Lady Marabout, as Despreaux disrobed her that
+night. "I always _am_ to be puzzled, I think! I never _can_ have one of
+those quiet, mediocre, well-mannered, remarkable-for-nothing girls, who
+have no idiosyncrasies and give nobody any trouble; one marries them
+safely to some second-rate man; nobody admires them, and nobody dislikes
+them; they're to society what neutral tint is among body-colors, or
+rather what grays are among dresses, inoffensive, unimpeachable, always
+look ladylike, but never look brilliant; colorless dresses are very
+useful, and so are characterless girls; and I dare say the draper would
+tell us the grays in the long run are the easiest to sell, as the girls
+are to marry; they please the commonplace taste of the generality, and
+do for every-day wear! Flora Montolieu puzzles me; she is very charming,
+very striking, very lovable, but she puzzles me! I have a presentiment
+that that child will give me a world of anxiety, an infinitude of
+trouble!"
+
+And Lady Marabout laid her head on her pillow, not the happier that
+Flora Montolieu was lying asleep in the room next her, dreaming of the
+wild-vine shadows and the night-blooming flowers of her native tropics,
+under the rose-curtains of her new home in Lowndes Square, already a
+burden on the soul and a responsibility on the mind of that home's most
+genial and generous mistress.
+
+"If she were a man, I should certainly call her a detrimental," said
+Lady Marabout, after a more deliberate study of her charge. "You know,
+my dear Philip, the sort of man one call detrimental; attractive enough
+to do a great deal of damage, and ineligible enough to make the damage
+very unacceptable: handsome and winning, but a younger son, or a
+something nobody wants; a delightful flirtation, but a terrible
+alliance; you know what I mean! Well, that is just what this little
+Montolieu is in our sex; I am quite sure it is what she will be
+considered; and if it be bad for a man, it is very much worse for a
+woman! Everybody will admire her, and nobody will marry her; I have a
+presentiment of it!"
+
+With which prophetical melange of the glorious and the inglorious for
+her charge's coming career, Lady Marabout sighed, and gave a little
+shiver, such as
+
+ Sous des maux ignores nous fait gemir d'avance,
+
+as Delphine Gay well phrased it. And she floated out of her boudoir to
+the dining-room for luncheon, at which unformal and pleasant meal
+Carruthers chanced to stay, criticise a new dry sherry, and take a look
+at this unsalable young filly of the Marabout Yearling Sales.
+
+"I don't know about her being detrimental, mother, nor about her being
+little; she in more than middle height," laughed he; "but I vow she is
+the prettiest thing you've had in your list for some time. You've had
+much greater beauties, you say? Well, perhaps so; but I bet you any
+money she will make a sensation."
+
+"I'm sure she will," reiterated Lady Marabout, despairingly. "I have no
+doubt she will have a brilliant season; there is something very
+piquante, taking, and uncommon about her; but who will marry her at the
+end of it?"
+
+Carruthers shouted with laughter.
+
+"Heaven forbid that I should attempt to prophesy! I would undertake as
+readily to say who'll be the owner of the winner of the Oaks ten years
+hence! I can tell you who _won't_----"
+
+"Yourself; because you'll never marry anybody at all," cried Lady
+Marabout. "Well! I must say I should not wish you to renounce your
+misogamistic notions here. The Montolieus are not at all what _you_
+should look for; and a child like Flora would be excessively ill suited
+to you. If I could see you married, as I should desire, to some woman of
+weight and dignity, five or six-and-twenty, fit for you in every
+way----"
+
+"_De grace, de grace!_ My dear mother, the mere sketch will kill me, if
+you insist on finishing it! Be reasonable! Can anything be more
+comfortable, more tranquil, than I am now? I swing through life in a
+rocking-chair; if I'm a trifle bored now and then, it's my heaviest
+trial. I float as pleasantly on the waves of London life, in my way, as
+the lotus-eaters of poetry on the Ganges in theirs; and _you'd_ have the
+barbarity to introduce into my complacent existence the sting of
+matrimony, the phosphorus of Hymen's torch, the symbolical serpent of a
+wedding-ring?--for shame!"
+
+Lady Marabout laughed despite herself, and the solemnity, in _her_ eyes,
+of the subject.
+
+"I _should_ like to see you happily married, for all that, though I
+quite despair of it now; but perhaps you are right."
+
+"Of course I am right! Adam was tranquil and unworried till fate sent
+him a wife, and he was typical of the destinies of his descendants.
+Those who are wise, take warning; those who are not, neglect it and
+repent. Lady Hautton et C^{ie} are very fond of twisting scriptural
+obscurities into 'types.' _There's_ a type plain as day, and salutary to
+mankind, if detrimental to women!"
+
+"Philip, you are abominable! don't be so wicked!" cried Lady Marabout,
+enjoying it all the more because she was a little shocked at it, as your
+best women will on occasion; human nature is human nature everywhere,
+and the female heart gives pleasurable little pulses at the sight of
+forbidden fruits now, as in the days of Eve.
+
+"Who's that Miss Montolieu with your mother this year, Phil?" dozens of
+men asked Carruthers, that season, across the mess-table, in the
+smoking-room of the Guards, in the Ride or the Ring, in the doorways of
+ball-rooms, or anywhere where such-like questions are asked and new
+pretty women discussed.
+
+"What is it in her that takes so astonishingly?" wondered Lady Marabout,
+who is, like most women, orthodox on all points, loving things by rule,
+worrying if they go out of the customary routine, and was, therefore,
+quite incapable of reconciling herself to so revolutionary a fact as a
+young lady being admired who was not a beauty, and sought while she was
+detrimental in every way. It was "out of the general rule," and your
+orthodox people hate anything "out of the general run," as they hate
+their prosperous friends: the force of hatred can no further go! Flora
+Montolieu's crime in Belgravia was much akin to the Bonapartes' crimes
+to the Bourbons. Thrones must be filled legitimately, if not worthily,
+in the eyes of the orthodox people, and this Petit Caporal of Lady
+Marabout's had no business to reign where the Hereditary Princesses and
+all the other noble lines failed to sway the sceptre. Lady Marabout,
+belonging to the noble lines herself, agreed in her heart with them, and
+felt a little bit guilty to have introduced this democratic and
+unwelcome element in society.
+
+Flora Montolieu "took," as people say of bubble companies, meaning that
+they will pleasantly ruin a million or two: or of new fashions, meaning
+that they will become general with the many and, _sequitur_, unwearable
+with the few. She had the brilliance and grace of one of her own
+tropical flowers, with something piquante and attractive about her that
+one had to leave nameless, but that was all the more charming for that
+very fact perhaps; full of life and animation, but soft as a gazelle, as
+her chaperone averred; not characterless, as Lady Marabout fondly
+desired (on the same principle, I suppose, as a timid whip likes a horse
+as spiritless as a riding-school hack), but gifted with plenty of very
+marked character, so much, indeed, that it rather puzzled her
+_cameriste_.
+
+"Girls shouldn't have marked character; they should be clay that one can
+mould, not a self-chiselled statuette, that will only go into its own
+niche, and won't go into any other. This little Montolieu would make
+just such a woman as Vittoria Colonna or Madame de Sable, but one
+doesn't want _those_ qualities in a girl, who is but a single little ear
+in the wheat-sheaf of society, and whom one wants to marry off, but
+can't expect to marry well. Her poor mother, of course, will look to me
+to do something advantageous for her, and I verily believe she is that
+sort of girl that will let me do nothing," thought Lady Marabout,
+already beginning to worry, as she talked to Lady George Frangipane at a
+breakfast in Palace Gardens, and watched Flora Montolieu, with
+Carruthers on her left and Goodwood on her right, amusing them both, to
+all semblance, and holding her own to the Lady Hautton's despite, who
+held _their_ own so excessively chillily and loftily that no ordinary
+mortals cared to approach them, but, beholding them, thought
+involuntarily of the stately icebergs off the Spitzbergen coast, only
+that the icebergs _could_ melt or explode when their time came, and the
+time was never known when the Hautton surface could be moved to anger or
+melt to any sunshine whatever. At least, whether their maids or their
+mother ever beheld the first of the phenomena, far be it from me to say,
+but the world never saw either.
+
+"Well, Miss Montolieu, how do you like our life here?" Carruthers was
+asking. "Which is preferable--Belgravia or St. Denis?"
+
+"Oh, Belgravia, decidedly," laughed Lady Marabout's charge. "I think
+your life charming. All change, excitement, gayety, who would not like
+it?"
+
+"Nobody--that is not fresh to it?"
+
+"Fresh to it? Ah! are you one of the class who find no beauty in
+anything unless it is new? If so, do not charge the blame on to the
+thing, as your tone implies; take it rather to yourself and your own
+fickleness."
+
+"Perhaps I do," smiled Carruthers. "But whether one's self or 'the
+thing' is to blame, the result's much the same--satiety! Wait till you
+have had two or three seasons, and then tell me if you find this
+mill-wheel routine, these circus gyrations, so delightful! We are the
+performing stud, who go round and round in the hippodrome, day after day
+for show, till we are sick of the whole programme, knowing our white
+stars are but a daub of paint, and our gay spangles only tinfoil. You
+are a little pony just joined to the troupe, and just pleased with the
+glitter of the arena. Wait till you've had a few years of it before you
+say whether going through the same hoops and passing over the same
+sawdust is so very amusing."
+
+"If I do not, I shall desert the troupe, and form a circus of my own
+less mechanical and more enjoyable."
+
+"_Il faut souffrir pour etre belle, il faut souffrir encore plus pour
+etre a la mode!_" said Goodwood, on her right, while Lady Egidia Hautton
+thought, "How bold that little Montolieu is!" and her sister, Lady
+Feodorowna, wondered what her cousin Goodwood _could_ see there.
+
+"I do not see the necessity," interrupted Flora, "and I certainly would
+never bow to the 'il faut.' I would make fashion follow me; I would not
+follow fashion." ("That child talks as though she were the Duchess of
+Amandine;" thought Lady Marabout, catching fragmentary portions across
+the table, the Marabout oral and oracular organs being always
+conveniently multiplied when she was armed cap a pie as a chaperone.)
+"Sir Philip, you talk as if you belonged to the 'nothing-is-new, and
+nothing-is-true, and it-don't-signify' class. I should have thought you
+were above the nil admirari affectation."
+
+"He admires, as we all do, when we find something that compels our
+homage," said Goodwood, with an emphasis that would have made the hearts
+of any of the Hereditary Princesses palpitate with gratification, but at
+which the ungrateful Petit Caporal only glanced at him a little
+surprisedly with her large hazel eyes, as though she by no means saw the
+point of the speech.
+
+Carruthers laughed:
+
+"Nil admirari? Oh no. I enjoy life, but then it is thanks to the clubs,
+my yacht, my cigar-case, my stud, a thousand things,--not thanks at all
+to Belgravia."
+
+"Complimentary to the Belgraviennes!" cried Flora, with a shrug of her
+shoulders. "They have not known how to amuse you, then?"
+
+"Ladies never _do_ amuse us!" sighed Carruthers. "_Tant pis pour nous!_"
+
+"Are you going to Lady Patchouli's this evening?" asked Goodwood.
+
+"I believe we are. I think Lady Marabout said so."
+
+"Then I shall exert myself, and go too. It will be a terrible
+bore--balls always are. But to waltz with _you_ I will try to encounter
+it!"
+
+Flora Montolieu arched her eyebrows, and gave him a little disdainful
+glance.
+
+"Lord Goodwood, do not be so sure that I shall waltz at all with you. If
+_you_ take vanity for wit, _I_ cannot accept discourtesy as compliment!"
+
+"Well hit, little lady!" thought Carruthers, with a mental bravissima.
+
+"What a speech!" thought Lady Marabout, across the table, as shocked as
+though a footman had dropped a cascade of iced hock over her.
+
+"You got it for once, Goodwood," laughed Carruthers, as they drove away
+in his tilbury. "You never had such a sharp brush as that."
+
+"By Jove, no! Positively it was quite a new sensation--refreshing,
+indeed! One grows so tired of the women who agree with one eternally.
+She's charming, on my word. Who _is_ she, Phil? In an heraldic sense, I
+mean."
+
+"My dear child, what could possess you to answer Lord Goodwood like
+that?" cried Lady Marabout, as her barouche rolled down Palace Gardens.
+
+"Possess me? The Demon of Mischief, I suppose."
+
+"But, my love, it was a wonderful compliment from him!"
+
+"Was it? I do not see any compliment in those vain, impertinent,
+Brummelian amour-propreisms. I must coin the word, there is no good one
+to express it."
+
+"But, my dear Flora, you know he is the Marquis of Goodwood, the Duke of
+Doncaster's son! It is not as if he were a boy in the Lancers, or an
+unfledged _petit maitre_ from the Foreign Office----"
+
+"Were he her Majesty's son, he should not gratify his vanity at my
+expense! If he expected me to be flattered by his condescension, he
+mistook me very much. He has been allowed to adopt that tone, I suppose;
+but from a man to a woman a chivalrous courtesy is due, though the man
+be an emperor."
+
+"Perhaps so--of course; but that _is_ their tone nowadays, my love, and
+you cannot alter it. I always say the Regency-men inaugurated it, and
+their sons and grandsons out-Herod Herod. But to turn a tide, or be a
+wit with impunity, a woman wants to occupy a prominent and unassailable
+position. Were you the Duchess of Amandine, you might say that sort of
+thing, but a young girl just out _must not_--indeed she must not! The
+Hauttons heard you, and the Hauttons are very merciless people;
+perfectly bred themselves, and pitiless on the least infringement of the
+convenances. Besides, ten to one you may have gained Goodwood's
+ill-will; and he is a man whose word has immense weight, I assure you."
+
+"I do not see anything remarkable in him to give him weight," said the
+literal and unimpressible little Montolieu. "He is a commonplace person
+to my taste, neither so brilliant nor so handsome by a great deal as
+many gentlemen I see--as Sir Philip, for instance, Lady Marabout?"
+
+"An my son? No, my love, he is not; very few men have Philip's talents
+and person," said Lady Marabout, consciously mollified and propitiated,
+but going on, nevertheless, with a Spartan impartiality highly laudable
+"Goodwood's rank, however, is much higher than Philip's (at least it
+stands so, though really the Carruthers are by far the older, dating as
+far back as Ethelbert II., while the Doncaster family are literally
+unknown till the fourteenth century, when Gervaise d'Ascotte received
+the acolade before Ascalon from Godfrey de Bouillon); Goodwood _has_
+great weight, my dear, in the best circles. A compliment from him is a
+great compliment to any woman, and the sort of answer you gave him----"
+
+"Must have been a great treat to him, dear Lady Marabout, if every one
+is in the habit of kow-towing before him. Princes, you know, are never
+so happy as when they can have a little bit of nature; and my speech
+must have been as refreshing to Lord Goodwood as the breath of his
+Bearnese breezes and the freedom of his Pyrenean forests were to Henri
+Quatre after the court etiquette and the formal ceremonial of Paris."
+
+"I don't know about its being a treat to him, my dear; it was more
+likely to be a shower-bath. And your illustration isn't to the point.
+The Bearnese breezes were Henri Quatre's native air, and might be
+pleasant to him; but the figurative ones are not Goodwood's, and I am
+sure cannot please him."
+
+"But, Lady Marabout, I do not want to please him!" persisted the young
+lady, perversely. "I don't care in the least what he thinks, or what he
+says of me!"
+
+"Dear me, how oddly things go!" thought Lady Marabout. "There was
+Valencia, one of the proudest girls in England, his equal in every way,
+an acknowledged beauty, who would have said the dust on the trottoir was
+diamonds, and worn turquoises on azureline, or emeralds on rose, I
+verily believe, if such opticisms and gaucheries had been Goodwood's
+taste; and here is this child--for whom the utmost one can do will be to
+secure a younger son out of the Civil Service, or a country
+member--cannot be made to see that he is of an atom more importance
+than Soames or Mason, and treats him with downright nonchalant
+indifference. What odd anomalies one sees in everything!"
+
+"Who _is_ that young lady with you this season?" Lady Hautton asked,
+smiling that acidulated smile with which that amiable saint always puts
+long questions to you of which she knows the answer would be _peine
+forte et dure_. "Not the daughter of that horrid John Montolieu, who did
+all sorts of dreadful things, and was put into a West India regiment?
+Indeed! that man? Dear me! Married the sister of your incumbent at
+Fernditton? Ah, really!--very singular! But how do you come to have
+brought out the daughter?"
+
+At all of which remarks Lady Marabout winced, and felt painfully guilty
+of a gross democratic dereliction from legitimate and beaten paths,
+conscious of having sinned heavily in the eyes of the world and Lady
+Hautton, by bringing within the sacred precincts of Belgravia the
+daughter of a _mauvais sujet_ in a West India corps and a sister of a
+perpetual curate. The world was a terrible dragon to Lady Marabout; to
+her imagination it always appeared an incarnated and omniscient bugbear,
+Argus-eyed, and with all its hundred eyes relentlessly fixed on her,
+spying out each item of her shortcomings, every little flaw in the
+Marabout diamonds, any spur-made tear in her Honiton flounces, any
+crease in her train at a Drawing-room, any lese-majeste against the
+royal rule of conventionalities, any glissade on the polished oak floor
+of society, though like a good many other people she often worried
+herself needlessly; the flaws, tears, creases, high treasons, and false
+glissades being fifty to one too infinitesimal or too unimportant to
+society for one of the hundred eyes (vigilant and unwinking though I
+grant they are) to take note of them. The world was a terrible bugbear
+to Lady Marabout, and its special impersonation was Anne Hautton. She
+disliked Anne Hautton; she didn't esteem her; she knew her to be a
+narrow, censorious, prejudiced, and strongly malicious lady; but she was
+the personification of the World to Lady Marabout, and had weight and
+terror in consequence. Lady Marabout is not the first person who has
+burnt incense and bowed in fear before a little miserable clay image she
+cordially despised, for no better reason--for the self-same reason,
+indeed.
+
+"She evidently thinks I ought not to have brought Flora out; and perhaps
+I shouldn't; though, poor little thing, it seems very hard she may not
+enjoy society--fitted for society, too, as she is--just because her
+father is in a West India regiment, and poor Lilla was only a
+clergyman's daughter. Goodwood really seems to admire her. I can never
+forgive him for his heartless flirtation with Valencia; but if he _were_
+to be won by a Montolieu, what would the Hauttons say?"
+
+And sitting against the wall, with others of her sisterhood, at a ball,
+a glorious and golden vision rose up before Lady Marabout's eyes.
+
+If the unknown, unwelcome, revolutionary little Montolieu should go in
+and win where the Lady Hauttons had tried and failed through five
+seasons--if this little tropical flower should be promoted to the
+Doncaster conservatory, where all the stately stephanotises of the
+peerage had vainly aspired to bloom--if this Petit Caporal should be
+crowned with the Doncaster diadem, that all the legitimate rulers had
+uselessly schemed to place on their brows! The soul of Lady Marabout
+rose elastic at the bare prospect--it would be a great triumph for a
+chaperone as for a general to conquer a valuable position with a handful
+of boy recruits.
+
+If it _should_ be! Anne Hautton would have nothing to say after _that_!
+
+And Lady Marabout, though she was the most amiable lady in Christendom,
+was not exempt from a feeling of longing for a stone to roll to the
+door of her enemy's stronghold, or a flourish of trumpets to silence the
+boastful and triumphant _fanfare_ that was perpetually sounding at sight
+of her defeats from her opponent's ramparts.
+
+Wild, visionary, guiltily scheming, sinfully revolutionary seemed such a
+project in her eyes. Still, how tempting! It would be a terrible blow to
+Valencia, who'd tried for Goodwood fruitlessly, to be eclipsed by this
+unknown Flora; it would be a terrible blow to their Graces of Doncaster,
+who held nobody good enough, heraldically speaking, for their
+heir-apparent, to see him give the best coronet in England to a
+bewitching little interloper, sans money, birth, or rank. "They wouldn't
+like it, of course; I shouldn't like it for Philip, for instance, though
+she's a very sweet little thing; all the Ascottes would be very vexed,
+and all the Valletorts would never forgive it; but it would be _such_ a
+triumph over Anne Hautton!" pondered Lady Marabout, and the last clause
+carried the day. Did you ever know private pique fail to carry the day
+over public charity?
+
+And Lady Marabout glanced with a glow of prospective triumph, which,
+though erring to her Order, was delicious to her individuality, at
+Goodwood waltzing with the little Montolieu a suspicious number of
+times, while Lady Egidia Hautton was condemned to his young brother,
+Seton Ascotte, and Lady Feodorowna danced positively with nobody better
+than their own county member, originally a scion of Goodwood's bankers!
+Could the force of humiliation further go? Lady Hautton sat smiling and
+chatting, but the tiara on her temples was a figurative thorn crown, and
+Othello's occupation was gone. When a lady's daughters are dancing with
+an unavailable _cadet_ of twenty, and a parvenu, only acceptable in the
+last extremities of despair, what good is it for her to watch the smiles
+and construe the attentions?
+
+"We shall see who triumphs now," thought Lady Marabout, with a glow of
+pleasure, for which her heart reproached her a moment afterwards. "It is
+very wrong," she thought; "if those poor girls don't marry, one ought to
+pity them; and as for her--going through five seasons, with a fresh
+burden of responsibility leaving the schoolroom, and added on your hands
+each year, _must_ sour the sweetest temper; it would do mine, I am sure.
+I dare say, if I had had daughters, I should have been ten times more
+worried even than I am."
+
+Which she would have been, undoubtedly, and the eligibles on her
+visiting-list ten times more too! Men wouldn't have voted the Marabout
+dinners and soirees so pleasant as they did, under the sway of that
+sunshiny hostess, if there had been Lady Maudes and Lady Marys to exact
+attention, and lay mines under the Auxerre carpets, and man-traps among
+the epergne flowers of Lowndes Square. Nor would Lady Marabout have been
+the same; the sunshine couldn't have shone so brightly, nor the milk of
+roses flowed so mildly under the weight and wear of marriageable but
+unmarried daughters; the sunshine would have been fitful, the milk of
+roses curdled at best. And no wonder! Those poor women! they have so
+much to go through in the world, and play but such a monotonous role,
+taken at its most brilliant and best, from first to last, from cradle to
+grave, from the berceaunettes in which they commence their existence to
+the mausoleum in which they finish it. If they _do_ get a little bit
+soured when they have finished their own game, and have to sit at the
+card-tables, wide awake however weary, vigilant however drowsy, alert
+however bored to death, superintending the hands of the fresh players,
+surreptitiously suggesting means for securing the tricks, keeping a
+dragon's eye out for revokes, and bearing all the brunt of the blame if
+the rubber be lost--if they do get a little bit soured, who can, after
+all, greatly wonder?
+
+"That's a very brilliant little thing, that girl Montolieu," said
+Goodwood, driving over to Hornsey Wood, the morning after, with
+Carruthers and some other men, in his drag.
+
+"A deuced pretty waltzer!" said St. Lys, of the Bays; "turn her round in
+a square foot."
+
+"And looks very well in the saddle; sits her horse better than any woman
+in the Ride, except Rosalie Rosiere, and as she came from the Cirque
+Olympique originally, one don't count _her_," said Fulke Nugent. "I _do_
+like a woman to ride well, I must say. I promised your mother to take a
+look at the Marabout Yearling Sale, Phil, if ever I wanted the
+never-desirable and ever-burdensome article she has to offer, and if
+anything could tempt me to pay the price she asks, I think it would be
+that charming Montolieu."
+
+"She's the best thing Lady Tattersall ever had on hand," said Goodwood,
+drawing his whip over his off-wheeler's back. "You know, Phil--gently,
+gently, Coronet!--what spoilt your handsome cousin was, as I said, that
+it was all mechanism; perfect mechanism, I admit, but all artificial,
+prearranged, put together, wound up to smile in this place, bow in that,
+and frown in the other; clockwork every inch of it! Now--so-ho, Zouave!
+confound you, _won't_ you be quiet?--little Montolieu hasn't a bit of
+artifice about her; 'tisn't only that you don't know what she's going to
+say, but that _she_ doesn't either; and whether it's a smile or a frown,
+a jest or a reproof, it's what the moment brings out, not what's planned
+beforehand."
+
+"The hard hit you had the other day seems to have piqued your interest,"
+said Carruthers, smoothing a loose leaf of his Manilla.
+
+"Naturally. The girl didn't care a button about my compliment (I only
+said it to try her), and the plucky answer she gave me amused me
+immensely. Anything unartificial and frank is as refreshing as
+hock-and-seltzer after a field-day--one likes it, don't you know?"
+
+"Wonderfully eloquent you are, Goody. If you come out like that in St.
+Stephen's, we sha'n't know you, and the ministerialists will look down
+in the mouth with a vengeance!"
+
+"Don't be satirical, Phil! If I admire Mademoiselle Flora, what is it to
+you, pray?"
+
+"Nothing at all," said Carruthers, with unnecessary rapidity of
+enunciation.
+
+"My love, what are you going to wear to-night? The Bishop of Bonviveur
+is coming. He was a college friend of your poor uncle's; knew your dear
+mother before she married. I want you to look your very best and charm
+him, as you certainly do most people," said Lady Marabout. Adroit
+intriguer! The bishop was going, sans doute; the bishop loved good wine,
+good dinners, and good society, and found all three in Lowndes Square,
+but the bishop was entirely unavailable for purposes matrimonial, having
+had three wives, and being held tight in hand by a fourth; however, a
+bishop is a convenient piece to cover your king, in chess, and the
+bishop served admirably just then in Lady Marabout's moves as a _locum
+tenens_ for Goodwood. Flora Montolieu, in her innocence, made herself
+look her prettiest for her mother's old friend, and Flora Montolieu was
+conveniently ready, looking her prettiest, for her chaperone's
+pet-eligible, when Goodwood--who hated to dine anywhere in London except
+at the clubs, the Castle, or the Guards' mess, and was as difficult to
+get for your dinners as birds'-nests soup or Tokay pur--entered the
+Marabout drawing-rooms.
+
+"Anne Hautton will see he dined here to-night, in the _Morning Post_
+to-morrow morning, and she will know Flora must attract him very
+unusually. What _will_ she, and Egidia, and Feodorowna say?" thought
+Lady Marabout, with a glow of pleasure, which she was conscious was
+uncharitable and sinful, and yet couldn't repress, let her try how she
+might.
+
+In scheming for the future Duke of Doncaster for John Montolieu's
+daughter, she felt much as democratically and treasonably guilty to her
+order as a prince of the blood might feel heading a Chartist emeute; but
+then, suppose the Chartist row was that Prince's sole chance of crushing
+an odious foe, as it was the only chance for her to humiliate the
+Hautton, don't you think it might look tempting? Judge nobody, my good
+sir, till you've been in similar circumstances yourself--a golden rule,
+which might with advantage employ those illuminating colors with which
+ladies employ so much of their time just now. Remembering it, they might
+hold their white hands from flinging those sharp flinty stones, that
+surely suit them so ill, and that soil their fingers in one way quite as
+much as they soil the victim's bowed head in another? Illuminate the
+motto, mesdames and demoiselles! Perhaps you _will_ do that--on a smalt
+ground, with a gold Persian arabesque round, and impossible flowers
+twined in and out of the letters; but, _remember_ it!--pardon! It were
+asking too much.
+
+"My dear Philip, did you notice how very marked Goodwood's attentions
+were to Flora last night?" asked Lady Marabout, the morning after, in
+one of her most sunshiny and radiant moods, as Carruthers paid her his
+general matutinal call in her boudoir.
+
+"Marked?"
+
+"Yes, marked! Why do you repeat it in that tone? If they _were_ marked,
+there is nothing to be ridiculed that I see. They were very marked,
+indeed, especially for him; he's such an unimpressible,
+never-show-anything man. I wonder you did not notice it!"
+
+"My dear mother!" said Carruthers, a little impatiently, brushing up the
+Angora cat's ruff the wrong way with his cane, "do you suppose I pass my
+evenings noticing the attentions other men may see fit to pay to young
+ladies?"
+
+"Well--don't be impatient. You never used to be," said Lady Marabout.
+"If you were in my place just for a night or two, or any other
+chaperone's, you'd be more full of pity. But people never _will_
+sympathize with anything that doesn't touch themselves. The only chords
+that strike the key-note in anybody is the chord that sounds 'self;' and
+that is the reason why the world is as full of crash and tumult as
+Beethoven's 'Storm.'"
+
+"Quite right, my dear mother!"
+
+"Of course it's quite right. I always think you have a great deal of
+sympathy for a man, Philip, even for people you don't harmonize
+with--(you could sympathize with that child Flora, yesterday, in her
+rapturous delight at seeing that Coccoloba Uvifera in the Patchouli
+conservatory, because it reminded her of her West Indian home, and you
+care nothing whatever about flowers, nor yet about the West Indies, I
+should suppose)--but you never will sympathize with me. You know how
+many disappointments and grievances and vexations of every kind I have
+had the last ten, twenty, ay, thirty, forty seasons--ever since I had to
+chaperone your aunt Eleanore, almost as soon as I was married, and was
+worried, more than anybody ever _was_ worried, by her coquetteries and
+her inconsistencies and her vacillations--so badly as she married, too,
+at the last! Those flirting beauties so often do; they throw away a
+hundred admirable chances and put up with a wretched _dernier
+resort_;--let a thousand salmon break away from the line out of their
+carelessness, and end by being glad to land a little minnow. I don't
+know when I _haven't_ been worried by chaperoning. Flora Montolieu is a
+great anxiety, a great difficulty, little detrimental that she is!"
+
+"Detrimental! What an odd word you choose for her."
+
+"I don't choose it for her; she _is_ it," returned Lady Marabout,
+decidedly.
+
+"How so?"
+
+"How so! Why, my dear Philip, I told you the very first day she came.
+How so! when she is John Montolieu's daughter, when she has no birth to
+speak of, and not a farthing to her fortune."
+
+"If she were Jack Ketch's daughter, you could not speak much worse. Her
+high-breeding might do credit to a Palace; I only wish one found it in
+all Palaces! and I never knew you before measure people by their money."
+
+"My dear Philip, no more I do. I can't bear you when you speak in that
+tone; it's so hard and sarcastic, and unlike you. _I_ don't know what
+you mean either. I should have thought a man of the world like yourself
+knew well enough what I intend when I say Flora is a detrimental. She
+has a sweet temper, very clever, very lively, very charming, as any one
+knows by the number of men that crowd about her, but a detrimental she
+is----"
+
+"Poor little heart!" muttered Carruthers in his beard, too low for his
+mother to hear.
+
+"--And yet I am quite positive that if she herself act judiciously, and
+it is well managed for her, Goodwood may be won before the season is
+over," concluded Lady Marabout.
+
+Carruthers, not feeling much interest, it is presumed, in the
+exclusively feminine pursuit of match-making, returned no answer, but
+played with Bijou's silver bells, and twisted his own tawny moustaches.
+
+"I am quite positive it _may be_, if properly managed," reiterated Lady
+Marabout. "You might second me a little, Philip."
+
+"_I?_ Good Heavens! my dear mother, what are you thinking of? I would
+sooner turn torreador, and throw lassos over bulls at Madrid, than help
+you to fling nuptial cables over poor devils in Belgravia. Twenty to
+one? I'm going to the Yard to look at a bay filly of Cope Fielden's,
+and then on to a mess-luncheon of the Bays."
+
+"Must you go?" said his mother, looking lovingly on him. "You look
+tired, Philip. Don't you feel well?"
+
+"Perfectly; but Cambridge had us out over those confounded Wormwood
+Scrubs this morning, and three hours in this June sun, in our harness,
+makes one swear. If it were a sharp brush, it would put life into one;
+as it is, it only inspires one with an intense suffering from boredom,
+and an intense desire for hock and seltzer."
+
+"I am very glad you haven't a sharp brush, as you call it, for all
+that," said Lady Marabout. "It might be very pleasant to you, Philip,
+but it wouldn't be quite so much so to me. I wish you would stay to
+luncheon."
+
+"Not to-day, thanks; I have so many engagements."
+
+"You have been very good in coming to see me this season--even better
+than usual. It _is_ very good of you, with all your amusements and
+distractions. You have given me a great many days this month," said Lady
+Marabout, gratefully. "Anne Hautton sees nothing of Hautton, she says,
+except at a distance in Pall-Mall or the Park, all the season through.
+Fancy if I saw no more of you! Do you know, Philip, I am almost
+reconciled to your never marrying. I have never seen anybody I should
+like at all for you, unless you had chosen Cecil Ormsby--Cecil Cheveley
+I mean; and I am sure I should be very jealous of your wife if you had
+one. I couldn't help it!"
+
+"Rest tranquil, my dear mother; you will never be put to the test!" said
+Carruthers, with a laugh, as he bid her good morning.
+
+"Perhaps it _is_ best he shouldn't marry: I begin to think so," mused
+Lady Marabout, as the door closed on him. "I used to wish it very much
+for some things. He is the last of his name, and it seems a pity; there
+ought to be an heir for Deepdene; but still marriage _is_ such a
+lottery (he is right enough there, though I don't admit it to him: it's
+a tombola where there is one prize to a million of blanks; one can't
+help seeing that, though, on principle, I never allow it to him or any
+of his men), and if Philip had any woman who didn't appreciate him, or
+didn't understand him, or didn't make him happy, how wretched _I_ should
+be! I have often pictured Philip's wife to myself, I have often
+idealized the sort of woman I should like to see him marry, but it's
+very improbable I shall ever meet my ideal realized; one never does!
+And, after all, whenever I have fancied, years ago, he _might_ be
+falling in love, I have always felt a horrible dread lest she shouldn't
+be worthy of him--a jealous fear of her that I could not conquer. It's
+much better as it is; there is no woman good enough for him."
+
+With which compliment to Carruthers at her sex's expense Lady Marabout
+returned to weaving her pet projected toils for the ensnaring of
+Goodwood, for whom also, if asked, I dare say the Duchess of Doncaster
+would have averred on _her_ part, looking through _her_ maternal Claude
+glasses, no woman was good enough either. When ladies have daughters to
+marry, men always present to their imaginations a battalion of
+worthless, decalogue-smashing, utterly unreliable individuals, amongst
+whom there is not one fit to be trusted or fit to be chosen; but when
+their sons are the candidates for the holy bond, they view all women
+through the same foggy and non-embellishing medium, which, if it does
+not speak very much for their unprejudiced discernment, at least speaks
+to the oft-disputed fact of the equality of merit in the sexes, and
+would make it appear that, in vulgar parlance, there must be six of the
+one and half a dozen of the other.
+
+"Flora, soft and careless, and rebellious as she looks, _is_ ambitious,
+and has set her heart on winning Goodwood, I do believe, as much as ever
+poor Valencia did. True, she takes a different plan of action, as Philip
+would call it, and treats him with gay nonchalante indifference, which
+certainly seems to pique him more than ever my poor niece's beauty and
+quiet deference to his opinions did; but that is because she reads him
+better, and knows more cleverly how to rouse him. She has set her heart
+on winning Goodwood, I am certain, ambitious as it seems. How eagerly
+she looked out for the Blues yesterday at that Hyde Park
+inspection--though I am sure Goodwood does not look half so handsome as
+Philip does in harness, as they call it; Philip is so much the finer
+man! I will just sound her to-day--or to-night as we come back from the
+opera," thought Lady Marabout, one morning.
+
+Things were moving to the very best of her expectations. Learning
+experience from manifold failures, Lady Marabout had laid her plans this
+time with a dexterity that defied discomfiture: seconded by both the
+parties primarily necessary to the accomplishment of her manoeuvres,
+with only a little outer-world opposition to give it piquancy and
+excitement, she felt that she might defy the fates to checkmate her
+here. This should be her Marathon and Lemnos, which, simply reverted to,
+should be sufficient to secure her immunity from the attacks of any
+feminine Xantippus who should try to rake up her failures and tarnish
+her glory. To win Goodwood with a nobody's daughter would be a feat as
+wonderful in its way as for Miltiades to have passed "in a single day
+and with a north wind," as Oracle exacted, to the conquest of the
+Pelasgian Isles; and Lady Marabout longed to do it, as you, my good sir,
+may have longed in your day to take a king in check with your only
+available pawn, or win one of the ribands of the turf with a little
+filly that seemed to general judges scarcely calculated to be in the
+first flight at the Chester Consolation Scramble.
+
+Things were beautifully in train; it even began to dawn on the
+perceptions of the Hauttons, usually very slow to open to anything
+revolutionary and unwelcome. Her Grace of Doncaster, a large,
+lethargic, somnolent dowager, rarely awake to anything but the interests
+and restoration of the old ultra-Tory party in a Utopia always dreamed
+of and never realized, like many other Utopias political and poetical,
+public and personal, had turned her eyes on Flora Montolieu, and asked
+her son the question inevitable, "_Who_ is she?" to which Goodwood had
+replied with a devil-may-care recklessness and a headlong indefiniteness
+which grated on her Grace's ears, and imparted her no information
+whatever: "One of Lady Tattersall's yearlings, and the most charming
+creature _I_ ever met. You know that? Why did you ask me, then? You know
+all I do, and all I care to do!"--a remark that made the Duchess wish
+her very dear and personal friend, Lady Marabout, were comfortably and
+snugly interred in the mausoleum of Fern Ditton, rather than alive in
+the flesh in Belgravia, chaperoning young ladies whom nobody knew, and
+who were not to be found in any of Sir E. Burke's triad of volumes.
+
+Belgravia, and her sister Mayfair, wondered at it, and talked over it,
+raked up the parental Montolieu lineage mercilessly, and found out, from
+the Bishop of Bonviveur and Sauceblanche, that the uncle on the distaff
+side had been only a Tug at Eton, and had lived and died at Fern Ditton
+a perpetual curate and nothing else--not even a dean, not even a rector!
+Goodwood _couldn't_ be serious, settled the coteries. But the more
+hints, innuendoes, questions, and adroitly concealed but simply
+suggested animadversion Lady Marabout received, the greater was her
+glory, the warmer her complacency, when she saw her Little Montolieu,
+who was not little at all, leading, as she undoubtedly did lead, the
+most desired eligible of the day captive in her chains, sent bouquets by
+him, begged for waltzes by him, followed by him at the Ride, riveting
+his lorgnon at the Opera, monopolizing his attention--though, clever
+little intriguer, she knew too well how to pique him ever to let him
+monopolize hers.
+
+"She certainly makes play, as Philip would call it, admirably with
+Goodwood," said Lady Marabout, admiringly, at a morning party, stirring
+a cup of Orange Pekoe, yet with a certain irrepressible feeling that she
+should almost prefer so very young a girl not to be quite so adroit a
+schemer at seventeen. "That indifference and nonchalance is the very
+thing to pique and retain such a courted fastidious creature as
+Goodwood; and she knows it, too. Now a clumsy casual observer might even
+fancy that she liked some others--even you, Philip, for instance--much
+better; she talks to you much more, appeals to you twice as often,
+positively teases you to stop and lunch or come to dinner here, and
+really told you the other night at the Opera she missed you when you
+didn't come in the morning; but to anybody who knows anything of the
+world, it is easy enough to see which way her inclinations (yes, I _do_
+hope it is inclination as well as ambition--I am not one of those who
+advocate pure _mariages de convenance_; I don't think them right,
+indeed, though they are undoubtedly very expedient sometimes) turn. I do
+not think _anybody_ ever could prove me to have erred in my
+quick-sightedness in those affairs. I may have been occasionally
+mistaken in other things, or been the victim of adverse and unforeseen
+circumstances which were beyond my control, and betrayed me; but I know
+no one can read a girl's heart more quickly and surely than I, or a
+man's either, for that matter."
+
+"Oh, we all know you are a clairvoyante in heart episodes, my dear
+mother; they are the one business of your life!" smiled Carruthers,
+setting down his ice, and lounging across the lawn to a group of cedars,
+where Flora Montolieu stood playing at croquet, and who, like a scheming
+adventuress, as she was, immediately verified Lady Marabout's words, and
+piqued Goodwood a outrance by avowing herself tired of the game, and
+entering with animated verve into the prophecies for Ascot with
+Carruthers, whose bay filly Sunbeam, sister to Wild-Falcon, was entered
+to run for the Queen's Cup.
+
+"What an odd smile that was of Philip's," thought Lady Marabout, left to
+herself and her Orange Pekoe. "He has been very intimate with Goodwood
+ever since they joined the Blues, cornets together, three-and-twenty
+years ago; surely he can't have heard him drop anything that would make
+him fancy he was _not serious_?"
+
+An idle fear, which Lady Marabout dismissed contemptuously from her mind
+when she saw how entirely Goodwood--in defiance of the Hauttons' sneer,
+the drowsy Duchess's unconcealed frown, all the comments sure to be
+excited in feminine minds, and all the chaff likely to be elicited from
+masculine lips at the mess-table, and in the U. S., and in the Guards'
+box before the curtain went up for the ballet--vowed himself to the
+service of the little detrimental throughout that morning party, and
+spoke a temporary adieu, whose tenderness, if she did not exactly catch,
+Lady Marabout could at least construe, as he pulled up the tiger-skin
+over Flora's dainty dress, before the Marabout carriage rolled down the
+Fulham Road to town. At which tenderness of farewell Carruthers--steeled
+to all such weaknesses himself--gave a disdainful glance and a
+contemptuous twist of his moustaches, as he stood by the door talking to
+his mother.
+
+"You too, Phil?" said Goodwood, with a laugh, as the carriage rolled
+away.
+
+Carruthers stared at him haughtily, as he will stare at his best friends
+if they touch his private concerns more nearly than he likes; a stare
+which said disdainfully, "I don't understand you," and thereby told the
+only lie to which Carruthers ever stooped in the whole course of his
+existence.
+
+Goodwood laughed again.
+
+"If you poach on my manor _here_, I shall kill you Phil; so _gare a
+vous_!"
+
+"You are in an enigmatical mood to-day! I can't say I see much wit in
+your riddles," said Carruthers, with his grandest and most contemptuous
+air, as he lit his Havana.
+
+"Confound that fellow! I'd rather have had any other man in London for a
+rival! Twenty and more years ago how he cut me out with that handsome
+Virginie Peauderose, that we were both such mad boys after in Paris.
+However, it will be odd if _I_ can't win the day here. A Goodwood
+rejected--pooh! There isn't a woman in England that would do it!"
+thought Goodwood, as he drove down the Fulham Road.
+
+"'_His_ manor!' Who's told him it's his? And if it be, what is that to
+me?" thought Carruthers, as he got into his tilbury. "Philip, _you_'re
+not a fool, like the rest of them, I hope? You've not forsworn yourself
+surely? Pshaw!--nonsense!--impossible!"
+
+"Certainly she _has_ something very charming about her. If I were a man
+I don't think I could resist her," thought Lady Marabout, as she sat in
+her box in the grand tier, tenth from the Queen's, moving her fan
+slowly, lifting her lorgnon now and then, listening vaguely to the music
+of the second act of the "Barbiere," for probably about the two
+hundredth time in her life, and looking at Flora Moutolieu, sitting
+opposite to her.
+
+"The women are eternally asking me who she is, I don't care a hang
+_who_, but she's the prettiest thing in London," said Fulke Nugent,
+which was the warmest praise that any living man about town remembered
+to have heard fall from his lips, which limited themselves religiously
+to one legitimate laudation, which is a superlative nowadays, though Mr.
+Lindley Murray, if alive, wouldn't, perhaps, receive or recognize it as
+such: "Not bad-looking."
+
+"It isn't _who_ a woman is, it's _what_ she is, that's the question, I
+take it," said Goodwood, as he left the Guards' box to visit the
+Marabout.
+
+"By George!" laughed Nugent to Carruthers, "Goodey must be serious, eh,
+Phil? He don't care a button for little Bibi; he don't care even for
+Zerlina. When the ballet begins, I verily believe he's thinking less of
+the women before him than of the woman who has left the house; and if a
+fellow can give more ominous signs of being 'serious,' as the women
+phrase it, I don't know 'em, do you?"
+
+"I don't know much about that sort of thing at all!" muttered
+Carruthers, as he went out to follow Goodwood to the Marabout box.
+
+That is an old, old story, that of the fair Emily stirring feud between
+Palamon and Arcite. It has been acted out many a time since Beaumont and
+Fletcher lived and wrote their twin-thoughts and won their twin laurels;
+but the bars that shut the kinsmen in their prison-walls, the ivy-leaves
+that filled in the rents of their prison-stones, were not more entirely
+and blissfully innocent of the feud going on within, and the battle
+foaming near them, than the calm, complacent soul of Lady Marabout was
+of the rivalry going on close beside her for the sake of little
+Montolieu.
+
+She certainly thought Philip made himself specially brilliant and
+agreeable that night; but then that was nothing new, he was famous for
+talking well, and liked his mother enough not seldom to shower out for
+her some of his very best things; certainly she thought Goodwood did not
+shine by the contrast, and looked, to use an undignified word, rather
+cross than otherwise; but then nobody _did_ shine beside Philip, and she
+knew a reason that made Goodwood pardonably cross at the undesired
+presence of his oldest and dearest chum. Even _she_ almost wished Philip
+away. If the presence of her idolized son could have been unwelcome to
+her at any time, it was so that night.
+
+"It isn't like Philip to monopolize her so, he who has so much tact
+usually, and cares nothing for girls himself," thought Lady Marabout;
+"he must do it for mischief, and yet _that_ isn't like him at all; it's
+very tiresome, at any rate."
+
+And with that skilful diplomacy in such matters, on which, if it was
+sometimes overthrown, Lady Marabout not unjustly plumed herself, she
+dexterously entangled Carruthers in conversation, and during the crash
+of one of the choruses whispered, as he bent forward to pick up her fan,
+which she had let drop,
+
+"Leave Flora a little to Goodwood; he has a right--he spoke decisively
+to her to-day."
+
+Carruthers bowed his head, and stooped lower for the fan.
+
+He left her accordingly to Goodwood till the curtain fell after the last
+act of the "Barbiere;" and Lady Marabout congratulated herself on her
+own adroitness. "There is nothing like a little tact," she thought;
+"what would society be without the guiding genius of tact, I wonder? One
+dreadful Donnybrook Fair!"
+
+But, someway or other, despite all her tact, or because her son
+inherited that valuable quality in a triple measure to herself, someway,
+it was Goodwood who led her to her carriage, and Carruthers who led the
+little Montolieu.
+
+"Terribly _bete_ of Philip; how very unlike him!" mused Lady Marabout,
+as she gathered her burnous round her.
+
+Carruthers talked and laughed as he led Flora Montolieu through the
+passages, more gayly, perhaps, than usual.
+
+"My mother has told me some news to-night, Miss Montolieu," he said,
+carelessly. "Am I premature in proffering you my congratulations? But
+even if I be so, you will not refuse the privilege to an old friend--to
+a very sincere friend--and will allow me to be the first to wish you
+happiness?"
+
+Lady Marabout's carriage stopped the way. Flora Montolieu colored,
+looked full at him, and went to it, without having time to answer his
+congratulations, in which the keenest-sighted hearer would have failed
+to detect anything beyond every-day friendship and genuine indifference.
+The most truthful men will make the most consummate actors when spurred
+up to it.
+
+"My dear child, you look ill to-night; I am glad you have no
+engagements," said Lady Marabout, as she sat down before the
+dressing-room fire, toasting her little satin-shod foot--she has a
+weakness for fire even in the hottest weather--while Flora Montolieu lay
+back in a low chair, crushing the roses mercilessly. "You _do_ feel
+well? I should not have thought so, your face looks so flushed, and your
+eyes so preternaturally dark. Perhaps it is the late hours; you were not
+used to them in France, of course, and it must be such a change to this
+life from your unvarying conventual routine at St. Denis. My love, what
+was it Lord Goodwood said to you to-day?"
+
+"Do not speak to me of him, Lady Marabout, I hate his name!"
+
+Lady Marabout started with an astonishment that nearly upset the cup of
+coffee she was sipping.
+
+"Hate his name? My dearest Flora, why, in Heaven's name?"
+
+Flora did not answer; she pulled the roses off her hair as though they
+had been infected with Brinvilliers' poison.
+
+"What has he done?"
+
+"_He_ has done nothing!"
+
+"Who has done anything, then?"
+
+"Oh, no one--no one has done anything, but--I am sick of Lord Goodwood's
+name--tired of it!"
+
+Lady Marabout sat almost speechless with surprise.
+
+"Tired of it, my dear Flora?"
+
+Little Montolieu laughed:
+
+"Well, tired of it, perhaps from hearing him praised so often, as the
+Athenian trader grew sick of Aristides, and the Jacobin of Washington's
+name. Is it unpardonably heterodox to say so?"
+
+Lady Marabout stirred her coffee in perplexity:
+
+"My dear child, pray don't speak in that way; that's like Philip's tone
+when he is enigmatical and sarcastic, and worries me. I really cannot in
+the least understand you about Lord Goodwood, it is quite
+incomprehensible to me. I thought I overheard him to-day at Lady
+George's concert speak very definitely to you indeed, and when he was
+interrupted by the Duchess before you could give him his reply, I
+thought I heard him say he should call to-morrow morning to know your
+ultimate decision. Was I right?"
+
+"Quite right."
+
+"He really proposed marriage to you to-day?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And yet you say you are sick of his name?"
+
+"Does it follow, imperatively, Lady Marabout, that because the Sultan
+throws his handkerchief, it must be picked up with humility and
+thanksgiving?" asked Flora Montolieu, furling and unfurling her fan with
+an impatient rapidity that threatened entire destruction of its ivory
+and feathers, with their Watteau-like group elaborately painted on
+them--as pretty a toy of the kind as could be got for money, which had
+been given her by Carruthers one day in payment of some little bagatelle
+of a bet.
+
+"Sultan!--Humility!" repeated Lady Marabout, scarcely crediting her
+senses. "My dear Flora, do you know what you are saying? You must be
+jesting! There is not a woman in England who would be insensible to the
+honor of Goodwood's proposals. You are jesting, Flora!"
+
+"I am not, indeed!"
+
+"You mean to say, you could positively think of _rejecting_ him!" cried
+Lady Marabout, rising from her chair in the intensity of her amazement,
+convinced that she was the victim of some horrible hallucination.
+
+"Why should it surprise you if I did?"
+
+"_Why?_" repeated Lady Marabout, indignantly. "Do you ask me _why_? You
+must be a child, indeed, or a consummate actress, to put such a
+question; excuse me, my dear, if I speak a little strongly: you
+perfectly bewilder me, and I confess I cannot see your motives or your
+meaning in the least. You have made a conquest such as the proudest
+women in the peerage have vainly tried to make; you have one of the
+highest titles in the country offered to you; you have won a man whom
+everybody declared would never be won; you have done this, pardon me,
+without either birth or fortune on your own side, and then you speak of
+rejecting Goodwood--Goodwood, of all the men in England! You cannot be
+serious, Flora, or, if you are, you must be mad!"
+
+Lady Marabout spoke more hotly than Lady Marabout had ever spoken in all
+her life. Goodwood absolutely won--Goodwood absolutely "come to the
+point"--the crowning humiliation of the Hauttons positively within her
+grasp--her Marathon and Lemnos actually gained! and all to be lost and
+flung away by the unaccountable caprice of a wayward child! It was
+sufficient to exasperate a saint, and a saint Lady Marabout never
+pretended to be.
+
+Flora Montolieu toyed recklessly with her fan.
+
+"You told Sir Philip this evening, I think, of----"
+
+"I hinted it to him, my dear--yes. Philip has known all along how much I
+desired it, and as Goodwood is one of his oldest and most favorite
+friends, I knew it would give him sincere pleasure both for my sake and
+Goodwood's, and yours too, for I think Philip likes you as much as he
+ever does any young girl--better, indeed; and I could not imagine--I
+could not dream for an instant--that there was any doubt of your
+acceptation, as, indeed, there _cannot_ be. You have been jesting to
+worry me, Flora!"
+
+Little Montolieu rose, threw her fan aside, as if its ivory stems had
+been hot iron, and leaned against the mantelpiece.
+
+"You advise me to accept Lord Goodwood, then, Lady Marabout?"
+
+"My love, if you need my advice, certainly!--such an alliance will never
+be proffered to you again; the brilliant position it will place you in I
+surely have no need to point out!" returned Lady Marabout. "The little
+hypocrite!" she mused, angrily, "as if her own mind were not fully made
+up--as if any girl in Europe would hesitate over accepting the Doncaster
+coronet--as if a nameless Montolieu could doubt for a moment her own
+delight at being created Marchioness of Goodwood! Such a triumph as
+_that_--why I wouldn't credit _any_ woman who pretended she wasn't
+dazzled by it!"
+
+"I thought you did not approve of marriages of convenience?"
+
+Lady Marabout played a tattoo--slightly perplexed tattoo--with her spoon
+in her Sevres saucer.
+
+"No more I do, my dear--that is, under some circumstances; it is
+impossible to lay down a fixed rule for everything! Marriages of
+convenience--well, perhaps not; but as _I_ understand these words, they
+mean a mere business affair, arranged as they are in France, without the
+slightest regard to the inclinations of either; merely regarding whether
+the incidents of fortune, birth, and station are equal and suitable.
+Marriages _de convenance_ are when a parvenu barters his gold for good
+blood, or where an _ancienne princesse_ mends her fortune with a
+_nouveau riche_, profound indifference, meanwhile, on each side. I do
+not call this so; decidedly not! Goodwood must be very deeply attached
+to you to have forgotten his detestation of marriage, and laid such a
+title as his at your feet. Have you any idea of the weight of the Dukes
+of Doncaster in the country? Have you any notion of what their
+rent-roll is? Have you any conception of their enormous influence, their
+very high place, the magnificence of their seats? Helmsley almost equals
+Windsor! All these are yours if you will; and you affect to
+hesitate----"
+
+"To let Lord Goodwood buy me!"
+
+"Buy you? Your phraseology is as strange as my son's!"
+
+"To accept him only for the coronet and the rent-roll, his position and
+his Helmsley, seems not a very grateful and flattering return for his
+preference?"
+
+"I do not see that at all," said Lady Marabout, irritably. Is there
+anything more annoying than to have unwelcome truths thrust in our
+teeth? "It is not as though he were odious to you--a hideous man, a
+coarse man, a cruel man, whose very presence repelled you. Goodwood is a
+man quite attractive enough to merit some regard, independent of his
+position; you have an affectionate nature, you would soon grow attached
+to him----"
+
+Flora Montolieu shook her head.
+
+"And, in fact," she went on, warming with her subject, and speaking all
+the more determinedly because she was speaking a little against her
+conscience, and wholly for her inclinations, "my dear Flora, if you need
+persuasion--which you must pardon me if I doubt your doing in your
+heart, for I cannot credit any woman as being insensible to the suit of
+a future Duke of Doncaster, or invulnerable to the honor it does her--if
+you need persuasion, I should think I need only refer to the happiness
+it will afford your poor dear mother, amidst her many trials, to hear of
+so brilliant a triumph for you. You are proud--Goodwood will place you
+in a position where pride may be indulged with impunity, nay, with
+advantage. You are ambitious--what can flatter your ambition more than
+such an offer. You are clever--as Goodwood's wife you may lead society
+like Madame de Rambouillet or immerse yourself in political intrigue
+like the Duchess of Devonshire. It is an offer which places within your
+reach everything most dazzling and attractive, and it is one, my dear
+Flora, which you must forgive me if I say a young girl of obscure rank,
+as rank goes, and no fortune whatever, should pause before she lightly
+rejects. You cannot afford to be fastidious as if you were an heiress or
+a lady-in-your-own-right."
+
+That was as ill-natured a thing as the best-natured lady in Christendom
+ever said on the spur of self-interest, and it stung Flora Montolieu
+more than her hostess dreamed.
+
+The color flushed into her face and her eyes flashed.
+
+"You have said sufficient, Lady Marabout, I accept the Marquis
+to-morrow!"
+
+And taking up her fan and her opera-cloak, leaving the discarded roses
+unheeded on the floor, she bade her chaperone good-night, and floated
+out of the dressing-room, while Lady Marabout sat stirring the cream in
+a second cup of coffee, a good deal puzzled, a little awed by the odd
+turn affairs had taken, with a slight feeling of guilt for her own share
+in the transaction, an uncomfortable dread lest the day should ever come
+when Flora should reproach her for having persuaded her into the
+marriage, a comfortable conviction that nothing but good _could_ come of
+such a brilliant and enviable alliance, and, above all other conflicting
+feelings, one delicious, dominant, glorified security of triumph over
+the Hauttons, _mere et filles_.
+
+But when morning dawned, Lady Marabout's horizon seemed cleared of all
+clouds, and only radiant with unshadowed sunshine. Goodwood was coming,
+and coming to be accepted.
+
+She seemed already to read the newspaper paragraphs announcing his
+capture and Flora's conquest, already to hear the Hauttons' enforced
+congratulations, already to see the nuptial party gathered round the
+altar rail of St. George's. Lady Marabout had never felt in a sunnier,
+more light-hearted mood, never more completely at peace with herself and
+all the world as she sat in her boudoir at her writing-table, penning a
+letter which began:
+
+ "MY DEAREST LILLA,--What happiness it gives me to congratulate
+ you on the brilliant future opening to your sweet Flora----"
+
+And which would have continued, no doubt, with similar eloquence if it
+had not been interrupted by Soames opening the door and announcing "Sir
+Philip Carruthers," who walked in, touched his mother's brow with his
+moustaches, and went to stand on the hearth with his arm on the
+mantelpiece.
+
+"My dear Philip, you never congratulated me last night; pray do so now!"
+cried Lady Marabout, delightedly, wiping her pen on the pennon, which a
+small ormolu knight obligingly carried for that useful purpose. Ladies
+always wipe their pens as religiously as they bolt their bedroom doors,
+believe in cosmetics, and go to church on a Sunday.
+
+"Was your news of last night true, then?" asked Carruthers, bending
+forwards to roll Bijou on its back with his foot.
+
+"That Goodwood had spoken definitively to her? Perfectly. He proposed to
+her yesterday at the Frangipane concert--not _at_ the concert, of
+course, but afterwards, when they were alone for a moment in the
+conservatories. The Duchess interrupted them--did it on purpose--and he
+had only time to whisper hurriedly he should come this morning to hear
+his fate. I dare say he felt tolerably secure of it. Last night I
+naturally spoke to Flora about it. Oddly enough, she seemed positively
+to think at first of rejecting him--_rejecting_ him!--only fancy the
+madness! Between ourselves, I don't think she cares anything about him,
+but with such an alliance as that, of course I felt it my bounden duty
+to counsel her as strongly as I could to accept the unequalled position
+it proffered her. Indeed, it could have been only a girl's waywardness,
+a child's caprice to pretend to hesitate, for she _is_ very ambitious
+and very clever, and I would never believe that any woman--and she less
+than any--would be proof against such dazzling prospects. It would be
+absurd, you know, Philip. Whether it was hypocrisy or a real reluctance,
+because she doesn't feel for him the idealic love she dreams of, I don't
+know, but I put it before her in a way that plainly showed her all the
+brilliance of the proffered position, and before she bade me good night,
+I had vanquished all her scruples, if she had any, and I am able to
+say----"
+
+"Good God, what have you done?"
+
+"Done?" re-echoed Lady Marabout, vaguely terrified. "Certainly I
+persuaded her to accept him. She _has_ accepted him probably; he is here
+now! I should have been a strange person indeed to let any young girl in
+my charge rashly refuse such an offer."
+
+"You induced her to accept him! God forgive you!"
+
+Lady Marabout turned pale as death, and gazed at him with undefinable
+terror.
+
+"Philip! You do not mean----"
+
+"Great Heavens! have you never seen, mother----?"
+
+He leaned his arms on the marble, with his forehead bowed upon them, and
+Lady Marabout gazed at him still, as a bird at a basilisk.
+
+"Philip, Philip! what have I done? How could I tell?" she murmured,
+distractedly, tears welling into her eyes. "If I had only known! But how
+could I dream that child had any fascination for you? How could I
+fancy----"
+
+"Hush! No, you are in no way to blame. You could not know it. _I_ barely
+knew it till last night," he answered, gently.
+
+"Philip loves her, and _I_ have made her marry Goodwood!" thought Lady
+Marabout, agonized, remorseful, conscience-struck, heart-broken in a
+thousand ways at once. The climax of her woes was reached, life had no
+greater bitterness for her left; her son loved, and loved the last woman
+in England she would have had him love; that woman was given to another,
+and _she_ had been the instrument of wrecking the life to save or serve
+which she would have laid down her own in glad and instant sacrifice!
+Lady Marabout bowed her head under a grief, before which the worries so
+great before, the schemes but so lately so precious, the small triumphs
+just now so all-absorbing, shrank away into their due insignificance.
+Philip suffering, and suffering through her! Self glided far away from
+Lady Marabout's memory then, and she hated herself, more fiercely than
+the gentle-hearted soul had ever hated any foe, for her own criminal
+share in bringing down this unforeseen terrific blow on her beloved
+one's head.
+
+"Philip, my dearest, what _can_ I do?" she cried, distractedly; "if I
+had thought--if I had guessed----"
+
+"Do nothing. A woman who could give herself to a man whom she did not
+love should be no wife of mine, let me suffer what I might."
+
+"But _I_ persuaded her, Philip! Mine is the blame!"
+
+His lips quivered painfully:
+
+"Had she cared for me as--I may have fancied, she had not been so easy
+to persuade! She has much force of character, where she wills. He is
+here now, you say; I cannot risk meeting him just yet. Leave me for a
+little while; leave me--I am best alone."
+
+Gentle though he always was to her, his mother knew him too well ever to
+dispute his will, and the most bitter tears Lady Marabout had ever
+known, ready as she was to weep for other people's woes, and rarely as
+she had to weep for any of her own, choked her utterance and blinded
+her eyes as she obeyed and closed the door on his solitude. Philip--her
+idolized Philip--that ever her house should have sheltered this creature
+to bring a curse upon him! that ever she should have brought this
+tropical flower to poison the air for the only one dear to her!
+
+"I am justly punished," thought Lady Marabout, humbly and
+penitentially--"justly. I thought wickedly of Anne Hautton. I did not do
+as I would be done by. I longed to enjoy their mortification. I advised
+Flora against my own conscience and against hers. I am justly chastised!
+But that _he_ should suffer through me, that my fault has fallen on his
+head, that my Philip, my noble Philip, should love and not be loved, and
+that _I_ have brought it on him----Good Heaven! what is that?"
+
+"That" was a man whom her eyes, being misty with tears, Lady Marabout
+had brushed against, as she ascended the staircase, ere she perceived
+him, and who, passing on with a muttered apology, was down in the hall
+and out of the door Mason held open before she had recovered the shock
+of the rencontre, much before she had a possibility of recognizing him
+through the mist aforesaid.
+
+A fear, a hope, a joy, a dread, one so woven with another there was no
+disentangling them, sprang up like a ray of light in Lady Marabout's
+heart--a possibility dawned in her: to be rejected as an impossibility?
+Lady Marabout crossed the ante-room, her heart throbbing tumultuously,
+spurred on to noble atonement and reckless self-sacrifice, if fate
+allowed them.
+
+She opened the drawing-room door; Flora Montolieu was alone.
+
+"Flora, you have seen Goodwood?"
+
+She turned, her own face as pale and her own eyes as dim as Lady
+Marabout's.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You have refused him?"
+
+Flora Montolieu misconstrued her chaperone's eagerness, and answered
+haughtily enough:
+
+"I have told him that indifference would be too poor a return for his
+affections to insult him with it, and that I would not do him the injury
+of repaying his trust by falsehood and deception. I meant what I said to
+you last night; I said it on the spur of pain, indignation, no matter
+what; but I could not keep my word when the trial came."
+
+Lady Marabout bent down and kissed her, with a fervent gratitude that
+not a little bewildered the recipient.
+
+"My dear child! thank God! little as I thought to say so. Flora, tell
+me, you love some one else?"
+
+"Lady Marabout, you have no right----"
+
+"Yea, I have a right--the strongest right! Is not that other my son?"
+
+Flora Montolieu looked up, then dropped her head and burst into
+tears--tears that Lady Marabout soothed then, tears that Carruthers
+soothed, yet more effectually still, five minutes afterwards.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That _I_ should have sued that little Montolieu, and sued to her for
+Philip!" mused Lady Marabout. "It is very odd. Perhaps I get used to
+being crossed and disappointed and trampled on in every way and by
+everybody; but certainly, though it is most contrary to my wishes,
+though a child like that is the last person I should ever have chosen or
+dreamt of as Philip's wife, though it is a great pain to me, and Anne
+Hautton of course will be delighted to rake up everything she can about
+the Montolieus, and it _is_ heart-breaking when one thinks how a
+Carruthers _might_ marry, how the Carruthers always _have_ married,
+rarely any but ladies in their own right for countless generations,
+still it _is_ very odd, but I certainly feel happier than ever I did in
+my life, annoyed as I am and grieved as I am. It _is_ heart-breaking
+(that horrid John Montolieu! I wonder what relation one stands in
+legally to the father of one's son's wife; I will ask Sir Fitzroy
+Kelley; not that the Montolieus are likely to come to England)--it is
+very sad when one thinks whom Philip might have married; and yet she
+certainly is infinitely charming, and she really appreciates and
+understands him. If it were not for what Anne Hautton will always say, I
+could really be pleased! To think what an anxious hope, what a dreaded
+ideal, Philip's wife has always been to me; and now, just as I had got
+reconciled to his determined bachelor preferences, and had grown to
+argue with him that it was best he shouldn't marry, he goes and falls in
+love with this child! Everything is at cross-purposes in life, I think!
+There is only one thing I am resolved upon--I will NEVER chaperone
+anybody again."
+
+And she kept her vow. None can christen her Lady Tattersall any longer
+with point, for there are no yearling sales in that house in Lowndes
+Square, whatever there be in the other domiciles of that fashionable
+quarter. Lady Marabout has shaken that burden off her shoulders, and
+moves in blissful solitude and tripled serenity through Belgravia,
+relieved of responsibility, and wearing her years as lightly, losing the
+odd trick at her whist as sunnily, and beaming on the world in general
+as radiantly as any dowager in the English Peerage.
+
+That she was fully reconciled to Carruthers's change of resolve was
+shown in the fact that when Anne Hautton turned to her, on the evening
+of his marriage-day, after the dinner to which Lady Marabout had bidden
+all her friends, and a good many of her foes, with an amiable murmur:
+
+"I am _so_ grieved for you, dearest Helena--I know what your
+disappointment must be!--what should _I_ feel if Hautton----Your
+_belle-fille_ is charming, certainly, very lovely; but then--such a
+connection! You have my deepest sympathies! I always told you how wrong
+you were when you fancied Goodwood admired little Montolieu--I beg her
+pardon, I mean Lady Carruthers--but you _will_ give your imagination
+such reins!"
+
+Lady Marabout smiled, calmly and amusedly, felt no pang, and--thought of
+Philip.
+
+I take it things must be very rose-colored with us when we can smile
+sincerely on our enemies, and defeat their stings simply because we feel
+them not.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUINZE;
+
+OR,
+
+PENDANT TO A PASTEL BY LA TOUR.
+
+
+I have, among others hanging on my wall, a pastel of La Tour's; of the
+artist-lover of Julie Fel, of the monarch of pastellistes, the touch of
+whose crayons was a "brevet of wit and of beauty," and on whose easel
+bloomed afresh the laughing eyes, the brilliant tints, the rose-hued
+lips of all the loveliest women of the "Regne Galant," from the
+princesses of the Blood of the House of Bourbon to the princesses of the
+green-room of the Comedie-Francaise. Painted in the days of Louis
+Quinze, the light of more than a century having fallen on its soft
+colors to fade and blot them with the icy brush of time, my pastel is
+still fresh, still eloquent. The genius that created it is gone--gone
+the beauty that inspired it--but the picture is deathless! It shows me
+the face of a woman, of a beautiful woman, else, be sure she would not
+have been honored by the crayons of La Tour; her full Southern lips are
+parted with a smile of triumph; a chef-d'oeuvre of coquetry, a
+head-dress of lace and pearls and little bouquets of roses is on her
+unpowdered hair, which is arranged much like Julie Fel's herself in the
+portrait that hangs, if I remember right, at the Musee de Saint Quentin;
+and her large eyes are glancing at you with languor, malice, victory,
+all commingled. At the back of the picture is written "Mlle. Thargelie
+Dumarsais;" the letters are faded and yellow, but the pastel is living
+and laughing yet, through the divine touch of the genius of La Tour.
+With its perfume of dead glories, with its odor of the Beau Siecle, the
+pastel hangs on my wall, living relic of a buried age, and sometimes in
+my mournful moments the full laughing lips of my pastel will part, and
+breathe, and speak to me of the distant past, when Thargelie Dumarsais
+saw all Paris at her feet, and was not humbled then as now by being only
+valued and remembered for the sake of the talent of La Tour. My
+beautiful pastel gives me many confidences. I will betray one to you--a
+single leaf from a life of the eighteenth century.
+
+
+I.
+
+THE FIRST MORNING.
+
+In the heart of Lorraine, nestled down among its woods, stood an old
+chateau that might have been the chateau of the Sleeping Beauty of fairy
+fame, so sequestered it stood amidst its trees chained together by
+fragrant fetters of honeysuckle and wild vine, so undisturbed slept the
+morning shadows on the wild thyme that covered the turf, so unbroken was
+the silence in which the leaves barely stirred, and the birds folded
+their wings and hushed their song till the heat of the noonday should be
+passed. Beyond the purple hills stretching up in the soft haze of
+distance in the same province of laughing, luxurious, sunlit Lorraine,
+was Luneville, the Luneville of Stanislaus, Montesquieu, of Voltaire, of
+Henault, of Boufflers, a Versailles in miniature, even possessing a
+perfect replica of Pompadour in its own pretty pagan of a Marquise.
+Within a few leagues was Luneville, but the echo of its mots and
+madrigals did not reach over the hills, did not profane the sunny air,
+did not mingle with the vintage-song of the vine-dressers, the silver
+babble of the woodland brook, the hushed chant of the Ave Maria, the
+vesper bells chimed from the churches and monasteries, which made the
+sole music known or heard in this little valley of Lorraine.
+
+The chateau of Grande Charmille stood nestled in its woods, gray,
+lonely, still, silent as death, yet not gloomy, for white pigeons
+circled above its pointed towers, brilliant dragon-flies fluttered above
+the broken basin of the fountain that sang as gayly as it rippled among
+the thyme as though it fell into a marble cup, and bees hummed their
+busy happy buzz among the jessamine that clung to its ivy-covered
+walls--walls built long before Lorraine had ceased to be a kingdom and a
+power, long before a craven and effeminated Valois had dared to kick the
+dead body of a slaughtered Guise. Not gloomy with the golden light of a
+summer noon playing amidst the tangled boughs and on the silvered
+lichens; not gloomy, for under the elm-boughs on the broken stone steps
+that led to the fountain, her feet half buried in violet-roots and wild
+thyme, leaning her head on her hand, as she looked into the water, where
+the birds flew down to drink, and fluttered their wings fearless of her
+presence, was a young girl of sixteen--and if women sometimes darken
+lives, it must be allowed that they always illumine landscapes!
+
+Aline, when Boufflers saw her in the spring morning, in all the grace of
+youth and beauty, unconscious of themselves, made not a prettier picture
+than this young dreamer under the elm-boughs of the Lorraine woods, as
+she bent over the water, watching it bubble and splash from the
+fountain-spout, and hide itself with a rippling murmur under the broad
+green reeds and the leaves of the water-lily. She was a charming
+picture: a brunette with long ebon tresses, with her lashes drooping
+over her black, languid, almond-shaped eyes, a smile on her half-pouted
+lips, and all the innocence and dawning beauty of her sixteen years
+about her, while she sat on the broken steps, now brushing the
+water-drops off the violets, now weaving the reeds into a pretty,
+useless toy, now beckoning the birds that came to peck on the
+rose-sprays beside her.
+
+"Favette! where are your dreams?"
+
+Favette, the young naiad of the Lorraine elm-woods, looked up, the plait
+of rushes dropping from her hands, and a warm sudden blush tinging her
+cheeks and brow with a tint like that on the damask rose-leaves that had
+fallen into the water, and floated there like delicate shells.
+
+"Mon Dieu, Monsieur Leon! how you frightened me!"
+
+And like a startled fawn, or a young bird glancing round at a rustle
+amidst the leaves, Favette sprang up, half shy, half smiling, all her
+treasures gathered from the woods--of flowers, of mosses, of berries, of
+feathery grasses, of long ivy-sprays--falling from her lap on to the
+turf in unheeded disorder.
+
+"_I_ frightened you, Favette? Surely not. Are you sorry to see me,
+then?"
+
+"Sorry? Oh no, Monsieur Leon!" and Favette glanced through her thick
+curled lashes, slyly yet archly, and began to braid again her plait of
+rushes.
+
+"Come, tell me, then, what and whom were you dreaming of, ma mie, as you
+looked down into the water? Tell me, Favette. You have no secrets from
+your playmate, your friend, your brother?"
+
+Favette shook her head, smiling, and plaited her rushes all wrong, the
+blush on her cheeks as bright as that on the cups of the rose-leaves
+that the wind shook down in a fresh shower into the brook.
+
+"Come, tell me, mignonne. Was it--of me?"
+
+"Of you? Well, perhaps--yes!"
+
+It was first love that whispered in Favette's pretty voice those three
+little words; it was first love that answered in his, as he threw
+himself down on the violet-tufted turf at her feet, as Boufflers at
+Aline's.
+
+"Ah, Favette, so should it be! for every hope, every dream, every
+thought of _mine_, is centred in and colored by you."
+
+"Yet you can leave me to-day," pouted Favette, with a sigh and a _moue
+mutine_, and gathering tears in her large gazelle eyes.
+
+"Leave you? Would to Heaven I were not forced! But against a king's will
+what power has a subject? None are too great, none are too lowly, to be
+touched by that iron hand if they provoke its grasp. Vincennes yawns for
+those who dare to think, For-l'Eveque for those who dare to jest.
+Monsieur de Voltaire was sent to the Bastille for merely defending a
+truth and his own honor against De Rohan-Chabot. Who am I, that I should
+look for better grace?"
+
+Favette struck him, with her plaited rushes, a reproachful little blow.
+
+"Monsieur Vincennes--Monsieur Voltaire--who are they? I know nothing of
+those stupid people!"
+
+He smiled, and fondly stroked her hair:
+
+"Little darling! The one is a prison that manacles the deadly crimes of
+Free Speech and Free Thought; the other, a man who has suffered for
+both, but loves both still, and will, sooner or later, help to give both
+to the world----"
+
+"Ah, you think of your studies, of your ambitions, of your great heroes!
+You think nothing of me, save to call me a little darling. You are
+cruel, Monsieur Leon!"
+
+And Favette twisted her hand from his grasp with petulant sorrow, and
+dashed away her tears--the tears of sixteen--as bright and free from
+bitterness as the water-drops on the violet-bells.
+
+"_I_ cruel--and to you! My heart must indeed be badly echoed by my lips,
+if you have cause to fancy so a single moment. Cruel to you? Favette,
+Favette! is a man ever cruel to the dearest thing in his life, the
+dearest name in his thoughts? If I smiled I meant no sneer; I love you
+as you are, mignonne; the picture is so fair, one touch added, or one
+touch effaced, would mar the whole in _my_ eyes. I love you as you are!
+with no knowledge but what the good sisters teach you in their convent
+solitude, and what the songs of the birds, the voices of the flowers,
+whisper to you of their woodland lore. I love you as you are! Every
+morning when I am far away from you, and from Lorraine, I shall think of
+you gathering the summer roses, calling the birds about you, bending
+over the fountain to see it mirror your own beauty; every evening I
+shall think of you leaning from the window, chanting softly to yourself
+the Ora pro nobis, while the shadows deepen, and the stars we have so
+often watched together come out above the pine-hills. Favette, Favette!
+exile will have the bitterness of death to me; to give me strength to
+bear it, tell me that you love me more dearly than as the brother you
+have always called me; that you will so love me when I shall be no
+longer here beside you, but shall have to trust to memory and fidelity
+to guard for me in absence the priceless treasure of your heart?"
+
+Favette's head drooped, and her hands played nervously with the now torn
+and twisted braid of rushes: he saw her heart beat under its muslin
+corsage, like a bee caught and caged in the white leaves of a lily; and
+she glanced at him under her lashes with a touch of naive coquetry.
+
+"If I tell you so, what gage have I, Monsieur Leon, that, a few months
+gone by, you will even remember it? In those magnificent cities you will
+soon forget Lorraine; with the _grandes dames_ of the courts you will
+soon cease to care for Favette?"
+
+"Look in my eyes, Favette, they alone can answer you as I would answer!
+Till we meet again none shall supplant you for an hour, none rob you of
+one thought; you have my first love, you will have my last. Favette, you
+believe me?"
+
+"Yes--I believe!" murmured Favette, resting her large eyes fondly on
+him. "We will meet as we part, though you are the swallow, free to take
+flight over the seas to foreign lands, and I am the violet, that must
+stay where it is rooted in the Lorraine woods!"
+
+"Accept the augury," he whispered, resting his lips upon her low smooth
+brow. "Does not the swallow ever return to the violet, holding it fairer
+than all the gaudy tropical flowers that may have tempted him to rest on
+the wing and delay his homeward flight? Does not the violet ever welcome
+him the same, in its timid winning spring-tide loveliness, when he
+returns to, as when he quitted, the only home he loves? Believe the
+augury, Favette; we shall meet as we part!"
+
+And they believed the augury, as they believed in life, in love, in
+faith; they who were beginning all, and had proved none of the
+treacherous triad!
+
+What had he dreamed of in his solitary ancestral woods fairer than this
+Lorraine violet, that had grown up with him, side by side, since he, a
+boy of twelve, gathered heaths from the clefts of the rocks that the
+little child of six years old cried for and could not reach? What had
+she seen that she loved half so well as M. le Chevalier from the Castle,
+whom her uncle, the Cure, held as his dearest and most brilliant pupil,
+whose eyes always looked so lovingly into hers, and whose voice was
+always lavishing fond names on his petite Favette?
+
+They believed the augury, and were happy even in the sweet sorrow of
+parting--sorrow that they had never known before--as they sat together
+in the morning sunlight, while the water bubbled among the violet tufts,
+among the grasses and wild thyme, and the dragon-flies fluttered their
+green and gold and purple wings amidst the tendrils of the vines, and
+the rose-leaves, drifted gently by the wind, floated down the brook,
+till they were lost in deepening shadow under the drooping boughs.
+
+
+II.
+
+THE SECOND MORNING.
+
+"Savez-vous que Favart va ecrire une nouvelle comedie--La Chercheuse
+d'Esprit?"
+
+"Vraiment? Il doit bien ecrire cela, car il s'occupe toujours a le
+_chercher_, et n'arrive jamais a le trouver!"
+
+The mot had true feminine malice, but the lips that spoke it were so
+handsome, that had even poor Favart himself, the poet-pastrycook who
+composed operas and comedies while he made meringues and fanfreluches,
+and dreamed of libretti while he whisked the cream for a supper, been
+within hearing, they would have taken the smart from the sting; and, as
+it was, the hit only caused echoes of softly-tuned laughter, for the
+slightest word of those lips it was the fashion through Paris just then
+to bow to, applaud, and re-echo.
+
+Before her Psyche, shrouded in cobweb lace, powdered by Martini,
+gleaming with pearls and emeralds, scented with most delicate amber,
+making her morning toilette, and receiving her morning levee according
+to the fashion of the day, sat the brilliant satirist of poor Favart.
+The _ruelle_ was crowded; three marshals, De Richelieu, Lowendal, and
+Maurice de Saxe; a prince, De Soubise; a poet, Claude Dorat; an abbe,
+Voisenon; a centenarian, Saint-Aulaire; peers uncounted, De Bievre, De
+Caylus, De Villars, D'Etissac, Duras, D'Argenson--a crowd of
+others--surrounded and superintended her toilette, in a glittering troop
+of courtiers and gentlemen. Dames d'atours (for she had her maids of
+honor as well as Marie Leczinska) handed her her flacons of perfume, or
+her numberless notes, on gold salvers, chased by Reveil; the ermine
+beneath her feet, humbly sent by the Russian ambassador--far superior to
+what the Czarina sent to Madame de Mailly--had cost two thousand louis;
+her bedroom outshone in luxury any at Versailles, Choisy, or La Muette,
+with its Venetian glass, its medallions of Fragonard, its plaques of
+Sevres, its landscapes of Watteau, framed in the carved and gilded
+wainscoting, its Chinese lamps, swinging by garlands of roses, its
+laughing Cupids, buried under flowers, painted in fresco above the
+alcove, its hangings of velvet, of silk, of lace; and its cabinets, its
+screens, its bonbonnieres, its jewel-boxes, were costly as those of the
+Marquises de Pompadour or De Prie.
+
+Who was she?--a Princess of the Blood, a Duchess of France, a mistress
+of the King?
+
+Lords of the chamber obeyed her wishes, ministers signed lettres de
+cachet at her instance; "_ces messieurs_," la Queue de la Regence, had
+their rendezvous at her suppers; she had a country villa that eclipsed
+Trianon; she had fetes that outshone the fetes at Versailles; she had a
+"_droit de chasse_" in one of the royal districts; she had the first
+place on the easels of Coypel, Lancret, Pater, Vanloo, La Tour; the
+first place in the butterfly odes of Crebillon le Gai, Claude Dorat;
+Voisenon.
+
+Who was she?--the Queen of France? No; much more--the Queen of Paris!
+
+She was Thargelie Dumarsais; matchless as Claire Clairon, beautiful as
+Madeleine Gaussin, resistless as Sophie Arnould, great as Adrienne
+Lecouvreur. She was a Power in France--for was she not the Empress of
+the Comedie? If Madame Lenormand d'Etioles ruled the government at
+Versailles, Mademoiselle Thargelie Dumarsais ruled the world at Paris;
+and if the King's favorite could sign her enemies, by a smile, to the
+Bastille, the Court's favorite could sign hers, by a frown, to
+For-l'Eveque.
+
+The foyer was nightly filled while she played in _Zaire_, or
+_Polyeucte_, or _Les Folies Amoureuses_, with a court of princes and
+poets, marshals and marquises, beaux esprits and abbes galants; and
+mighty nobles strewed with bouquets the path from her carriage to the
+coulisses; bouquets she trod on with nonchalant dignity, as though
+flowers only bloomed to have the honor of dying under her foot. Louis
+Quinze smilingly humored her caprices, content to wait until it was her
+pleasure to play at his private theatre; dukes, marquises, viscounts,
+chevaliers, vied who should ruin himself most magnificently and most
+utterly for her; and lovers the most brilliant and the most flattering,
+from Richelieu, Roi de Ruelles, to Dorat, poet of boudoir-graces and
+court-Sapphos, left the titled beauties of Versailles for the
+self-crowned Empress of the Francais. She had all Paris for her
+chentela, from Versailles to the Caveau; for even the women she deposed,
+the actors she braved, the journalists she consigned to For-l'Eveque,
+dared not raise their voice against the idol of the hour. A Queen of
+France? Bah! Pray what could Marie Leczinska, the pale, dull pietist,
+singing canticles in her private chapel, compare for power, for sway,
+for courtiers, for brilliant sovereignty, for unrivalled triumph, with
+Thargelie Dumarsais, the Queen of the Theatre?
+
+Ravishingly beautiful looked the matchless actress as she sat before her
+Psyche, flashing _oeillades_ on the brilliant group who made every added
+aigrette, every additional bouquet of the coiffure, every little
+_mouche_, every touch to the already perfect toilette, occasion for
+flattering simile and soft-breathed compliment; ravishingly beautiful,
+as she laughed at Maurice de Saxe, or made a disdainful _moue_ at an
+impromptu couplet of Dorat's, or gave a blow of her fan to Richelieu, or
+asked Saint-Aulaire what he thought of Vanloo's portrait of her as
+_Rodugune_; ravishingly beautiful, with her charms that disdained alike
+rouge and marechale powder, and were matchless by force of their own
+coloring, form, and voluptuous languor, when, her toilette finished,
+followed by her glittering crowd, she let Richelieu lead her to his
+carriage.
+
+There was a review of Guards on the plain at Sablons that morning, a
+fete afterwards, at which she would be surrounded by the most brilliant
+staff of an army of Noblesse, and Richelieu was at that moment the most
+favored of her troop of lovers. M. le Duc, as every one knows, never
+sued at court or coulisse in vain, and the love of Thargelie Dumarsais,
+though perhaps with a stronger touch of romance in it than was often
+found in the atmosphere of the foyer, was, like the love of her time and
+her class, as inconstant and vivacious, now settling here, now lighting
+there, as any butterfly that fluttered among the limes at Trianon. Did
+not the jest-loving _parterre_ ever salute with gay laughter two lines
+in a bagatelle-comedy of the hour--
+
+ Oui l'Amour papillonne, sans entraves, a son gre;
+ Charge longtemps de fers, de soie meme, il mourrait!--
+
+when spoken by Thargelie Dumarsais--laughter that hailed her as
+head-priestess of her pleasant creed, in a city and a century where the
+creed was universal?
+
+"Ah, bonjour! You have not seen her before, have you, semi-Englishman?
+You have found nothing like her in the foggy isles, I wager you fifty
+louis!" cried one of Thargelie Dumarsais's court, the Marquis de la
+Thorilliere, meeting a friend of his who had arrived in Paris only the
+day before, M. le Chevalier de Tallemont des Reaux, as Richelieu's
+cortege rolled away, and the Marquis crossed to his own carriage.
+
+"Her? Whom? I have not been in Paris for six years, you know. What can I
+tell of its idols, as I remember of old that they change every hour?"
+
+"True! but, bon Dieu! not to know la Dumarsais! What it must be to have
+been buried in those benighted Britannic Isles! Did you not see her in
+Richelieu's carriage?"
+
+"No. I saw a carriage driving off with such an escort and such fracas,
+that I thought it could belong to nobody less than to Madame Lenormand
+d'Etioles; but I did not observe it any further. Who is this beauty I
+ought to have seen?"
+
+"Thargelie Dumarsais, for whom we are all ruining ourselves with the
+prettiest grace in the world, and for whom you will do the same when you
+have been once to the Francais; that is, if you have the good fortune to
+attract her eyes and please her fancy, which you may do, for the fogs
+have agreed with you, Leon!--I should not wonder if you become the
+fashion, and set the women raving of you as 'leur zer zevalier!'"
+
+"Thanks for the prophecy, but I shall not stay long enough to fulfil it,
+and steal your myrtle crowns. I leave again to-morrow."
+
+"_Leave?_ Sapristi! See what it is to have become half English, and
+imbibed a taste for spleen and solitude! Have you written another
+satire, or have you learned such barbarism as to dislike Paris?"
+
+"Neither; but I leave for Lorraine to-morrow. It is five years since I
+saw my old pine-woods."
+
+"Dame! it is ten years since _I_ saw the wilds of Bretagne, and I will
+take good care it shall be a hundred before I see them again. _Hors de
+Paris, c'est hors du monde._ Come with me to La Dumarsais's _petit
+souper_ to-night, and you will soon change your mind."
+
+"My good Armand, you have not been an exile, as I have; you little know
+how I long for the very scent of the leaves, the very smell of the earth
+at Grande Charmille! But bah! I talk in Hebrew to you. You have been
+lounging away your days in titled beauties, _petits salons_, making
+butterfly verses, learning their broidery, their lisp, and their
+perfumes, talking to their parrots, and using their cosmetiques, till
+you care for no air but what is musk-scented! But what of this
+Dumarsais of yours--does she equal Lecouvreur?"
+
+"Eclipses her!--with Paris as with Maurice de Saxe. Thargelie Dumarsais
+is superb, mon cher--unequalled, unrivalled! We have had nothing like
+her for beauty, for grace, for talent, nor, pardieu! for extravagance!
+She ruined _me_ last year in a couple of months. Richelieu is in favor
+just now--with what woman is he not? Thargelie is very fond of the
+Marshals of France! Saxe is fettered to her hand and foot, and the
+Duchesse de Bouillon hates her as rancorously as she does Adrienne. Come
+and see her play _Phedre_ to-night, and you will renounce Lorraine. I
+will take you to supper with her afterwards; she will permit any friend
+of mine entry, and then, generous man that I am, I shall have put you
+_en chemin_ to sun yourself in her smiles and ingratiate yourself in her
+favor. Don't give me too much credit for the virtue though, for I
+confess I should like to see Richelieu supplanted."
+
+"Does his reign threaten to last long, then?"
+
+The Marquis shrugged his shoulders, and gave his badine an expressive
+whisk.
+
+"Dieu sait! we are not prophets in Paris. It would be as easy to say
+where that weathercock may have veered to-morrow, as to predict where la
+Dumarsais's love may have lighted ere a month! Where are you going, may
+I ask?"
+
+"To see Lucille de Verdreuil. I knew her at Luneville; she and Madame de
+Boufflers were warm friends till Stanislaus, I believe, found Lucille's
+eyes lovelier than Madame la Marquise deemed fit, and then they
+quarrelled, as women ever do, with virulence in exact proportion to the
+ardor of their friendship."
+
+"As the women quarrel at Choisy for _notre maitre_! They will be friends
+again when both have lost the game, like Louise de Mailly and the
+Duchesse de Chateauroux. The poor Duchess! Fitz-James and Maurepas,
+Chatillon and Bouillon, Rochefoucauld and le Pere Perussot, all
+together, were too strong for her. All the gossip of that Metz affair
+reached you across the water, I suppose? Those pests of Jesuits! if they
+want him to be their Very Christian King, and to cure him of his worship
+of Cupidon, they will have to pull down all the stones of La Muette and
+the Parc aux Cerfs! What good is it to kill _one_ poor woman when women
+are as plentiful as roses at Versailles? And now let me drive you to
+Madame de Vaudreuil; if _she_ do not convert you from your fancy for
+Lorraine this morning, Thargelie Dumarsais will to-night."
+
+"_Mon zer zevalier, Paris at ado'able! Vous n'etes pas se'ieux en
+voulant le quitter, z'en suis sure!_" cried the Comtesse de Vaudreuil,
+in the pretty lisp of the day, a charming little blonde, patched and
+powdered, nestled in a chair before a fire of perfumed wood, teasing her
+monkey Zulme with a fan of Pater's, and giving a pretty little sign of
+contempt and disbelief with some sprays of jessamine employed in the
+chastisement of offenders more responsible and quite as audacious as
+Zulme.
+
+Her companion, her "zer zevalier," was a young man of seven-and-twenty,
+with a countenance frank, engaging, nobly cast, far more serious, far
+more thoughtful in its expression, than was often seen in that laughing
+and mocking age. Exiled when a mere boy for a satirical pamphlet which
+had provoked the wrath of the Censeur Royal, and might have cost him the
+Bastille but for intercession from Luneville, he had passed his youth
+less in pleasure than in those philosophical and political problems then
+beginning to agitate a few minds; which were developed later on in the
+"Encyclopedie," later still in the Assemblee Nationale. Voltaire and
+Helvetius had spoken well of him at Madame de Geoffrin's; Claudine de
+Tencin had introduced him the night before in her brilliant salons; the
+veteran Fontenelle had said to him, "_Monsieur, comme censeur royal je
+refusai mon approbation a votre brochure; comme homme libre je vous en
+felicite_"--all that circle was prepared to receive him well, the young
+Chevalier de Tallemont might make a felicitous season in Paris if he
+chose, with the romance of his exile about him, and Madame de Vaudreuil
+smiling kindly on him.
+
+"The country!" she cried; "the country is all very charming in eclogues
+and pastorals, but out of them it is a desert of ennui! What _can_ you
+mean, Leon, by leaving Paris to-morrow? Ah, mechant, there must be
+something we do not see, some love besides that of the Lorraine woods!"
+
+"Madame, is there not my father?"
+
+"_Bien zoli!_ But at your age men are not so filial. There is some other
+reason--but what? Any love you had there five years ago has hardly any
+attractions now. Five years! Ma foi, five months is an eternity that
+kills the warmest passion!"
+
+"May there not be some love, madame, that time only strengthens?"
+
+"I never heard of it if there be. It would be a very dreary affair, I
+should fancy, smouldering, smouldering on and on like an ill-lit fire.
+Nobody would thank you for it, mon cher, _here_! Come, what is your
+secret? Tell it me."
+
+Leon de Tallemont smiled; the smile of a man who has happy thoughts, and
+is indifferent to ridicule.
+
+"Madame, one can refuse you nothing! My secret? It is a very simple one.
+The greatest pang of my enforced exile was the parting from one I loved;
+the greatest joy of my return is that I return to her."
+
+"_Bon Dieu! comme c'est drole!_ Here is a man talking to me of love, and
+of a love not felt for _me_!" thought Madame la Comtesse, giving him a
+soft glance of her beautiful blue eyes. "You are a very strange man.
+You have lived out of France till you have grown wretchedly serious and
+eccentric. Loved this woman for five years? Leon! Leon! you are telling
+me a fairy tale. Who is she, this enchantress? She must have some
+mysterious magic. Tell me--quick!"
+
+"She is no enchantress, madame, and she has no magic save the simple one
+of having ever been very dear to me. We grew up together at Grande
+Charmille; she was the orphan niece of the Priest, a fond, innocent,
+laughing child, fresh and fair, and as untouched by a breath of impure
+air as any of the violets in the valley. She was scarcely out of the
+years of childhood when I left her, with beauty whose sweetest grace of
+all was its own unconsciousness. Through my five long years of exile I
+have remembered Favette as I saw her last under the elm-boughs in the
+summer light, her eyes dim with the tears of our parting, her young
+heart heaving with its first grief. I have loved her too well for others
+to have power to efface or to supplant her; of her only have I thought,
+of her only have I dreamed, holding her but the dearer as the years grew
+further from the hour of our separation, nearer to the hour of our
+reunion. I have heard no word of her since we parted; but of what value
+is love without trust and fidelity in trial? The beauty of her childhood
+may have merged into the beauty of womanhood, but I fear no other change
+in Favette. As we parted so we vowed to meet, and I believe in her love
+as in my own. I know that I shall find my Lorraine violet without stain
+or soil. Madame, Favette is still dearer to me now, Heaven help me, than
+five years ago. Five years--five years--true! it _is_ an eternity! Yet
+the bitterness of the past has faded for ever from me _now_, and I only
+see--the future!"
+
+Madame de Vaudreuil listened in silence; his words stirred in her chords
+long untouched, never heard amidst the mots, the madrigals, the
+laughter of her world of Paris, Versailles, and Choisy. She struck him a
+little blow with her jessamine-sprays, with a mist gathering over her
+lovely blue eyes.
+
+"Hush, hush, Leon! you speak in a tongue unknown here. A word
+of the heart amongst us sounds a word of a _Gaulois_ out of
+fashion--forbidden!"
+
+
+III.
+
+MIDNIGHT.
+
+The Francais was crowded. Thargelie Dumarsais, great in _Electre_,
+_Chimene_, _Ines_, as in "_Ninette a la Cour_," "_Les Moissonneurs_," or
+"_Annette et Lubin_," was playing in "_Phedre_." Louis Quinze was
+present, with all the powdered marquises, the titled wits, the
+glittering gentlemen of the Court of Versailles; but no presence stayed
+the shout of adoration with which the parterre welcomed the idol of the
+hour, and Louis le Bien-aime (des femmes!) himself added his royal quota
+to the ovation, and threw at her feet a diamond, superb as any in his
+regalia. It was whispered that the Most Christian King was growing
+envious of his favorite's favor with la Dumarsais, and would, ere long,
+supersede him.
+
+The foyer was filled with princes of the blood, marshals of France,
+dukes, marquises, the elite of her troop of lovers; lords and gentlemen
+crowded the passages, flinging their bouquets for her carpet as she
+passed; and poor scholars, young poets, youths without a sou--amongst
+them Diderot, Gilbert, Jean-Jacques Rousseau--pressed forward to catch a
+glimpse, by the light of the links, of this beauty, on which only the
+eyes of grands seigneurs who could dress Cupidon in a court habit
+_parfile d'or_ were allowed to gaze closely, as she left the Francais,
+after her unmatched and uninterrupted triumphs, and went to her
+carriage with Richelieu. The suppers of Thargelie Dumarsais were
+renowned through Paris; they equalled in magnificence the suppers of the
+Regency, rivalled them for license, and surpassed them for wit. All the
+world might flock to her fetes where she undisguisedly sought to surpass
+the lavishness of Versailles, even by having showers of silver flung
+from her windows to the people in the streets below; but to her _soupers
+a huis clos_ only a chosen few were admitted, and men would speak of
+having supped with la Dumarsais as boastfully as women of having supped
+with the King at Choisy.
+
+"What you have lost in not seeing her play _Phedre_! Helvetius would
+have excused you; all the talk of his salons is not worth one glance at
+la Dumarsais. Mon ami! you will be converted to Paris when once you have
+seen her," said the Marquis de la Thorilliere, as his carriage stopped
+in the Chaussee d'Antin.
+
+Leon de Tallemont laughed, and thought of the eyes that would brighten
+at his glance, and the heart that would beat against his once more under
+the vine shadows of Lorraine. No new magic, however seductive, should
+have strength to shake his allegiance to that Memory, and, true to his
+violet in Lorraine, he defied the Queen of the Foyer.
+
+"We are late, but that is always a more pardonable fault than to be too
+early," said the Marquis, as they were ushered across the vestibule,
+through several salons, into the supper-room, hung with rich tapestries
+of "Les Nymphes au Bain," "Diane Chasseresse," and "Apollon et Daphne;"
+with gilded consoles, and rosewood buffets, enamelled with medallion
+groups, and crowded with Sevres and porcelaine de Saxe, while Venetian
+mirrors at each end of the salle reflected the table, with its wines,
+and fruits, and flowers, its gold dishes and Bohemian glass. The air was
+heavily perfumed, and vibrating with laughter. The guests were
+Richelieu, Bievre, Saxe, D'Etissac, Montcrif, and lovely Marie Camargo,
+the queen of the coulisses who introduced the "short skirts" of the
+ballet, and upheld her innovation so stanchly amidst the outcries of
+scandalized Jansenists and journalists. But even Marie Camargo herself
+paled--and would have paled even had she been, what she was not, in the
+first flush of her youth--before the superb beauty, the languid
+voluptuousness, the sensuous grace, the southern eyes, the full lips,
+like the open leaves of a damask rose, melting yet mocking, of the most
+beautiful and most notorious woman of a day in which beauty and
+notoriety were rife, the woman with the diamond of Louis Quinze
+sparkling in the light upon her bosom, whom Versailles and Paris hailed
+as Thargelie Dumarsais.
+
+The air, scented with amber, rang with the gay echoes of a stanza of
+Dorat's, chanted by Marie Camargo; the "Cupids and Bacchantes," painted
+in the panels of Sevres, seemed to laugh in sympathy with the revel over
+which they presided; the light flashed on the King's diamond, to which
+Richelieu pointed, with a wicked whisper; for the Marshal was getting
+tired of his own reign, and his master might pay his court when he
+would. Thargelie Dumarsais, more beautiful still at her _petit souper_
+than at her _petit lever_, with her hair crowned with roses, true
+flowers of Venus that might have crowned Aspasia, looked up laughingly
+as her lacqueys ushered in le Marquis de la Thorilliere and le Chevalier
+de Tallemont.
+
+"M. le Marquis," cried the actress, "you are late! It is an impertinence
+forbidden at my court. I shall sup in future with barred doors, like M.
+d'Orleans; then all you late-comers----"
+
+Through the scented air, through the echoing laughter, stopping her own
+words, broke a startled bitter cry:
+
+"_Mon Dieu, c'est Favette!_"
+
+Thargelie Dumarsais shrank back in her rose velvet fauteuil as though
+the blow of a dagger had struck her; the color fled from her lips, and
+underneath the delicate rouge on her cheeks; her hand trembled as it
+grasped the King's aigrette.
+
+"Favette--Favette! Who calls me that?"
+
+It was a forgotten name, the name of a bygone life that fell on her ear
+with a strange familiar chime, breaking in on the wit, the license, the
+laughter of her midnight supper, as the subdued and mournful sound of
+vesper bells might fall upon the wild refrains and noisy drinking-songs
+of bacchanalian melody.
+
+A surprised silence fell upon the group, the laughter hushed, the voices
+stopped; it was a strange interruption for a midnight supper. Thargelie
+Dumarsais involuntarily rose, her lips white, her eyes fixed, her hand
+clasped convulsively on the King's diamond. A vague, speechless terror
+held mastery over her, an awe she could not shake off had fastened upon
+her, as though the dead had risen from their graves, and come thither to
+rebuke her for the past forgotten, the innocence lost. The roses in her
+hair, the flowers of revel, touched a cheek blanched as though she
+beheld some unearthly thing, and the hand that lay on the royal jewel
+shook and trembled.
+
+"Favette? Favette?" she echoed again. "It is so many years since I heard
+that name!"
+
+Her guests sat silent still, comprehending nothing of this single name
+which had such power to move and startle her. Richelieu alone, leaning
+back in his chair, leisurely picked out one of his brandy-cherries, and
+waited as a man waits for the next scene at a theatre:
+
+"Is it an unexpected tragedy, or an arranged comedy, ma chere? Ought one
+to cry or to laugh? Give me the _mot d'ordre_!"
+
+His words broke the spell, and called Thargelie Dumarsais back to the
+world about her. Actress by profession and by nature, she rallied with a
+laugh, putting out her jewelled hand with a languid glance from her long
+almond-shaped eyes.
+
+"A friend of early years, my dear Duc, that is all. Ah, Monsieur de
+Tallemont what a strange rencontre! When did you come to Paris? I
+scarcely knew you at the first moment; you have so long been an exile,
+one may pardonably be startled by your apparition, and take you for a
+ghost! I suppose you never dreamed of meeting Favette Fontanie under my
+_nom de theatre_? Ah! how we change, do we not, Leon? Time is so short,
+we have no time to stand still! Marie, ma chere, give Monsieur le
+Chevalier a seat beside you--he cannot be happier placed!"
+
+Leon de Tallemont heard not a word that she spoke; he stood like a man
+stunned and paralyzed by a sudden and violent blow, his head bowed, a
+mortal pallor changing his face to the hues of death, the features that
+were a moment before bright, laughing, and careless, now set in mute and
+rigid anguish.
+
+"Favette! Favette!" he murmured, hoarsely, in the vague dreamy agony
+with which a man calls wildly and futilely on the beloved dead to come
+back to him from the silence and horror of the grave.
+
+"Peste!" laughed Richelieu. "This cast-off lover seems a strange fellow!
+Does he not know that absent people have never the presumption to dream
+of keeping their places, but learn to give them graciously up!--shall I
+teach him the lesson? If he have his sixteen quarterings, a prick of my
+sword will soon punish his impudence!"
+
+The jeer fell unheeded on Leon de Tallemont's ear; had he heard it, the
+flippant sneer would have had no power to sting him then. Regardless of
+the men around the supper-table, he grasped Thargelie Dumarsais's hands
+in his:
+
+"This is how we meet!"
+
+She shrank away from his glance, terrified, she scarce knew why, at the
+mute anguish upon his face.
+
+Perhaps for a moment she realized how utterly she had abused the love
+and wrecked the life of this man; perhaps with his voice came back to
+her thronging thoughts of guileless days, memories ringing through the
+haze of years, as distant chimes ring over the water from lands we have
+quitted, reaching us when we have floated far away out to sea--memories
+of an innocent and untroubled life, when she had watched the woodland
+flowers open to the morning sun, and listened to the song of the brooks
+murmuring over the violet roots, and heard the sweet evening song of the
+birds rise to heaven under the deep vine shadows of Lorraine.
+
+One moment she was silent, her eyes falling, troubled and guilty,
+beneath his gaze; then she looked up, laughing gayly, and flashing on
+him her languid lustrous glance.
+
+"You look like a somnambulist, _mon ami_! Did nobody ever tell you,
+then, how Mme. de la Vrilliere carried me off from Lorraine, and brought
+me in her train to Paris, till, when Favette Fontanie was tired of being
+petted like the spaniel, the monkey, and the parrot, she broke away from
+Madame la Marquise, and made, after a little probation at the Foire St.
+Laurent, her appearance at the Francais as Thargelie Dumarsais? _Allons
+donc!_ have I lost my beauty, that you look at me thus? You should be
+reminding me of the proverb, '_On revient toujours a ses premiers
+amours!_' Surely, Thargelie Dumarsais will be as attractive to teach
+such a lesson as that little peasant girl, Favette, used to be? Bah,
+Leon! Can I not love you as well again in Paris as I once loved you at
+Grande Charmille? And--who knows?--perhaps I will!"
+
+She leaned towards him; her breath fanning his cheek, her scented hair
+brushing his lips, her lustrous eyes meeting his with eloquent meaning,
+her lips parted with the resistless witchery of that melting and
+seductive _sourire d'amour_ to which they were so admirably trained. He
+gazed down on her, breathless, silence-stricken--gazed down on the
+sorceress beauty to which the innocent loveliness of his Lorraine flower
+had changed. Was this woman, with the rouge upon her cheeks, the crimson
+roses in her hair, the mocking light in her eyes, the wicked laugh on
+her lips, the diamond glittering like a serpent's eye in her bosom--was
+she the guileless child he had left weeping, on the broken steps of the
+fountain, tears as pure as the dew in the violet-bells, with the summer
+sunlight streaming round her, and no shade on her young brow darker than
+the fleeting shadow flung from above by the vine-leaves? A cry broke
+once more from his lips:
+
+"Would to God I had died before to-night!"
+
+Then he lifted his head, with a smile upon his face--a smile that
+touched and vaguely terrified all those who saw it--the smile of a
+breaking heart.
+
+"I thank you for your proffered embraces, but _I_ am faithful. I love
+but one, and I have lost her; Favette is dead! I know nothing of
+Thargelie Dumarsais, the Courtesan."
+
+He bowed low to her and left her--never to see her face again.
+
+A silence fell on those he had quitted, even upon Richelieu; perhaps
+even he realized that all beauty, faith, and joy were stricken from this
+man's life; and--reality of feeling was an exile so universally banished
+from the gay salons of the Dix-huitieme Siecle, that its intrusion awed
+them as by the unwonted presence of some ghostly visitant.
+
+Thargelie Dumarsais sat silent--her thoughts had flown away once more
+from her brilliant supper-chamber to the fountain at Grande Charmille:
+she was seeing the dragon-flies flutter among the elm-boughs, and the
+water ripple over the wild thyme; she was feeling the old priest's
+good-night kiss upon her brow, and her own hymn rise and mingle with the
+chant of the vesper choir; she was hearing the song of the forest-birds
+echo in the Lorraine woods, and a fond voice whisper to her, "Fear not,
+Favette!--we shall meet as we part!"
+
+Richelieu took up his Dresden saucer of cherries once more with a burst
+of laughter.
+
+"_Voila un drole!_--this fellow takes things seriously. What fools there
+are in this world! It will be a charming little story for Versailles.
+Dieu! how Louis will laugh when I tell it him! I fear though, ma cherie,
+that the 'friend of your childhood' will make you lose your reputation
+by his impolite epithets!"
+
+"When one has nothing, one can lose nothing--eh, ma chere?" laughed
+Marie Camargo. "Monsieur le Duc, she does not hear us----"
+
+"No, _l'infidele_!" cried Richelieu. "Mademoiselle! I see plainly you
+love this rude lover of bygone days better than you do us!--is it not
+the truth?"
+
+"Chut! nobody asks for truths in a polite age!" laughed Thargelie
+Dumarsais, shaking off unwelcome memories once for all, and looking down
+at the King's diamond gleaming in the light--the diamond that prophesied
+to her the triumph of the King's love.
+
+"Naturally," added La Camargo. "My friend, I shall die with envy of your
+glorious jewel. _Dieu! comme il brille!_"
+
+
+
+
+"DEADLY DASH."
+
+A STORY TOLD ON THE OFF DAY.
+
+
+On the off-day after the Derby everybody, except the great winners, is,
+it will be generally admitted, the resigned prey to a certain gentle
+sadness, not to say melancholy, that will only dissipate itself under a
+prolonged regimen of S. and B., seidlitz well dashed with Amontillado,
+or certain heavenly West Indian decoctions;--this indisposition, I would
+suggest, we should call, delicately and dubiously, Epsomitis. It will
+serve to describe innumerable forms and degrees of the reactionary
+malady.
+
+There is the severest shape of all, "dead money," that covers four
+figures, dropped irretrievably, and lost to the "milkers;" lost always
+_you_ say because of a cough, or because of a close finish, or because
+of something dark, or because of a strain in the practising gallops, or
+because of a couple of brutes that cannoned just at the start; and
+never, of course, because the horse you had fancied was sheerly and
+simply only fit for a plater. There is the second severe form, when you
+awake with a cheerful expectation of a summons for driving "at twelve
+miles an hour" (as if that wasn't moderate and discreet!), and for
+thereby smashing a greengrocer's cart into the middle of next week, and
+running a waggonette into an omnibus, as you came back from the Downs,
+of which you have no more remembrance than that there was a crash, and
+a smash, and a woman's screams, and a man's "d--n the swells!" and a
+_tintamarre_ of roaring conductor and bellowing greengrocer, and
+infuriated females, through which you dashed somehow with a cheer--more
+shame for you--and a most inappropriate _l'Africaine_ chorus from the
+men on your drag. There is the milder form, which is only the rueful
+recollection of seeing, in a wild ecstasy, the chestnut with the white
+blaze sweep with his superb stride to the front, and of having, in your
+moment of rapturous gratitude to the red and blue, rushed,
+unintentionally, during the discussion of Fortnum and Mason's hamper,
+into a promise to take Euphrosyne Brown to Baden in August, where you
+know very well she will cost you more than all your sums netted through
+Gladiateur. There are the slenderer touches of the malady, which give
+you, over your breakfast coffee, a certain dolorous meditation as to how
+you could have been such a fool as to have placed all your trust in
+Danebury, or to have put in a hole through Spring Cottage just what your
+yacht costs for three months; which makes you wonder why on earth you
+took that lot of actresses on to the hill, and threw money enough away
+on them in those wages of idiotcy (or wages of sin, as your uncle the
+dean would translate it), of cashmeres, eau de Cologne, gloves, and
+bracelets, to have purchased those two weight-carriers offered you at
+L600 the pair, and dirt-cheap at that; or which makes you only dully and
+headachily conscious that you drank champagne up on the box-seat as if
+you were a young fellow from Eton, and now pay for the juvenile folly,
+as you know you deserve to do, when that beautiful white Burgundy at
+your club, or your own cool perfect claret at home, seems to stare you
+in the face and ask, "Why did you crack all those bottles of Dry on the
+Downs?"
+
+There are symptoms and varieties innumerable of the malady that I
+propose shall be known henceforward as Epsomitis; therefore, the off-day
+finds everybody more or less slightly done-up and mournful. Twenty-four
+hours and the Oaks, if properly prepared for by a strictly medicinal
+course of _brules-gueules_, as the Chasseurs say, smoked perseveringly,
+will bring all patients round on the Friday; but during the twenty-four
+hours a sense that all on and off the course is vanity and vexation of
+spirit will generally and somnolently predominate in the universal and
+fashionable disease of Epsomitis.
+
+One off-day, after the magnificent victory of Monarque's unrivalled son,
+an acquaintance of mine, suffering considerably from these symptoms,
+sought my philosophy and my prescriptions. A very sharp irritant for
+Epsomitis may be administered in the form of "I told you so? It's all
+your own fault!" But this species of blister and douche bath combined is
+rarely given unless the patient be mad enough to let his wife, if he
+unluckily have one, learn what ails him. As far as I was concerned, I
+was much too sympathetic with the sufferer to be down upon him with the
+triumphant reminder that I had cautioned him all along not to place his
+trust in Russley. I, instead, prescribed him cool wines, and led him on
+to talk of other people's misfortunes, the very best way to get
+reconciled with your own. We talked of old times, of old memories, of
+old acquaintance, in the twilight, between Derby and Oaks. We got a
+little melancholy; too much champagne is always productive on the morrow
+of a gently sentimental tinge, and a man is always inclined to look on
+the world as a desert when he has the conviction that he himself has
+been made a fool in it. Among other names, that of Deadly Dash came up
+between us. What had become of him? I did not know; he did. He told me;
+and I will tell it here, for the story is of the past now.
+
+"Deadly Dash! What a shot he was! Never missed," said my friend, whose
+own gun is known well enough at Hornsey-wood House; therewith falling
+into a reverie, tinged with the Jacques-like gloom of Epsomitis in its
+severest form, from which he awoke to tell me slowly, between long
+draughts of iced drinks, what I write now. I alter his tale in nothing,
+save in filling in with words the gaps and blanks that he made,
+all-eloquent in his halting oratory, by meditative, plaintive,
+moralizing puffs from his tonic, the _brule gueule_, and an occasional
+appeal to my imagination in the customary formula of "Oh, bother!--_you_
+understand--all the rest of it you know," which, though it tells
+everything over claret, is not so clear a mode of relation in type. For
+all else here the story is as he gave it to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Deadly Dash!" It was a fatal sounding sobriquet, and had a fatal
+fascination for many, for me as well as the rest, when I was in my salad
+days and joined the old ----th, amongst whose Light Dragoons, it was so
+signally and ominously famous. The nickname had a wide significance;
+"_he always kills_," was said with twofold truth, in twofold meaning of
+Dash; in a _barriere_ duel he would wheel lightly, aim carelessly, and
+send the ball straight as any arrow through heart or lung, just as he
+fancied, in the neatest style anybody could dream of; and in an intrigue
+he took just the same measures, and hit as invariably with the self-same
+skill and the self-same indifference. "He always kills" applied equally
+to either kind of affair, and got him his sobriquet, which he received
+with as laughing an equanimity as a riding man gets the Gilt Vase, or a
+"lover of the leash" the Ravensworth Stakes, or the Puppy Cup and
+Goblet. He was proud of it, and had only one regret, that he lived in
+the dead days of the duel, and could only go out when he was on French
+soil. In dare-devilry of every sort he out-Heroded Herod, and distanced
+any who were mad enough to try the pace with him in that steeple-chase
+commonly called "going to the bad." It was a miracle how often he used
+to reach the stage of "_complete_ ruin" that the Prince de Soubise once
+sighed for as an unattainable paradise; and picked himself up again,
+without a hair turned, as one may say, and started off with as fresh a
+pace as though nothing had knocked him over. Other men got his speed
+sometimes; but nobody could ever equal his stay. For an "out and out
+goer" there was nobody like Deadly Dash; and though only a Captain of
+Horse, with few "expectations," he did what Dukes daren't have done, and
+lived at a faster rate than all the elder sons in the kingdom put
+together. Dash had the best bow and the brightest wits, the lightest
+morals and the heaviest debts of any _sabreur_ in the Service; very
+unscrupulous fellows were staggered at _his_ devil-me-care vices; and as
+for reputation,--"a deuced pleasant fellow, Dash," they used to say at
+the Curragh, in the Guards' Club, at Thatched House anniversary dinners,
+in North Indian cantonments, in Brighton barrack-rooms, or in any of the
+many places where Deadly Dash was a household word; "a very pleasant
+fellow; no end 'fit' always, best fun in life over the olives when you
+get him in humor; shoot you dead though next morning, if he want, and
+you be handy for him in a neat snug little Bad; make some devil of a
+_mot_ on you too afterwards, just as pleasantly as if he were offering
+you a Lopez to smoke!"
+
+Now, that was just the sort of celebrity that made me mad to see the
+owner of it; there wasn't a living being, except that year's favorite
+out of the Whitewall establishment, that I was half so eager to look at,
+or so reverent when I thought of, as "the Killer." I was very young
+then. I had gone through a classic course of yellow covers from Jeffs'
+and Rolandi's, and I had a vague impression that a man who had had a
+dozen _barriere_ affairs abroad, and been "_enfant_" to every lovely
+_lionne_ of his day, must of necessity be like the heroes of Delphine
+Demireps' novels, who had each of them always a "je ne sais quoi de
+farouche et de fier dans ses grands yeux noirs, et toute la revelation
+d'une ame usee, mais dominee par des passions encore inepuisables,
+ecrite sur son sombre et pale visage," &c, &c, in the Demireps' most
+telling style.
+
+I don't know quite what I expected to see in the Killer, but I think it
+was a sort of compound of Monte Christo, Mephistopheles, and Murat mixed
+in one; what I did see was a slight delicate man with a face as fair and
+soft as a girl's, the gentlest possible manners, and a laugh like music.
+Deadly Dash had led a life as bad as he could lead, had lit his cigar
+without a tremor in the wrist, on many gray mornings, while his
+adversary lay dying hard among the red rank grasses, had gamed so deep
+twenty-four hours at a stretch that the most reckless _galerie_ in
+Europe held their breath to watch his play; had had a tongue of silver
+for his intrigues and a nerve of steel for his _vendetta_; had lived in
+reckless rioting and drunk deep; but the Demirep would not have had him
+at any price in her romance; he looked so simply and quietly
+thorough-bred, he was so utterly guiltless of all her orthodox traits.
+The gentlest of mortals was Deadly Dash; when you first heard his sweet
+silvery voice, and his laughter as light and airy as a woman's, you
+would never believe how often abroad there a dead man had been left to
+get stiff and cold among the clotted herbage, while the Killer went out
+of the town by the early express, smoking and reading the "Charivari,"
+and sipping some cold Curacoa punch out of his flask.
+
+"Of course!" growled a man to me once in the Guards' smoking-room, an
+order of the Scots Fusilleers to Montreal having turned him misanthrope.
+"Did Mephistopheles ever come out in full harness, with horns and tail
+complete, eh? Not such a fool. He looked like a gentleman, and talked
+like a wit. Would the most dunder-headed Cain in Christendom, I should
+be glad to know, be such an ass as to go about town with the brand on
+his forehead, when he could turn down Bond Street any day and get a
+dash of the ladies' pearl powder? Who ever _shows_ anything now, my good
+fellow? Not that Dash 'paints,' to give the deuce his due--except
+himself a little blacker even than he is; he don't cant; he couldn't
+cant; not to save his life, I believe. But as to his bewitching you,
+almost as bad as he does the women, I know all about that. I used to
+swear by him till----"
+
+"Till what?"
+
+"Till he cut a brother of mine out with Rachel, and shot him in the
+woods of Chantilly for flaring-up rough at the rivalry. Charlie was
+rather a good fellow, and Dash and I didn't speak after that, you see.
+Great bore; bosh too, perhaps. Dash brews the best Curacoa punch in
+Europe, and if he name you the winning mount for the Granby, you may let
+the talent damn you as they like. Still you know as he killed
+Charlie,--" and the Guardsman stuck a great cheroot in his mouth, in
+doubt as to whether, after all, it wasn't humbug, and an uncalled-for
+sacrifice, rather scenic and sentimental, to drop an expert at Curacoa
+brew, and a sure prophet for Croxton Park, just because in a legitimate
+fashion he had potted your brother and relieved your entail;--on the
+whole, a friendly act rather than otherwise? "Keep clear of the Killer,
+though, young one," he added, as he sauntered out. "He's like that
+cheetah cub of Berkeley's; soft as silk, you know, _patte de velours_,
+and what d'ye call 'em, and all the rest of it, but deucedly deadly to
+deal with."
+
+I did know: it was the eternal refrain that was heard on all sides; from
+the wily Jews through whose meshes he slipped; the unhappy duns who were
+done by him; the beauties who were bewitched by him; the hosts and
+husbands who, having him down for the pheasants, found him poach other
+preserves than those of the cover-sides; the women who had their
+characters shattered by a silvery sneer from a voice that was as soft,
+in its murderous slander, as in its equally murderous wooing; and all
+the rest, who, in some shape or another, owed ruin to that Apollo
+Apollyon--Deadly Dash. Ruin which at last became so wide and so deep,
+that even vice began to look virtuous when his name was mentioned (vice
+always does when she thinks you are really cleared out), and men of his
+own corps and his own club began to get shy of having the Killer's arm
+linked in theirs too often down Pall Mall, for its wrist was terribly
+steady in either Hazard, whether of the yard of green table or the
+twenty yards of green turf.
+
+At last the crisis came: the Killer killed one too many; a Russian
+Prince in the Bois de Vincennes, in a quarrel about a pretty wretched
+little chorus-singer of the Cafe Alcazar, who took their fancies both at
+once. The _mondes_ thought it terribly wicked, not the deed you know,
+but the audacity of a cavalry man's having potted a Very Serene High
+Mightiness. In a Duke, all these crimes and crimcons, though as scarlet,
+would have been held but the crimson gold-dotted fruit adorning the
+strawberry-leaves; Deadly Dash, a Light Dragoon whose name was signed to
+plenty of "floating little bills," could not bid high enough to purchase
+his pardon from society, which says to its sinners with austere front of
+virtue, "Oblivion cannot be hired,--unless," adds Society, dropping to
+mellowest murmur her whisper, "unless you can give us a premium!" So
+Dash, with a certain irresistible though private pressure upon him from
+the Horse Guards--sent in his papers to sell. What had been done so
+often could not now be done again; the first steeple-chaser in the
+Service could not at last even save his stake, but was finally,
+irretrievably, struck out.
+
+Certainly the fellow was a bad fellow, and deserved his crash so far; he
+had no scruples, and no conscience; he spared neither woman nor man; of
+remorse he had never felt a twinge, and if you were in his path he would
+pick you off some way or other as indifferently as if you were one of
+the pigeons at Hornsey. And yet, he had been kind to me, though I was a
+young one; with his own variable Free Lance sort of liberality, the man
+would give his last sou to get you out of any difficulty, and would
+carry off your mistress, or beggar you at chicken-hazard, with the
+self-same pleasant air the next day: and I could not help being sorry
+that things had come to this pass with him. He shot so superbly! Put him
+where you would, in a warm corner while the bouquets of pheasants were
+told off; in a punt, while a square half-mile of wild-ducks whirred up
+from the marshes; in a dark forest alley in Transylvania, while the
+great boar rushed down through the twilight, foaming blood and roaring
+fury; in a still Indian night with the only target here and there a
+dusky head diving amidst the jhow jungle three hundred yards away: put
+him where you would, he was such a magnificent shot! The sins of a
+Frankenstein should not have lost such a marksman as Deadly Dash to the
+Service.
+
+But the authorities thought otherwise; they were not open to the fact,
+that the man who had been out in more _barriere_ affairs, and had won
+more Grand Military stakes than any other, should, by all laws of
+war-policy, have had his blackest transgressions forgiven him, till he
+could have been turned to account against Ghoorkas, Maories, or Caffres.
+The authorities instead, made him send in his papers, not knowing the
+grand knack of turning a scamp into a hero--a process that requires some
+genius and some clairvoyance in the manipulator,--and Deadly Dash, with
+his lightest and airiest laugh, steamed down channel one late autumn
+night, marked, disgraced, and outlawed, for creditors by the score were
+after him, knowing very well that he and his old gay lawless life, and
+his own wild pleasant world, and his old lands yonder in the green heart
+of the grass countries that had gone rood by rood to the Hebrews, were
+all divorced for ever with a great gulf between them that could never
+close.
+
+So he dropped out of the Service, out of the country, out of
+remembrance, out of regret; nobody said a De Profundis over him, and
+some men breathed the freer. We can rarely be sure of any who will be
+sorry to miss us; but we can always be certain of some to be glad we are
+gone. And in the Killer's case these last were legion. Here and there
+were one or two who owed him a wayward, inconstant bizarre fit of
+generosity; but there were on the other hand hundreds who owed him
+nothing less than entire ruin.
+
+So Deadly Dash went with nobody to regret him and nobody to think of him
+for a second, after the nine hours' wonder in the clubs and the
+mess-rooms that his levanting "under a cloud" occasioned; and so the old
+sobriquet, that had used to have so signal a notoriety, dropped out of
+men's mouths and was forgotten. Where he was gone no one knew; and to be
+sure no one asked. Metaphorically, he was gone to the devil; and when a
+man takes that little tour, if he furnish talk for a day he has had very
+distinguished and lengthened obsequies as friendship goes in this world.
+Now and then in the course of half-a-dozen years I remembered him, when
+I looked up at the head of a Royal over my mantelpiece, with thirteen
+points, that he had stalked once in Ayrshire and given to me; but nobody
+else gave a thought to the Killer. Time passed, and whether he had been
+killed fighting in Chili or Bolivia, shot himself at Homburg, become
+Mussulman and entered the Sultan's army, gone to fight with the Kabyles
+and Bedouins, turned brigand for the Neapolitan Bourbons, or sunk
+downward by the old well-worn stage, so sadly and so often travelled,
+into an adventurer living by the skill of his ecarte and the dread
+surety of his shot, we did not know; we did not care. When society has
+given a man the sack, it matters uncommonly little whether he has given
+himself a shroud.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seven or eight years after the name of Deadly Dash had ceased to be
+heard among cavalry men, and quoted on all things "horsey," whether of
+the flat or of the ridge and furrow, I was in the Confederate States, on
+leave for a six months' tour there. It was after Lee's raid across the
+border and the days of Gettysburgh. I had run the blockade in a
+fast-built clipper, and pushed on at once into the heart of Virginia, to
+be in the full heat of whatever should come on the cards; cutting the
+cities rather, and keeping as much as I could to the camps and the
+woods, for I wanted to see the real thing in the rough. In my relish for
+adventure, however, I was a trifle, as it proved, too foolhardy.
+
+Starting alone one day to cross the thirty miles or so that parted me
+from the encampment of some Virginian Horse, with no other companions
+than a very weedy-looking steel gray, and a brace of revolvers, I fairly
+"lost tracks," and had not a notion of my way out of a wilderness of
+morass and forest, all glowing with the scarlet and the green of the
+Indian summer. Here and there were beautiful wild pools and lakes shut
+in by dense vegetation, so dense, that at noon it was dark as twilight,
+and great tablelands of rock jutted out black and rugged in places; but
+chiefly as far as was to be seen stretched the deep entangled woodland,
+with nothing else to break it, brooding quietly over square leagues of
+swamp. The orioles were singing their sweetest, wildest music overhead;
+sign of war there was none, save to be sure, now and then when I came on
+a black, arid circle, where a few charred timbers showed where a hut had
+been burnt down and deserted, or my horse shied and snorted uneasily,
+and half stumbled over some shapeless log on the ground--a log that when
+you looked closer was the swollen shattered body of a man who had died
+hard, with the grasses wrenched up in his fingers that the ants had
+eaten bare, and the hollows of his eyes staring open where the carrion
+birds had plucked the eyeballs out. And near him there were sure to be,
+half sunk in swamp, or cleaned to skeletons by the eagles and hawks,
+five, or ten, or twenty more, lying nameless and unburied there, where
+they had fallen in some scuffle with pickets, or some stray cavalry
+skirmish, to be told off as "missing," and to be thought of no more.
+These groups I came upon more than once rotting among the rich Virginian
+soil, while the scarlet and purple weight of blossoming boughs swayed
+above, and the bright insect life fluttered humming around them; they
+were the only highway marks through the wooded wilderness.
+
+So lonely was it mile after mile, and so little notion had I of either
+the way in or the way out, that the _hallali!_ of a boar-hunt, or the
+sweet mellow tongues of the hounds when they have found in the coverts
+at home, were never brighter music to me than the sharp crack of rifles
+and the long sullen roll of musketry as they suddenly broke the silence,
+while I rode along, firing from the west that lay on my left. The gray,
+used to powder, pointed his ears and quickened his pace. Though a weedy,
+fiddle-headed beast, his speed was not bad, and I rattled him over the
+ground, crashing through undergrowth and wading through pools, with all
+my blood up at the tune of those ringing cheery shots; the roar growing
+louder and louder with every moment, and the sulphur scent of the smoke
+borne stronger and stronger down on the wind, till the horse broke
+_pele-mele_ through a network of parasites; dashed downward along a
+slope of dank herbage, slipping at every step, and with his hind legs
+tucked under him; and shot, like a run-in for a race, on to a green
+plateau, where the skirmish was going on in hot earnest.
+
+A glance told me how the land lay. A handful of Southern troopers held
+their own with tremendous difficulty against three divisions of Federal
+infantry, whom they had unexpectedly encountered, as the latter were
+marching across the plateau with some batteries of foot artillery,--the
+odds were probably scarcely less than five to one. The Southerners were
+fighting magnificently, as firm in their close square of four hundred as
+the Consular Guard at Marengo, but so surrounded by the Northern host,
+that they looked like a little island circled round by raging breakers.
+Glancing down on the plain as my horse scoured and slid along the
+incline, the nucleus of Southerners looked hopelessly lost amidst the
+belching fire and pressing columns of the enemy. The whole was
+surrounded and hidden by the whirling clouds of dust and smoke that
+swirled above in a white heavy mist; but through this the sabres
+flashed, the horses' heads reared, maddened and foam-covered, like so
+many bas-reliefs of Bucephalus, the lean rifle-barrels glittered, and
+for a moment I saw the Southern leader, steady as a rock in the centre,
+hewing like a trooper right and left, and with a gray heron's feather
+floating from his sombrero, a signal that seemed as well known and as
+closely followed as the snowy plume of Murat.
+
+To have looked on at this and not have taken a share in it, one would
+have been a stone, not a man, and much less a cavalry-man; I need not
+tell you that I smashed the gray across the plateau, hurled him into the
+thick of the melee, dashed _somehow_ through the Federal ranks, and was
+near the gray plume and fighting for the Old Dominion before you could
+have shouted a stave of "Dixie." I was a "non-combatant," I was a
+"neutral"--delicate Anglo-euphemism for coward, friend to neither and
+traitor to both!--I was on a tour of observation, and had no business to
+fire a shot for one or the other perhaps, but I forgot all that, and
+with the bridle in my teeth and a pistol in each hand, I rode down to
+give one blow the more for the weak side.
+
+How superbly that Gray Feather fought!--keeping his men well up round
+him, though saddle after saddle was emptied, and horse after horse tore
+riderless out of the ranks, or reeled over on their heads, spurting
+blood, he sat like a statue, he fought like a Titan, his sabre seemed
+flashing unceasingly in the air, so often was it raised to come down
+again like lightning through a sword-arm, or lay open a skull to the
+brains; the shots ploughed up the earth round him, and rattled like hail
+through the air, a score of balls were aimed at him alone, a score of
+sabres crossed his own; but he was cool as St. Lawrence ice, and laid
+the men dead in struggling heaps under his charger's hoofs; only to
+fight near the man was a glorious intoxication; you seemed to "breathe
+blood" till you got drunk with it.
+
+The four hundred had been mowed down to two; I did as good work as I
+could, having wrenched a sword out of some dead trooper's hand; but I
+was only one, and the Northerners counted by thousands. Come out of it
+alive I never expected to do; but I vow it was the happiest day of my
+life--the pace was so splendidly fast! The Gray Feather at last glanced
+anxiously around; his men stuck like death to him, ready to be hewed
+down one by one, and die game; his teeth were set tight, and his eyes
+had a flash in them like steel. "Charge! and cut through!" he shouted,
+his voice rolling out like a clarion, giving an order that it seemed
+could be followed by nothing short of supernatural aid. The Southrons
+thought otherwise; they only heard to obey; they closed up as steadily
+as though they were a squadron on parade, despite the great gaps between
+them of dying chargers, and of heaped-up killed and wounded, that broke
+their ranks like so much piled stones and timber; they halted a moment,
+the murderous fire raking them right and left, front and rear; then,
+with that dense mass of troops round them, they charged; shivered the
+first line that wedged them in; pierced by sheer force of impetus the
+columns that opened fire in their path; wrenched themselves through as
+through the steel jaws of a trap, and swept out on to the green level of
+the open plateau, with a wild rallying Virginian shout that rings in my
+ears now!
+
+I have been in a good many hot things in my time; but I never knew
+anything that for pace and long odds could be anything near to that.
+
+I had kept with them through the charge with no other scratch than a
+shoulder cut; and I had been close to their chief through it all. When
+we were clean out on the plains beyond pursuit--for the Union-men had
+not a squadron of cavalry, though their guns at long range belched a
+storm in our wake--he turned in his saddle without checking his mare's
+thundering gallop, and levelled his rifle that was slung at his aide.
+"I'll have the General, anyhow," he said, quietly taking aim--still
+without checking his speed--at the knot of staff-officers that now were
+scarce more than specks in a blurred mass of mist. He fired; and the
+centre figure in that indistinct and fast-vanishing group fell from the
+saddle, while the yell of fury that the wind faintly floated nearer told
+us that the shot had been deadly. The Gray Feather laughed, a careless
+airy laugh of triumph, while he swept on at topmost pace; a little more,
+and we should dive down into the dark aisles of grand forest-trees and
+cavernous ravines of timber roads, safe from all pursuit; a second, and
+we should reach the green core of the safe and silent woods, the cool
+shelter of mountain-backed lakes, the sure refuge of tangled coverts. It
+was a guinea to a shilling that we gained it; it was all but won; a
+moment's straight run-in, and we should have it! But that moment was not
+to be ours.
+
+Out of the narrow cleft of a valley on the left, all screened with
+hanging tumbled foliage, and dark as death, there poured suddenly across
+our front a dense body of Federal troopers and Horse Artillery, two
+thousand strong at the least, full gallop, to join the main army. We
+were surrounded in a second, in a second overpowered by sheer strength
+of numbers; only two hundred of us, many sorely wounded, and on mounts
+that were jaded and ridden out of all pace, let us fight as we would,
+what could we do against fresh and picked soldiers, swarming down on us
+like a swarm of hornets, while in our rear was the main body through
+which we had just cut our way? That the little desperate band "died
+hard," I need not say; but the vast weight of the fresh squadrons
+pressed our little knot in as if between the jaws of a trap, crushing it
+like grain between two iron weights. The Gray Feather fought like all
+the Knights of the Round Table merged in one, till he streamed with
+blood from head to foot, and his sabre was hacked and bent like an
+ash-stick, as did a man near him, a tall superb Virginian, handsome as
+any Vandyke or Velasquez picture. At last both the Gray Feather and he
+went down, not by death--it would not come to them--but literally hurled
+out of their stirrup-leathers by crowding scores who poured on them,
+hamstrung or shot their horses, and made them themselves prisoners--not,
+however, till the assailants lay heaped ten deep about their slaughtered
+chargers. For myself, a blow from a sabre, a second afterwards, felled
+me like so much wood. I saw a whirling blaze of sun, a confused circling
+eddy of dizzy color, forked flames, and flashes of light, and I knew no
+more, till I opened my eyes in a dark, square, unhealthy wooden chamber,
+with a dreamy but settled conviction that I was dead, and in the family
+vault, far away under the green old elms of Warwickshire, with the rooks
+cawing above my head.
+
+As the delusion dissipated and the mists cleared, I saw through the
+uncertain light a face that was strangely but vaguely familiar to me,
+connected somehow with incoherent memories of life at home, and yet
+unknown to me. It was bronzed deeply, bearded, with flakes of gray among
+the fairness of the hair, much aged, much worn, scarred and stained just
+now with the blood of undressed wounds and the dust of the combat, for
+there was no one merciful enough there to bring a stoup of water; it was
+rougher, darker, sterner, and yet, with it all, nobler, too, than the
+face that I had known. I lay and stared blankly at it: it was the face
+of the Southern Leader of the morning, who sat now, on a pile of straw,
+looking wearily out to the dying sun, one amongst a group of twenty,
+prisoners all, like myself. I moved, and he turned his eyes on me; they
+had laid me down there as a "gone 'coon," and were amazed to see me come
+to life again. As our eyes met I knew him--he was Deadly Dash.
+
+The old name left my lips with a shout as strong as a half-killed man
+can give. It seemed so strange to meet him there, captives together in
+the Unionists' hands! It struck him with a sharp shock. England and he
+had been divorced so long. I saw the blood leap to his forehead, and the
+light into his glance; then, with a single stride, he reached the straw
+I lay on, holding my hands in his, looking on me with the kindly eyes
+that had used to make me like the Killer, and greeting me with a warmth
+that was only damped and darkened by regret that my battle done for fair
+Virginia had laid me low, a prisoner with himself, and that we should
+meet thus, in so sharp an hour of adversity, with nothing before us but
+the Capitol, the Carroll prison, or worse. Yet thus we did meet once
+more and I knew at last what had been the fate of Deadly Dash, whom
+England had outlawed as a scoundrel, and the New World had found a hero.
+
+Though suffering almost equally himself, he tended me with the
+kindliest sympathy; he came out of his own care to ponder how possible
+it might be to get me eventual freedom as a tourist and a mere
+accidental sharer in the fray; he was interested to hear all that I
+would tell him of my own affairs and of his old friends in England, but
+of himself he would not speak; he simply said he had been fighting for
+the Confederacy ever since the war had begun; and I saw that he strove
+in vain to shake off a deep heart-broken gloom that seemed to have
+settled on him, doubtless, as I thought, from the cruel defeat of the
+noon, and the hopeless captivity into which he, the most restless and
+the most daring soldier that oversaw service, was now flung.
+
+I noticed, too, that every now and then while he sat beside me, talking
+low--for there were sentinels both in and out the rude outhouse of the
+farm that had been turned into our temporary prison--his eyes wandered
+to the gallant Virginian who had been felled down with himself, and who,
+covered like himself with blood and dust, and with his broken left arm
+hanging shattered, lay on the bare earth in a far-off corner motionless
+and silent, with his lips pressed tight under their long black
+moustaches, and such a mute unutterable agony in his eyes as I never saw
+in any human face, though I have seen deaths enough in the field and the
+sick-ward. The rest of the Confederate captives were more ordinary men
+(although from none was a single word of lament ever wrenched); but this
+superb Virginian excited my interest, and I asked his name, in that sort
+of languid curiosity at passing things which comes with weakness, of the
+Killer, whose glance so incessantly wandered towards him.
+
+"Stuart Lane," he answered, curtly, and added no more; but if I ever saw
+in this world hatred, passionate, ungovernable, and intense, I saw it in
+the Killer's look as his glance flashed once more on to the motionless
+form of the handsomest, bravest, and most dauntless officer of his
+gallant regiment that he had seen cut to pieces there on that accursed
+plateau.
+
+"A major of yours?" I asked him. "Ah, I thought so; he fought
+magnificently. How wretched he looks, though he is too proud to show
+it!"
+
+"He is thinking of--of his bride. He married three weeks ago."
+
+The words were simple enough, and spoken very quietly; but there was an
+unsteadiness, as of great effort, over them; and the heel of his heavy
+spurred jack-boot crashed into the dry mud with a grinding crush, as
+though it trod terrible memories down. Was it a woman who was between
+these two comrades in arms and companions in adversity? I wondered if it
+were so, even in that moment of keen and heavy anxiety for us all, as I
+looked at the face that bent very kindly over the straw to which a shot
+in the knee and a deep though not dangerous shoulder-wound bound me. It
+was very different to the face of eight or nine years before--browner,
+harder, graver far; and yet there was a look as if "sorrow had passed by
+there," and swept the old heartlessness and gay callousness away,
+burning them out in its fires.
+
+Silence fell over us in that wretched outshed where we were huddled
+together. I was hot with incipient fever, and growing light-headed
+enough, though I knew what passed before me, to speak to Dash once or
+twice in a dreamy idea that we were in the Shires watching the run-in
+for the "Soldiers' Blue Riband." The minutes dragged very drearily as
+the day wore itself away. There were the sullen monotonous tramp of the
+sentinels to and fro, and, from without, the neighing of horses, the
+bugle calls, the roll of the drums, the challenge of outposts--all the
+varied, endless sounds of a camp; for the farmhouse in whose shed we
+were thrown was the head-quarters _pro tem_. of the Federal General who
+commanded the Divisions that had cost the Killer's handful of Horse so
+fearfully dear. We were prisoners, and escape was impossible. All arms
+of course had been removed from us; most, like myself, were too disabled
+by wounds to have been able to avail ourselves of escape had it been
+possible; and the guard was doubled both in and out the shed; there was
+nothing before any of us but the certainty of imprisonment in all its
+horrors in some far-off fortress or obscure jail. There was the possible
+chance that, since certain officers on whom the Northerners set great
+store had lately fallen into Southern hands, an exchange might be
+effected; yet, on the other side, graver apprehensions still existed,
+since we knew that the General into whose camp we had been brought had
+proclaimed his deliberate purpose of shooting the three next
+Secessionist officers who fell into his power, in requital for three of
+his own officers who had been shot, or were said to have been shot, by a
+Southern raider. We knew very well that, the threat made, it would be
+executed; and each of us, as the sun sank gradually down through the hot
+skies that were purple and stormy after the burning day, knew, too, that
+it might never rise again to greet our sight. None of us would have
+heeded whether a ball would hit or miss us in the open, in a fair fight,
+in a man-to-man struggle; but the boldest and most careless amidst us
+felt it very bitter to die like dogs, to die as prisoners.
+
+Even Deadly Dash, coolest, most hardened, most devil-may-care of
+soldiers and of sinners, sat with his gaze fastened on the slowly
+sinking light in the west with the shadow of a great pain upon his face,
+while every now and then his glance wandered to Stuart Lane, and a
+quick, irrepressible shudder shook him whenever it did so. The Virginian
+never moved; no sign of any sort escaped him; but the passionate misery
+that looked out of his eyes I never saw equalled, except, perhaps, in
+the eyes of a stag that I once shot in Wallachia, and that looked up
+with just such a look before it died. He was thinking, no doubt, of the
+woman he loved--wooed amidst danger, won amidst calamity, scarcely
+possessed ere lost for ever;--thinking of her proud beauty, of her
+bridal caress, that would never again touch his lips, of her fair life
+that would perish with the destruction of his.
+
+Exhaustion from the loss of blood made everything pass dreamily, and yet
+with extraordinary clearness, before me, I felt in a wakening dream, and
+had no sense whatever of actual existence, and yet the whole scene was
+so intensely vital and vivid to me, that it seemed burned into my very
+brain itself. It was like the phantasmagoria of delirium, utterly
+impalpable, but yet intensely real. I had no power to act or resist, but
+I seemed to have ten times redoubled power to see and hear and feel; I
+was aware of all that passed, with a hundredfold more susceptibility to
+it than I ever felt in health. I remember a total impossibility that
+came on me to decide whether I was dreaming or was actually awake.
+Twilight fell, night came; there was a change of sentries, and a light,
+set up in a bottle, shed a flickering, feeble, yellow gleam over the
+interior of the shed, on the dark Rembrandt faces of the Southerners and
+on the steel of the guards' bayonets. And I recollect that the Killer,
+who sat by the tossed straw on which they had flung me, laughed the old,
+low, sweet, half-insolent laugh that I had known so well in early days.
+"_Il faut souffrir pour etre beau!_ We are picturesque, at any rate,
+quite Salvatoresque! Little Dickey would make a good thing of us if he
+could paint us now. He is alive, I suppose?"
+
+I answered him I believe in the affirmative; but the name of that little
+Bohemian of the Brush, who had used to be our butt and _protege_ in
+England, added a haze the more to my senses. By this time I had
+difficulty to hold together the thread of how, and when, and why I had
+thus met again the face that looked out on me so strangely familiarly in
+the dull, sickly trembling of the feeble light of this black, noisome
+shed in the heart of Federal Divisions.
+
+Through that haze I heard the challenge of the sentries; I saw a soldier
+prod with his bayonet a young lad who had fainted from haemorrhage, and
+whom he swore at for shamming. I was conscious of the entrance of a
+group of officers, whom I knew afterwards to be the Northern General and
+his staff, who came to look at their captives. I knew, but only dreamily
+still, that these men were the holders of our fate, and would decide on
+it then and there. I felt a listless indifference, utter and opium-like,
+as to what became of me, and I remember that Stuart Lane, and Dash
+himself, rose together, and stood looking with a serene and haughty
+disdain down on the conquerors who held their lives in the
+balance--without a trace of pain upon their faces now. I remember how
+like they looked to stags that turn at bay; like the stags, outnumbered,
+hunted down, with the blood of open wounds and the dust of the long
+chase on them; but, like the deer, too, uncowed, and game to the finish.
+
+Very soon their doom was given. Seven were to be sent back with a flag
+of truce to be exchanged for the seven Federal officers they wanted out
+of the Southerners' hands, ten were to be transmitted to the prisons of
+the North,--three were to be shot at day-dawn in the reprisal before
+named. The chances of life and of death were to be drawn for by lottery,
+and at once.
+
+Not a sound escaped the Virginians, and not a muscle of their English
+Leader's face moved: the prisoners, to a man, heard impassively, with a
+grave and silent dignity, that they were to throw the die in hazard,
+with death for the croupier and life for the stake.
+
+The General and his staff waited to amuse themselves with personally
+watching the turns of this new _Rouge et Noir_; gambling in lives was a
+little refreshing change that sultry, dreary, dun-colored night, camped
+amongst burnt-out farms and wasted corn-lands.
+
+Slips of paper, with "exchange," "death," and "imprisonment" written on
+them in the numbers needed, were made ready, rolled up, and tossed into
+an empty canteen; each man was required to come forward and draw, I
+alone excepted because I was an officer of the British Army. I remember
+passionately arguing that they had no right to exempt me, since I had
+been in the fray, and had killed three men on my own hook, and would
+have killed thirty more had I had the chance; but I was perhaps
+incoherent in the fever that was fast seizing all my limbs from the rack
+of undressed wounds; at any rate, the Northerners took no heed, save to
+force me into silence, and the drawing began. As long as I live I shall
+see that night in remembrance with hideous distinctness: the low
+blackened shed with its foetid odors from the cattle lately foddered
+there; the yellow light flaring dully here and there; the glisten of the
+cruel rifles; the heaps of straw and hay soaked with clotted blood; the
+group of Union Officers standing near the doorway; and the war-worn
+indomitable faces of the Southerners, with the fairer head and slighter
+form of their English chief standing out slightly in front of all.
+
+The Conscription of Death commenced; a Federal private took the paper
+from each man as he drew it, and read the word of destiny aloud. Not one
+amongst them faltered or paused one moment; each went,--even those most
+exhausted, most in agony,--with a calm and steady step, as they would
+have marched up to take the Flag of the Stars and Bars from Lee or
+Longstreet. Not one waited a second's breath before he plunged his hand
+into the fatal lottery.
+
+Deadly Dash was the first called: there was not one shadow of anxiety
+upon his face; it was calm without effort, careless without bravado,
+simply, entirely indifferent. They took his paper and read the words of
+safety and of life--"Exchange." Then, for one instant, a glory of hope
+flashed like the sun into his eyes--to die the next; die utterly.
+
+Three followed him, and they all drew the fiat for detention; the fifth
+called was Stuart Lane.
+
+Let him have suffered as he would, he gave no sign of it now; he
+approached with his firm, bold cavalry step, and his head haughtily
+lifted; the proud, fiery, dauntless Cavalier of ideal and of romance.
+Without a tremor in his wrist he drew his paper out and gave it.
+
+One word alone fell distinct on the silence like the hiss of a shot
+through the night--"_Death!_"
+
+He bowed his head slightly as if in assent, and stepped backward--still
+without a sign.
+
+His English chief gave him one look,--it was that of merciless
+exultation, of brutal joy, of dark, Cain-like, murderous hate; but it
+passed, passed quickly: Dash's head sank on his chest, and on his face
+there was the shadow, I think, of a terrible struggle--the shadow, I
+know, of a great remorse. He strove with his longing greed for this
+man's destruction; he knew that he thirsted _to see him die_.
+
+The Virginian stood erect and silent: a single night and the strong and
+gallant life, the ardent passions, the chivalrous courage to do and
+dare, and the love that was in its first fond hours would all be
+quenched in him as though they had never been; but he was a soldier, and
+he gave no sign that his death-warrant was not as dear to him as his
+bridal-night had been. Even his conquerors cast one glance of admiration
+on him; it was only his leader who felt for him no pang of reverence and
+pity.
+
+The lottery continued; the hazard was played out; life and death were
+scattered at reckless chance amidst the twenty who were the playthings
+of that awful gaming; all had been done in perfect silence on the part
+of the condemned; not one seemed to think or to feel for himself, and
+in those who were sent out to their grave not a grudge lingered against
+their comrades of happier fortune. Deadly Dash, whose fate was release,
+alone stood with his head sunk, thoughtful and weary.
+
+The three condemned to execution were remanded to separate and solitary
+confinement, treated already as felons for that one short night which
+alone remained to them. As his guards removed him, Stuart Lane paused
+slightly, and signed to his chief to approach him; he held out his hand
+to Dash, and his voice was very low, though it came to my ear where they
+stood beside me: "We were rivals once, but we may be friends _now_. As
+you have loved her, be pitiful to her when you tell her of my
+death,--God knows it may be hers! As you have loved her, feel what it is
+to die without one last look on her face!"
+
+Then, and then only, his bronze cheek grew white as a woman's, and his
+whole frame shook with one great silent sob; his guard forced him on,
+and his listener had made him no promise, no farewell; neither had he
+taken his hand. He had heard in silence, with a dark and evil gloom
+alone upon him.
+
+The Federal General sharply summoned him from his musing, as the chief
+of those to be exchanged on the morrow under a white flag of parley;
+there were matters to be stated to and to be arranged with him.
+
+"I will only see you alone, General," he answered curtly.
+
+The Northerner stared startled, and casting a glance over the
+redoubtable leader of horse, whose gray feather had become known and
+dreaded, thought of possible assassination. Deadly Dash laughed his old
+light, ironic, contemptuous laugh.
+
+"A wounded unarmed man can scarcely kill you! Have as many of your
+staff about you as you please, but let none of my Virginians be present
+at our interview."
+
+The Northerners thought he intended to desert to them, or betray some
+movement of importance, and assented; and he went out with them from the
+cattle-shed into the hot, stormy night, and the Southerners who were
+condemned to death and detention looked after him with a long, wistful,
+dog-like look. They had been with him in so many spirit-stirring days
+and nights of peril, and they knew that never would they meet again. He
+had not given one of them a word of adieu; he had killed too many to be
+touched by his soldiers' loss. Who could expect pity from Deadly Dash?
+
+An hour passed; I was removed under a guard to a somewhat better lodging
+in the granary, where a surgeon hastily dressed my wounds, and left me
+on a rough pallet with a jug of water at my side, and the sentinel for
+my only watcher, bidding me "sleep." Sleep! I could not have slept for
+my ransom. Though life had hardened me, and made me sometimes, as I
+fear, callous enough, I could not forget those who were to die when the
+sun rose; specially, I could not forget that gallant Virginian to whom
+life was so precious, yet who gave himself with so calm a fortitude to
+his fate. The rivalry, I thought, must be deep and cruel, to make the
+man from whom he had won what they both loved turn from him in hatred,
+even in such extremity as his. On the brink of a comrade's grave, feud
+might surely have been forgotten?
+
+All that had just passed was reeling deliriously through my brain, and I
+was panting in the sheer irritation and exhaustion of gunshot wounds,
+when through the gloom Dash entered the granary, closely guarded, but
+allowed to be with me on account of our common country. Never was I more
+thankful to see a familiar face from home than to see his through the
+long watches of that burning, heavy, interminable night. He refused to
+rest; he sat by me, tending me as gently as a woman, though he was
+suffering acutely himself from the injuries received in the course of
+the day; he watched me unweariedly, though often and often his gaze and
+his thoughts wandered far from me, as he looked out through the open
+granary door, past the form of the sentinel, out to the starry solemn
+skies, the deep woods, and the dark silent land over which the stars
+were brooding, large and clear.
+
+Was he thinking of the Virginian whose life would die out for ever, with
+the fading of those stars, or of the woman whom he had lost, whose love
+was the doomed soldier's, and would never be his own, though the grave
+closed over his rival with the morrow's sun? Dreamily, half
+unconsciously, in the excitement of fever, I asked him of her of whom I
+knew nothing:
+
+"Did you love that woman so well?"
+
+His eyes were still fixed on the distant darkening skies, and he
+answered quietly, as though rather to his own thoughts than my
+words,--"Yes: I love her--as I never loved in that old life in England;
+as we never love but once, I think."
+
+"And she?"
+
+"And she--has but one thought in the world--_him_."
+
+His voice, as he answered, now grated with dull, dragging misery over
+the words.
+
+"Had she so much beauty that she touched you like this?"
+
+He smiled slightly, a faint, mournful smile, unutterably sad.
+
+"Yes; she is very lovely, but her beauty is the least rare charm. She is
+a woman for whom a man would live his greatest, and if he cannot live
+for her--may--die."
+
+The utterance was very slow, and seemed to lie on me like a hand on my
+lips compelling me to silence; he had forgotten all, except his memory
+of her, and where he sat with his eyes fixed outward on the drifting
+clouds that floated across the stars, I saw his lips quiver once, and I
+heard him murmur half aloud: "My darling! My darling! You will know how
+I loved you _then_----"
+
+And the silence was never broken between us, but he sat motionless thus
+all the hours through, looking out at the deep still woods, and the
+serene and lustrous skies, till the first beams of the sun shone over
+the hills in the east, and I shuddered, where I lay, at its light;--for
+I knew it was the signal of death.
+
+Then he arose, and bent towards me, and the kindly eyes of old looked
+down on mine.
+
+"Dear old fellow, the General expects me at dawn. I must leave you just
+now; say good-bye."
+
+His hand closed on mine, he looked on me one moment longer, a little
+lingeringly, a little wistfully, then he turned and went out with his
+guard; went out into the young day that was just breaking on the world.
+
+I watched his shadow as it faded, and I saw that the sun had risen
+wholly; and I thought of those who were to die with the morning light.
+
+All was very calm for a while; then the beat of a drum rolled through
+the quiet of the dawn, and the measured tramp of armed men sounded
+audibly; my heart stood still, my lips felt parched,--I knew the errand
+of that column marching so slowly across the parched turf. A little
+while longer yet, and I heard the sharp ring of the ramrods being
+withdrawn, and the dull echo of the charge being rammed down: with a
+single leap, as though the bullets were through me, I sprang, weak as I
+was, from my wretched pallet, and staggered to the open doorway, leaning
+there against the entrance powerless and spell-bound. I saw the file of
+soldiers loading; I saw the empty coffin-shells; I saw three men
+standing bound, their forms distinct against the clear, bright haze of
+morning, and the fresh foliage of the woods. Two of them were
+Virginians, but the third was not Stuart Lane With a great cry I sprang
+forward, but the guards seized my arms and held me, helpless as a woman,
+in their gripe. He whom we had called Deadly Dash heard, and looked up
+and smiled. His face was tranquil and full of light, as though the pure
+peace of the day shone there.
+
+The gripe of the sentinels held me as if in fetters of iron; the world
+seemed to rock and reel under me, a sea of blood seemed eddying before
+my eyes; the young day was dawning, and murder was done in its early
+hours, and I was held there to look on,--its witness, yet powerless to
+arrest it! I heard the formula--so hideous then!--"Make
+ready!"--"Present!"--"Fire!" I saw the long line of steel tubes belch
+out their smoke and flame. I heard the sullen echo of the report roll
+down from the mountains above. When the mist cleared away, the three
+figures stood no longer clear against the sunlight; they had fallen.
+
+With the mad violence of desperation I wrenched myself from my guards,
+and staggered to him where he lay; he was not quite dead yet; the balls
+had passed through his lungs, but he breathed still; his eyes were
+unclosed, and the gleam of a last farewell came in them. He smiled
+slightly, faintly once more.
+
+"She will know how I loved her now. Tell her I died for her," he said
+softly, while his gaze looked upwards to the golden sun-rays rising in
+the east.
+
+And with these words life passed away, the smile still lingering gently
+on his lips;--and I knew no more, for I fell like a man stunned down by
+him where he was stretched beside the grave that they had hewn for him
+ere he was yet dead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I knew when I saw him there, as well as I knew by detail long after,
+that he had offered his life for Stuart Lane's, and that it had been
+accepted; the Virginian, ignorant of the sacrifice made for him, had
+been sent to the Southern lines during the night, told by the
+Northerners that he was pardoned on his parole to return in his stead a
+distinguished Federal officer lately captured by him. He knew nothing,
+dreamt nothing, of the exchange by which his life was given back to the
+woman who loved him, when his English Leader died in his place as the
+sun rose over the fresh summer world, never again to rise for those
+whose death-shot rang sullen and shrill through its silence.
+
+So Deadly Dash died, and his grave is nameless and unknown there under
+the shadow of the great Virginian forests. He was outlawed, condemned,
+exiled, and the world would see no good in him; sins were on him
+heavily, and vices lay darkly at his door; but when I think of that
+grave in the South where the grass grows so rankly now, and only the
+wild deer pauses, I doubt if there was not that in him which may well
+shame the best amongst us. We never knew him justly till he perished
+there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And my friend who told me this said no more, but took up his
+_brule-gueule_ regretfully. The story is given as he gave it, and the
+States could whisper from the depths of their silent woods many tales of
+sacrifice as generous, of fortitude as great. That when he had related
+it he was something ashamed of having felt it so much, is true; and you
+must refer the unusual weakness, as he did, to the fact that he told it
+on the off-day of the Derby, after having put a cracker on Wild Charley.
+A sufficient apology for any number of frailties!
+
+
+
+
+THE GENERAL'S MATCH-MAKING.
+
+OR,
+
+COACHES AND COUSINSHIP.
+
+
+Where the devil shall I go this Long? Paris is too hot; the inside of my
+adorable Chateau des Fleurs would give one a lively idea of the feelings
+of eels in a frying-pan. Rome's only fit to melt down puffy cardinals,
+as jocks set themselves before the kitchen fire preparatory to the
+Spring Meetings. In Switzerland there's nothing fit to eat. Spain might
+be the ticket--the Andalusians are a good-looking lot, but they haven't
+a notion of beer. Scotland I daren't enter, because I know I should get
+married under their rascally laws. I'd go to the Bads, but the V. P.'s
+fillies say they mean to do 'em this summer, and I won't risk meeting
+them if I know it; the baits they set to catch the unsuspecting are
+quite frightful. Where the devil _shall_ I go?
+
+So spoke Sydenham Morton, whilom Captain of Eton, now, in due course,
+having passed up to Kings, discussing ham-pie and audit, devils and
+coffee, while the June sun streamed through the large oriel windows.
+
+"_To_ the devil, I fear, if you only find your proper fraternity," said
+a man, coming in. Oak was never sported by Sydie, except when he was
+rattling certain little squares of ivory in boxes lined with green felt.
+
+"Ah, Mr. Keane, is that you? Come in."
+
+The permission was needless, insomuch as Keane was already in and down
+on a rocking-chair.
+
+"One o'clock, and only just begun your breakfast! I have finished more
+than half my day's work."
+
+"I dare say," answered Sydie; "but one shining light like you,
+monseigneur, is enough for a college. Why should I exert myself? I swore
+I hadn't four marks a year, and I've my fellowship for telling the
+furbelow. We all go in for the dolce here except you, and you're such a
+patent machine for turning out Q. E. D.s by the dozen, that you can no
+more help working than the bed-maker can help taking my tea and saying
+the cat did it, and 'May she never be forgiven if she ever so much as
+looked at that there blessed lock.' I say, find a Q. E. D. for me, to
+the most vexatious problem, where I'm to go this Long?"
+
+"Go a quiet reading tour; mark out a regular plan, and travel somewhere
+rugged and lonely, with not a crinoline, or a trout-stream, or a pack of
+hounds within a hundred miles; the middle of Stonehenge, for example, or
+with the lighthouse men out at the Smalls or Eddystone. You'd do wonders
+when you came back, Sydie."
+
+Sydie shook his head and puffed gravely at his pipe.
+
+"Thank you, sir. Cramming's not my line. As for history, I don't see
+anything particularly interesting in the blackguardisms of men all dust
+and ashes and gelatine now; if I were the Prince of Wales, I might think
+it my duty to inquire into the characters of my grandfathers; but not
+being that individual, I find the Derby list much more suited to my
+genius. As for the classics, they won't help me to ask for my dinner at
+Tortoni's, nor to ingratiate myself with the women at the Maison Doree;
+and I prefer following Ovid's counsels, and enjoying the Falernian of
+life represented in these days by milk-punch, to plodding through the De
+Officiis. As for mathematics, it _may_ be something very grand to draw
+triangles and circles till A meets B because C is as long as D; but I
+know, when I did the same operation in chalk when I was a small actor
+on the nursery floor, my nurse (who might have gone along with the
+barbarian who stuck Archimedes) called me an idle brat. Well, I say,
+about the Long? Where are _you_ going, most grave and reverent
+seignior?"
+
+"Where there are no impertinent boys, if there be such a paradise on
+earth," rejoined Keane, lighting his pipe. "I go to my moor, of course,
+for the 12th, but until then I haven't made up my mind. I think I shall
+scamper over South America; I want freshening up, and I've a great fancy
+to see those buried cities, not to mention a chance of buffalo hunting."
+
+"Travelling's such a bore," interrupted Sydie, stretching himself out
+like an india-rubber tube. "Talk of the cherub that's always sitting up
+aloft to watch over poor Jack, there are always ten thousand demons
+watching over the life of any luckless AEothen; there are the
+custom-house men, whose natural prey he becomes, and the hotel-keepers,
+who fasten on him to suck his life-blood, and there are the mosquitoes,
+and other things less minute but not less agonizing; and there are
+guides and muleteers, and waiters and ciceroni--oh, hang it!
+travelling's a dreadful bore, if it were only for the inevitable widow
+with four daughters whom you've danced with once at a charity ball, who
+rushes up to you on the Boulevards or a Rhine steamer, and tacks herself
+on to you, and whom it's well for you if you can shake off when you
+scatter the dust of the city from the sole of your foot."
+
+"You can't chatter, can you?"
+
+"Yes; my fraenum was happily cut when I was a baby. Fancy what a loss the
+world would have endured if it hadn't been!" said Sydie, lazily shutting
+his half-closed blue eyes. "I say, the governor has been bothering my
+life out to go down to St. Crucis; he's an old brick, you know, and has
+the primest dry in the kingdom. I wish you'd come, will you? There's
+capital fishing and cricketing, and you'd keep me company. Do. You shall
+have the best mount in the kingdom, and the General will do you no end
+of good on Hippocrate's rule--contrarieties cure contrarieties."
+
+"I'll think about it; but you know I prefer solitude generally;
+misanthropical, I admit, but decidedly lucky for me, as my companions
+through life will always be my ink-stand, my terrier, and my papers. I
+have never wished for any other yet, and I hope I never shall. Are you
+going to smoke and drink audit on that sofa all day?"
+
+"No," answered Sydie, "I'm going to take a turn at beer and Brown's for
+a change. Well, I shall take you down with me on Tuesday, sir, so that's
+settled."
+
+Keane laughed, and after some few words on the business that had brought
+him thither, went across the quad to his own rooms to plunge into the
+intricacies of Fourrier and Laplace, or give the vigor of his brain to
+stuffing some young goose's empty head, or cramming some idle young dog
+with ballast enough to carry him through the shoals and quicksands of
+his Greats.
+
+Gerald Keane was a mathematical Coach, and had taken high honors--a rare
+thing for a Kingsman to do, for are they not, by their own confession,
+the laziest disciples of the dolce in the whole of Granta, invariably
+bumped and caught out, and from sheer idleness letting other men beat
+Lord's and shame the Oxford Eleven, and graduate with Double Firsts,
+while they lie perdus in the shades of Holy Henry? Keane, however, was
+the one exception to the rule. He was dreadfully wild, as ladies say,
+for his first term or two, though equally eloquent at the Union; then
+his family exulting in the accuracies of their prophecies regarding his
+worthlessness, and somebody else daring him to go in for honors, his
+pluck was put up, and he set himself to work to show them all what he
+could do if he chose. Once roused to put out his powers, he liked using
+them; the bother of the training over, it is no trouble to keep place as
+stroke-oar; and now men pointed him out in the Senate House, and at the
+Senior Fellows' table, and he bid fair to rank with the writer on Jasher
+and the author of the Inductive Sciences.
+
+People called him very cold. It was popularly averred that he had no
+more feeling than Roubilliac's or Thorwaldsen's statues; but as he was a
+great favorite with the under-grads, and always good-natured to them,
+there were a few men who doubted the theory, though _he_ never tried to
+refute or dispute it.
+
+Of all the young fellows, the one Keane liked the best, and to whom he
+was kindest, was Sydenham Morton--Sydie to everybody in Granta, from the
+little fleuriste opposite in King's Parade, to the V. P.'s wife, who
+petted him because his uncle was a millionnaire--the dearest fellow in
+the world, according to all the Cambridge young ladies--the darling of
+all the milliner and confectioner girls in Trumpington Street and Petty
+Cury--the best chap going among the kindred spirits, who got gated, and
+lectured, and rusticated for skying over to Newmarket, or pommelling
+bargees, or taking a lark over at Cherryhinton--the best-dressed,
+fastest, and most charming of Cantabs, as he himself would gravely
+assure you.
+
+They were totally dissimilar, and far asunder in position; but an affair
+on the slope of the Matterhorn, when the boy had saved the elder man's
+life, had riveted attachment between them, and bridged over the
+difference of their academical rank.
+
+The Commencement came and went, with its speeches, and its H.R.H.
+Chancellor, and its pretty women gliding among the elms of Neville's
+Court (poor Leslie Ellis's daily haunt), filling the grim benches of the
+Senate House, and flitting past the carved benches of King's Chapel.
+Granta was henceforth a desert to all Cambridge belles; they could walk
+down Trumpington Street without meeting a score of little straw hats,
+and Trumpington Street became as odious as Sahara; the "darling Backs"
+were free to them, and, of course, they who, by all relations, from
+those of Genesis to those of Vanity Fair, have never cared, save for
+_fruit defendu_, saw nothing to admire in the trees, and grass, and
+river, minus outriggers and collegians. There was a general exodus:
+Masters' red hoods, Fellows Commoners' gold-lace, Fellows' gown and
+mortar boards, morning chapel surplices, and under-grads' straw-hats and
+cutaway coats, all vanished from court and library, street and cloister.
+Cambridge was empty; the married Dons and their families went off to
+country-houses or Rhine steamers; Fellows went touring with views to
+mediaeval architecture, Roman remains, Greek inscriptions, Paris laisser
+aller, or Norwegian fishing, according to their tastes and habits;
+under-grads scattered themselves over the face of the globe, and were to
+be found in knots of two or three calling for stout in Vefour's, kicking
+up a row with Austrian gendarmerie, chalking up effigies of Bomba on
+Italian walls, striding up every mountain from Skiddaw to the Pic du
+Midi, burrowing like rabbits in a warren for reading purposes on
+Dartmoor, kissing sunny-haired Gretchens in German hostelries, swinging
+through the Vaterland with knapsacks and sticks, doing a walking
+tour--in fact, swarming everywhere with their impossible French and
+hearty voices, and lithe English muscle, Granta marked on them as
+distinctly as an M.B. waistcoat marks an Anglican, or utter ignorance of
+modern politics a "great classic."
+
+Cambridge had emptied itself of the scores of naughty boys that lie in
+the arms of Mater, and on Tuesday Keane and Sydie were shaking and
+rattling over those dreadful nervous Eastern Counties tenders, through
+that picturesque and beautiful country that does permutations with such
+laudable perseverance on pollards, fens, and flats--flats, fens, and
+pollards--at the snail's pace that, according to the E.G.R., we must
+believe to be "express."
+
+"I wrote and told the governor you were coming down with me, sir," said
+Sydie, hanging up his hat. "I didn't tell him what a trouble I had to
+make you throw over South America for a fortnight, and come and taste
+his curry at the Beeches. You'll like the old boy; he's as hot and
+choleric, and as genial and good-hearted, as any old brick that ever
+walked. He was born as sweet-tempered and soft-mouthed as mamma when an
+eldest son waltzes twice with Adeliza, and the pepper's been put into
+him by the curry-powder, the gentlemanlike transportation, and the
+unlimited command over black devils, enjoyed by gentlemen of the
+H.E.I.C.S."
+
+"A nabob uncle," thought Keane. "Oh, I see, yellow, dyspeptic, always
+boring one with 'How to govern India,' and recollections of 'When I
+served with Napier.' What a fool I was to let Sydie persuade me to go. A
+month in Lima and the Pampas would be much pleasanter."
+
+"He came over last year," continued Sydie, in blissful ignorance, "and
+bought the Beeches, a very jolly place, only he's crammed it with
+everything anybody suggested, and tried anything that any farmer
+recommended, so that the house and the estate present a peculiar
+compendium of all theories of architecture, and a general exhibition of
+all sorts of tastes. He's his hobbies; pouncing on and apprehending
+small boys is one of 'em, for which practice he is endeared to the youth
+of St. Crucis as the 'old cove,' the 'Injian devil,' and like
+affectionate cognomens. But the General's weak point is me--me and
+little Fay."
+
+"His mare, I suppose?"
+
+"His mare!--bless my heart, no!--his mare!" And Sydie lay back, and
+laughed silently. "His mare! By George! what would she say? She's a good
+deal too lively a young lady to run in harness for anybody, though
+she's soft-mouthed enough when she's led. Mare! No, Fay's his niece--my
+cousin. Her father and my father went to glory when we were both smalls,
+and left us in legacy to the General, and a pretty pot of money the
+legacy has cost him."
+
+"Your cousin, indeed! The name's more like a mare's than a girl's,"
+answered Keane, thinking to himself. "A cousin! I just wish I'd known
+that. One of those Indian girls, I bet, tanned brown as a berry, flirts
+a outrance, has run the gauntlet of all the Calcutta balls, been engaged
+to men in all the Arms, talks horridly broad Anglo-Indian-English. I
+know the style."
+
+The engine screamed, and pulled up at the St. Crucis station, some
+seventy miles farther on, lying in the midst of Creswickian landscapes,
+with woodlands, and cottages, and sweet fresh stretches of meadow-land,
+such as do one's heart good after hard days and late nights in dust and
+gaslight.
+
+"Deuced fine points," said Sydie, taking the ribbons of a high-stepping
+bay that had brought one of the neatest possible traps to take him and
+Keane to the Beeches, and springing, in all his glory, to the box, than
+which no imperial throne could have offered to him one-half so
+delightful a seat. "Governor never keeps screws. What a crying shame
+we're not allowed to keep the sorriest hack at King's. That comes of
+gentlemen slipping into shoes that were meant for beggars. Hallo, there
+are the old beech-trees; I vow I can almost taste the curry and dry from
+looking at them."
+
+In dashed the bay through the park-gates, sending the shingle flying up
+in small simoons, and the rooks cawing in supreme surprise from their
+nests in the branches of the beech-trees.
+
+"Hallo, my ancient, how are you?" began Sydie to the butler, while that
+stately person expanded into a smile of welcome. "Down, dog, down! 'Pon
+my life, the old place looks very jolly. What have you hung all that
+armor up for;--to make believe our ancestors dwelt in these marble
+halls? How devilish dusty I am. Where's the General? Didn't know we were
+coming till next train. Fay! Fay! where are you? Ashton, where's Miss
+Morton?"
+
+"Here, Sydie dear," cried the young lady in question, rushing across the
+hall with the most ecstatic delight, and throwing herself into the
+Cantab's arms, who received her with no less cordiality, and kissed her
+straightway, regardless of the presence of Keane, the butler, and
+Harris.
+
+"Oh, Sydie," began the young lady, breathlessly, "I'm so delighted
+you're come. There's the archery fete, and a picnic at Shallowton, and
+an election ball over at Coverdale, and I want you to dance with me, and
+to try the new billiard-table, and to come and see my aviary, and to
+teach me pistol-shooting (because Julia Dupuis can shoot splendidly, and
+talks of joining the Rifles), and to show me how to do Euclid, and to
+amuse me, and to play with me, and to tell me which is the prettiest of
+Snowdrop's pups to be saved, and to----" She stopped suddenly, and
+dropped from enthusiastic tirade to subdued surprise, as she caught
+sight of Keane for the first time. "Oh, Sydie, why did you not introduce
+me to your friend? How rude I have been!"
+
+"Mr. Keane, my cousin, the torment of my existence, Miss Morton in
+public, Little Fay in private life. There, you know one another now. I
+can't say any more. Do tell me where the governor is."
+
+"Mr. Keane, what can you think of me?" cried Fay. "Any friend of
+Sydenham's is most welcome to the Beeches, and my uncle will scold me
+frightfully for giving you such a reception. Please do forgive me, I was
+so delighted to see my cousin."
+
+"Which I can fully enter into, having a weakness for Sydie myself,"
+smiled Keane. "I am sure he is very fortunate in being the cause of such
+an excuse."
+
+Keane said it _par complaisance_, but rather carelessly; young ladies,
+as a class, being one of his aversions. He looked at Fay Morton,
+however, and saw she was not an Indianized girl after all. She was not
+yellow, but, au contraire, had waving fair hair, long dark eyes, and a
+mischievous, sunny face--
+
+ A rosebud set with little wilful thorns,
+ And sweet as English air could make her.
+
+"Where's the governor, Fay?" reiterated Sydie.
+
+"Here, my dear boy. Thought of your old uncle the first thing, Sydie?
+God bless my soul, how well you look! Confound you, why didn't you tell
+me what train you were coming by? Devil take you, Ashton, why's there no
+fire in the hall? Thought it was warm, did you? Hum! more fool you
+then."
+
+"Uncle dear," said Miss Fay, "here is Sydie's friend, Mr. Keane; you are
+being as rude as I have been."
+
+The General, at this conjuration, swung sharp round, a stout, hale,
+handsome old fellow, with gray moustaches and a high color, holding a
+spade in his hand and clad in a linen coat.
+
+"Bless my soul, sir," cried the General, shaking Keane's hand with the
+greatest possible energy, "charmed to see you--delighted, 'pon my honor;
+only hope you're come to stay till Christmas; there are plenty of
+bachelors' dens. Devil take me! of what was I thinking? I was pleased
+to see that boy, I suppose. More fool I, you'll say, a lazy,
+good-for-nothing young dog like him. Don't let me keep you standing in
+the hall. Cursed cold, isn't it? and there's Little Fay in muslin!
+Ashton, send some hot water into the west room for Mr.--Mr.----Confound
+you, Sydie, why didn't you tell--I mean introduce me?--Mr. Keane.
+Luncheon will be on the table in ten minutes. Like curry, Mr. Keane?
+There, get along, Sydie, you foolish boy; you can talk to Fay after
+luncheon."
+
+"Sydie," whispered Fay, an hour before dinner, when she had teased the
+Cantab's life out of him till he had consented to pronounce judgment on
+the puppies, "what a splendid head that man has you brought with you;
+he'd do for Plato, with that grand calm brow and lofty unapproachable
+look. Who is he?"
+
+"The greatest philosopher of modern times," responded her cousin,
+solemnly. "A condensation of Solon, Thales, Plutarch, Seneca, Cicero,
+Lucullus, Bion, Theophrastes, and Co.; such a giant of mathematical
+knowledge, and all other knowledge, too, that every day, when he passes
+under Bacon's Gate, we are afraid the old legend will come to pass, and
+it will tumble down as flat as a pancake; a homage to him, but a loss to
+Cambridge."
+
+"Nonsense," said Miss Fay, impatiently. "(I like that sweet little thing
+with the black nose best, dear.) _Who_ is he? What is he? How old is he?
+What's his name? Where does he live?"
+
+"Gently, young woman," cried Sydie. "He is Tutor and Fellow of King's,
+and a great gun besides; he's some twenty-five years older than you. His
+name on the rolls is Gerald, I believe, and he dwells in the shadow of
+Mater, beyond the reach of my cornet; for which fact, not being
+musically inclined, he is barbarian enough to return thanks daily in
+chapel."
+
+"I am sorry he is come. It was stupid of you to bring him."
+
+"Wherefore, _ma cousine_? Are you afraid of him? You needn't be. Young
+ladies are too insignificant atoms of creation for him to criticise.
+He'll no more expect sense from you than from Snowdrop and her pups."
+
+"Afraid!" repeated Fay, with extreme indignation. "I should like to see
+any man of whom I should feel afraid! If he doesn't like fun and
+nonsense, I pity him; but if he despise me ever so much for it, I shall
+enjoy myself before him, and in spite of him. I was sorry you brought
+him, because he will take you away when I want you all to myself; and he
+looks so haughty, that----"
+
+"You _are_ afraid of him, Fay, and won't own it."
+
+"I am _not_," reiterated Fay, impetuously; "and I will smoke a cigar
+with him after dinner, to show you I am not one bit."
+
+"I bet you six pair of gloves you do no such thing, young lady."
+
+"Done. Do keep the one with a black nose, Sydie; and yet that little
+liver-colored darling is too pretty to be killed. Suppose we save them
+all? Snowdrop will be so pleased."
+
+Whereon Fay kissed all the little snub noses with the deepest affection,
+and was caught in the act by Keane and the General.
+
+"There's that child with her arms full of dogs," said the General,
+beaming with satisfaction at sight of his niece. "She's a little,
+spoilt, wilful thing. She's an old bachelor's pet, and you must make
+allowances. I call her the fairy of the Beeches, God bless her! She
+nursed me last winter, when I was at death's door from these cursed cold
+winds, sir, better than Miss Nightingale could have done. What a
+devilish climate it _is_; never two days alike. I don't wonder
+Englishwomen are such icicles, poor things; they're frostbitten from
+their cradle upwards."
+
+"India warms them up, General, doesn't it?"
+
+The General shook with laughter.
+
+"To be sure, to be sure; if prudery's the fashion, they'll wear it, sir,
+as they would patches or hair-powder; but they're always uncommonly glad
+to leave it off and lock it out of sight when they can. What do you
+think of the kennels? I say, Sydie, confound you, why did you bring down
+any traps with you? Haven't room for 'em, not for one. Couldn't cram a
+tilbury into the coach-house."
+
+"A trap, governor?" said Sydie, straightening his back after examination
+of the pups; "can't keep even a wall-eyed cab-horse; wish I could."
+
+"Where's your drag, then?" demanded the General.
+
+"My drag? Don't I just wish I had one, to offer my bosom friend the
+V. P. a seat on the box. Calvert, of Trinity, tooled us over in his to
+the Spring Meetings, and his grays are the sweetest pair of goers--the
+leaders especially--that ever you saw in harness. We came back 'cross
+country, to get in time for hall, and a pretty mess we made of it, for
+we broke the axle, and lamed the off-wheeler, and----"
+
+"But, God bless my soul," stormed the General, excited beyond measure,
+"you wrote me word you were going to bring a drag down with you, and of
+course I supposed you meant what you said, and I had Harris in about it,
+and he swore the coach-house was as full of traps as ever it could hold,
+so I had my tax-cart and Fay's phaeton turned into one of the stalls,
+and then, after all, it comes out you've never brought it! Devil take
+you, Sydie, why can't you be more thoughtful----"
+
+"But, my dear governor----"
+
+"Nonsense; don't talk to me!" cried the General, trying to work himself
+into a passion, and diving into the recesses of six separate pockets one
+after another. "Look here, sir, I suppose you'll believe your own words?
+Here it is in black and white.--'P. S. I shall bring _my Coach_ down
+with me.' There, what do you say now? Confound you, what are you
+laughing at? _I_ don't see anything to laugh at. In my day, young
+fellows didn't make fools of old men in this way. Bless my soul, why
+the devil don't you leave off laughing, and talk a little common sense?
+The thing's plain enough.--'P.S. _I shall bring my Coach down with
+me_.'"
+
+"So I have," said Sydie, screaming with laughter. "Look at him--he's a
+first-rate Coach, too! Wheels always oiled, and ready for any road;
+always going up hill, and never caught coming down; started at a devil
+of a pace, and now keeps ahead of all other vehicles on all highways. A
+first-class Coach, that will tool me through the tortuous lanes and
+treacherous pitfalls of the Greats with flying colors. My Coach! Bravo,
+General! that's the best bit of fun I've had since I dressed up like
+Sophonisba Briggs, and led the V. P. a dance all round the quad, every
+hair on his head standing erect in his virtuous indignation at the awful
+morals of his college."
+
+"Eh, what?" grunted the General, light beginning to dawn upon him. "Do
+you mean Mr. Keane? Hum! how's one to be up to all your confounded
+slang? How could I know? Devil take you, Sydie, why can't you write
+common English? You young fellows talk as bad jargon as Sepoys. You're
+sure I'm delighted to see you, Mr. Keane, though I did make the
+mistake."
+
+"Thank you, General," said Keane; "but it's rather cool of you, Master
+Sydie, to have forced me on to your uncle's hands without his wish or
+his leave."
+
+"Not at all, not at all," swore the General, with vehement cordiality.
+"I gave him carte blanche to ask whom he would, and unexpected guests
+are always most welcome; _not_ that you were unexpected though, for I'd
+told that boy to be sure and bring somebody down here----"
+
+"And have had the tax-cart and my phaeton turned out to make comfortable
+quarters for him," said Miss Fay, with a glance at The Coach to see how
+he took chaff, "and I only hope Mr. Keane may like his accommodation."
+
+"Perhaps, Miss Morton," said Keane, smiling, "I shall like it so well
+that you will have to say to me as poor Voltaire to his troublesome
+abbe, 'Don Quichotte prenait les auberges pour les chateaux, mais vous
+avez pris les chateaux pour les auberges.'"
+
+"Tiresome man," thought Fay. "I wish Sydie hadn't brought him here; but
+I shall do as I always do, however grand and supercilious he may look.
+He has lived among all those men and books till he has grown as cold as
+granite. What a pity it is people don't enjoy existence as I do!"
+
+"You are thinking, Miss Morton," said Keane, as he walked on beside her,
+with an amused glance at her face, which was expressive enough of her
+thoughts, "that if your uncle is glad to see me, you are not, and that
+Sydie was very stupid not to bring down one of his kindred spirits
+instead of----Don't disclaim it now; you should veil your face if you
+wish your thoughts not to be read."
+
+"I was not going to disclaim it," said Fay, quickly looking up at him
+with a rapid glance, half penitence, half irritation. "I always tell the
+truth; but I was _not_ thinking exactly that; I don't want any of
+Sydie's friends--I detest boys--but I certainly _was_ thinking that as
+you look down on everything that we all delight in, I fancied you and
+the Beeches will hardly agree. If I am rude, you must not be angry; you
+wanted me to tell you the truth."
+
+Keane smiled again.
+
+"Do I look down on the things you delight in? I hardly know enough of
+you, as we have only addressed about six syllables to each other, to be
+able to judge what you like and what you don't like; but certainly I
+must admit, that caressing the little round heads of those puppies
+yonder, which seemed to afford you such extreme rapture, would not be
+any source of remarkable gratification to me."
+
+Fay looked up at him and laughed.
+
+"Well, I am fond of animals as you are fond of books. Is it not an open
+question whether the live dog or sheepskin is not as good as the dead
+Morocco or Russian leather?"
+
+"Is it an open question, whether Macaulay's or Arago's brain weighs no
+more than a cat's or a puppy's?"
+
+"Brain!" said impudent little Fay; "are your great men always as honest
+and as faithful as my poor little Snowdrop? I have an idea that
+Sheridan's brains were often obscured by brandy; that Richelieu had the
+weakness to be prouder of his bad poems than his magnificent policies;
+and that Pope and Byron had the folly to be more tenacious of a glance
+at their physical defect than an onslaught on their noblest works. I
+could mention a good many other instances where brain was not always a
+voucher for corresponding strength of character."
+
+Keane was surprised to hear a sensible speech from this volatile little
+puss, and honored her by answering her seriously.
+
+"Say, rather, Miss Morton, that those to whom many temptations fall
+should have many excuses made. Where the brain preponderates, excelling
+in creative faculty and rapid thought, there will the sensibilities be
+proportionately acute. The vivacity and vigorous life which produced the
+rapid flow of Sheridan's eloquence led him into the dissipation which
+made him end his days in a spunging-house. Men of cooler minds and
+natures must not presume to judge him. They had not his temptation; they
+cannot judge of his fault. Richelieu, in all probability, amused himself
+with his verses as he amused himself with his white kitten and its cork,
+as a _delassement_; had he piqued himself upon his poetry, as they say,
+he would have turned poetaster instead of politician. As for the other
+two, you must remember that Pope's deformity made him a subject of
+ridicule to the woman he was fool enough to worship, and Byron, poor
+fellow, was over-susceptible on all points, or he would scarcely have
+allowed the venomed arrows from the Scotch Reviewers to wound him, nor
+would he have cared for the desertion of a wife who was to him like ice
+to fire. When you are older, you will learn that it is very dangerous
+and unjust to say this thing is right, that wrong, that feeling wise, or
+this foolish; for all temperaments are different, and the same
+circumstances may produce very different effects. Your puppies will grow
+up with dissimilar characters; how much more so, then, must men?"
+
+Miss Fay was quiet for a minute, then she flashed her mischievous eyes
+on him.
+
+"Certainly; but then, by your own admission, you have no right to decide
+that your love for mathematics is wise, and my love for Snowdrop
+foolish; it may be quite _au contraire_. Perhaps, after all, I may have
+'chosen the better part.'"
+
+"Fay, go in and dress for dinner," interrupted the General, trotting up;
+"your tongue would run on forever if nobody stopped it; you're no
+exception to your sex on that point. Is she?"
+
+Keane laughed.
+
+"Perhaps Miss Morton's fraenum, like Sydie's, was cut too far in her
+infancy, and therefore she has been 'unbridled' ever since."
+
+"In all things!" cried little Fay. "Nobody has put the curb on me yet,
+and nobody ever shall."
+
+"Don't be too sure, Fay," cried Sydie. "Rarey does wonders with the
+wildest fillies. Somebody may bring you down on your knees yet."
+
+"You'll have to see to that, Sydie," laughed the General. "Come, get
+along, child, to your toilette. I never have my soup cold and my curry
+overdone. To wait for his dinner is a stretch of good nature, and
+patience that ought not to be expected of any man."
+
+The soup was not cold nor the curry overdone, and the dinner was
+pleasant enough, in the long dining-room, with the June sun streaming in
+through its bay-windows from out the brilliant-colored garden, and the
+walls echoing with the laughter of Sydie and his cousin, the young lady
+keeping true to her avowal of "not caring for Plato's presence."
+"Plato," however, listened quietly, peeling his peaches with tranquil
+amusement; for if the girl talked nonsense, it was clever nonsense, as
+rare, by the way, and quite as refreshing as true wit.
+
+"My gloves are safe; you're too afraid of him, Fay," whispered Sydie,
+bending forwards to give her some hautboys.
+
+"Am I?" cried Miss Fay, with a _moue_ of supreme contempt. Neither the
+whisper nor the _moue_ escaped Keane, as he talked with the governor on
+model drainage.
+
+"Where's my hookah, Fay?" asked the General, after dessert. "Get it,
+will you, my pet?"
+
+"Voila!" cried Miss Fay, lifting the narghile from the sideboard. Then
+taking some cigars off the mantelpiece, she put one in her own mouth,
+struck a fusee, and, handing the case to Keane, said, with a saucy smile
+in her soft bright eyes, though, to tell the truth, she was a little bit
+afraid of taking liberties with him:
+
+"If you are not above such a sublunary indulgence, will you have a cigar
+with me?"
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said Keane, with a grave bow; "and if you
+would like to further rival George Sand, I shall be very happy to give
+you the address of my tailor."
+
+"Thank you exceedingly; but as long as crinoline is the type of the sex
+that are a little lower than the angels, and ribbon-ties the seal of
+those but a trifle better than Mephistopheles, I don't think I will
+change it," responded Little Fay, contemptuously, as she threw herself
+down on a couch with an indignant defiant glance, and puffed at her
+Manilla.
+
+"I _hate_ him, Sydie," said the little lady, vehemently, that night.
+
+"Do you, dear?" answered the Cantab; "you see, you've never had anybody
+to be afraid of, or had any man neglect you before."
+
+"He may neglect me if he please, I am sure I do not care," rejoined Fay,
+disdainfully; "only I do wish, Sydie, that you had never brought him
+here to make us all uncomfortable."
+
+"He don't make me uncomfortable, quite otherwise; nor yet the governor;
+you're the only victim, Fay."
+
+Fay saw little enough of Keane for the next week or two. He was out all
+day with Sydie trout-fishing, or walking over his farms with the
+General, or sitting in the study reading, and writing his articles for
+the _Cambridge Journal_, _Leonville's Mathematical Journal_, or the
+_Westminster Review_. But when she was with him, there was no mischief
+within her reach that Miss Fay did not perpetrate. Keane, to tease her,
+would condemn--so seriously that she believed him--all that she loved
+the best; he would tell her that he admired quiet, domestic women; that
+he thought girls should be very subdued and retiring; that they should
+work well, and not care much for society; at all of which, being her
+extreme antipodes, Little Fay would be vehemently wrathful. She would
+get on her pony without any saddle in her evening dress, and ride him at
+the five-bar gate in the stable-yard; she would put on Sydie's
+smoking-cap, and look very pretty in it, and take a Queen's on the divan
+of the smoking-room, reading _Bell's Life_, and asking Keane how much he
+would bet on the October; she would spend all the morning making wreaths
+of roses, dressing herself and the puppies up in them, inquiring if it
+was not a laudable and industrious occupation. There was no nonsense or
+mischief Fay would not imagine and forthwith commit, and anything they
+wanted her not to do she would do straightway, even to the imperilling
+of her own life and limb. She tried hard to irritate or rouse "Plato,"
+as she called him, but Plato was not to be moved, and treated her as a
+spoilt child, whom he alone had sense enough to resist.
+
+"It will be great folly for you to attempt it, Miss Morton. Those horses
+are not fit to be driven by any one, much less by a woman," said Keane,
+quietly, one morning.
+
+They were in the stable-yard, and chanced to be alone when a new
+purchase of the governor's--two scarcely broken-in thorough-bred
+colts--were brought with a new mail-phaeton into the yard, and Miss Fay
+forthwith announced her resolution of driving them round the avenue. The
+groom that came with them told her they were almost more than he could
+manage, their own coachman begged and implored, Keane reasoned quietly,
+all to no purpose. The rosebud had put out its little wilful thorns;
+Keane's words added fuel to the fire. Up she sprang, looking the
+daintiest morsel imaginable perched up on that very exalted box-seat,
+told the horrified groom to mount behind, and started them off, lifting
+her hat with a graceful bow to "Plato," who stood watching the phaeton
+with his arms folded and his cigar in his mouth.
+
+Soon after, he started in the contrary direction, for the avenue circled
+the Beeches in an oval of four miles, and he knew he should meet her
+coming back. He strolled along under the pleasant shadow of the great
+trees, enjoying the sunset and the fresh air, and capable of enjoying
+them still more but for an inward misgiving. His presentiment was not
+without its grounds. He had walked about a mile and a half round the
+avenue, when a cloud of dust told him what was up, and in the distance
+came the thorough-breds, broken away as he had prophesied, tearing along
+with the bits between their teeth, Little Fay keeping gallantly hold of
+the ribbons, but as powerless over the colts now they had got their
+heads as the groom leaning from the back seat.
+
+On came the phaeton, bumping, rattling, oscillating, threatening every
+second to be turned over. Keane caught one glance of Fay's face,
+resolute and pale, and of her little hands grasping the ribbons, till
+they were cut and bleeding with the strain. There was nothing for it but
+to stand straight in the animals' path, catch their heads, and throw
+them back on their haunches. Luckily, his muscles were like
+iron--luckily, too, the colts had come a long way, and were not fresh.
+He stood like a rock, and checked them; running a very close risk of
+dislocating his arms with the shock, but saving little Fay from
+destruction. The colts stood trembling, the groom jumped out and caught
+the reins, Keane amused himself silently with the mingled penitence,
+vexation, shame, and rebellion visible in the little lady's face.
+
+"Well," said he, quietly, "as you were so desirous of breaking your
+neck, will you ever forgive me for defeating your purpose?"
+
+"Pray don't!" cried Fay, passionately. "I do thank you so much for
+saving my life; I think it so generous and brave of you to have rescued
+me at such risk to yourself. I feel that I can never be grateful enough
+to you, but don't talk in that way. I know it was silly and self-willed
+of me."
+
+"It was; that fact is obvious."
+
+"Then I shall make it more so," cried Miss Fay, with her old wilfulness.
+"I do feel very grateful, and I would tell you so, if you would let me;
+but if you think it has made me afraid, you are quite wrong, and so you
+shall see."
+
+And before he could interfere, or do more than mechanically spring up
+after her, she had caught the reins from the groom, and started the
+trembling colts off again. But Keane put his hand on the ribbons.
+
+"Foolish child; are you mad?" he said, so gravely yet so gently that Fay
+let them go, and let him drive her back to the stable-yard, where she
+sprang out, and rushed away to her own room, terrified the governor with
+a few vehement sentences, which gave him a vague idea that Keane was
+murdered and both Fay's legs broken, and then had a private cry all to
+herself, with her arms round Snowdrop's neck, curled up in one of the
+drawing-room windows, where she had not been long when the General and
+Keane passed through, not noticing her, hidden as she was, in curtains,
+cushions, and flowers.
+
+"She's a little wilful thing, Keane," the General was saying, "but you
+mustn't think the worse of her for that."
+
+"I don't. I am sick of those conventional young ladies who agree with
+everything one says to them--who keep all the frowns for mothers and
+servants, and are as serene as a cloudless sky abroad, smile blandly on
+all alike, and haven't an opinion of their own."
+
+"Fay's plenty of opinions of her own," chuckled the General; "and she
+tells 'em pretty freely, too. Bless the child, she's not ashamed of any
+of her thoughts and never will be."
+
+"I hope not. Your little niece can do things that no other young lady
+could and they are so pretty in her that it would be a thousand pities
+for her to grow one atom less natural and wilful. Grapes growing wild
+are charming--grapes trained to a stake are ruined. I assure you, if I
+were you, I would not scold her for driving those colts to-day. High
+spirits and love of fun led her on, and the courage and presence of mind
+she displayed are too rare among her sex for us to do right in checking
+them."
+
+"To be sure, to be sure," assented the governor, gleefully. "God bless
+the child, she's one among a thousand, sir. Cognac, not milk and water.
+There's the dinner-bell; confound it."
+
+Whereat the General made his exit, and Keane also; and Fay kissed the
+spaniel with even more passionate attachment than ordinary.
+
+"Ah, Snowdrop, I don't hate him any more; he is a darling!"
+
+One glowing August morning Keane was in the study pondering whether he
+would go to his moor or not. The General had besought him to stay. His
+gamekeeper wrote him that it was a horribly bad rainy season in
+Invernessshire; the trout and the rabbits were very good sport in a mild
+way here. Altogether, Keane felt half disposed to keep where he was,
+when a shadow fell across his paper; and, as he looked up, he saw in the
+open window the English rosebud.
+
+"Is it not one of the open questions, Mr. Keane," asked Fay, "whether it
+is very wise to spend all this glorious morning shut out of the sight of
+the sun-rays and the scent of the flowers?"
+
+"How have _you_ been spending it, then?"
+
+"Putting bouquets in all the rooms, cleaning my aviary, talking to the
+puppies, and reading Jocelyn under the limes in the shrubberies--all
+very puerile, but all very pleasant. Perhaps if you descended to a lazy
+day like that now and then, you might be none the worse!"
+
+"Is that a challenge? Will you take me under the limes?"
+
+"No, indeed! I do not admit men who despise them to my gardens of
+Armida, any more than you would admit me into your Schools. I have as
+great a scorn for a skeptic as you have for a tyro."
+
+"Pardon me. I have no scorn for a tyro. But you would not come to the
+Accademe; you dislike 'Plato' too much."
+
+Fay looked up at him half shyly, half mischievously.
+
+"Yes, I do dislike you, when you look down on me as Richelieu might have
+looked down on his kitten."
+
+"Liking to see its play?" said Keane, half sadly. "Contrasting its gay
+insouciance with his own toil and turmoil, regretting, perhaps, the time
+when trifles made his joy as they did his kitten's? If I were to look on
+you so, there would not be much to offend you."
+
+"You do not think so of me, or you would speak to me as if I were an
+intelligent being, not a silly little thing."
+
+"How do you know I think you silly?"
+
+"Because you think all women so."
+
+"Perhaps; but then you should rather try to redeem me from my error in
+doctrine. Come, let us sign a treaty of peace. Take me under the limes.
+I want some fresh air after writing all day; and in payment I will teach
+you Euclid, as you vainly beseeched your cousin to do yesterday."
+
+"Will you?" cried Fay, eagerly. Then she threw back her head. "I never
+am won by bribes."
+
+"Nor yet by threats? What a difficult young lady you are. Come, show me
+your shrubbery sanctum now you have invaded mine."
+
+The English rosebud laid aside its wilful thorns, and Fay, a little less
+afraid of her Plato, and therefore a little less defiant to him, led him
+over the grounds, filled his hands with flowers, showed him her aviary,
+read some of Jocelyn to him, to show him, she said, that Lamartine was
+better than the Oedipus in Coloneus, and thought, as she dressed for
+dinner, "I wonder if he does despise me--he has such a beautiful face,
+if he were not so haughty and cold!"
+
+The next day Keane gave her an hour of Euclid in the study. Certainly
+The Coach had never had such a pretty pupil; and he wished every dull
+head he had to cram was as intelligent as this fair-haired one. Fay was
+quick and clever; she was stimulated, moreover, by his decree concerning
+the stupidity of all women; she really worked as hard as any young man
+studying for degrees when they supposed her fast asleep in bed, and she
+got over the Pons Asinorum in a style that fairly astonished her tutor.
+
+The Coach did not dislike his occupation either; it did him good, after
+his life of solitude and study, something as the kitten and cork did
+Richelieu good after his cabinets and councils; and Little Fay, with her
+flowers and fun, mischief and impudence, and that winning wilfulness
+which it amused him gradually to tame down, unbent the chillness which
+had grown upon him. He was the better for it, as a man after hard study
+or practice is the better for some fresh sea-breezes, and some days of
+careless dolce.
+
+"Well, Fay, have you had another poor devil flinging himself at your
+feet by means of a postage-stamp?" said Sydie one morning at breakfast.
+"You can't disguise anything from me, your most interested, anxious, and
+near and dear relative. Whenever the governor looks particularly stormy
+I see the signs of the times, that if I do not forthwith remove your
+dangerously attractive person, all the bricks, spooneys, swells, and
+do-nothings in the county will speedily fill the Hanwell wards to
+overflowing."
+
+"Don't talk such nonsense, Sydie," said Fay, impatiently, with a glance
+at Keane, as she handed him his chocolate.
+
+"Ah! deuce take the fellows," chuckled the General. "Love, devotion,
+admiration! What a lot of stuff they do write. I wonder if Fay were a
+little beggar, how much of it all would stand the test? But we know a
+trick worth two of that. Try those sardines, Keane. House is let,
+Fay--eh? House is let; nobody need apply. Ha, ha!"
+
+And the General took some more curry, laughing till he was purple, while
+Fay blushed scarlet, a trick of which she was rarely guilty; Sydie
+smiled, and Keane picked out his sardines with calm deliberation.
+
+"Hallo! God bless my soul!" burst forth the General again. "Devil take
+me! I'll be hanged if I stand it! Confound 'em all! I do call it hard
+for a man not to be able to sit at his breakfast in peace. Good Heavens!
+what will come to the country, if all those little devils grow up to be
+food for Calcraft? He's actually pulling the bark off the trees, as I
+live! Excuse me, I _can't_ sit still and see it."
+
+Wherewith the General bolted from his chair, darted through the window,
+upsetting three dogs, two kittens, and a stand of flowers in his exit,
+and bolted breathlessly across the park with the poker in his hand.
+
+"Bless his old heart! Ain't he a brick?" shouted Sydie. "Do excuse me,
+Fay, I must go and hear him blow up that boy sky-high, and give him a
+shilling for tuck afterwards; it will be so rich."
+
+The Cantab made his exit, and Fay busied herself calming the kittens'
+minds, and restoring the dethroned geraniums. Keane read his _Times_ for
+ten minutes, then looked up.
+
+"Miss Morton, where is your tongue? I have not heard it for a quarter of
+an hour, a miracle that has never happened in the two months I have been
+at the Beeches."
+
+"You do not want to hear it."
+
+"What! am I in _mauvais odeur_ again?" smiled Keane. "I thought we were
+good friends. Have you found the Q. E. D. to the problem I gave you?"
+
+"To be sure!" cried Fay, exultantly. And kneeling down by him, she went
+through the whole thing in exceeding triumph.
+
+"You are a good child," said her tutor, smiling, in himself amazed at
+this volatile little thing's capacity for mathematics. "I think you will
+be able to take your degree, if you like. Come, do you hate me now,
+Fay?"
+
+"No," said Fay, a little shyly. "I never hated you, I always admired
+you; but I was afraid of you, though I would never confess it to Sydie."
+
+"Never be afraid of me," said Keane, putting his hand on hers as it lay
+on the arm of his chair. "You have no cause. You can do things few girls
+can; but they are pretty in you, where they might be--not so pretty in
+others. _I_ like them at the least. You are very fond of your cousin,
+are you not?"
+
+"Of Sydie? Oh, I love him dearly!"
+
+Keane took his hand away, and rose, as the General trotted in:
+
+"God bless my soul, Keane, how warm it is! Confoundedly hot without
+one's hat, I can tell you. Had my walk all for nothing, too. That cursed
+little idiot wasn't trespassing after all. Stephen had set him to spud
+out the daisies, and I'd thrashed the boy before I'd listen to him.
+Devil take him!"
+
+August went out and September came in, and Keane stayed on at the
+Beeches. They were pleasant days to them all, knocking over the
+partridges right and left, enjoying a cold luncheon under the luxuriant
+hedges, and going home for a dinner, full of laughter, and talk, and
+good cookery; and Fay's songs afterwards, as wild and sweet in their way
+as a goldfinch's on a hawthorn spray.
+
+"You like Little Fay, don't you, Keane?" said the General, as they went
+home one evening.
+
+Keane looked startled for a second.
+
+"Of course," he said, rather haughtily. "That Miss Morton is very
+charming every one must admit."
+
+"Bless her little heart! She's a wild little filly, Keane, but she'll go
+better and truer than your quiet broken-in ones, who wear the harness so
+respectably, and are so wicked and vicious in their own minds. And what
+do you think of my boy?" asked the General, pointing to Sydie, who was
+in front. "How does he stand at Cambridge?"
+
+"Sydie? Oh, he's a nice young fellow. He is a great favorite there, and
+he is--the best things he can be--generous, sweet-tempered, and
+honorable----"
+
+"To be sure," echoed the General, rubbing his hands. "He's a dear boy--a
+very dear boy. They're both exactly all I wished them to be, dear
+children; and I must say I am delighted to see 'em carrying out the plan
+I had always made for 'em from their childhood."
+
+"Being what, General, may I ask?"
+
+"Why, any one can see, as plain as a pikestaff, that they're in love
+with each other," said the General, glowing with satisfaction; "and I
+mean them to be married and happy. They dote on each other, Keane, and I
+sha'n't put any obstacles in their way. Youth's short enough, Heaven
+knows; let 'em enjoy it, say I, it don't come back again. Don't say
+anything to him about it; I want to have some fun with him. They've
+settled it all, of course, long ago; but he hasn't confided in me, the
+sly dog. Trust an old campaigner, though, for twigging an _affaire de
+coeur_. Bless them both, they make me feel a boy again. We'll have a gay
+wedding, Keane; mind you come down for it. I dare say it'll be at
+Christmas."
+
+Keane walked along, drawing his cap over his eyes. The sun was setting
+full in his face.
+
+"Well, what sport?" cried Fay, running up to them.
+
+"Pretty fair," said Keane, coldly, as he passed her.
+
+It was an hour before the dinner-bell rang. Then he came down cold and
+calm, particularly brilliant in conversation, more courteous, perhaps,
+to her than ever, but the frost had gathered round him that the sunny
+atmosphere of the Beeches had melted; and Fay, though she tried to
+tease, and to coax, and to win him, could not dissipate it. She felt him
+an immeasurable distance from her again. He was a learned, haughty,
+grave philosopher, and she a little naughty child.
+
+As Keane went up-stairs that night, he heard Sydie talking in the hall.
+
+"Yes, my worshipped Fay, I shall be intensely and utterly miserable away
+from the light of your eyes; but, nevertheless, I must go and see
+Kingslake from John's next Tuesday, because I've promised; and let one
+idolize your divine self ever so much, one can't give up one's larks,
+you know."
+
+Keane ground his teeth with a bitter sigh and a fierce oath.
+
+"Little Fay, I would have loved you more tenderly than that!"
+
+He went in and threw himself on his bed, not to sleep. For the first
+time for many years he could not summon sleep at his will. He had gone
+on petting her and amusing himself, thinking of her only as a winning,
+wayward child. Now he woke with a shock to discover, too late, that she
+had stolen from him unawares the heart he had so long refused to any
+woman. With his high intellect and calm philosophy, after his years
+spent in severe science and cold solitude, the hot well-springs of
+passion had broken loose again. He longed to take her bright life into
+his own grave and cheerless one; he longed to feel her warm young heart
+beat with his own, icebound for so many years; but Little Fay was never
+to be his.
+
+In the bedroom next to him the General sat, with his feet in his
+slippers and his dressing-gown round him, smoking his last cheroot
+before a roaring fire, chuckling complacently over his own thoughts.
+
+"To be sure, we'll have a very gay wedding, such as the county hasn't
+seen in all its blessed days," he muttered, with supreme satisfaction.
+"Sydie shall have this place. What do I want with a great town of a
+house like this, big enough for a barrack? I'll take that shooting-box
+that's to let four miles off; that'll be plenty large enough for me and
+my old chums to smoke in and chat over bygone times, and it will do our
+hearts good--freshen us up a bit to see those young things enjoying
+themselves. My Little Fay will be the prettiest bride that ever was
+seen. Silly young things to suppose I don't see through them. Trust an
+old soldier! However, love is blind, they say. How could they have
+helped falling in love with one another? and who'd have the heart to
+part 'em, I should like to know!"
+
+Keane stayed that day; the next, receiving a letter which afforded a
+true though a slight excuse to return to Cambridge, he went, the
+General, Fay, and Sydie believing him gone only for a few days, he
+knowing that he would never set foot in the Beeches again. He went back
+to his rooms, whose dark monastic gloom in the dull October day seemed
+to close round him like an iron shroud. Here, with his books, his
+papers, his treasures of intellect, science and art, his "mind a
+kingdom" to him, he had spent many a happy day, with his brain growing
+only clearer and clearer as he followed out a close reasoning or
+clenched a subtle analysis. Now, for the sake of a mischievous child but
+half his age, he shuddered as he entered.
+
+"Well, my dear boy," began the General one day after dinner, "I've seen
+your game, though you thought I didn't. How do you know, you young dog,
+that I shall give my consent?"
+
+"Oh, bother, governor, I know you will," cried Sydie, aghast; "because,
+you see, if you let me have a few cool hundreds I can give the men such
+slap-up wines--and it's my last year, General."
+
+"You sly dog!" chuckled the governor, "I'm not talking of your
+wine-merchant, and you know I'm not, Master Sydie. It's no good playing
+hide-and-seek with me; I can always see through a milestone when Cupid
+is behind it; and there's no need to beat round the bush with me, my
+boy. I never gave my assent to anything with greater delight in my life;
+I've always meant you to marry Fay, and----"
+
+"Marry Fay!" shouted Sydie. "Good Heavens! governor, what next?" And the
+Cantab threw himself back and laughed till he cried, and Snowdrop and
+her pups barked furiously in a concert of excited sympathy.
+
+"Why, sir, why?--why, because--devil take you, Sydie--I don't know what
+you are laughing at, do you?" cried the General, starting out of his
+chair.
+
+"Yes, I do, governor; you're laboring under a most delicious delusion."
+
+"Delusion!--eh?--what? Why, bless my soul, I don't think you know what
+you are saying, Sydie," stormed the General.
+
+"Yes I do; you've an idea--how you got it into your head Heaven knows,
+but there it is--you've an idea that Fay and I are in love with one
+another; and I assure you you were never more mistaken in your life."
+
+Seeing the General standing bolt upright staring at him, and looking
+decidedly apocleptic, Sydie made the matter a little clearer.
+
+"Fay and I would do a good deal to oblige you, my beloved governor, if
+we could get up the steam a little, but I'm afraid we really _cannot_.
+Love ain't in one's own hands, you see, but a skittish mare, that gets
+her head, and takes the bit between her teeth, and bolts off with you
+wherever she likes. Is it possible that two people who broke each
+other's toys, and teased each other's lives out, and caught the measles
+of each other, from their cradle upwards, should fall in love with each
+other when they grow up? Besides, I don't intend to marry for the next
+twenty years, if I can help it. I couldn't afford a milliner's bill to
+my tailor's, and I should be ruined for life if I merged my bright
+particular star of a self into a respectable, lark-shunning,
+bill-paying, shabby-hatted, family man. Good Heavens, what a train of
+horrors comes with the bare idea!"
+
+"Do you mean to say, sir, you won't marry your cousin?" shouted the
+General.
+
+"Bless your dear old heart, _no_, governor--ten times over, _no_! I
+wouldn't marry anybody, not for half the universe."
+
+"Then I've done with you, sir--I wash my hands of you!" shouted the
+General, tearing up and down the room in a quick march, more beneficial
+to his feelings than his carpet. "You are an ungrateful, unprincipled,
+shameless young man, and are no more worthy of the affection and the
+interest I've been fool enough to waste on you than a tom-cat. You're an
+abominably selfish, ungrateful, unnatural boy; and though you _are_ poor
+Phil's son, I will tell you my mind, sir; and I must say I think your
+conduct with your cousin, making love to her--desperate love to
+her--winning her affections, poor unhappy child, and then making a jest
+of her and treating it with a laugh, is disgraceful, sir--_disgraceful_,
+do you hear?"
+
+"Yes, I hear, General," cried Sydie, convulsed with laughter; "but Fay
+cares no more for me than for those geraniums. We are fond of one
+another, in a cool, cousinly sort of way, but----"
+
+"Hold your tongue!" stormed the General. "Don't dare to say another word
+to me about it. You know well enough that it has been the one delight of
+my life, and if you'd had any respect or right feeling in you, you'd
+marry her to-morrow."
+
+"She wouldn't be a party to that. Few women _are_ blind to my manifold
+attractions; but Fay's one of 'em. Look here, governor," said Sydie,
+laying his hand affectionately on the General's shoulder, "did it never
+occur to you that though the pretty castle's knocked down, there may be
+much nicer bricks left to build a new one? Can't you see that Fay
+doesn't care two buttons about me, but cares a good many diamond studs
+about somebody else?"
+
+"Nothing has occurred to me but that you and she are two heartless,
+selfish, ungrateful chits. Hold your tongue, sir!"
+
+"But, General----"
+
+"Hold your tongue, sir; don't talk to me, I tell you. In love with
+somebody else? I should like to see him show his face here. Somebody
+she's talked to for five minutes at a race-ball, and proposed to her in
+a corner, thinking to get some of my money. Some swindler, or Italian
+refugee, or blackleg, I'll be bound--taken her in, made her think him an
+angel, and will persuade her to run away with him. I'll set the police
+round the house--I'll send her to school in Paris. What fools men are to
+have anything to do with women at all! You seem in their confidence;
+who's the fellow?"
+
+"A man very like a swindler or a blackleg--Keane!"
+
+"Keane!" shouted the General, pausing in the middle of his frantic
+march.
+
+"Keane," responded Sydie.
+
+"Keane!" shouted the General again. "God bless my soul, she might as
+well have fallen in love with the man in the moon. Why couldn't she like
+the person I'd chosen for her?"
+
+"If one can't guide the mare one's self, 'tisn't likely the governors
+can for one," muttered Sydie.
+
+"Poor dear child! fallen in love with a man who don't care a button for
+her, eh? Humph!--that's always the way with women--lose the good
+chances, and fling themselves at a man's feet who cares no more for
+their tom-foolery of worship than he cares for the blacking on his
+boots. Devil take young people, what a torment they are! The ungrateful
+little jade, how dare she go and smash all my plans like that? and if I
+ever set my heart on anything, I set it on that match. Keane! he'll no
+more love anybody than the stone cherubs on the terrace. He's a splendid
+head, but his heart's every atom as cold as granite. Love her? Not a bit
+of it. When I told him you were going to marry her (I thought you would,
+and so you will, too, if you've the slightest particle of gratitude or
+common sense in either of you), he listened as quietly and as calmly as
+if he had been one of the men in armor in the hall. Love, indeed! To the
+devil with love, say I! It's the head and root of everything that's
+mischievous and bad."
+
+"Wait a bit, uncle," cried Sydie; "you told him all about your previous
+match-making, eh? And didn't he go off like a shot two days after, when
+we meant him to stay on a month longer? Can't you put two and two
+together, my once wide-awake governor? 'Tisn't such a difficult
+operation."
+
+"No, I can't," shouted the General: "I don't know anything, I don't see
+anything, I don't believe in anything, I hate everybody and everything,
+I tell you; and I'm a great fool for having ever set my heart on any
+plan that wanted a woman's concurrence--
+
+ For if she will she will, you may depend on't,
+ And if she won't she won't, and there's an end on't."
+
+Wherewith the General stuck his wide-awake on fiercely, and darted out
+of the bay-window to cool himself. Half way across the lawn, he turned
+sharp round, and came back again.
+
+"Sydie, do you fancy Keane cares a straw for that child?"
+
+"I can't say. It's possible."
+
+"Humph! Well, can't you go and see? That's come of those mathematical
+lessons. What a fool I was to allow her to be so much with him!" growled
+the General, with many grunts and half-audible oaths, swinging round
+again, and trotting through the window as hot and peppery as his own
+idolized curry.
+
+Keane was sitting writing in his rooms at King's some few days after.
+The backs looked dismal with their leafless, sepia-colored trees; the
+streets were full of sloppy mud and dripping under-grads' umbrellas; his
+own room looked sombre and dark, without any sunshine on its heavy oak
+bookcases, and massive library-table, and dark bronzes. His pen moved
+quickly, his head was bent over the paper, his mouth sternly set, and
+his forehead paler and more severe than ever. The gloom in his chambers
+had gathered round him himself, when his door was burst open, and Sydie
+dashed in and threw himself down in a green leather arm-chair.
+
+"Well, sir, here am I back again. Just met the V. P. in the quad, and he
+was so enchanted at seeing me, that he kissed me on both cheeks, flung
+off his gown, tossed up his cap, and performed a _pas d'extase_ on the
+spot. Isn't it delightful to be so beloved? Granta looks very delicious
+to-day, I must say--about as refreshing and lively as an acidulated
+spinster going district-visiting in a snow-storm. And how are you, most
+noble lord?"
+
+"Pretty well."
+
+"Only that? Thought you were all muscle and iron. I say. What _do_ you
+think the governor has been saying to me?"
+
+"How can I tell?"
+
+"Tell! No, I should not have guessed it if I'd tried for a hundred
+years! By George! nothing less than that I should marry Fay. What do you
+think of that, sir?"
+
+Keane traced Greek unconsciously on the margin of his _Times_. For the
+life of him, with all his self-command, he could not have answered.
+
+"Marry Fay! _I!_" shouted Sydie. "Ye gods, what an idea! I never was so
+astonished in all my days. Marry Little Fay!--the governor must be mad,
+you know."
+
+"You will not marry your cousin?" asked Keane, tranquilly, though the
+rapid glance and involuntary start did not escape Sydie's quick eyes.
+
+"Marry! I! By George, no! She wouldn't have me, and I'm sure I wouldn't
+have her. She is a dear little monkey, and I'm very fond of her, but I
+wouldn't put the halter round my neck for any woman going. I don't like
+vexing the General, but it would be really too great a sacrifice merely
+to oblige him."
+
+"She cares nothing for you, then?"
+
+"Nothing? Well, I don't know. Yes, in a measure, she does. If I should
+be taken home on a hurdle one fine morning, she'd shed some cousinly
+tears over my inanimate body; but as for _the other thing_, not one bit
+of it. 'Tisn't likely. We're a great deal too like one another, too full
+of devilry and carelessness, to assimilate. Isn't it the delicious
+contrast and fiz of the sparkling acid of divine lemons with the
+contrariety of the fiery spirit of beloved rum that makes the delectable
+union known and worshipped in our symposia under the blissful name of
+PUNCH? Marry Little Fay! By Jove, if all the governor's match-making was
+founded on no better reasons for success, it is a small marvel that he's
+a bachelor now! By George, it's time for hall!"
+
+And the Cantab took himself off, congratulating himself on the adroit
+manner in which he had cut the Gordian knot that the General had muddled
+up so inexplicably in his unpropitious match-making.
+
+Keane lay back in his chair some minutes, very still; then he rose to
+dine in hall, pushing away his books and papers, as if throwing aside
+with them a dull and heavy weight. The robins sang in the leafless
+backs, the sun shone out on the sloppy streets; the youth he thought
+gone for ever was come back to him. Oh, strange stale story of Hercules
+and Omphale, old as the hills, and as eternal! Hercules goes on in his
+strength slaying his hydra and his Laomedon for many years, but he
+comes at last, whether he like it or not, to his Omphale, at whose feet
+he is content to sit and spin long golden threads of pleasure and of
+passion, while his lion's skin is motheaten and his club rots away.
+
+Little Fay sat curled up on the study hearth-rug, reading a book her
+late guest had left behind him--a very light and entertaining volume,
+being Delolme "On the Constitution," but which she preferred, I suppose,
+to "What Will He Do With It?" or the "Feuilles d'Automne," for the sake
+of that clear autograph, "Gerald Keane, King's Coll.," on its fly-leaf.
+A pretty picture she made, with her handsome spaniels; and she was so
+intent on what she was reading--the fly-leaf, by the way--that she never
+heard the opening of the door, till a hand drew away her book. Then Fay
+started up, oversetting the puppies one over another, radiant and
+breathless.
+
+Keane took her hands and drew her near him.
+
+"You do not hate me now, then?"
+
+Fay put her head on one side with her old wilfulness.
+
+"Yes, I do--when you go away without any notice, and hardly bid me
+good-bye. You would not have left one of your men pupils so
+unceremoniously."
+
+Keane smiled involuntarily, and drew her closer.
+
+"If you do not hate me, will you go a step farther--and love me? Little
+Fay, my own darling, will you come and brighten my life? It has been a
+saddened and a stern one, but it shall never throw a shade on yours."
+
+The wild little filly was conquered--at last, she came to hand docile
+and subdued, and acknowledged her master. She loved him, and told him so
+with that frankness and fondness which would have covered faults far
+more glaring and weighty than Little Fay's.
+
+"But you must never be afraid of me," whispered Keane, some time after.
+
+"Oh, no!"
+
+"And you do not wish Sydie had never brought me here to make you all
+uncomfortable?"
+
+"Oh, please don't!" cried Fay, plaintively. "I was a child then, and I
+did not know what I said."
+
+"'Then,' being three months ago, may I ask what you are now?"
+
+"A child still in knowledge, but _your_ child," whispered Fay, lifting
+her face to his, "to be petted and spoiled, and never found fault with,
+remember!"
+
+"My little darling, who would have the heart to find fault with you,
+whatever your sins?"
+
+"God bless my soul, what's this?" cried a voice in the doorway.
+
+There stood the General in wide-awake and shooting-coat, with a spade in
+one hand and a watering-pot in the other, too astonished to keep his
+amazement to himself. Fay would fain have turned and fled, but Keane
+smiled, kept one arm round her, and stretched out his hand to the
+governor.
+
+"General, I came once uninvited, and I am come again. Will you forgive
+me? I have a great deal to say to you, but I must ask you one question
+first of all. Will you give me your treasure?"
+
+"Eh! humph! What? Well--I suppose--yes," ejaculated the General,
+breathless from the combined effects of amazement and excessive and
+vehement gardening. "But, bless my soul, Keane, I should as soon have
+thought of one of the stone cherubs, or that bronze Milton. Never mind,
+one lives and learns. Mind? Devil take me, what am I talking about? I
+don't mind at all; I'm very happy, only I'd set my heart on--you know
+what. More fool I. Fay, you little imp, come here. Are you fairly broken
+in by Keane, then?"
+
+"Yes," said Miss Fay, with her old mischief, but a new blush, "as he has
+promised never to use the curb."
+
+"God bless you, then, my little pet," cried the General, kissing her
+some fifty times. Then he laughed till he cried, and dried his eyes and
+laughed again, and grunted, and growled, and shook both Keane's hands
+vehemently. "I was a great fool, sir, and I dare say you've managed much
+better. I _did_ set my heart on the boy, you know, but it can't be
+helped now, and I don't wish it should. Be kind to her, that's all; for
+though she mayn't bear the curb, the whip from anybody she cares about
+would break her heart. She's a dear child, Keane--a very dear child. Be
+kind to her, that's all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the evening of January 13th, beginning the Lent Term, Mr. Sydenham
+Morton sat in his own rooms with half a dozen spirits like himself, a
+delicious aroma surrounding them of Maryland and rum-punch, and a rapid
+flow of talk making its way through the dense atmosphere.
+
+"To think of Granite Keane being caught!" shouted one young fellow. "I
+should as soon have thought of the Pyramids walking over to the Sphinx,
+and marrying her."
+
+"Poor devil! I pity him," sneered Henley of Trinity, aged nineteen.
+
+"He don't require much pity, my dear fellow; I think he's pretty
+comfortable," rejoined Sydie. "He did, to be sure, when he was trying to
+beat sense into your brain-box, but that's over for the present."
+
+"Come, tell us about the wedding," said Somerset of King's. "I was sorry
+I couldn't go down."
+
+"Well," began Sydie, stretching his legs and putting down his pipe,
+"she--_the_ she was dressed in white tulle and----"
+
+"Bother the dress. Go ahead!"
+
+"The dress was no bother, it was the one subject in life to the women.
+You must listen to the dress, because I asked the prettiest girl there
+for the description of it to enlighten your minds, and it was harder to
+learn than six books of Horace. The bridesmaids wore tarlatane a la
+Princesse Stephanie, trois jupes bouillonnees, jupe desous de soie
+glacee, guirlandes couleur dea yeux imperiaux d'Eugenie, corsets
+decolletes garnis de ruches de ruban du----"
+
+"For Heaven's sake, hold your tongue!" cried Somerset. "That jargon's
+worse than the Yahoos'. The dead languages are bad enough to learn, but
+women's living language of fashion is ten hundred times worse. The
+twelve girls were dressed in blue and white, and thought themselves
+angels--we understand. Cut along."
+
+"Gunter was prime," continued Sydie, "and the governor was prime,
+too--splendid old buck; only when he gave her away he was very near
+saying, 'Devil take it!' which might have had a novel, but hardly a
+solemn, effect. Little Fay was delightful--for all the world like a bit
+of incarnated sunshine. Keane was granite all over, except his eyes, and
+they were lava; if we hadn't, for our own preservation, let him put her
+in a carriage and started 'em off, he might have become dangerous, after
+the manner of Etna, ice outside and red-hot coals within. The
+bridesmaids tears must have washed the church for a week, and made it
+rather a damp affair. One would scarcely think women were so anxious to
+marry, to judge from the amount of grief they get up at a friend's
+sacrifice. It looks uncommonly like envy; but it _isn't_, we're sure!
+The ball was like most other balls: alternate waltzing and flirtation, a
+vast lot of nonsense talked, and a vast lot of champagne drunk--Cupid
+running about in every direction, and a tremendous run on all the
+amatory poets--Browning and Tennyson being worked as hard as cab-horses,
+and used up pretty much as those quadrupeds--dandies suffering
+self-inflicted torture from tight boots, and saying, like Cranmer, when
+he held his hand in the fire, that it was rather agreeable than
+otherwise, considering it drew admiration--spurs getting entangled in
+ladies' dresses, and ladies making use thereof for a display of
+amiability, which the dragoons are very much mistaken if they fancied
+continued into private life--girls believing all the pretty things said
+to them--men going home and laughing at them all--wallflowers very
+black, women engaged ten deep very sunshiny--the governor very glorious,
+and my noble self very fascinating. And now," said Sydie, taking up his
+pipe, "pass the punch, old boy, and never say I can't talk!"
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF A CRAYON-HEAD;
+
+OR,
+
+A DOUBLED-DOWN LEAF IN A MAN'S LIFE.
+
+
+I was dining with a friend, in his house on the Lung' Arno (he fills,
+never mind what, post in the British Legation), where I was passing an
+autumn month. The night was oppressively hot; a still, sultry sky
+brooded over the city, and the stars shining out from a purple mist on
+to the Campanile near, and the slopes of Bellosguardo in the distance.
+It was intensely hot; not all the iced wines on his table could remove
+the oppressive warmth of the evening air, which made both him and me
+think of evenings we had spent together in the voluptuous lassitude of
+the East, in days gone by, when we had travelled there, fresh to life,
+to new impressions, to all that gives "greenness to the grass, and glory
+to the flower."
+
+The Arno ran on under its bridge, and we leaned out of the balcony where
+we were sitting and smoking, while I tossed over, without thinking much
+of what I was doing, a portfolio of his sketches. Position has lost for
+art many good artists since Sir George Beaumont: my friend is one of
+them; his sketches are masterly; and had he been a vagrant Bohemian
+instead of an English peer, there might have been pictures on the walls
+of the R. A. to console one for the meretricious daubs and pet
+vulgarities of nursery episodes, hideous babies, and third-class
+carriage interiors, which make one's accustomed annual visit to the
+rooms that once saw the beauties of Reynolds, and Wilson, and Lawrence,
+a positive martyrdom to anybody of decent refinement and educated taste.
+The portfolio stood near me, and I took out a sketch or two now and then
+between the pauses of our conversation, looking lazily up the river,
+while the moonlight shone on Dante's city, that so long forgot, and has,
+so late, remembered him.
+
+"Ah! what a pretty face this is! Who's the original?" I asked him,
+drawing out a female head, done with great finish in pastel, under which
+was written, in his own hand, "Florelle." It was a face of great beauty,
+with a low Greek brow and bronze-dark hair, and those large, soft,
+liquid eyes that you only see in a Southern, and that looked at you from
+the sketch with an earnest, wistful regard, half childlike, half
+impassioned. He looked up, glanced at the sketch, and stretched out his
+hand hastily, but I held it away from him. "I want to look at it; it is
+a beautiful head; I wish we had the original here now. Who is she?"
+
+As I spoke--holding the sketch up where the light from the room within
+fell on what I had no doubt was a likeness of some fair face that had
+beguiled his time in days gone by, a souvenir of one of his loves more
+lasting than souvenirs of such episodes in one's life often are, if
+merely trusted to that inconstant capricieuse, Memory,--I might have hit
+him with a bullet rather than asked him about a mere etude a deux
+crayons, for he shuddered, and drank off some white Hermitage quickly.
+
+"I had forgotten that was in the portfolio," he said, hurriedly, as he
+took it from me and put it behind him, with its face against the wall,
+as though it had been the sketch of a Medusa.
+
+"What do you take it away for? I had not half done looking at it. Who is
+the original?"
+
+"One I don't care to mention."
+
+"Because?"
+
+"Because the sight of that picture gives me a twinge of what I ought to
+be hardened against--regret."
+
+"Regret! Is any woman worth that?"
+
+"She was."
+
+"I don't believe it; and I fancied you and I thought alike on such
+points. Of all the women for whom we feel twinges of conscience or
+self-reproach in melancholy moments, how many _loved us_? Moralists and
+poets sentimentalize over it, and make it a stalking-horse whereby to
+magnify our sins and consign us more utterly to perdition, while they do
+for themselves a little bit of poetic morality cheaply; but in reality
+there are uncommonly few women who can love, to begin with, and in the
+second, vanity, avarice, jealousy, desires for pretty toilettes, one or
+other, or all combined, have quite as much to do with their 'sacrifice'
+for us as anything."
+
+"Quite true; but--there are women and women, perhaps, and it was not of
+that sort of regret that I spoke."
+
+"Of what sort, then?"
+
+He made me no reply: he broke the ash off his Manilla, and smoked
+silently some moments, leaning over the balcony and watching the
+monotonous flow of the Arno, with deeper gloom on his face than I
+remembered to have seen there any time before. I was sorry I had chanced
+to light upon a sketch that had brought him back such painful
+recollections of whatever kind they might be, and I smoked too, sending
+the perfumed tobacco out into the still sultry night that was brooding
+over Florence.
+
+"Of what sort?" said he, abruptly, after some minutes' pause. "Shall I
+tell you? Then you can tell _me_ whether I was a fool who made one grand
+mistake, or a sensible man of the world who kept himself from a grand
+folly. I have been often in doubt myself."
+
+He leaned back, his face in shadow, so that I could not see it, while
+the Arno's ebb and flow was making mournful river-music under our
+windows,--while the purple glories of the summer night deepened round
+Giotto's Tower, where, in centuries past, the Immortal of Florence had
+sat dreaming of the Paradiso, the mortals passing by whispering him as
+"the man who had seen hell," and the light within the room shone on the
+olives and grapes, the cut-glass and silver claret-jugs, the crimson
+Montepulciano and the white Hermitage, on the table, as he told me the
+story of the head in crayons.
+
+"Two years ago I went into the south of France. I was charge d'Affaires
+at ---- then, you remember, and the climate had told upon me. I was not
+over-well, and somebody recommended me the waters of Eaux Bonnes. The
+waters I put little faith in, but in the air of the Pyrenees, in the
+change from diplomacy to a life _en rase campagne_, I put much, and I
+went to Eaux Bonnes accordingly, for July and August, with a vow to
+forswear any society I might find at the baths--I had had only too much
+of society as it was--and to spend my days in the mountains with my
+sketching-block and my gun. But I did not like Eaux Bonnes; it was
+intensely warm. There were several people who knew me really; no end of
+others who got hold of my name, and wanted me to join their
+riding-parties, and balls, and picnics. That was not what I wanted, so I
+left the place and went on to Luz, hoping to find solitude there. That
+valley of Luz--you know it?--is it not as lovely as any artist's dream
+of Arcadia, in the evening, when the sunset light has passed off the
+meadows and corn-lands of the lower valley, and just lingers golden and
+rosy on the crests of the mountains, while the glow-worms are coming out
+among the grasses, and the lights are being lit in the little homesteads
+nestling among their orchards one above another on the hill-sides, and
+its hundred streams are rushing down the mountains and under the trees,
+foaming, and tumbling, and rejoicing on their way! When I have had my
+fill of ambition and of pleasure, I shall go and live at Luz, I think.
+
+"_When!_ Well! you are quite right to repeat it ironically; that time
+will never come, I dare say, and why should it? I am not the stuff to
+cogitate away my years in country solitudes. If prizes are worth
+winning, they are worth working for till one's death; a man should never
+give up the field while he has life left in him. Well! I went to Luz,
+and spent a pleasant week or so there, knocking over a few chamois or
+izards, or sketching on the sides of the Pic du Midi, or Tourmalet, but
+chiefly lying about under the great beech-trees in the shade, listening
+to the tinkle of the sheep-bells, like an idle fellow, as I meant to be
+for the time I had allotted myself. One day----"
+
+He stopped and blew some whiffs from his Manilla into the air. He seemed
+to linger over the prelude to his story, and shrink from going on with
+the story itself, I thought; and he smothered a sigh as he raised
+himself.
+
+"How warm the night is; we shall have a tempest. Reach me that wine,
+there's a good fellow. No, not the Amontillado, the Chateau Margaux,
+please; one can't drink hot dry wines such a night as this. But to
+satisfy your curiosity about this crayon study.--One day I thought I
+would go to Gavarnie. I had heard a good deal, of course, about the
+great marble wall, and the mighty waterfalls, the rocks of Marbore, and
+the Breche de Roland, but, as it chanced, I had never been up to the
+Cercle, nor, indeed, in that part of the Midi at all, so I went. The
+gods favored me, I remember; there were no mists, the sun was brilliant,
+and the great amphitheatre was for once unobscured; the white marble
+flashing brown and purple, rose and golden, in the light; the cascades
+tumbling and leaping down into the gigantic basin; the vast plains of
+snow glittering in the sunshine; the twin rocks standing in the clear
+air, straight and fluted as any two Corinthian columns hewn and
+chiselled by man. Good Heaven! before a scene like Gavarnie, what true
+artist must not fling away his colors and his brushes in despair and
+disgust with his own puerility and impotence? What can be transferred to
+canvas of such a scene as that? What does the best beauty of Claude, the
+grandest sublimity of Salvator, the greatest power of Poussin, look
+beside Nature when she reigns as she reigns at Gavarnie? I am an art
+worshipper, as you know: but there are times in my life, places on
+earth, that make me ready to renounce art for ever!
+
+"The day was beautiful, and thinking I knew the country pretty well, I
+took no guides. I hate them when I can possibly dispense with them. But
+the mist soon swooped down over the Cercle, and I began to wish I had
+had one when I turned my horse's head back again. You know the route, of
+course? Through the Chaos--Heaven knows it is deserving of its
+name;--down the break-neck little bridle-path, along the Gave, and over
+the Scia bridge to St. Sauveur. You know it? Then you know that it is
+much easier to break your neck down it than to find your way by it,
+though by some hazard I did not break my neck, nor the animal's knees
+either, but managed to get over the bridge without falling into the
+torrent, and to pick my way safely down into more level ground; once
+there, I thought I should easily enough find my way to St. Sauveur, but
+I was mistaken: the mists had spread over the valley, a heavy storm had
+come up, and, somehow or other, I lost the way, and could not tell where
+I was, whether St. Sauveur was to the left or the right, behind me or in
+front of me. The horse, a miserable little Pyrenean beast, was too
+frightened by the lightning to take the matter into his hands as he had
+done on the road through the Chaos, and I saw nothing for it but to
+surrender and come to grief in any way the elements best pleased;
+swearing at myself for not having stayed at the inn at Gavarnie or
+Gedre; wishing myself at the vilest mountain auberge that ever sheltered
+men and mules pele-mele; and calling myself hard names for not having
+listened to my landlady's dissuasions of that morning as I left her
+door, from my project of going to Gavarnie without a guide, which seemed
+to her the acme of all she had ever known or heard of English strangers'
+fooleries. The storm only increased, the great black rocks echoing the
+roll of the thunder, and the Gave lashing itself into fury in its narrow
+bed; happily I was on decently level ground, and the horse being, I
+suppose, tolerably used to storms like it, I pushed him on at last, by
+dint of blows and conjurations combined, to where, in the flashes of the
+lightning, I saw what looked to me like the outline of a homestead: it
+stood in a cleft between two shelving sides of rock, and a narrow
+bridle-path led up to it, through high yews and a tangled wilderness of
+rhododendrons, boxwood, and birch--one of those green slopes so common
+in the Pyrenees, that look in full sunlight doubly bright and
+Arcadian-like, from the contrast of the dark, bare, perpendicular rocks
+that shut them in. I could see but little of its beauty then in the fog
+that shrouded both it and me, but I saw the shape and semblance of a
+house, and urging the horse up the ascent, thundered on its gate-panels
+with my whip-handle till the rocks round echoed.
+
+"There was no answer, and I knocked a little louder, if possible, than
+before. I was wet to the skin with that wretched storm, and swore not
+mildly at the inhospitable roof that would not admit me under it. I
+knocked again, inclined to pick up a piece of granite and beat the panel
+in; and at last a face--an old woman's weather-beaten face, but with
+black southern eyes that had lost little of their fire with age--looked
+through a grating at me and asked me what I wanted.
+
+"'I want shelter if you can give it me,' I answered her. 'I have lost
+my way coming from Gavarnie, and am drenched through. I will pay you
+liberally if you will give me an asylum till the weather clears.'
+
+"Her eyes blazed like coals through the little grille.
+
+"'M'sieu, we take no money here--have you mistaken it for an inn? Come
+in if you want shelter, in Heaven's name! The Holy Virgin forbid we
+should refuse refuge to any!'
+
+"And she crossed herself and uttered some conjurations to Mary to
+protect them from all wolves in sheep's clothing, and guard their
+dwelling from all harm, by which I suppose she thought I spoke fairly
+and looked harmless, but might possibly be a thief or an assassin, or
+both in one. She unlocked the gate, and calling to a boy to take my
+horse into a shed, admitted me under a covered passageway into the
+house, which looked like part, and a very ruined part, too, of what had
+probably been, in the times of Henri-Quatre and his grandfather, a
+feudal chateau fenced in by natural ramparts from the rocks that
+surrounded it, shutting in the green slope on which it stood, with only
+one egress, the path through which I had ascended, into the level plain
+below. She marshalled me through this covered way into an interior
+passage, dark and vaulted, cheerless enough, and opened a low oak door,
+ushering me into a chamber, bare, gloomy, yet with something of lost
+grandeur and past state lingering about its great hearth, its massive
+walls, its stained windows, and its ragged tapestry hangings. The woman
+went up to one of the windows and spoke with a gentleness to which I
+should have never thought her voice could have been attuned with its
+harsh patois.
+
+"'Mon enfant, v'la un m'sieu etranger qui vient chercher un abri pour un
+petit peu. Veux-tu lui parler?'
+
+"The young girl she spoke to turned, rose, and, coming forward, bade me
+welcome with the grace, simplicity, and the naive freedom from
+embarrassment of a child, looking up in my face with her soft clear
+eyes. She was like----No matter! you have seen that crayon-head, it is
+but a portrayal of a face whose expression Raphael and Sassoferrato
+themselves would have failed to render in its earnest, innocent,
+elevated regard. She was very young--
+
+ Standing with reluctant feet
+ Where the brook and river meet--
+ Womanhood and childhood fleet.
+
+Good Heavens, I am quoting poetry! what will you think of me, to have
+gone back to the Wertherian and Tennysonian days so far as to repeat a
+triplet of Longfellow's? No man quotes _those_ poets after his salad
+days, except in a moment of weakness. Caramba! why _has_ one any
+weaknesses at all? we ought not to have any; we live in an atmosphere
+that would kill them all if they were not as obstinate and
+indestructible as all other weeds whose seeds will linger and peer up
+and spoil the ground, let one root them out ever so! I owed you an
+apology for that lapse into Longfellow, and I have made it. Am I to go
+on with this story?"
+
+He laughed as he spoke, and his laugh was by no means heartfelt. I told
+him to go on, and he lighted another Manilla and obeyed me, while the
+Arno murmured on its way, and the dusky, sultry clouds brooded nearer
+the earth, and the lights were lit in the distant windows of the palace
+of the Marchese Acqua d'Oro, that fairest of Florentines, who rouges so
+indiscriminately and flirts her fan so inimitably, to one of whose balls
+we were going that night.
+
+He settled himself back in his chair, with his face darkened again by
+the shadow cast on it from the pillar of the balcony; and took his cigar
+out of his mouth.
+
+"She looked incongruous in that bare and gloomy room, out of place with
+it, and out of keeping with the old woman--a French peasant-woman,
+weather-beaten and bronzed, such as you see any day by the score riding
+to market or sitting knitting at their cottage-doors. It was impossible
+that the girl could be either daughter or grand-daughter, or any
+relation at all to her. In that room she looked more as one of these
+myrtles might do, set down in the stifling gloomy horrors of a London
+street than anything else, save that in certain traces about the
+chamber, as I told you, there were relics of a faded grandeur which
+harmonized better with her. I can see her now, as she stood there with a
+strange foreign grace, an indescribable patrician delicacy mingled with
+extreme youthfulness and naivete, like an old picture in costume, like
+one of Raphael's child-angels in face--poor little Florelle!
+
+"'You would stay till the storm is over, monsieur? you are welcome to
+shelter if you will,' she said, coming forward to me timidly yet
+frankly. 'Cazot tells me you are a stranger, and our mountain storms are
+dangerous if you have no guide.'
+
+"I did not know who Cazot was, but I presumed her to be the old woman,
+who seemed to be portress, mistress, domestic, cameriste, and all else
+in her single person, but I thanked her for her permitted shelter, and
+accepted her invitation to remain till the weather had cleared, as you
+can imagine. When you have lost your way, any asylum is grateful,
+however desolate and tumble-down. They made me welcome, she and the old
+peasant-woman, with that simple, unstrained, and unostentatious
+hospitality which is, after all, the true essence of good breeding, and
+of which your parvenu knows nothing, when he keeps you waiting, and
+shows you that you are come at an inapropos moment, in his fussy fear
+lest everything should not be _comme il faut_ to do due credit to _him_.
+Old Cazot set before me some simple refreshment, a _grillade de
+chataignes_, some maize and milk, and a dish of trout just caught in the
+Gave below, while I looked at my chatelaine, marvelling how that young
+and delicate creature could come to be shut up with an old peasant on a
+remote hill-side. I did my best to draw her out and learn her history;
+she was shy at first of a complete stranger, as was but natural, but I
+spoke of Garvarnie, of the beauty of the Pyrenees, or Tourmalet, and the
+Lac Bleu, and, warming with enthusiasm for her birthplace, the girl
+forgot that I was a foreign tourist, unknown to her, and indebted to her
+for an hour's shelter, and before my impromptu supper was over I had
+drawn from her, by a few questions which she was too much of a child and
+had too little to conceal not to answer with a child's ingenuousness,
+the whole of her short history, and the explanation of her anomalous
+position. Her name was Florelle de l'Heris, a name once powerful enough
+among the nobles of the Midi, and the old woman, Madame Cazot, was her
+father's foster-sister. Of her family, beggared in common with the best
+aristocracy of France, none were now left; they had dwindled and fallen
+away, till of the once great house of L'Heris this child remained alone
+its representative: her mother had died in her infancy, and her father,
+either too idle or too broken-hearted to care to retrieve his fortunes,
+lived the life of a hermit among these ruins where I now found his
+daughter, educating her himself till his death, which occurred when she
+was only twelve years old, leaving her to poverty and obscurity, and
+such protection and companionship as her old nurse Cazot could afford
+her. Such was the story Florelle de l'Heris told me as I sat there that
+evening waiting till the clouds should clear and the mists roll off
+enough to let me go to St. Sauveur--a story told simply and
+pathetically, and which Cazot, sitting knitting in a corner, added to by
+a hundred gesticulations, expletives, appeals to the Virgin, and prolix
+addenda, glad, I dare say, of any new confident, and disposed to regard
+me with gratitude for my sincere praises of her fried trout. It was a
+story which seemed to me to suit the delicate beauty of the flower I
+had found in the wilderness, and read more like a chapter of some
+versified novelette, like 'Lucille,' than a _bona fide_ page out of the
+book of one's actual life, especially in a life like mine, of
+essentially material pleasures and emphatically substantial and palpable
+ambitions. But there _are_ odd stories in real life!--strange pathetic
+ones, too--stranger, often, than those that found the plot and underplot
+of a novel or the basis of a poem; but when such men as I come across
+them they startle us, they look bizarre and unlike all the other leaves
+of the book that glitter with worldly aphorisms, philosophical maxims,
+and pungent egotisms, and we would fain cut them out; they have the ring
+of that Arcadia whose golden gates shut on us when we outgrew boyhood,
+and in which, _en revanche_, we have sworn ever since to
+disbelieve--keeping our word sometimes, perhaps to our own
+hindrance--Heaven knows!
+
+"I stayed as long as I could that evening, till the weather had cleared
+up so long, and the sun was shining again so indisputably, that I had no
+longer any excuse to linger in the dark-tapestried room, with the
+chestnuts sputtering among the wood-ashes, and Madame Cazot's needles
+clicking one continual refrain, and the soft gazelle eyes of my young
+chatelaine glancing from my sketches to me with that mixture of shyness
+and fearlessness, innocence and candor, which gave so great a charm to
+her manner. She was a new study to me, both for my palette and my
+mind--a pretty fresh toy to amuse me while I should stay in the Midi. I
+was not going to leave without making sure of a permission to return. I
+wanted to have that face among my pastels, and when I had thanked her
+for her shelter and her welcome, I told her my name, and asked her leave
+to come again where I had been so kindly received.
+
+"'Come again, monsieur? Certainly, if you care to come. But you will
+find it a long way from Luz, I fear,' she said, naively, looking up at
+me with her large clear fawn-like eyes--eyes so cloudless and untroubled
+_then_--as she let me take her hand, and bade me adieu et bonsoir.
+
+"I reassured her on that score, you can fancy, and left her standing in
+the deep-embrasured window, a great stag-hound at her feet, and the
+setting sun, all the brighter for its past eclipse, bathing her in
+light. I can always see her in memory as I saw her then, poor
+child!----Faugh! How hot the night is! Can't we get more air anyhow?
+
+"'If you come again up here, m'sieu, you will be the first visitor the
+Nid de l'Aigle has seen for four years,' said old Cazot, as she showed
+me out through the dusky-vaulted passage. She was a cheerful, garrulous
+old woman, strong in her devotion to the De l'Heris of the bygone past;
+stronger even yet in her love for their single orphan representative of
+the beggared present. 'Visitors! Is it likely we should have any,
+m'sieu? Those that would suit me would be bad company for Ma'amselle
+Florelle, and those that should seek her never do. I recollect the time,
+m'sieu, when the highest in all the departments were glad to come to the
+bidding of a De l'Heris; but generations have gone since then, and lands
+and gold gone too, and, if you cannot feast them, what care people for
+you? That is true in the Pyrenees, m'sieu, as well as in the rest of the
+world. I have not lived eighty years without finding out that. If my
+child yonder were the heiress of the De l'Heris, there would be plenty
+to court and seek her; but she lives in these poor broken-down ruins
+with me, an old peasant woman, to care for her as best I can, and not a
+soul takes heed of her save the holy women at the convent, where, maybe,
+she will seek refuge at last!'
+
+"She let me out at the gate where I had thundered for admittance two
+hours before, and, giving her my thanks for her hospitality--money she
+would not take--I wished her good day, and rode down the bridle-path to
+St. Sauveur, and onwards to Luz, thinking at intervals of that fair
+young life that had just sprung up, and was already destined to wither
+away its bloom in a convent. Any destiny would be better to proffer to
+her than that. She interested me already by her childlike loveliness and
+her strange solitude of position, and I thought she would while away
+some of the long summer hours during my stay in the Midi when I was
+tired of chamois and palette, and my lazy dolce under the beech-wood
+shades. At any rate, she was newer and more charming than the belles of
+Eaux Bonnes.
+
+"The next morning I remembered her permission and my promise, and I rode
+out through the town again, up the mountain-road, to the Nid de l'Aigle;
+glad of anything that gave me an amusement and a pursuit. I never wholly
+appreciate the far niente, I think; perhaps I have lived too entirely in
+the world--and a world ultra-cold and courtly, too--to retain much
+patience for the meditative life, the life of trees and woods, sermons
+in stones, and monologues in mountains. I am a restless, ambitious man;
+I must have a _pursuit_, be it of a great aim or a small, or I grow
+weary, and my time hangs heavily on hand. Already having found Florelle
+de l'Heris among these hills reconciled me more to my _pro tempo_
+banishment from society, excitement, and pleasure, and I thanked my good
+fortune for having lighted upon her. She was very lovely, and I always
+care more for the physical than the intellectual charms of any woman. I
+do not share some men's visionary requirements on their mental score; I
+ask but material beauty, and am content with it.
+
+"I rode up to the Nid de l'Aigle: by a clearer light it stood on a spot
+of great picturesqueness, and before the fury of the revolutionary
+peasantry had destroyed what was the then habitable and stately chateau,
+must have been a place of considerable extent and beauty, and in the
+feudal times, fenced in by the natural ramparts of its shelving rocks,
+no doubt all but impregnable. There were but a few ruins now that held
+together and had a roof over them--the part where Madame Cazot and the
+last of the De l'Heris lived; it was perfectly solitary; there was
+nothing to be heard round it but the foaming of the river, the music of
+the sheep-bells from the flocks that fed in the clefts and on the slopes
+of grass-land, and the shout of some shepherd-boy from the path below;
+but it was as beautiful a spot as any in the Pyrenees, with its
+overhanging beech-woods, its wilderness of wild-flowers, its rocks
+covered with that soft gray moss whose tint defies one to repeat it in
+oil or water colors, and its larches and beeches drooping over into the
+waters of the Gave. In such a home, with no companions save her father,
+old Cazot, and her great stag-hound, and, occasionally, the quiet
+recluses of St. Marie Purificatrice, with everything to feed her native
+poetry and susceptibility, and nothing to teach her anything of the
+actual and ordinary world, it were inevitable that the character of
+Florelle should take its coloring from the scenes around her, and that
+she should grow up singularly childlike, imaginative, and innocent of
+all that in any other life she would unavoidably have known. Well
+educated she was, through her father and the nuns, but it was a
+semi-religious and peculiar education, of which the chief literature had
+been the legendary and sacred poetry of France and Spain, the chief
+amusement copying the illuminated missals lent her by the nuns, or
+joining in the choral services of the convent; an education that taught
+her nothing of the world from which she was shut out, and encouraged all
+that was self-devoted, visionary, and fervid in her nature, leaving her
+at seventeen as unconscious of evil as the youngest child. I despair of
+making you imagine what Florelle then was. Had I never met her, I should
+have believed in her as little as yourself, and would have discredited
+the existence of so poetic a creation out of the world of fiction; her
+ethereal delicacy, her sunny gayety when anything amused her, her
+intense sensitiveness, pained in a moment by a harsh word, pleased as
+soon by a kind one, her innocence of all the blots and cruelties,
+artifices and evils, of that world beyond her Nid de l'Aigle, made a
+character strangely new to me, and strangely winning, but which to you I
+despair of portraying: I could not have _imagined_ it. Had I never seen
+her, and had I met with it in the pages of a novel, I should have put it
+aside as a graceful but impossible conception of romance.
+
+"I went up that day to the Nid de l'Aigle, and Florelle received me with
+pleasure; perhaps Madame Cazot had instilled into her some scepticism
+that 'a grand seigneur,' as the woman was pleased to term me, would
+trouble himself to ride up the mountains from Luz merely to repeat his
+thanks for an hour's shelter and a supper of roasted chestnuts. She was
+a simple-minded, good-hearted old woman, who had lived all her life
+among the rocks and rivers of the Hautes-Pyrenees, her longest excursion
+a market-day to Luz or Bagneres. She looked on her young mistress and
+charge as a child--in truth, Florelle was but little more--and thought
+my visit paid simply from gratitude and courtesy, never dreaming of
+attributing it to 'cette beaute hereditaire des L'Heris,' which she was
+proud of boasting was an inalienable heirloom to the family.
+
+"I often repeated my visits; so often, that in a week or so the old
+ruined chateau grew a natural resort in the long summer days, and
+Florelle watched for my coming from the deep-arched window where I had
+seen her first, or from under the boughs of the great copper beech that
+grew before the gate, and looked for me as regularly as though I were to
+spend my lifetime in the valley of Luz. Poor child! I never told her my
+title, but I taught her to call me by my christian name. It used to
+sound very pretty when she said it, with her long Southern
+pronunciation--prettier than it ever sounds now from the lips of
+Beatrice Acqua d'Oro yonder, in her softest moments, when she plays at
+sentiment. She had great natural talent for art, hitherto uncultivated,
+of course, save by such instructions as one of the women at the convent,
+skilful at illuminating, had occasionally given her. I amused myself
+with teaching her to transfer to paper and canvas the scenery she loved
+so passionately. I spent many hours training this talent of hers that
+was of very unusual calibre, and, with due culture, might have ranked
+her with Elisabetta Sirani or Rosa Bonheur. Sitting with her in the old
+room, or under the beech-trees, or by the side of the torrents that tore
+down the rocks into the Gave, it pleased me to draw out her unsullied
+thoughts, to spread her mind out before me like a book--a pure book
+enough, God knows, with not even a stain of the world upon it--to make
+her eyes glisten and glow and dilate, to fill them with tears or
+laughter at my will, to wake up her young life from its unconscious,
+untroubled, childish repose to a new happiness, a new pain, which she
+felt but could not translate, which dawned in her face for me, but never
+spoke in its true language to her, ignorant then of its very name--it
+amused me. Bah! our amusements are cruel sometimes, and costly too!
+
+"It was at that time I took the head in pastels which you have seen, and
+she asked me, in innocent admiration of its loveliness, if she was
+_indeed_ like that?--This night is awfully oppressive. Is there water in
+that carafe? Is it iced? Push it to me. Thank you.
+
+"I was always welcome at the Nid de l'Aigle. Old Cazot, with the
+instinct of servants who have lived with people of birth till they are
+as proud of their master's heraldry as though it were their own,
+discerned that I was of the same rank as her adored House of De
+l'Heris--if indeed she admitted any equal to them--and with all the
+cheery familiarity of a Frenchwoman treated me with punctilious
+deference, being as thoroughly imbued with respect and adoration for the
+aristocracy as any of those who died for the white lilies in the Place
+de la Revolution. And Florelle--Florelle watched for me, and counted her
+hours by those I spent with her. You are sure I had not read and played
+with women's hearts so long--women, too, with a thousand veils and
+evasions and artifices, of which she was in pure ignorance even of the
+existence--without having this heart, young, unworn, and unoccupied,
+under my power at once, plastic to mould as wax, ready to receive any
+impressions at my hands, and moulded easily to my will. Florelle had
+read no love stories to help her to translate this new life to which I
+awoke her, or to put her on her guard against it. I went there often,
+every day at last, teaching my pupil the art which she was only too glad
+and too eager to learn, stirring her vivid imagination with descriptions
+of that brilliant outside world, of whose pleasures, gayeties and
+pursuits she was as ignorant as any little gentian flower on the rocks;
+keeping her spell-bound with glimpses of its life, which looked to her
+like fairyland, bizarre bal masque though it be to us; and pleasing
+myself with awakening new thoughts, new impressions, new emotions, which
+swept over her tell-tale face like the lights and shades over
+meadow-land as the sun fades on and off it. She was a new study, a new
+amusement to me, after the women of our world, and I beguiled my time
+with her, not thoughtlessly, as I might have done, not too hastily, as I
+_should_ have done ten years before, but pleased with my new amusement,
+and more charmed with Florelle than I at first knew, though I confess I
+soon wished to make her love me, and soon tried my best to make her do
+so--an easy task when one has had some practice in the rose-hued
+atmosphere of the boudoir, among the most difficile and the most
+brilliant coquettes of Europe! Florelle, with a nature singularly
+loving, and a mind singularly imaginative, with no rival for me even in
+her fancy, soon lavished on me all the love of which her impassioned and
+poetic character was capable. She did not know it, but I did. She loved
+me, poor child!--love more pure, unselfish, and fond than I ever won
+before, than I shall ever win again.
+
+"Basta! why need you have lighted on that crayon-head, and make me rake
+up this story? I loathe looking at the past. What good ever comes of it?
+A wise man lives only in his present. 'La vita e appunto una memoria,
+una speranza, un punto,' writes the fool of a poet, as though the bygone
+memories and the unrealized hopes were worth a straw! It is that very
+present 'instant' that he despises which is available, and in which,
+when we are in our senses, we absorb ourselves, knowing that that alone
+will yield a fruit worth having. What are the fruits of the others? only
+Dead Sea apples that crumble into ash.
+
+"I knew that Florelle loved me; that I, and I alone, filled both her
+imagination and her heart. I would not precipitately startle her into
+any avowal of it. I liked to see it dawn in her face and gleam in her
+eyes, guilelessly and unconsciously. It was a new pleasure to me, a new
+charm in that book of Woman of which I had thought I knew every phase,
+and had exhausted every reading. I taught Florelle to love me, but I
+would not give her a name to my teaching till she found it herself. I
+returned it? O yes, I loved her, selfishly, as most people, men or
+women, do love, let them say what they will; _very_ selfishly,
+perhaps--a love that was beneath her--a love for which, had she seen
+into my heart, she might have disdained and hated me, if her soft nature
+could have been moved to so fierce a thing as hate--a love that sought
+its own gratification, and thought nothing of her welfare--a love _not_
+worthy of her, as I sometimes felt then, as I believe now.
+
+"I had been about six weeks in the Pyrenees since the day I lost myself
+en route from Gavarnie; most of the days I had spent three or four
+hours, often more, at the Nid de l'Aigle, giving my painting lessons to
+Florelle, or being guided by her among the beech-wooded and mountain
+passes near her home. The dreariest fens and flats might have gathered
+interest from such a guide, and the glorious beauties of the Midi, well
+suited to her, gained additional poetry from her impassioned love for
+them, and her fond knowledge of all their legends, superstitions,
+histories, and associated memories, gathered from the oral lore of the
+peasantry, the cradle songs of Madame Cazot, and the stories of the old
+chronicles of the South. Heavens! what a wealth of imagination, talent,
+genius, lay in her if _I_ had not destroyed it!
+
+"At length the time drew near when my so-called sojourn at the Baths
+must end. One day Florelle and I were out sketching, as usual; she sat
+under one of the great beeches, within a few feet of one of the cascades
+that fell into the Gave du Pau, and I lay on the grass by her, looking
+into those clear gazelle eyes that met mine so brightly and trustfully,
+watching the progress of her brush, and throwing twigs and stones into
+the spray of the torrent. I can remember the place as though it were
+yesterday, the splash of the foam over the rocks, the tinkle of the
+sheep-bells from the hills, the scent of the wild flowers growing round,
+the glowing golden light that spread over the woodlands, touching even
+the distant crest of Mount Aigu and the Pic du Midi. Strange how some
+scenes will stamp themselves on the camera of the brain never to be
+effaced, let one try all that one may.
+
+"There, that morning, I, for the first time since we had met, spoke of
+leaving Luz, and of going back to that life which I had so often amused
+her by describing. Happy in her present, ignorant of how soon the scenes
+so familiar and dear to her would tire and pall on me, and infinitely
+too much of a child to have looked beyond, or speculated upon anything
+which I had not spoken of to her, it had not presented itself to her
+that this sort of life could not go on for ever; that even she would not
+reconcile me long to the banishment from my own world, and that in the
+nature of things we must either become more to each other than we were
+now, or part as strangers, whom chance had thrown together for a little
+time. She loved me, but, as I say, so innocently and uncalculatingly,
+that she never knew it till I spoke of leaving her; then she grew very
+pale, her eyes filled with tears, and shunned mine for the first time,
+and, as an anatomist watches the quiver of pain in his victim, so I
+watched the suffering of mine. It was her first taste of the bitterness
+of life, and while I inflicted the pain I smiled at it, pleased in my
+egotism to see the power I had over her. It was cruel, I grant it, but
+in confessing it I only confess to what nine out of ten men have felt,
+though they may conceal or deny it.
+
+"'You will miss me, Florelle?' I asked her. She looked at me
+reproachfully, wistfully, piteously, the sort of look I have seen in the
+eyes of a dying deer; too bewildered by this sudden mention of my
+departure to answer in words. No answer was needed with eyes so eloquent
+as hers, but I repeated it again. I knew I gave pain, but I knew, too, I
+should soon console her. Her lips quivered, and the tears gathered in
+her eyes; she had not known enough of sorrow to have learnt to dissemble
+it. I asked her if she loved me so much that she was unwilling to bid me
+farewell. For the first time her eyes sank beneath mine, and a hot
+painful color flushed over her face. Poor child! if ever I have been
+loved by any woman, I was loved by her. Then I woke her heart from its
+innocent peaceful rest, with words that spoke a language utterly new to
+her. I sketched to her a life with me that made her cheeks glow, and her
+lips quiver, and her eyes grow dark. She was lovelier in those moments
+than any art could ever attempt to picture! She loved me, and I made
+her tell me so over and over again. She put her fate unhesitatingly into
+my hands, and rejoiced in the passion I vowed her, little understanding
+how selfishly I sought her, little thinking, in her ignorance of the
+evil of the world, that while she rejoiced in the fondness I lavished on
+her, and worshipped me as though I were some superior unerring godlike
+being, she was to me only a new toy, only a pursuit of the hour, a
+plaything, too, of which I foresaw I should tire! Isn't it Benjamin
+Constant who says,'Malheureux l'homme qui, dans le commencement d'un
+amour, prevoit avec une precision cruelle l'heure ou il en sera lasse'?
+
+"As it happened, I had made that morning an appointment in Luz with some
+men I knew, who happened to be passing through it, and had stopped there
+that day to go up the Pic du Midi the next, so that I could spend only
+an hour or two with Florelle. I took her to her home, parted with her
+for a few hours, and went down the path. I remember how she stood
+looking after me under the heavy gray stone-work of the gateway, the
+tendrils of the ivy hanging down and touching her hair that glistened in
+the sunshine as she smiled me her adieux. My words had translated, for
+the first time, all the newly-dawned emotions that had lately stirred in
+her heart, while she knew not their name.
+
+"I soon lost sight of her through a sharp turn of the bridle-path round
+the rocks, and went on my way thinking of my new love, of how completely
+I held the threads of her fate in my hands, and how entirely it lay in
+my power to touch the chords of her young heart into acute pain or into
+as acute pleasure with one word of mine--of how utterly I could mould
+her character, her life, her fate, whether for happiness or misery, at
+my will. I loved her well enough, if only for her unusual beauty, to
+feel triumph at my entire power, and to feel a tinge of her own poetry
+and tenderness of feeling stirring in me as I went on under the green,
+drooping, fanlike boughs of the pines, thinking of Florelle de l'Heris.
+
+"'M'sieu! permettez-moi vous parle un p'tit mot?'
+
+"Madame Cazot's patois made me look up, almost startled for the moment,
+though there was nothing astonishing in her appearance there, in her
+accustomed spot under the shade of a mountain-ash and a great boulder of
+rock, occupied at her usual task, washing linen in the Gave, as it
+foamed and rushed over its stones. She raised herself from her work and
+looked up at me, shading her eyes from the light--a sunburnt, wrinkled,
+hardy old woman, with her scarlet capulet, her blue cloth jacket, and
+her brown woollen petticoat, so strange a contrast to the figure I had
+lately left under the gateway of the Nid de l'Aigle, that it was
+difficult to believe them even of the same sex or country.
+
+"She spoke with extreme deference, as she always did, but so earnestly,
+that I looked at her in surprise, and stopped to hear what it might be
+she had to say. She was but a peasant woman, but she had a certain
+dignity of manner for all that, caught, no doubt, from her long service
+with, and her pride in, the De l'Heris.
+
+"'M'sieu, I have no right, perhaps, to address you; you are a grand
+seigneur, and I but a poor peasant woman. Nevertheless, I must speak. I
+have a charge to which I shall have to answer in the other world to God
+and to my master. M'sieu, pardon me what I say, but you love Ma'amselle
+Florelle?'
+
+"I stared at the woman, astonished at her interference and annoyed at
+her presumption, and motioned her aside with my stick. But she placed
+herself in the path--a narrow path--on which two people could not have
+stood without one or other going into the Gave, and stopped me
+resolutely and respectfully, shading her eyes from the sun, and looking
+steadily at my face.
+
+"'M'sieu, a little while ago, in the gateway yonder, when you parted
+with Ma'amselle Florelle, I was coming out behind you to bring my linen
+to the river, and I saw you take her in your arms and kiss her many
+times, and whisper to her that you would come again "ce soir!" Then,
+m'sieu, I knew that you must love my little lady, or, at least, must
+have made her love you. I have thought her--living always with her--but
+a beautiful child still; but you have found her a beautiful woman, and
+loved her, or taught her love, m'sieu. Pardon me if I wrong your honor,
+but my master left her in my charge, and I am an ignorant old peasant,
+ill fitted for such a trust; but is this love of yours such as the Sieur
+de l'Heris, were he now on earth, would put his hand in your own and
+thank you for, or is it such that he would wash out its insult in your
+blood or his?'
+
+"Her words amazed me for a moment, first at the presumption of an
+interference of which I had never dreamt, next at the iron firmness with
+which this old woman, nothing daunted, spoke as though the blood of a
+race of kings ran in her veins. I laughed a little at the absurdity of
+this cross-questioning from her to me, and not choosing to bandy words
+with her, bade her move aside; but her eyes blazed like fire; she stood
+firm as the earth itself.
+
+"'M'sieu, answer me! You love Ma'amselle Florelle--you have asked her in
+marriage?'
+
+"I smiled involuntarily:
+
+"'My good woman, men of my class don't marry every pretty face they
+meet; we are not so fond of the institution. You mean well, I know; at
+the same time, you are deucedly impertinent, and I am not accustomed to
+interference. Have the goodness to let me pass, if you please.'
+
+"But she would not move. She folded her arms across her chest, quivering
+from head to foot with passion, her deep-set eyes flashing like coals
+under her bushy eyebrows.
+
+"'M'sieu, I understand you well enough. The house of the L'Heris is
+fallen, ruined, and beggared, and you deem dishonor may approach it
+unrebuked and unrevenged. Listen to me, m'sieu; I am but a woman, it is
+true, and old, but I swore by Heaven and Our Lady to the Sieur de
+l'Heris, when he lay dying yonder, years ago, that I would serve the
+child he left, as my forefathers had served his in peace and war for
+centuries, and keep and guard her as best I might dearer than my own
+heart's blood. Listen to me. Before this love of yours shall breathe
+another word into her ear to scorch and sully it; before your lips shall
+ever meet hers again; before you say again to a De l'Heris poor and
+powerless, what you would never have dared to say to a De l'Heris rich
+and powerful, I will defend her as the eagles by the Nid de l'Aigle
+defend their young. You shall only reach her across my dead body!'
+
+"She spoke with the vehemence and passionate gesticulation of a
+Southern; in her patois, it is true, and with rude eloquence, but there
+was an odd _timbre_ of pathos in her voice, harsh though it was, and a
+certain wild dignity about her through the very earnestness and passion
+that inspired her. I told her she was mad, and would have put her out of
+my path, but, planting herself before me, she laid hold of my arm so
+firmly that I could not have pushed forwards without violence, which I
+would not have used to a woman, and a woman, moreover, as old as she
+was.
+
+"'Listen to one word more, m'sieu. I know not what title you may bear in
+your own country, but I saw a coronet upon your handkerchief the other
+day, and I can tell you are a grand seigneur--you have the air of it,
+the manner. M'sieu, you can have many women to love you; cannot you
+spare this one? you must have many pleasures, pursuits, enjoyments in
+your world, can you not leave me this single treasure? Think, m'sieu! If
+Ma'amselle Florelle loves you now, she will love you only the dearer as
+years go on; and _you_, you will tire of her, weary of her, want change,
+fresh beauty, new excitement--you must know that you will, or why should
+you shrink from the bondage of marriage?--you will weary of her; you
+will neglect her first and desert her afterwards; what will be the
+child's life _then_? Think! You have done her cruel harm enough now with
+your wooing words, why will you do her more? What is your love beside
+hers? If you have heart or conscience, you cannot dare to contrast them
+together; _she_ would give up everything for you, and _you_ would give
+up nothing! M'sieu, Florelle is not like the women of your world; she is
+innocent of evil as the holy saints; those who meet her should guard her
+from the knowledge, and not lead her to it. Were the Sieur De l'Heris
+living now, were her House powerful as I have known them, would you have
+dared or dreamt of seeking her as you do now? M'sieu, he who wrongs
+trust, betrays hospitality, and takes advantage of that very purity,
+guilelessness, and want of due protection which should be the best and
+strongest appeal to every man of chivalry and honor--he, whoever he be,
+the De l'Heris would have held, as what he is, a coward! Will you not
+now have pity upon the child, and let her go?'
+
+"I have seldom been moved in, never been swayed from, any pursuit or any
+purpose, whether of love, or pleasure, or ambition; but something in old
+Cazot's words stirred me strangely, more strangely still from the daring
+and singularity of the speaker. Her intense love for her young charge
+gave her pathos, eloquence, and even a certain rude majesty, as she
+spoke; her bronzed wrinkled features worked with emotions she could not
+repress, and hot tears fell over her hard cheeks. I felt that what she
+said was true; that as surely as the night follows the day would
+weariness of it succeed to my love for Florelle, that to the hospitality
+I had so readily received I had, in truth, given but an ill return, and
+that I had deliberately taken advantage of the very ignorance of the
+world and faith in me which should have most appealed to my honor. I
+knew that what she said was true, and this epithet of 'coward' hit me
+harder from the lips of a woman, on whom her sex would not let me avenge
+it, with whom my conscience would not let me dispute it, than it would
+have done from any man. _I_ called a coward by an old peasant woman!
+absurd idea enough, wasn't it? It is a more absurd one still that I
+could not listen to her unmoved, that her words touched me--how or why I
+could not have told--stirred up in me something of weakness,
+unselfishness, or chivalrousness--I know not what exactly--that prompted
+me for once to give up my own egotistical evanescent passions and act to
+Florelle as though all the males of her house were on earth to make me
+render account of my acts. At old Cazot's words I shrank for once from
+my own motives and my own desires, shrank from classing Florelle with
+the _cocottes_ of my world, from bringing her down to their level and
+their life.
+
+"'You will have pity on her, m'sieu, and go?' asked old Cazot, more
+softly, as she looked in my face.
+
+"I did not answer her, but put her aside out of my way, went down the
+mountain-path to where my horse was left cropping the grass on the level
+ground beneath a plane-tree, and rode at a gallop into Luz without
+looking back at the gray-turreted ruins of the Nid de l'Aigle.
+
+"And I left Luz that night without seeing Florelle de l'Heris again--a
+tardy kindness--one, perhaps, as cruel as the cruelty from which old
+Cazot had protected her. Don't you think I was a fool, indeed, for once
+in my life, to listen to an old woman's prating? Call me so if you like,
+I shall not dispute it; we hardly know when we are fools, and when wise
+men! Well! I have not been much given to such weaknesses.
+
+"I left Luz, sending a letter to Florelle, in which I bade her farewell,
+and entreated her to forget me--an entreaty which, while I made it, I
+felt would not be obeyed--one which, in the selfishness of my heart, I
+dare say, I hoped might not be. I went back to my old diplomatic and
+social life, to my customary pursuits, amusements, and ambitions,
+turning over the leaf of my life that contained my sojourn in the
+Pyrenees, as you turn over the page of a romance to which you will never
+recur. I led the same life, occupied myself with my old ambitions, and
+enjoyed my old pleasures; but I could not forget Florelle as wholly as I
+wished and tried to do. I had not usually been troubled with such
+memories; if unwelcome, I could generally thrust them aside; but
+Florelle I did not forget; the more I saw of other women the sweeter and
+brighter seemed by contrast her sensitive, delicate nature, unsullied by
+the world, and unstained by artifice and falsehood. The longer time went
+on, the more I regretted having given her up--perhaps on no better
+principle than that on which a child cares most for the toy he cannot
+have; perhaps because, away from her, I realized I had lost the purest
+and the strongest love I had ever won. In the whirl of my customary life
+I sometimes wondered how she had received my letter, and how far the
+iron had burnt into her young heart--wondered if she had joined the
+Sisters of Sainte Marie Purificatrice, or still led her solitary life
+among the rocks and beech-woods of Nid de l'Aigle. I often thought of
+her, little as the life I led was conducive to regretful or romantic
+thoughts. At length my desire to see her again grew ungovernable. I had
+never been in the habit of refusing myself what I wished; a man is a
+fool who does, if his wishes are in any degree attainable. And at the
+end of the season I went over to Paris, and down again once more into
+the Midi. I reached Luz, lying in the warm golden Pyrenean light as I
+had left it, and took once more the old familiar road up the hills to
+the Nid de l'Aigle. There had been no outward change from the year that
+had flown by; there drooped the fan-like branches of the pines; there
+rushed the Gave over its rocky bed; there came the silvery sheep-bell
+chimes down the mountain-sides; there, over hill and wood, streamed the
+mellow glories of the Southern sunlight. There is something unutterably
+painful in the sight of any place after one's lengthened absence,
+wearing the same smile, lying in the same sunlight. I rode on, picturing
+the flush of gladness that would dawn in Florelle's face at the sight of
+me, thinking that Mme. Cazot should not part me from her again, even, I
+thought, as I saw the old gray turrets above the beech-woods, if I paid
+old Cazot's exacted penalty of marriage! I loved Florelle more deeply
+than I had done twelve months before. 'L'absence allument les grandes
+passions et eteignent les petites,' they say. It had been the reverse
+with me.
+
+"I rode up the bridle-path and passed through the old gateway. There was
+an unusual stillness about the place; nothing but the roar of the
+torrent near, and the songs of the birds in the branches speaking in the
+summer air. My impatience to see Florelle, or to hear her, grew
+ungovernable. The door stood open. I groped my way through the passage
+and pushed open the door of the old room. Under the oriel window, where
+I had seen her first, she lay on a little couch. I saw her again--but
+_how_! My God! to the day of my death I shall never forget her face as I
+saw it then; it was turned from me, and her hair streamed over her
+pillows, but as the sunlight fell upon it, I knew well enough what was
+written there. Old Cazot, sitting by the bed with her head on her arms,
+looked up, and came towards me, forcing me back.
+
+"'You are come at last, to see her die. Look on your work--look well at
+it--and then go; with my curse upon you!'
+
+"I shook off her grasp, and forcing my way towards the window, threw
+myself down by Florelle's bed; till then I never knew how well I loved
+her. My voice awoke her from her sleep, and, with a wild cry of joy, she
+started up, weak as she was, and threw her arms round my neck, clinging
+to me with her little hands, and crying to me deliriously not to leave
+her while she lived--to stay with her till death should take her; where
+had I been so long? why had I come so late? _So late!_--those piteous
+words! As I held her in my arms, unconscious from the shock, and saw the
+pitiless marks that disease, the most hopeless and the most cruel, had
+made on the face that I had left fair, bright, and full of life as any
+child's, I felt the full bitterness of that piteous reproach, 'Why had I
+come so late?'
+
+"What need to tell you more. Florelle de l'Heris was dying, and I had
+killed her. The child that I had loved so selfishly had loved me with
+all the concentrated tenderness of her isolated and impassioned nature;
+the letter I wrote bidding her farewell had given her her death-blow.
+They told me that from the day she received that letter everything lost
+its interest for her. She would sit for hours looking down the road to
+Luz, as though watching wearily for one who never came, or kneeling
+before the pictures I had left as before some altar, praying to Heaven
+to take care of me, and bless me, and let her see me once again before
+she died. Consumption had killed her mother in her youth; during the
+chill winter at the Nid de l'Aigle the hereditary disease settled upon
+her. When I found her she was dying fast. All the medical aid, all the
+alleviations, luxuries, resources, that money could procure, to ward off
+the death I would have given twenty years of my life to avert, I
+lavished on her, but they were useless; for my consolation they told me
+that, used a few months earlier, they would have saved her! She lingered
+three weeks, fading away like a flower gathered before its fullest
+bloom. Each day was torture to me. I knew enough of the disease to know
+from the first there was no hope for her or me. Those long terrible
+night-hours, when she lay with her head upon my shoulder, and her little
+hot thin hands in mine, while I listened, uncertain whether every breath
+was not the last, or whether life was not already fled! By God! I cannot
+think of them!
+
+One of those long summer nights Florelle died; happy with me, loving and
+forgiving me to the last; speaking to the last of that reunion in which
+_she_, in her innocent faith, believed and hoped, according to the
+promise of her creed!--died with her hands clasped round my neck, and
+her eyes looking up to mine, till the last ray of light was quenched in
+them--died while the morning dawn rose in the east and cast a golden
+radiance on her face, the herald of a day to which she never awoke!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a dead silence between us; the Arno splashed against the wall
+below, murmuring its eternal song beneath its bridge, while the dark
+heavy clouds drifted over the sky with a sullen roll of thunder. He lay
+back in his chair, the deep shadow of the balcony pillar hiding his face
+from me, and his voice quivered painfully as he spoke the last words of
+his story. He was silent for many minutes, and so was I, regretting that
+my careless question had unfolded a page out of his life's history
+written in characters so painful to him. Such skeletons dwell in the
+hearts of most; hands need be tender that disentomb them and drag out to
+daylight ashes so mournful and so grievous, guarded so tenaciously,
+hidden so jealously. Each of us is tender over his own, but who does not
+think his brother's fit subject for jest, for gibe, for mocking dance
+of death?
+
+He raised himself with a laugh, but his lips looked white as death as he
+drank down a draught of the Hermitage.
+
+"Well! what say you: is the maxim right, _y-a-t-il femmes et femmes_?
+Caramba! why need you have pitched upon that portfolio?--There are the
+lights in the Acqua d'Oro's palace; we must go, or we shall get into
+disgrace."
+
+We went, and Beatrice Acqua d'Oro talked very ardent Italian to him, and
+the Comtesse Bois de Sandal remarked to me what a brilliant and
+successful man Lord ---- was, but how unimpressionable!--as cold and as
+glittering as ice. Nothing had ever made him _feel_, she was quite
+certain, pretty complimentary nonsense though he often talked. What
+would the Marchesa and the Comtesse have said, I wonder, had I told them
+of that little grave under the Pyrenean beech-woods? So much does the
+world know of any of us! In the lives of all men are doubled-down pages
+written on in secret, folded out of sight, forgotten as they make other
+entries in the diary, and never read by their fellows, only glanced at
+by themselves in some midnight hour of solitude.
+
+Basta! they are painful reading, my friends. Don't you find them so? Let
+us leave the skeletons in the closet, the pictures in the portfolio, the
+doubled-down pages in the locked diary, and go to Beatrice Acqua
+d'Oro's, where the lights are burning gayly. What is Madame Bois de
+Sandal, _nee_ Dashwood, singing in the music room?
+
+ The tender grace of a day that is dead
+ Will never come back to me!
+
+That is the burden of many songs sung in this world, for some dead
+flowers strew most paths, and grass grows over myriad graves, and many
+leaves are folded down in many lives, I fear. And--retrospection is very
+idle, my good fellow, and regret is as bad as the tic, and flirting is
+deucedly pleasant; the white Hermitage we drank to-night is gone, we
+know, but are there no other bottles left of wine every whit as good?
+Shall we waste our time sighing after spilt lees? Surely not. And
+yet--ah me!--the dead fragrance of those vines that yielded us the
+golden nectar of our youth!
+
+
+
+
+THE BEAUTY OF VICQ D'AZYR;
+
+OR,
+
+"NOT AT ALL A PROPER PERSON."
+
+
+Bon ami, do you consider the possession of sisters an agreeable addition
+to anybody's existence? _I_ hold it very intensely the reverse. Who pats
+a man down so spitefully as his sisters? Who refuses so obstinately to
+see any good in the Nazarene they have known from their nurseries? Who
+snubs him so contumaciously, when he's a little chap in jackets and they
+young ladies already out? Who worries him so pertinaciously to marry
+their pet friend, "who has ten thousand a year, dear! Red hair? I'm sure
+she has not! It's the most lovely auburn! But you never see any beauty
+in _refined_ women!" Who, if you incline towards a pretty little
+ineligible, rakes up so laboriously every scrap of gossip detrimental to
+her, and pours into your ear the delightful intelligence that she has
+been engaged to Powell of the Grays, is a shocking flirt, wears false
+teeth, is full five years older than she says she is, and has most
+objectionable connections? Who, I should like to know, does any and all
+of these things, my good fellow, so amiably and unremittingly as your
+sisters? till--some day of grace, perhaps--you make a telling speech at
+St. Stephen's, and fling a second-hand aroma of distinction upon them;
+or marry a co-heiress and lady-in-her-own-right, and they _raffolent_ of
+that charming creature, speculating on the desirability of being
+invited to your house when the men are down for September. Then, what a
+dear fellow you become! they always _were_ so fond of you! a little
+wild! oh, yes! but they are _so_ glad you are changed, and think more
+seriously now! it was only from a _real_ interest in your welfare that
+they used to grieve, &c., &c.
+
+My sisters were my natural enemies, I remember, when I was in the daisy
+age and exposed to their thraldom; they were so blandly superior, so
+ineffably condescending, and wielded, with such smiling dexterity, that
+feminine power of torture known familiarly as "nagging!" Now, of course,
+they leave me in peace; but from my earliest to my emancipated years
+they were my natural enemies. I might occasionally excite the enmity, it
+is possible. I remember, when I was aged eight, covering Constance, a
+stately brunette, with a mortifying amount of confusion, by asking her,
+as she welcomed a visitor with effusion, why she said she was delighted
+to see her when she had cried "There's that odious woman again!" as we
+saw the carriage drive up. I have a criminal recollection of taking
+Gwendolina's fan, fresh from Howell and James's, and stripping it of its
+gold-powdered down before her face ere she could rush to its rescue, as
+an invaluable medium in the manufacture of mayflies. I also have a dim
+and guilty recollection of saying to the Hon. George Cursitt, standing
+then in the interesting position of my prospective brother-in-law, "Mr.
+Cursitt, Agneta doesn't care one straw for you. I heard her saying so
+last night to Con; and that if you weren't so near the title, she would
+never have accepted you;" which revelation inopportunely brought that
+desirable alliance to an end, and Olympian thunders on my culprit's
+head.
+
+I had my sins, doubtless, but they were more than avenged on me; my
+sisters were my natural enemies, and I never knew of any man's who
+weren't so, more or less. Ah! my good sirs, those domesticities are all
+of them horrid bores, and how any man, happily and thrice blessedly
+free from them, can take the very worst of them voluntarily on his head
+by the Gate of Marriage (which differs thus remarkably from a certain
+Gate at Jerusalem, that at the one the camels kneel down to be lightened
+of all _their_ burdens ere they can pass through it; at the other, the
+poor human animal kneels down to be loaded with all _his_ ere he is
+permitted to enter), does pass my comprehension, I confess. I might
+amply avenge the injuries of my boyhood received from _mesdemoiselles
+mes soeurs_. Could I not tell Gwendolina of the pot of money dropped by
+her caro sposo over the Cesarewitch Stakes? Could I not intimate to
+Agneta where her Right Honorable lord and master spent the small hours
+last night, when popularly supposed to be nodding on the Treasury
+benches in the service of the state? Could I not rend the pride of
+Constance, by casually asking monsieur her husband, as I sip her coffee
+in her drawing-room this evening, who was that very pretty blonde with
+him at the Crystal Palace yesterday? the blonde being as well known
+about town as any other star of the demi-monde. Of course I could: but I
+am magnanimous; I can too thoroughly sympathize with those poor fellows.
+My vengeance would recoil on innocent heads, so I am magnanimous and
+silent.
+
+My sisters have long ceased to be mesdemoiselles, they have become
+mesdames, in that transforming crucible of marriage in which, assuredly,
+all that glitters is not gold, but in which much is swamped, and
+crushed, and fused with uncongenial metal, and from which the elixir of
+happiness but rarely exhales, whatever feminine alchemists, who
+patronize the hymeneal furnace, may choose to assure us to the contrary.
+My sisters are indisputably very fine women, and develop in full bloom
+all those essential qualities which their moral and mental trainers
+sedulously instilled into them when they were limited to the
+school-room and thorough-bass, Garcia and an "expurgated" Shakespeare,
+the society of Mademoiselle Colletmonte and Fraeulein von Engel, and the
+occasional refection of a mild, religious, respectably-twaddling fiction
+of the milk-and-water, pious-tendency, nursery-chronicling, and
+grammar-disregarding class, nowadays indited for the mental improvement
+of a commonplace generation in general, and growing young ladies in
+particular. My sisters are women of the world to perfection; indeed, for
+talent in refrigerating with a glance; in expressing disdain of a
+toilette or a ton by an upraised eyebrow; in assuming a various
+impenetrable plait-il? expression at a moment's notice; in sweeping past
+intimate friends with a charming unconsciousness of their existence,
+when such unconsciousness is expedient or desirable; in reducing an
+unwished-for intruder into an instantaneous and agonizing sense of his
+own de trop-ism and insignificance--in all such accomplishments and
+acquirements necessary to existence in all proper worlds, I think they
+may be matched with the best-bred lady to be found any day, from April
+to August, between Berkeley Square and Wilton Crescent. Constance, now
+Lady Marechale, is of a saintly turn, and touched with fashionable
+fanaticism, pets evangelical bishops and ragged school-boys, drives to
+special services, and is called our noble and Christian patroness by
+physicians and hon. secs., holds doctrinal points and strong tracts,
+mixed together in equal proportion, an infallible chloride of lime for
+the disinfectance of our polluted globe, and appears to receive
+celestial telegrams of indisputable veracity and charming acrimony
+concerning the destiny of the vengeful contents of the Seven Vials.
+Agneta, now Mrs. Albany Protocol, is a Cabinet Ministress, and a second
+Duchesse de Longueville (in her own estimation at the least); is
+"strengthening her party" when she issues her dinner invitations,
+whispers awfully of a "crisis" when even penny-paper leaders can't get
+up a breeze, and spends her existence in "pushing" poor Protocol, who,
+thorough Englishman that he is, considers it a point of honor to stand
+still in all paths with praiseworthy Britannic obstinacy and opticism.
+Gwendolina, now Lady Frederic Farniente, is a butterfly of fashion, has
+delicate health, affects dilettanteism, is interested by nothing, has
+many other charming minauderies, and lives in an exclusive circle--so
+tremendously exclusive, indeed, that it is possible she may at last draw
+the _cordon sanitaire_ so _very_ tight, that she will be left alone with
+the pretty woman her mirrors reflect.
+
+They have each of them attained to what the world calls a "good
+position"--an eminence the world dearly reveres; if you can climb to it,
+_do_; never mind what dirt may cling to your feet, or what you may
+chance to pull down in your ascent, so questions will be asked you at
+the top, when you wave your flag victoriously from a plateau at a good
+elevation. They haven't all their ambitions--who has? If a fresh
+Alexander conquered the world he would fret out his life for a
+standing-place to be able to try Archimedes' little experiment on his
+newly-won globe. Lady Marechale dies for entrance to certain salons
+which are closed to her; she is but a Baronet's wife, and, though so
+heavenly-minded, has _some_ weaknesses of earth. Mrs. Protocol grieves
+because she thinks a grateful country ought to wreathe her lord's brow
+with laurels--_Anglice_, strawberry-leaves--and the country remains
+ungrateful, and the brows bare. Lady Frederic frets because her foe and
+rival, Lady Maria Fitz-Sachet, has footmen an inch taller than her own.
+They haven't all their ambitions satisfied. We are too occupied with
+kicking our dear friends and neighbors down off the rounds of the social
+ladder to advance ourselves always perhaps as entirely as we otherwise
+might do. But still they occupy "unexceptionable positions," and from
+those fortified and impregnable citadels are very severe upon those who
+are not, and very jealous of those who are, similarly favored by
+fortune. When St. Peter lets ladies through the celestial portals, he'll
+never please them unless he locks out all their acquaintance, and
+indulges them with a gratifying peep at the rejected candidates.
+
+The triad regard each other after the manner of ladies; that is to say,
+Lady Marechale holds Mrs. Protocol and Lady Frederic "frivolous and
+worldly;" Lady Frederic gives them both one little supercilious
+expressive epithet, "_precieuses_;" Mrs. Protocol considers Lady
+Marechale a "pharisee," and Lady Frederic a "butterfly;"--in a word,
+there is that charming family love to one another which ladies so
+delight to evince, that I suppose we must excuse them for it on the plea
+that
+
+ 'Tis their nature to!
+
+which Dr. Watts puts forward so amiably and grammatically in excuse for
+the bellicose propensities of the canine race, but which is never
+remembered by priest or layman in extenuation of the human.
+
+They dislike one another--relatives always do--still, the three Arms
+will combine their Horse, Line, and Field Batteries in a common cause
+and against a common enemy; the Saint, the Politician, and the Butterfly
+have several rallying-points in common, and when it comes to the
+question of extinguishing an ineligible, of combining a sneer with a
+smile, of blending the unexceptionably-courteous with the
+indescribably-contemptuous, of calmly shutting their doors to those who
+won't aggrandize them, and blandly throwing them open to those who will,
+it would be an invidious task to give the golden apple, and decide which
+of the three ladies most distinguishes herself in such social prowess.
+
+Need I say that I _don't_ see very much of them?--severe strictures on
+society in general, with moral platitudes, over the luncheon wines at
+Lady Marechale's; discourse redolent of blue-books, with vindictive
+hits at Protocol and myself for our disinclination to accept a
+"mission," and our levity of life and opinions at "a period so full of
+social revolutions and wide-spread agitation as the present," through
+the soup and fish at Agneta's; softly hissed acerbities and languidly
+yawned satires on the prettiest women of my acquaintance, over the
+coffee at Lady Frederic's; are none of them particularly inviting or
+alluring. And as they or similar conversational confections are
+invariably included in each of the three ladies' entertainments _en
+petit comite_, it isn't wonderful if I forswear their drawing-rooms.
+Cheres dames, you complain, and your chosen defenders for you, that men
+don't affect your society nowadays save and except when making love to
+you. It isn't _our_ fault, indeed: you bore us, and--what can we do?--we
+shrink as naturally and pardonably from voluntary boredom as from any
+other voluntary suffering, and shirk an air redolent of ennui from the
+same principle as we do an air redolent of diphtheria. Self-preservation
+is a law of nature, and female society consists too exclusively of
+milk-and-water, dashed here and there with citric acid of malice, to be
+either a recherche or refreshing beverage to palates that have tasted
+warmer spices or more wholesome tonics.
+
+So I don't see much of my triad of sisters unless accidentally, but last
+August I encountered them by chance at Vicq d'Azyr. Do you know Vicq
+d'Azyr? No? All right? when it is known universally it will be spoilt;
+it will soon be fashionable, dyspeptic, artificial, like the crowds that
+will flock to it; its warm, bubbling springs will be gathered into long
+upright glasses, and quaffed by yellow-visaged groups; brass bands will
+bray where now the thrushes, orioles, and nightingales have the
+woodlands to themselves; cavalcades of hired hacks will cut up its
+thyme-covered turf, and young ladies will sketch in tortured outline and
+miserable washes the glorious sweep of its mountains, the crimson tints
+of its forests, the rush of its tumbling torrents, the golden gleam of
+its southern sun. Vicq d'Azyr will be a Spa, and will be spoilt;
+dyspepsia and bronchia, vanities and flirtations, cares and conquests,
+physicians and intrigantes, real marchionesses puffing under asthma,
+fictitious marquises strewing chaff for pigeons, monde and demi-monde,
+grandes dames and dames d'industrie will float into it, a mighty army of
+butterflies with a locust power of destruction: Vicq d'Azyr will be no
+more, and in its stead we shall have--a Fashionable Bath. Vicq d'Azyr,
+however, is free _yet_ from the hand of the spoiler, and is
+charming--its vine-clad hills stretching up in sunny slopes; its little
+homesteads nestling on the mountains' sides among the pines that load
+the air with their rich heavy perfume; its torrents foaming down the
+ravines, flinging their snowy spray far over the bows of arbutus and
+mountain-ash that bend across the brinks of their rushing courses; its
+dark-eyed peasant girls that dance at sunset under the linden-trees like
+living incarnations of Florian's pastorals; its sultry brilliant summer
+nights, when all is still, when the birds are sleeping among the
+ilex-leaves, and the wind barely stirs the tangled boughs of the
+woodland; when night is down on the mountains, wrapping hill and valley,
+crag and forest in one soft purple mist, and the silence around is only
+broken by the mystic music of the rushing waters, the soft whirr of the
+night-birds' wings, or the distant chime of a village clock faintly
+tolling through the air:----Caramba, messieurs! I beg your pardon! I
+don't know why I poetize on Vicq d'Azyr. _I_ went there to slay, not to
+sketch, with a rifle, not with a stylus, to kill izzards and chamois,
+not to indite a poem a la mode, with double-barrelled adjectives, no
+metre, and a "purpose;" nor to add my quota to the luckless loaded walls
+of the Academy by a pre-Raphaelite landscape of arsenical green, with
+the effete trammels of perspective gallantry disregarded, and trees
+like Dr. Syntax's wife, "roundabout and rather squat," with just
+two-dozen-and-seven leaves apiece for liberal allowance. I went to Vicq
+d'Azyr, amongst other places, last August, for chamois-hunting with
+Dunbar, of the Queen's Bays, taking up our abode at the Toison d'Or,
+whither all artists, tourists, men who come for the sport, women who
+come for its scenery, or invalids who come for its waters (whose
+properties, _miserabile dictu!_ are just being discovered as a panacea
+for every human ill--from a migraine to an "incurable pulmonary
+affliction"), seek accommodation if they can have it, since it is the
+only hotel in the place, though a very good one; is adorned with a
+balcony running round the house, twined and buried in honeysuckle and
+wild clematis, which enchants young ladies into instant promotion of it
+into their sketch-books; and gives you, what is of rather more
+importance, and what makes you ready to admire the clematis when, under
+gastronomic exasperation, you might swear at it as a harbor for
+tarantule--an omelette, I assure you, wellnigh as well cooked as you
+have it at Mivart's or Meurice's.
+
+At the Toison d'Or we took up our abode, and at the Toison d'Or we
+encountered my two elder sisters, Constance and Agneta, travelling for
+once on the same road, as they had left Paris together, and were
+together going on to the fashionable capital of a fashionable little toy
+duchy on the other side of the Rhine, when they should have finished
+with the wilder beauties and more unknown charms of Vicq d'Azyr and its
+environs. Each lady had her little train of husband, courier, valet,
+lady's-maid, small dog, and giant jewel-box. I have put the list in the
+inverse ratio of their importance, I believe. Your husband _versus_ your
+jewel-box? Of course, my dear madam; absurd! What's the value of a
+little simple gold ring against a dozen glittering circlets of diamonds,
+emeralds, rubies, and garnets?
+
+Each lady was bent on recruiting herself at Vicq d'Azyr after the toils
+of the season, and of shining _apres_ with all the brilliance that a
+fair share of beauty, good positions, and money, fairly entitled
+them to expect, at the little Court of--we will call it
+Lemongenseidlitz--denominated by its charming Duchess, Princess Helene
+of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz, the loveliest and most volage of all
+minor royalties. Each lady was strongly opposed to whatever the other
+wished; each thought the weather "sultry" when the other thought it
+"chilly," and _vice versa_. Each considered her own ailments "unheard-of
+suffering, dear!--I could never make any one feel!" &c. &c.--and assured
+you, with mild disdain, that the other's malady was "purely nervous,
+entirely exaggerated, but she _will_ dwell on it so much, poor darling!"
+Each related to you how admirably they would have travelled if _her_
+counsel had been followed, and described how the other _would_ take the
+direction of everything, _would_ confuse poor Chanderlos, the courier,
+till he hardly knew where he was, and _would_ take the night express out
+of pure unkindness, just because she knew how ill it always made her
+(the speaker) feel to be torn across any country the whole night at that
+dreadful pace; each was dissatisfied with everything, pleased with
+nothing, and bored, as became ladies of good degree; each found the sun
+too hot or the wind too cold, the mists too damp or the air too dry, and
+both combined their forces to worry their ladies'-maids, find fault with
+the viands, drive their lords to the registering of an oath never to
+travel with women again, welcome us benignly, since they thought we
+might amuse them, and smile their sunniest on Dunbar--he's
+heir-prospective to the Gwynne Marquisate, and Lady Marqueterie, the
+Saint, is not above keeping one eye open for worldly distinctions, while
+Mrs. Albany Protocol, though a Radical, is, like certain others of the
+ultra-Liberal party, not above a personal kow-towing before those
+"ridiculous and ought-to-be exploded conservative institutions"--Rank
+and Title.
+
+At the Toison d'Or, I say, when, after knocking over izzards _ad
+libitum_ in another part of the district, we descended one evening into
+the valley where Vicq d'Azyr lies nestled in the sunset light, with the
+pretty vendangeuses trooping down from the sloping vineyards, and the
+cattle winding homewards down the hill-side paths, and the vesper-bells
+softly chiming from the convent-tower rising yonder above its woods of
+linden and acacia--at the Toison d'Or, just alighting with the
+respective suites aforesaid, and all those portable embarrassments of
+books, tiger-skin rugs, flacons of bouquet, travelling-bags warranted to
+carry any and everything that the most fastidious can require en route
+from Piccadilly to Peru, with which ladies do love to encumber and
+embitter their own persons and their companions' lives, we met, as I
+have told you, mesdames mes soeurs.
+
+"What! Dear me, how very singular! Never should have dreamt of meeting
+_you_; so much too quiet a place, I should have thought. No Kursaal
+_here_? Come for sport--oh! Take Spes, will you! Poor little dear, he's
+been barking the whole way because he couldn't see out of the window.
+Ah, Major Dunbar, charmed to see you! What an amusing rencontre, is it
+not?" And Lady Marechale, slightly out of temper for so eminent a
+Christian at the commencement of her greeting, smoothed down her ruffled
+feathers and turned smilingly on Dunbar. I have said he will be one day
+Marquis of Gwynne.
+
+"By George, old fellow! _you_ in this out-of-the-way place! That's all
+right. Sport good, here? Glad to hear it. The deuce take me, if ever I
+am lured into travelling in a _partie carree_ again."
+
+And Marechale raised his eyebrows, and whispered confidentially to me
+stronger language than I may commit to print, though, considering his
+provocation, it was surely as pardonable as Uncle Toby's.
+
+"The thing I dislike in this sort of hotels and places is the admixture
+of people with whom one is obliged to come in contact," said Constance,
+putting up her glass as she entered the long low room where the humble
+table d'hote of the Toison d'Or was spread. Lady Marechale talks sweetly
+of the equality of persons in the sight of Heaven, but I never heard her
+recognize the same upon the soil of earth.
+
+"Exactly! One may encounter such very objectionable characters! _I_
+wished to dine in our own apartments, but Albany said no; and he is so
+positive, you know! This place seems miserably primitive," responded
+Agneta. Mrs. Protocol pets Rouges and Republicans of every country,
+talks liberalism like a feminine Sieyes or John Bright, projects a
+Reform Bill that shall bear the strongest possible family resemblance to
+the Decrets du 4 Aout, and considers "social distinctions _odious_
+between man and man;" but her practice is scarcely consistent with her
+theory, seeing that she is about as tenacious and resentful of
+objectionable contact as a sea-anemone.
+
+"Who is that, I wonder?" whispered Lady Marechale, acidulating herself
+in readiness, after the custom of English ladies when catching sight of
+a stranger whom they "don't know."
+
+"I wonder! All alone--how very queer!" echoed Mrs. Protocol, drawing her
+black lace shawl around her, with that peculiar movement which announces
+a woman's prescience of something antagonistic to her, that is to be
+repelled _d'avance_, as surely as a hedgehog's transfer of itself into a
+prickly ball denotes a sense of a coming enemy, and a need of caution
+and self-protection.
+
+"Who is that deucedly handsome woman?" whispered Marechale to me.
+
+"What a charming creature!" echoed Dunbar.
+
+The person referred to was the only woman at the table d'hote besides my
+sisters--a sister-tourist, probably; a handsome--nay more, a beautiful
+woman, about eight-and-twenty, distinguished-looking, brilliant, with a
+figure voluptuously perfect as was ever the Princess Borghese's. To say
+a woman looks a lady, means nothing in our day. "That young lady will
+wait on you, sir," says the shopman, referring to the shopwoman who will
+show you your gloves. "Hand the 'errings to that lady, Joe," you hear a
+fishmonger cry, as you pass his shop-door, referring by his epithet to
+some Mrs. Gamp or Betsy Priggs in search of that piscatory cheer at his
+stall. Heaven forbid we should give the abused and degenerate title to
+any woman deserving of the name! Generalize a thing, and it is vulgar.
+"A gentleman of my acquaintance," says Spriggs, an auctioneer and
+house-agent, to Smith, a collector of the water-rate. "A man I know,"
+says Pursang, one of the Cabinet, to Greville Tempest, who is heir to a
+Dukedom, and has intermarried with a royal house. The reason is plain
+enough. Spriggs thinks it necessary to inform Smith, who otherwise might
+remain ignorant of so signal a fact, that he actually does know a
+gentleman, or rather what he terms such. Pursang knows that Tempest
+would never suspect him of being _lie_ with men who were anything else;
+the one is proud of the fine English, the other is content with the
+simple phrase! Heaven forbid, I say, we should, nowadays, call any woman
+a lady who is veritably such; let us fall back on the dignified,
+definitive, courtly last-century-name of gentlewoman. I should be glad
+to see that name revived; it draws a line that snobbissimi cannot pass,
+and has a grand simplicity about it that will not attract Spriggs,
+Smith, and Spark, and Mesdames S., leurs femmes!
+
+Our sister-tourist, then, at the Toison d'Or, looked, to my eyes at the
+least, much more than a "lady," she looked an _aristocrate jusqu'au bout
+des ongles_, a beautiful, brilliant, dazzling brunette, with lovely
+hazel eyes, flashing like a tartaret falcon's under their arched
+pencilled eyebrows, quite an unhoped godsend in Vicq d'Azyr, where only
+stragglers resort as yet, though--alas for my Arcadia--my sister's pet
+physician, who sent them thither, is about, I believe, to publish a
+work, entitled "The Water-Spring in the Wilderness; or, A Scamper
+through Spots Unknown," which will do a little advertising of himself
+opportunely, and send hundreds next season to invade the wild woodlands
+and sunny valleys he inhumanly drags forth into the gas-glare of the
+world.
+
+The brilliant hazel eyes were opposite to me at dinner, and were, I
+confess, more attractive to me than the stewed pigeons, the crisp
+frog-legs, and the other viands prepared by the (considering we were in
+the heart of one of the most remote provinces) really not bad cook of
+the Toison d'Or. Lady Marechale and Mrs. Protocol honored her with that
+stare by which one woman knows so well how to destroy the reputation of
+another without speech; they had taken her measurement by some method of
+feminine geometry unknown to us, and the result was apparently not
+favorable to her, for over the countenances of the two ladies gathered
+that expression of stiff dignity and virtuous disdain, in the assuming
+of which, as I have observed before, they are inimitable proficients.
+"Evidently not a proper person!" was written on every one of their
+lineaments. Constance and Agneta had made up their minds with celerity
+and decision as to her social status, with, it is to be presumed, that
+unerring instinct which leads their sex to a conclusion so
+instantaneously, that, according to a philosopher, a woman will be at
+the top of the staircase of Reasoning by a single spring, while a man is
+toiling slowly up the first few steps.
+
+"You are intending to remain here some days, madame?" asked the fair
+stranger, with a charming smile, of Lady Marechale--a pleasant little
+overture to chance ephemeral acquaintance, such as a table d'hote
+surely well warrants.
+
+But the pleasant little overture was one to which Lady Marechale was far
+too English to respond. With that inimitable breeding for which our
+countrymen and women are continentally renowned, she bent her head with
+stately stiffness, indulged herself with a haughty stare at the
+offender, and turned to Agneta, to murmur in English her disgust with
+the _cuisine_ of the really unoffending Toison d'Or.
+
+"Poor Spes would eat nothing. Fenton must make him some panada. But
+perhaps there was nothing better than goat's milk in the house! What
+could Dr. Berkeley be thinking of? He described the place quite as
+though it were a second Meurice's or Badischer Hof!"
+
+A look of amusement glanced into the sparkling, yet languid eyes of my
+opposite neighbor.
+
+"English!" she murmured to herself, with an almost imperceptible but
+sufficiently scornful elevation of her arched eyebrows, and a slight
+smile, just showing her white teeth, as I addressed her in French; and
+she answered me with the ease, the aplomb, the ever suave courtesy of a
+woman of the world, with that polish which gives the most common
+subjects a brilliance never their own, and that vivacity which confers
+on the merest trifles a spell to amuse and to charm. She was certainly a
+very lovely creature, and a very charming one, too; frank, animated,
+witty, with the tone of a woman who has seen the world and knows it.
+Dunbar adored her, at first sight; he is an inflammable fellow, and has
+been ignited a thousand times at far less provocation. Marechale
+prepared for himself fifty conjugal orations by the recklessness with
+which, under the very eyes of madame, he devoted himself to another
+woman. Even Albany Protocol, dull, somnolent, and superior to such
+weaknesses, as becomes a president of many boards and a chairman of
+many committees, opened his eyes and glanced at her; and some young
+Cantabs and artists at the other end of the table stopped their own
+conversation, envying Dunbar and myself, I believe, for our
+juxtaposition with the _belle inconnue_; while my sisters sat trifling
+with the wing of a pigeon, in voluntary starvation (they would have had
+nothing to complain of, you see, if they had suffered themselves to dine
+well!), with strong disapprobation marked upon their lineaments, of this
+lovely vivacious unknown, whoever she might be, talking exclusively to
+each other, with a certain expression of sarcastic disdain and offended
+virtue, hinting far more forcibly than words that they thought already
+the "very worst" of her.
+
+So severe, indeed, did they look, that Dunbar, who is a good-natured
+fellow, and thinks--and thinks justly--that Constance and Agneta are
+very fine women, left me to discuss, Hoffmann, Heine, and the rest of
+Germany's satirical poets, with my opposite neighbor, and endeavored to
+thaw my sisters; a very difficult matter when once those ladies are
+iced. He tried Paris, but only elicited a monosyllabic remark concerning
+its weather; he tried Vicq d'Azyr, and was rewarded for his trouble by a
+withering sarcasm on the unlucky Toison d'Or; he tried chit-chat on
+mutual acquaintances, and the unhappy people he chanced to name were
+severally dismissed with a cutting satire appended to each. Lady
+Marechale and Mrs. Protocol were in one of those freezing and
+unassailable moods in which they sealed a truce with one another, and,
+combining their forces against a common foe, dealt out sharp, spherical,
+hard-hitting little bullets of speech from behind the abatis in which
+they intrenched themselves.
+
+At last he, in despair, tried Lemongenseidlitz, and the ladies thawed
+slightly--their anticipations from that fashionable little quarter were
+couleur de rose. They would meet their people of the best _monde_, all
+their dearest--that is of course their most fashionable--friends; the
+dear Duchess of Frangipane, the Millamonts those charming people,
+M. le Marquis de Croix-et-Cordon, Sir Henry Pullinger, Mrs.
+Merivale-Delafield, were all there; that delightful person, too, the
+Graf von Rosenlaeu, who amused them so much at Baden last year, was, as
+of course Dunbar knew, Master of the Horse to the Prince of
+Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz; they would be well received at the
+Court. Which last thing, however, they did not _say_, though they might
+imply, and assuredly fully thought it; since Lady Marechale already
+pictured herself gently awakening his Serene Highness to the spiritual
+darkness of his soul in legitimatizing gaming-tables in his duchy, and
+Mrs. Protocol already beheld herself closeted with his First Minister,
+giving that venerable Metternich lessons in political economy, and
+developing to him a system for filling his beggared treasury to
+overflowing, without taxing the people a kreutzer--a problem which,
+though it might have perplexed Kaunitz, Colbert, Pitt, Malesherbes,
+Talleyrand, and Palmerston put together, offered not the slightest
+difficulty to _her_ enterprising intellect. Have I not said that
+Sherlock states women are at the top of the staircase while we are
+toiling up the first few steps?
+
+"The Duchess--Princess Helene is a lovely woman, I think. Winton saw her
+at the Tuileries last winter, and raved about her beauty," said Dunbar,
+finding he had hit at last on an acceptable subject, and pursuing it
+with more zeal than discretion; for if there be one thing, I take it,
+more indiscreet than another, it is to praise woman to woman.
+
+Constance coughed and Agneta smiled, and both assented. "Oh yes--very
+lovely, they believed!"
+
+"And very lively--up to everything, I think I have heard," went on
+Dunbar, blandly, unconscious of the meaning of cough, smile, and
+assent.
+
+"Very lively!" sighed the Saint.
+
+"_Very_ lively!" smiled the Politician.
+
+"As gay a woman as Marie Antoinette," continued Dunbar, too intent on
+the truffles to pay en meme temps much heed to the subject he was
+discussing. "She's copied the Trianon, hasn't she?--has fetes and
+pastorals there, acts in comedies herself, shakes off etiquette and
+ceremonial as much as she can, and all that sort of thing, I believe?"
+
+Lady Marechale leaned back in her chair, the severe virtue and dignified
+censure of a British matron and a modern Lucretia expressed in both
+attitude and countenance.
+
+"A second Marie Antoinette?--too truly and unfortunately so, I have
+heard! Levity in _any_ station sufficiently reprehensible, but when
+exhibited in the persons of those whom a higher power has placed in
+exalted positions, it is most deeply to be deplored. The evil and
+contagion of its example become incalculable; and even when, which I
+believe her excusers are wont to assert of Princess Helene, it is merely
+traceable to an over-gayety of spirit and an over-carelessness of
+comment and censure, it should be remembered that we are enjoined to
+abstain from every _appearance_ of evil!"
+
+With which Constance shook out her phylacteries, represented by the
+thirty-guinea bracade-silk folds of her skirt (a dress I heard her
+describe as "very plain!--serviceable for travelling"), and glanced at
+my opposite neighbor with a look which said, "You are evidently not a
+proper person, but you hear for once what a proper person thinks!"
+
+Our charming companion did hear it, for she apparently understood
+English very well. She laughed a little--a sweet, low, ringing laugh--(I
+was rather in love with her, I must say--I am still)--and spoke with a
+slight pretty accent.
+
+"True, madame! but ah! what a pity your St. Paul did not advise, too,
+that people should not go by appearances, and think evil where evil is
+not!"
+
+Lady Marechale gave stare number two with a curl of her lip, and bent
+her head stiffly.
+
+"What a very strange person!" she observed to Agneta, in a murmur,
+meant, like a stage aside, to be duly heard and appreciated by the
+audience. And yet my sisters are thought very admirably bred women, too!
+But then, a woman alone--a foreigner, a stranger--surely no one would
+exact courtesy to such, from "ladies of position?"
+
+"Have you ever seen Princess Helene, the Duchess of Lemongenseidlitz,
+may I ask?" Marechale inquired, hastily, to cover his wife's sneer. He's
+a very good fellow, and finds the constant and inevitable society of a
+saint slightly trying, and a very heavy chastisement for a few words
+sillily said one morning in St. George's.
+
+"I have seen her, monsieur--yes!"
+
+"And is she a second Marie Antoinette?"
+
+She laughed gayly, showing her beautiful white teeth.
+
+"Ah, bah, monsieur! many would say that is a great deal too good a
+comparison for her! A second Louise de Savoie--a second Duchesse de
+Chevreuse--nay, a second Lucrezia Borgia, some would tell you. She likes
+pleasure--who does not, though, except those with whom 'les raisins sont
+trop verts et bons pour des goujats?'"
+
+"What an insufferably bold person!" murmured Constance.
+
+"Very disagreeable to meet this style of people!" returned Agneta.
+
+And both stiffened themselves with a little more starch; and we know
+that British wheats produce the stiffest starch in the world!
+
+"Who, indeed!" cried Marechale, regardless of madame's frown. "You know
+this for truth, then, of Princess Helene?"
+
+"Ah, bah, monsieur! who knows anything for truth?" laughed the lovely
+brunette. "The world dislikes truth so much, it is obliged to hide
+itself in out-of-the-way corners, and very rarely comes to light. Nobody
+knows the truth about her. Some think her, as you say, a second Marie
+Antoinette, who is surrendered to dissipation and levity, cares for
+nothing, and would dance and laugh over the dead bodies of the people.
+Others judge her as others judged Marie Antoinette; discredit the
+gossip, and think she is but a lively woman, who laughs at forms, likes
+to amuse herself, and does not see why a court should be a prison! The
+world likes the darker picture best; let it have it! I do not suppose it
+will break her heart!"
+
+And the fair stranger laughed so sweetly, that every man at the
+dinner-table fell in love with her on the spot; and Lady Marechale and
+Mrs. Protocol sat throughout the remainder of the meal in frozen dignity
+and unbreakable silence, while the lovely brunette talked with and
+smiled on us all with enchanting gayety, wit, and abandon, chatting on
+all sorts of topics of the day.
+
+Dinner over, she was the first to rise from the table, and bowed to us
+with exquisite grace and that charming smile of hers, of which the
+sweetest rays fell upon _me_, I swear, whether you consider the oath an
+emanation of personal vanity or not, my good sir. My sisters returned
+her bow and her good evening to them with that pointed stare which says
+so plainly, "You are not my equal, how dare you insult me by a
+courtesy?"
+
+And scarcely had we begun to sip our coffee up-stairs in the apartments
+Chanderlos had secured for the miladies Anglaises, than the duo upon her
+began as the two ladies sat with Spes between them on a sofa beside one
+of the windows opening on the balcony that ran round the house. A chance
+inadvertent assent of Dunbar's, a propos of--oh, sin unpardonable!--the
+beauty of the incognita's eyes, touched the valve and unloosened the
+hot springs that were seething below in silence. "A handsome woman!--oh
+yes, a gentleman's beauty, I dare say!--but a very odd person!"
+commenced Mrs. Protocol. "A very strange person!" assented Mrs.
+Marechale. "Very free manners!" added Agneta. "Quite French!" chorused
+Constance. "She has diamond rings--paste, no doubt!" said the
+Politician. "And rouges--the color's much too lovely to be natural!"
+sneered the Saint. "Paints her eyebrows, too!" "Not a doubt--and tints
+her lashes!" "An adventuress, I should say!" "Or worse!" "Evidently not
+a proper person!" "Certainly not!"
+
+Through the soft mellow air, hushed into evening silence, the words
+reached me, as I walked through the window on to the balcony, and stood
+sipping my coffee and looking lazily over the landscape wrapped in
+sunset haze, over the valley where the twilight shadows were deepening,
+and the mountains that were steeped yet in a rose-hued golden radiance
+from the rays that had sunk behind them.
+
+"My dear ladies," I cried, involuntarily, "can't you find anything a
+little more kindly to say of a stranger who has never done you any harm,
+and who, fifty to one, will never cross your path again?"
+
+"Bravo!" echoed Marechale, who has never gone as quietly in the
+matrimonial break as Protocol, and indeed will never be thoroughly
+broken in--"bravo! women are always studying to make themselves
+attractive; it's a pity they don't put down among the items a trifle of
+generosity and charity, it would embellish them wonderfully."
+
+Lady Marechale beat an injured tattoo with the spoon on her saucer, and
+leaned back with the air of a martyr, and drawing in her lips with a
+smile, whose inimitable sneer any lady might have envied--it was quite
+priceless!
+
+"It is the first time, Sir George, I should presume, that a husband and
+a brother were ever heard to unite in upbraiding a wife and a sister
+with her disinclination to associate with, or her averseness to
+countenance, an improper person!"
+
+"An improper person!" I cried. "But, my dear Constance, who ever told
+you that this lady you are so desperately bitter upon has any fault at
+all, save the worst fault in her own sex's eyes--that of beauty? I see
+nothing in her; her manners are perfect; her tone----"
+
+"You must pardon me if I decline taking your verdict on so delicate a
+question," interrupted Lady Marechale, with withering satire. "Very
+possibly you see nothing objectionable in her--nothing, at least, that
+_you_ would call so! Your views and mine are sufficiently different on
+every subject, and the women with whom I believe you have chiefly
+associated are not those who are calculated to give you very much
+appreciation for the more refined classes of our sex! Very possibly the
+person in question is what _you_, and Sir George too, perhaps, find
+charming; but you must excuse me if I really cannot, to oblige you,
+stoop to countenance any one whom my intuition and my knowledge of the
+world both declare so very evidently what she should not be. She will
+endeavor, most probably, if she remain here, to push herself into our
+acquaintance, but if you and my husband should choose to insult us by
+favoring her efforts, Agneta and I, happily, can guard ourselves from
+the objectionable companionship into which those who _should_ be our
+protectors would wish to force us!"
+
+With which Lady Marechale, with a little more martyrdom and an air of
+extreme dignity, had recourse to her _flacon_ of Viola Montana, and sank
+among the sofa cushions, a model of outraged and Spartan virtue. I set
+down my coffee-cup, and lounged out again to the peace of the balcony;
+Marechale shrugged his shoulders, rose, and followed me. Lo! on the
+part of the balcony that ran under _her_ windows, leaning on its
+balustrade, her white hand, white as the flowers, playing with the
+clematis tendrils, the "paste" diamond flashing in the last rays of the
+setting sun, stood our "dame d'industrie--or worse!" She was but a few
+feet farther on; she must have heard Lady Marechale's and Mrs.
+Protocol's duo on her demerits; she _had_ heard it, without doubt, for
+she was laughing gayly and joyously, laughter that sparkled all over her
+_riante_ face and flashed in her bright falcon eyes. Laughing still, she
+signed me to her. I need not say that the sign was obeyed.
+
+"Chivalrous knight, I thank you! You are a Bayard of chivalry; you
+defend the absent! What a miracle, mon Dieu! Tell your friends from me
+not to speak so loudly when their windows are open; and, for yourself,
+rest assured your words of this evening will not be forgotten."
+
+"I am happy, indeed, if I have been fortunate enough to obtain a chance
+remembrance, but do not give me too much praise for so simple a service;
+the clumsiest Cimon would be stirred into chivalry under such
+inspiration as I had----"
+
+The beautiful hazel eyes flashed smilingly on me under their lashes.
+(_Those_ lashes tinted! Heaven forgive the malice of women!) She broke
+off a sprig of the clematis, with its long slender leaves and fragrant
+starry flowers, and gave it to me.
+
+"_Tenez, mon ami_, if ever you see me again, show me that faded flower,
+and I shall remember this evening at Vicq d'Azyr. Nay, do not flatter
+yourself--do not thrust it in your breast; it is no gage d'amour! it is
+only a reward for loyal service, and a souvenir to refresh my own
+memory, which is treacherous sometimes, though not in gratitude to those
+who serve me. Adieu, mon Bayard--et bonsoir!"
+
+But I retained the hand that had given me my clematis-spray.
+
+"Meet you again! But will not that be to-morrow? If I am not to see you,
+as your words threaten, till the clematis be faded and myself forgotten,
+let me at least, I beseech you, know where, who, by what name----"
+
+She drew her hand away with something of a proud, surprised gesture;
+then she laughed again that sweet, ringing, mocking laugh:
+
+"No, no, Bayard, it is too much to ask! Leave the future to hazard; it
+is always the best philosophy. Au revoir! Adieu--perhaps for a day,
+perhaps for a century!"
+
+And the bewitching mystery floated away from me and through the open
+window of her room. You will imagine that my "intuition" did not lead me
+to the conclusion to which Lady Marechale's led her, or assuredly should
+I have followed the donor of the clematis, despite her prohibition. Even
+with my "intuition" pointing where it did, I am not sure what I might
+have done if, in her salon, I had not caught sight of a valet and a
+lady's maid in waiting with her coffee, and they are not such spectators
+as one generally selects.
+
+The servants closed her windows and drew down their Venetian blinds, and
+I returned to my coffee. Whether the two ladies within had overheard her
+conversation as she had heard theirs, I cannot say, but they looked
+trebly refrigerated, had congealed themselves into the chilliest human
+ice that is imaginable, and comported themselves towards me fully as
+distantly as though I had brought a dozen ballet-girls in to dinner with
+them, or introduced them to my choicest acquaintance from the Chateau
+des Fleurs.
+
+"A man's taste is so pitiably low!" remarked Lady Marechale, in her
+favorite stage aside to Mrs. Protocol; to which that other lady
+responded, "Disgracefully so!"
+
+Who _was_ my lovely unknown with the bright falcon eyes and the charming
+laugh, with her strange freedom that yet was _not_, somehow, free, and
+her strange fascination? I bade my man ask Chanderlos her
+name--couriers know everything generally--but neither Mills nor
+Chanderlos gave me any information. The people of the house did not
+know, or said they did not; they only knew she had servants in
+attendance who came with her, who revealed nothing, and paid any price
+for the best of everything. Are impertinent questions ever asked where
+money is plentiful?
+
+I was dressing the next morning something later than usual, when I heard
+the roll of a carriage in the courtyard below. I looked through the
+half-open persiennes with a semi-presentiment that it was my sweet
+foreigner who was leaving ere I could presume on my clematis or improve
+our acquaintance. True enough, she it was, leaving Vicq d'Azyr in a
+travelling-carriage, with handsome roans and servants in imperial-blue
+liveries. Who the deuce could she be?
+
+"Well, Constance," said I, as I bade Lady Marechale good morning, "your
+_bete noire_ won't 'press herself into your acquaintance,' as you were
+dreading last night, and won't excite Marechale and me to any more high
+treason. Won't you chant a Te Deum? She left this morning."
+
+"So I perceived," answered Lady Marechale, frigidly; by which I suppose
+_she_ had not been above the weakness of looking through _her_
+persiennes.
+
+"What a pity you and Agneta agitated yourselves with such unnecessary
+alarm! It must have cost you a great deal of eau-de-Cologne and
+sal-volatile, I am afraid, last night. Do you think she contaminated the
+air of the salle-a-manger, because I will order Mills to throw some
+disinfectant about before you go down?"
+
+"I have no inclination to jest upon a person of that stamp," rejoined
+Lady Marechale, with immense dignity, settling her turquoise
+wristband-studs.
+
+"'That stamp of persons!' What! Do you think she is an adventuress, an
+intrigante, 'or worse' still, then? I hoped her dashing equipage might
+have done something towards cleansing her character. Wealth _is_ a
+universal purifier generally."
+
+"Flippant impertinence!" murmured Lady Marechale, disgustedly, to Mrs.
+Protocol, as she swept onwards down the staircase, not deigning me a
+glance, much less a response, stiffening herself with a little extra
+starch of Lucretian virtue and British-matronly dignity, which did not
+grow limp again throughout breakfast, while she found fault with the
+chocolate, considered the _petits pains_ execrable, condemned the
+sardines as uneatable, petted Spes, kept Marechale and me at Coventry,
+and sighed over their enforced incarceration, by Dr. Berkeley's orders,
+in Vicq d'Azyr, that kept them in this stupid place away from
+Lemongenseidlitz.
+
+Their anticipations from Lemongenseidlitz were charmingly golden and
+rose-tinted. They looked forward to consolidating their friendship with
+the dear Duchess in its balmy air, to improving a passing acquaintance
+into an intimate one with that charming person the Baroness
+Liebenfrauenmilch, Mistress of the Robes to Princess Helene, and to
+being very intimate at the Court, while the Pullingers (their
+bosom-friends and very dear rivals) would be simply presented, and
+remain in chagrin, uninvited to the state balls and palace festivities.
+And what more delightful than that last clause? for what sauce invented,
+from Careme to Soyer, flavors our own _plats_ so deliciously, I should
+like to know, as thinking that our beloved next-door neighbor is doomed
+to a very dry cutlet?
+
+As Perette, in a humbler fashion, built visions from the pot of milk, so
+mesdames mes soeurs, from the glittering court and capital of
+Lemongenseidlitz, erected brilliant chateaux en Espagne of all their
+sayings and doings in that fashionable little city whither they were
+bound, and into which they had so many invaluable passports. They were
+impatient to be journeying from our humble, solitary valley, and after
+a month of Vicq d'Azyr, they departed for their golden land, and I went
+with them, as I had slain izzards almost _ad nauseam_, and Dunbar's
+expiration of leave had taken him back to Dublin.
+
+It was five o'clock when we reached its Reidenscher Hof, nine when we
+had finished dinner. It was stupid work yawning over coffee and
+_Galignani_. What was to be done? Marechale proposed the Opera, and for
+the first time in his life was unopposed by his wife. Constance was in a
+suave, benignant mood; she was thinking of her Graf von Rosenlaeu, of the
+Pullingers, and of the sweet, adroit manner in which she would--when she
+had captivated him and could proffer such hints--awaken his Serene
+Highness to a sense of his moral guilt in not bringing to instant
+capital punishment every agent in those Satanus-farmed banks that throve
+throughout his duchy. Lady Marechale and Mrs. Protocol assented, and to
+the little miniature gayly-decorated Opera House we drove. They were in
+the middle of the second act of "Ernani." "Ernani" was stale to us all,
+and we naturally lorgne'd the boxes in lieu of the stage. I had turned
+my glass on the left-hand stage-box, and was going steadily round, when
+a faint cry of dismay, alarm, amazement, horror, broke, muffled and low,
+from mesdames mes soeurs. Their lorgnons were riveted on one spot; their
+cheeks were blanched; their hands were tremulous; if they had beheld a
+spiritual visitant, no consternation more profound, more intense, could
+have seized both with its iron hand. _My_ sisters too! the chilliest,
+the calmest, the most impenetrable, the most unassailable of mortals!
+
+"And we called her, in her hearing, not a proper person?" gasped Lady
+Marechale.
+
+"We thought her a lorette! an intrigante! a dame d'industrie!" echoed
+Mrs. Protocol.
+
+"Who wore paste jewels!"
+
+"Who came from the Rue Breda!"
+
+"Who wanted to know us!"
+
+"Whom we wouldn't know!"
+
+I turned my Voightlander where their Voightlanders turned; there, in the
+royal box, leaning back in the fauteuil that marked her rank, there,
+with her lovely hazel eyes, her witching smile, her radiant beauty,
+matchless as the pearls gleaming above her brow, there sat the
+"adventuress--or worse!" of Vicq d'Azyr; the "evidently a not proper
+person" of my discerning sisters--H.S.H. Princess Helene, Grand-Duchess
+of Lemongenseidlitz-Phizzstrelitz! Great Heavens! how had we never
+guessed her before? How had we never divined her identity? How had we
+never remembered all we had heard of her love of laisser-aller, her
+taste for adventure, her delight in travelling, when she could,
+unattended and incognita? How had we never put this and that together,
+and penetrated the metamorphosis?
+
+"_And I called her not a proper person!_" gasped Lady Marechale, again
+shrinking back behind the azure curtains; the projectiles she had shot
+with such vindictive severity, such delighted acrimony, from the
+murderous mortar of malice, recoiling back upon her head for once, and
+crushing her to powder. What reception would they have _now_ at the
+Court? Von Rosenlaeu would be powerless; the Pullingers themselves would
+be better off! Perette's pot of milk was smashed and spilt! "Adieu,
+veau, vache, cochon, couvee!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the pitcher lies shivered into fragments, and the milk is spilt,
+you know, poor Perette's dreams are shivered and spilt with them. "I
+have not seen you at the palace yet?" asked her Grace of Frangipane. "We
+do not see you at the Court, mesdames?" asked M. de la Croix-et-Cordons.
+"How did it happen you were not at the Duchess's ball last night?" asked
+"those odious Pullingers." And what had my sister to say in reply? My
+clematis secured _me_ a charming reception--how charming I don't feel
+called upon to reveal--but Princess Helene, with that calm dignity which
+easily replaced, when she chose, her witching _abandon_, turned the
+tables upon her detractors, and taught them how dangerous it may be to
+speak ill--of the wrong people.
+
+
+
+
+A STUDY A LA LOUIS QUATORZE:
+
+PENDANT TO A PORTRAIT BY MIGNARD.
+
+
+She was surpassingly fair, Madame la Marquise. Mignard's portraits of
+her may fully rival his far-famed Portrait aux Amours. One of them has
+her painted as Venus Victrix, in the fashion of the day; one of them, as
+herself, as Leontine Opportune de Vivonne de Rennecourt, Marquise de la
+Riviere, with her creve-coeurs, and her diamonds, and her gay smile,
+showing her teeth, white and gleaming as the pearls mingled with her
+curls a la mode Montespan. Not Louise de la Beaume-le-Blanc, when the
+elm-boughs of St. Germain first flung their shadow on her golden head,
+before it bent for the Carmelite veil before the altar in the Rue St.
+Jacques; not Henriette d'Angleterre, when she listened to the trouveres'
+romances sung under her balcony at St. Cloud, before her young life was
+quenched by the hand of Morel and the order of Monsieur; not Athenais de
+Mortemart, when the liveries of lapis lazuli blue dashed through the
+streets of Paris, and the outriders cleared her path with their whips,
+before the game was lost, and the iron spikes were fastened inside the
+Montespan bracelets;--none of them, her contemporaries and
+acquaintances, eclipsed in loveliness Madame la Marquise. Had she but
+been fair instead of dark, the brown Bourbon eyes would have fallen on
+her of a surety; she would have outshone the lapis lazuli liveries with
+a royal guard of scarlet and gold, and her friend Athenais would have
+hated her as that fair lady hated "la sotte Fontanges" and "Saint
+Maintenon;" for their sex, in all ages, have remembered the sage's
+precept, "Love as though you will one day hate," and invariably carry
+about with them, ready for need, a little essence of the acid of Malice,
+to sour in an instant the sugared cream of their loves and their
+friendships if occasion rise up and the storm-cloud of rivalry loom in
+the horizon.
+
+She was a beauty, Madame la Marquise, and she knew it, as she leaned out
+over the balcony of her chateau of Petite Foret, that lay close to
+Clagny, under the shadow of the wood of Ville d'Avree, outside the gates
+of Versailles, looking down on her bosquets, gardens, and terraces
+designed by Le Notre; for though she was alone, and there was nothing
+but her little dog Osmin to admire her white skin, and her dark eyes,
+and her beautiful hands and arms, and her diamond pendants that
+glittered in the moonlight, she smiled, her flashing triumphant smile,
+as she whispered to herself, "He is mine--mine! Bah! how can he help
+himself?" and pressed the ruby agraffe on her bosom with the look of a
+woman who knew no resistance, and brooked no reluctance to worship at
+her shrine.
+
+Nothing ever opposed Madame la Marquise, and life went smoothly on with
+her. If Bossuet ever reproved her, it was in those _anathemes caches
+sous des fleurs d'oranger_ in which that politic priest knew how to deal
+when expedient, however haughty and relentless to the world in general.
+M. le Marquis was not a savage eccentricity like M. de Pardaillon de
+Gondran, would never have dreamt of imitating the eccentricity of going
+into mourning, but if the Bourbon eye _had_ fallen on his wife, would
+have said, like a loyal peer of France, that all his household treasures
+were the King's. Disagreeables fled before the scintillations of her
+smiles, as the crowd fled before her gilded carriage and her Flanders
+horses; and if ever a little fit of piety once in a while came over her,
+and Conscience whispered a mal a propos word in her delicate ear, she
+would give an enamelled lamp to Sainte Marie Reparatrice, by the advice
+of the Comtesse de Soubise and the Princesse de Monaco (who did such
+expiatory things themselves, and knew the comfort they afforded), and
+emerge from her repentance one of the most radiant of all the brilliant
+butterflies that fluttered their gorgeous wings in the Jardin de Flore
+under the sunny skies of Versailles.
+
+The moonlight glittered on the fountains, falling with measured splash
+into their marble basins; the lime-leaves, faintly stirred by the sultry
+breezes, perfumed the night with their voluptuous fragrance, and the
+roses, twining round the carved and gilded balustrade, shook off their
+bowed head drops of dew, that gleamed brightly as the diamonds among the
+curls of the woman who leaned above, resting her delicate rouged cheek
+on her jewelled hand, alone--a very rare circumstance with the Marquise
+de la Riviere. Osmin did not admire the rare solitude, for he rattled
+his silver bells and barked--an Italian greyhound's shrill, fretful
+bark--as his quick ears caught the distant sound of steps coming swiftly
+over the turf below, and his mistress smiled as she patted his head:
+
+"Ah, Osmin!--here he is?"
+
+A man came out from under the heavy shadow of lime sand chestnuts, whose
+darkness the moon's rays had no power to pierce, crossed the lawn just
+under the balcony, and, coming up the terrace-steps, stood near her--a
+man, young, fair, handsome, whose age and form the uniform of a Captain
+of the Guards would have suited far better than the dark robes of a
+priest, which he wore; his lips were pressed closely together, and his
+face was pale with a pallor that consorted painfully with the warm
+passionate gleam of his eyes.
+
+"So! You are late in obeying my commands, monsieur!"
+
+Surely no other man in France would have stood silent beside her, under
+the spell of her dazzling glances, with such a picture before him as
+Madame la Marquise, in her azure silk and her point d'Angleterre, with
+her diamond pendants shaking among her hair, and her arched eyebrows
+lifted imperiously! But he did; his lips pressed closer, his eyes
+gleaming brighter. She changed her tone; it was soft, seductive,
+reproachful, and the smile on her lips was tender--as tender as it ever
+could be with the mockery that always lay under it; and it broke at last
+the spell that bound him, as she whispered, "Ah! Gaston, you love me no
+longer!"
+
+"Not love you? O God!"
+
+They were but five words, but they told Madame la Marquise of a passion
+such as she had never roused, despite all her fascinations and
+intrigues, in the lovers that crowded round her in the salons within, or
+at Versailles, over the trees yonder, where love was gallantry, and all
+was light comedy, with nothing so foolish as tragedy known.
+
+He clasped her hands so closely that the sharp points of the diamond
+rings cut his own, though he felt them not.
+
+"Not love you? Great Heaven! Not love you? Near you, I forget my oath,
+my vows, my God!--I forget all, save you, whom I adore, as, till I met
+you, I adored my Church. Torture endured with you were dearer than
+Paradise won alone! Once with you, I have no strength, you bow me to
+your will as the wind bows the lime-leaf. Oh! woman, woman! could you
+have no mercy, that with crowds round you daily worshipping your
+slightest smile, you must needs bow _me_ down before your glance, as you
+bow those who have no oaths to bind them, no need to scourge themselves
+in midnight solitude for the mere crime of Thought? Had you no mercy,
+that with all hearts yours, you must have mine to sear it and destroy
+it? Have you not lives enough vowed to you, that you seek to blast mine
+for ever? I was content, untroubled, till I met you; no woman's glance
+stirred my heart, no woman's eyes haunted my vigils, no woman's voice
+came in memory between my soul and prayer! What devil tempted you to
+throw your spells over me--could you not leave _one_ man in peace?"
+
+"Ah bah! the tempted love the game of temptation generally full as well
+as the tempters!" thought Madame la Marquise, with an inward laugh.
+
+Why did she allow such language to go unrebuked? Why did she, to whom
+none dared to breathe any but words the most polished, and love vows the
+most honeyed, permit herself to be addressed in such a strain? Possibly
+it was very new to her, such energy as this, and such an outbreak of
+passion amused her. At any rate she only drew her hands away, and her
+brilliant brown eyes filled with tears;--tears _were_ to be had at
+Versailles when needed, even her friend Montespan knew how to use them
+as the worst weapons against the artillery of the Eveque de Comdom--and
+her heart heaved under the filmy lace.
+
+"Ah, Gaston! what words! 'What devil tempted me?' I know scarcely
+whether love be angel or devil; he seems either or both! But you love me
+little, unless in that name you recognize a plea for every madness and
+every thought!"
+
+The scarlet blood flushed over his face, and his eyes shone and gleamed
+like fire, while he clenched his hands in a mortal anguish.
+
+"Angel or devil? Ay! which, indeed! The one when it comes to us, the
+other when it leaves us! You have roused love in me I shall bear to my
+grave; but what gage have I that you give it me back? How do I know but
+that even now you are trifling with me, mocking at me, smiling at the
+beardless priest who is unlearned in all the gay gallantries of
+libertine churchmen and soldierly courtiers? My Heaven! how know, as I
+stand beside you, whether you pity or disdain me, love or scorn me?"
+
+The passionate words broke in a torrent from his lips, stirred the
+stillness of the summer eve with a fiery anguish little akin to it.
+
+"Do I not love you?"
+
+Her answer was simple; but as Leontine de Rennecourt spoke it, leaning
+her cheek against his breast, with her eyes dazzling as the diamonds in
+her hair, looking up into his by the light of the stars, they had an
+eloquence far more dangerous than speech, and delirious to the senses as
+magician's perfumes. His lips lingered on hers, and felt the loud fast
+throbs of the heart she had won as he bent over her, pressing her closer
+and closer to him--vanquished and conquered, as men in all ages and of
+all creeds have been vanquished and conquered by women, all other
+thoughts fleeing away into oblivion, all fears dying out, all vows
+forgotten in the warm, living life of passion and of joy, that, for the
+first time in a brief life, flooded his heart with its golden voluptuous
+light.
+
+"You love me? So be it," he murmured; "but beware what you do, my life
+lies in your hands, and you must be mine till death part us!"
+
+"Till my fancy change rather!" thought Madame la Marquise, as she put
+her jewelled hand on his lips, her hair softly brushing his cheek, with
+a touch as soft, and an odor as sweet, as the leaves of one of the roses
+twining below.
+
+Two men strolling below under the limes of Petite Foret--discussing the
+last scandals of Versailles, talking of the ascendency of La Fontanges,
+of the Spanish dress his Majesty had reassumed to please her, of the
+Brinvilliers' Poudre de Succession, of the new chateau given to Pere de
+la Chaise, of D'Aubigny's last extravagance and Lauzun's last mot, and
+the last gossip about Bossuet and Mademoiselle de Mauleon, and all the
+chit-chat of that varied day, glittering with wit and prolific of
+poison--glanced up to the balcony by the light of the stars.
+
+"That cursed priest!" muttered the younger, le Vicomte de Saint-Elix, as
+he struck the head off a lily with his delicate cane.
+
+"In a fool's paradise! Ah-ha! Madame la Marquise!" laughed the
+other--the old Duc de Clos-Vougeot--taking a chocolate sweetmeat out of
+his emerald-studded bonbonniere as they walked on, while the
+lime-blossoms shook off in the summer night wind and dropped dead on the
+grass beneath, laughing at the story of the box D'Artagnan had found in
+Lauzun's rooms when he seized his papers, containing the portraits of
+sixty women of high degree who had worshipped the resistless Captain of
+the Guard, with critical and historical notices penned under each;
+notices D'Artagnan and his aide could not help indiscreetly retailing,
+in despite of the Bourbon command of secrecy--secrecy so necessary where
+sixty beauties and saints were involved!
+
+"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc de Clos-Vougeot, tapping his
+bonbonniere, enamelled by Petitot: the Duc was old, and knew women well,
+and knew the value and length of a paradise dependent on that most
+fickle of butterflies--female fidelity; he had heard Ninon de Lenclos
+try to persuade Scarron's wife to become a coquette, and Scarron's wife
+in turn beseech Ninon to discontinue her coquetteries; had seen that,
+however different their theories and practice, the result was the same;
+and already guessed right, that if Paris had been universally won by the
+one, its monarch would eventually be won by the other.
+
+"A fool's paradise!"
+
+The courtier was right, but the priest, had he heard him, would never
+have believed; _his_ heaven shone in those dazzling eyes: till the eyes
+closed in death, his heaven was safe! He had never loved, he had seen
+nothing of women; he had come straight from the monastic gloom of a
+Dominican abbey, in the very heart of the South, down in Languedoc,
+where costly missals were his only idol, and rigid pietists, profoundly
+ignorant of the ways and thoughts of their brethren of Paris, had reared
+him up in anchorite rigidity, and scourged his mind with iron
+philosophies and stoic-like doctrines of self-mortification that would
+have repudiated the sophistries and ingenuities of Sanchez, Escobar, and
+Mascarenhas, as suggestions of the very Master of Evil himself. From the
+ascetic gloom of that Languedoc convent he had been brought straight, by
+superior will, into the glare of the life at Versailles, that brilliant,
+gorgeous, sparkling, bizarre life, scintillating with wit, brimful of
+intrigue, crowded with the men and women who formed the Court of that
+age and the History of the next; where he found every churchman an _abbe
+galant_, and heard those who performed the mass jest at it with those
+who attended it; where he found no lines marked of right and wrong, but
+saw them all fused in a gay, tangled web of two court colors--Expediency
+and Pleasure. A life that dazzled and tired his eyes, as the glitter of
+lights in a room dazzles and tires the eyes of a man who comes suddenly
+in from the dark night air, till he grew giddy and sick, and in the
+midst of the gilded salons, or soft confessions of titled sinners, would
+ask himself if indeed he could be the same man who had sat calm and
+grave with the mellow sun streaming in on his missal-page in the
+monastic gloom of the Languedoc abbey but so few brief months before,
+when all this world of Versailles was unknown? The same man? Truly
+not--never again the same, since Madame la Marquise had bent her brown
+eyes upon him, been amused with his singular difference from all those
+around her, had loved him as women loved at Versailles, and bowed him
+down to her feet, before he guessed the name of the forbidden language
+that stirred in his heart and rushed to his lips, untaught and unbidden.
+
+"A fool's paradise!" said the Duc, sagaciously tapping his gold
+bonbonniere. But many a paradise like it has dawned and faded, before
+and since the Versailles of Louis Quatorze.
+
+He loved, and Madame la Marquise loved him. Through one brief tumult of
+struggle he passed: struggle between the creed of the Dominican abbey,
+where no sin would have been held so thrice accursed, so unpardonable,
+so deserving of the scourge and the stake as this--and the creed of the
+Bourbon Court, where churchmen's gallantries were every-day gossip;
+where the Abbe de Rance, ere he founded the saintly gloom of La Trappe,
+scandalized town and court as much as Lauzun; where the Pere de la
+Chaise smiled complacently on La Fontanges' ascendancy; where three
+nobles rushed to pick up the handkerchief of that royal confessor, who
+washed out with holy water the royal indiscretions, as you wash off
+grains of dust with perfumed water; where the great and saintly Bishop
+of Condom could be checked in a rebuking harangue, and have the tables
+turned on him by a mischievous reference to Mademoiselle de Mauleon;
+where life was intrigue for churchmen and laymen alike, and where the
+abbe's rochet and the cardinal's scarlet covered the same vices as were
+openly blazoned on the gold aiglettes of the Garde du Corps and the
+costly lace of the Chambellan du Roi. A storm, brief and violent as the
+summer storms that raged over Versailles, was roused between the
+conflicting thoughts at war within him, between the principles deeply
+rooted from long habit and stern belief, and the passions sprung up
+unbidden with the sudden growth and gorgeous glow of a tropical
+flower--a storm, brief and violent, a struggle, ended that night, when
+he stood on the balcony with the woman he loved, felt her lips upon
+his, and bowed down to her feet delirious and strengthless.
+
+"I have won my wager with Adeline; I have vanquished _mon beau_ De
+Launay," thought Madame la Marquise, smiling, two days after, as she
+sat, en neglige, in her broidered chair, pulling Osmin's ears, and
+stirring the frothy chocolate handed to her by her negro, Azor, brought
+over in the suite of the African embassy from Ardra, full of monkeyish
+espieglerie, and covered with gems--a priceless dwarf, black as ink, and
+but two feet high, who could match any day with the Queen's little Moor.
+"He amuses me with his vows of eternal love. Eternal love?--how _de
+trop_ we should find it, here in Versailles! But it is amusing enough to
+play at for a season. No, that is not half enough--he adores! This poor
+Gaston!"
+
+So in the salons of Versailles, and in the world, where Ninon reigned,
+by the Court ladies, while they loitered in the new-made gardens of
+Marly, among other similar things jested of was this new amour of Madame
+de la Riviere for the young Pere de Launay. "She was always eccentric,
+and he _was_ very handsome, and would have charming manners if he were
+not so grave and so silent," the women averred; while the young nobles
+swore that these meddling churchmen had always the best luck, whether in
+amatory conquest, or on fat lands and rich revenues. What the Priest of
+Languedoc thought a love that would outlast life, and repay him for
+peace of conscience and heaven both lost, was only one of the passing
+bubbles of gossip and scandal floating for an hour, amidst myriads like
+it, on the glittering, fast-rushing, diamond-bright waters of life at
+Versailles!
+
+A new existence had dawned for him; far away in the dim dusky vista of
+forgotten things, though in reality barely distant a few short months,
+lay the old life in Languedoc, vague and unremembered as a passed
+dream; with its calm routine, its monastic silence, its unvarying
+alternations of study and prayer, its iron-bound thoughts, its rigid
+creed. It had sunk away as the peaceful gray twilight of a summer's
+night sinks away before the fiery burst of an artificial illumination,
+and a new life had dawned for him, radiant, tumultuous, conflicting,
+delicious--that dazzled his eyes with the magnificence of boundless
+riches and unrestricted extravagance; that charmed his intellect with
+the witty coruscations, the polished esprit, of an age unsurpassed for
+genius, grace, and wit; and that swayed alike his heart, his
+imagination, and his passions with the subtle intoxication of this syren
+of Love, whose forbidden song had never before, in faintest echo, fallen
+on his ear.
+
+Far away in the dim, lifeless, pulseless past, sank the memory of the
+old Dominican abbey, of all it had taught him, of all it had exacted, in
+its iron, stoical, merciless creed. A new life had arisen for him, and
+Gaston de Launay, waking from the semi-slumber of the living death he
+had endured in Languedoc, and liked because he knew no other, was
+happy--happy as a prisoner is in the wild delight with which he welcomes
+the sunlight after lengthened imprisonment, happy as an opium-eater is
+in the delicious delirium that succeeds the lulling softness of the
+opiate.
+
+"He loves me, poor Gaston! Bah! But how strangely he talks! If love were
+this fiery, changeless, earnest thing with us that it is with him, what
+in the world should we do with it? We should have to get a lettre de
+cachet for it, and forbid it the Court; send it in exile to Pignerol, as
+they have just done Lauzun. Love in earnest? We should lose the best
+spice for our wine, the best toy for our games, and, mon Dieu! what
+embroilments there would be! Love in earnest? Bagatell! Louise de la
+Valliere shows us the folly of that; but for its Quixotisms she would
+now be at Vaujours, instead of buried alive in that Rue St. Jacques,
+with nothing to do but to weep for 'Louison,' count her beads, and
+listen to M. de Condom's merciless eloquence! Like the king,
+
+ J'aime qu'on m'aime, mais avec de l'esprit.
+
+People have no right to reproach each other with inconstancy; one's
+caprices are not in one's own keeping; and one can no more help where
+one's fancy blows, than that lime-leaf can help where the breeze chooses
+to waft it. But poor Gaston! how make _him_ comprehend that?" thought
+Madame la Marquise, as she turned, and smiled, and held out her warm,
+jewelled hands, and listened once again to the words of the man who was
+in her power as utterly as the bird in the power of the snake when it
+has once looked up into the fatal eyes that lure it on to its doom.
+
+"You will love me ever?" he would ask, resting his lips on her white low
+brow.
+
+"Ever!" would softly answer Madame la Marquise.
+
+And her lover believed her: should his deity lie? He believed her! What
+did he, fresh from the solitude of his monastery, gloomy and severe as
+that of the Trappist abbey, with its perpetual silence, its lowered
+glances, its shrouded faces, its ever-present "memento mori," know of
+women's faith, of women's love, of the sense in which _they_ meant that
+vow "for ever"? He believed her, and never asked what would be at the
+end of a path strewn with such odorous flowers. Alone, it is true, in
+moments when he paused to think, he stood aghast at the abyss into which
+he had fallen, at the sin into which, a few months before, haughty and
+stern in virtue against the temptation that had never entered his path,
+he would have defied devils in legion to have lured him, yet into which
+he had now plunged at the mere smile of a woman! Out of her presence,
+out of her spells, standing by himself under the same skies that had
+blooded over his days of peace in Languedoc, back on his heart, with a
+sickening anguish, would come the weight of his sin; the burden of his
+broken oaths, the scorch of that curse eternal which, by his creed, he
+held drawn down on him here and hereafter; and Gaston de Launay would
+struggle again against this idolatrous passion, which had come with its
+fell delusion betwixt him and his God; struggle--vainly, idly--struggle,
+only to hug closer the sin he loved while he loathed; only to drink
+deeper of the draught whose voluptuous perfume was poison; only to
+forget all, forsake all, dare all, at one whisper of her voice, one
+glance of her eyes, one touch of the lips whose caress he held would be
+bought by a curse through eternity.
+
+Few women love aught "for ever," save, perchance, diamonds, lace, and
+their own beauty, and Madame la Marquise was not one of those few;
+certainly not--she had no desire to make herself singular in her
+generation, and could set fashions much more likely to find disciples,
+without reverting to anything so eccentric, plebeian, and out of date.
+Love _one_ for ever! She would have thought it as terrible waste of her
+fascinations, as for a jewel to shine in the solitude of its case,
+looked on by only one pair of eyes, or for a priceless enamel, by
+Petitot, to be only worn next the heart, shrouded away from the light of
+day, hidden under the folds of linen and lace.
+
+"Love one for ever?"--Madame la Marquise laughed at the thought, as she
+stood dressed for a ball, after assisting at the representation of a
+certain tragedy, called "Berenice" (in which Mesdames Deshoulieres and
+De Sevigne, despite their esprit, alone of all Paris and the Court could
+see no beauty), and glanced in the mirror at her radiant face, her
+delicate skin, her raven curls, with their pendants shaking, her
+snow-white arms, and her costly dress of the newest mode, its stomacher
+gleaming one mass of gems. "Love one for ever? The droll idea! Is it
+not enough that I have loved him once?"
+
+It was more than enough for his rivals, who bitterly envied him; courtly
+abbes, with polished smiles, and young chanoines, with scented curls and
+velvet toques, courtiers, who piqued themselves on reputations only
+second to Lauzun's, and men of the world, who laughed at this new
+caprice of Madame la Marquise, alike bore no good will to this Languedoc
+priest, and gave him a significant sneer, or a compliment that roused
+his blood to fire, and stung him far worse than more open insult, when
+they met in the salons, or crossed in the corridors, at Versailles or
+Petite Foret.
+
+"Those men! those men! Should he ever lose her to any one of them?" he
+would think over and over again, clenching his hand, in impotent agony
+of passion that he had not the sword and the license of a soldier to
+strike them on the lips with his glove for the smile with which they
+dared to speak her name; to make them wash out in blood under the trees,
+before the sun was up, the laugh, the mot, the delicate satire, which
+were worse to bear than a blow to the man who could not avenge them.
+
+"Pardieu! Madame must be very unusually faithful to her handsome Priest;
+she has smiled on no other for two months! What unparalleled fidelity!"
+said the Vicomte de Saint-Elix, with petulant irritation.
+
+"Jealous, Leonce?" laughed the old Duc, whom he spoke to, tapping the
+medallion portrait on his bonbonniere. "Take comfort: when the weather
+has been so long fixed, it is always near a change. Ah! M. de Launay
+overhears! He looks as if he would slay us. Very unchristian in a
+priest!"
+
+Gaston de Launay overheard, as he stood by a _croisee_ at Petite Foret,
+playing with Osmin--he liked even the dog, since the hand he loved so
+often lay on its slender neck, and toyed with its silver chain. And,
+sworn as he was to the service of his Church, sole mistress as his
+Church had been, till Leontine de Rennecourt's eyes had lured him to his
+desertion of her, apostate in his own eyes as such a thought confessed
+him to have grown, he now loathed the garb of a priest, that bound his
+hands from vengeance, and made him powerless before insult as a woman.
+Fierce, ruthless longing for revenge upon these men seized on him;
+devilish desires, the germ of which till that hour he never dreamt
+slumbered within him, woke up into dangerous, vigorous life. Had he
+lived in the world, its politic reserve, its courtly sneer, its light
+gallantries, that passed the time and flattered amour-propre, its
+dissimulated hate that smiled while plotting, and killed with poisoned
+bonbons, would never have been learnt by him; and having long lived out
+of it, having been suddenly plunged into its whirl, not guessing its
+springs, ignorant of its diplomacies, its suave lies, termed good
+breeding, its legeres philosophies, he knew nothing of the wisdom with
+which its wise men forsook their loves and concealed their hatreds. Both
+passions now sprung up in him at one birth, both the stronger for the
+long years in which a chill, artificial, but unbroken calm, had chained
+his very nature down, and fettered into an iron monotony, an unnatural
+and colorless tranquillity, a character originally impetuous and vivid,
+as the frosts of a winter chill into one cold, even, glassy surface, the
+rapids of a tumultuous river. With the same force and strength with
+which, in the old days in Languedoc, he had idolized and served his
+Church, sparing himself no mortification, believing every iota of her
+creed, carrying out her slightest rule with merciless self-examination,
+so--the tide once turned the other way--so the priest now loved, so he
+now hated.
+
+"He is growing exigeant, jealous, presuming; he amuses me no longer--he
+wearies. I must give him his conge," thought Madame la Marquise. "This
+play at eternal passion is very amusing for a while, but, like all
+things, gets tiresome when it has lasted some time. What does not? Poor
+Gaston, it is his provincial ideas, but he will soon rub such off, and
+find, like us all, that sincerity is troublesome, ever de trop, and
+never profitable. He loves me--but bah! so does Saint-Elix, so do they
+all, and a jealous husband like M. de Nesmond, _le drole!_ could
+scarcely be worse than my young De Launay is growing!"
+
+And Madame la Marquise glanced at her face in the mirror, and wished she
+knew Madame de Maintenon's secret for the Breuvage Indien; wished she
+had one of the _clefs de faveur_ to admit her to the Grande Salle du
+Parlement; wished she had the _couronne d'Agrippine_ her friend Athenais
+had just shown her; wished Le Brun were not now occupied on the ceiling
+of the King's Grande Galerie, and were free to paint the frescoes of her
+own new-built chapel; wished a thousand unattainable things, as spoilt
+children of fortune will do, and swept down her chateau staircase a
+little out of temper--she could not have told why--to receive her guests
+at a fete given in honor of the marriage of Mademoiselle de Blois and
+the Prince de Conti.
+
+There was the young Comte de Vermandois, who would recognize in the
+Dauphin no superiority save that of his "_frere aine_;" there was "_le
+petit bossu_," Prince Eugene, then soliciting the rochet of a Bishop,
+and equally ridiculed when he sought a post in the army; there was M. de
+Louvois, who had just signed the order for the Dragonades; there was the
+Palatine de Baviere, with her German brusquerie, who had just clumsily
+tried to insult Madame de Montespan by coming into the salon with a
+great turnspit, led by a similar ribbon and called by the same name, in
+ridicule of the pet Montespan poodle; there was La Montespan herself,
+with her lovely gold hair, her dove's eyes, and her serpent's tongue;
+there was Madame de Sevigne and Madame de Grignan the Duchesse de
+Richelieu and the Duchesse de Lesdiguieres; there was Bussy Rabutin and
+Hamilton. Who was there not that was brilliant, that was distinguished,
+that was high in rank and famed in wit at the fete of Madame la
+Marquise?--Madame la Marquise, who floated through the crowd that
+glittered in her salon and gardens, who laughed and smiled, showing her
+dazzling white teeth, who had a little Cupid gleaming with jewels
+(emblematic enough of Cupid as he was known at Versailles) to present
+the Princesse de Conti with a bridal bouquet whose flowers were of
+pearls and whose leaves were of emeralds; who piqued herself that the
+magnificence of her fete was scarcely eclipsed by His Majesty himself;
+who yielded the palm neither to La Valliere's lovely daughter, nor to
+her friend Athenais, nor to any one of the beauties who shone with them,
+and whose likeness by Mignard laughed down from the wall where it hung,
+matchless double of her own matchless self.
+
+The Priest of Languedoc watched her, the relentless fangs of passion
+gnawing his heart, as the wolf the Spartan. For the first time he was
+forgotten! His idol passed him carelessly, gave him no glance, no smile,
+but lavished a thousand coquetries on Saint-Elix, on De Rohan-Soubise,
+on the boy Vermandois,--on any who sought them. Once he addressed her.
+Madame la Marquise shrugged her snow-white shoulders, and arched her
+eyebrows with petulant irritation, and turned to laugh gayly at
+Saint-Elix, who was amusing her, and La Montespan, and Madame de
+Thianges, with some gay mischievous scandal concerning Madame de
+Lesdiguieres and the Archbishop of Paris; for scandals, if not wholly
+new are ever diverting when concerning an enemy, especially when dressed
+and served up with the piquant sauce of wit.
+
+"I no longer then, madame, lead a dog's life in jealousy of this
+priest?" whispered Saint-Elix, after other whispers, in the ear of
+Madame la Marquise. The Vicomte adored her, not truly in Languedoc
+fashion, but very warmly--a la mode de Versailles.
+
+The Marquise laughed.
+
+"Perhaps not! You know I bet Mme. de Montevreau that I would conquer
+him. I have won now. Hush! He is close. There will be a tragedy, _mon
+ami_!"
+
+"M. le Vicomte, if you have the honor of a noble, the heart of a man,
+you fight me to-night. I seek no shelter under my cloth!"
+
+Saint-Elix turned as he heard the words, laughed scornfully, and signed
+the speaker away with an insolent sneer:
+
+"Bah! _Reverend Pere!_ we do not fight with women and churchmen!"
+
+The fete was ended at last, the lights that had gleamed among the limes
+and chestnuts had died out, the gardens and salons were emptied and
+silent, the little Cupid had laid aside his weighty jewelled wings, the
+carriages with their gorgeous liveries, their outriders, and their
+guards of honor, had rolled from the gates of Petite Foret to the Palace
+of Versailles. Madame la Marquise stood alone once more in the balcony
+of her salons, leaning her white arms on its gilded balustrade, looking
+down on to the gardens beneath, silvered with the breaking light of the
+dawn, smiling, her white teeth gleaming between her parted rose-hued
+lips, and thinking--of what? Who shall say?
+
+Still, still as death lay the gardens below, that an hour ago had been
+peopled with a glittering crowd, re-echoing with music, laughter, witty
+response, words of intrigue. Where the lights had shone on diamonds and
+pearl-broidered trains, on softly rouged cheeks, and gold-laced coats,
+on jewelled swords and broideries of gold, the gray hue of the breaking
+day now only fell on the silvered leaves of the limes, the turf wet
+with dew, he drooped heads of the Provence roses; and Madame la
+Marquise, standing alone, started as a step through the salon within
+broke the silence.
+
+"Madame, will you permit me a word _now_?"
+
+Gaston de Launay took her hands off the balustrade, and held them tight
+in his, while his voice sounded, even in his own ears, strangely calm,
+yet strangely harsh:
+
+"Madame, you love me no longer?"
+
+"Monsieur, I do not answer questions put to me in such a manner."
+
+She would have drawn her hands away, but he held them in a fierce grasp
+till her rings cut his skin, as they had done once before.
+
+"No trifling! Answer--yes or no!"
+
+"Well! 'no,' then, monsieur. Since you _will_ have the truth, do not
+blame me if you find it uncomplimentary and unacceptable."
+
+He let go her hands and reeled back, staggered, as if struck by a shot.
+
+"Mon Dieu! it is true--you love me no longer! And you tell it me
+_thus_!"
+
+Madame la Marquise, for an instant, was silenced and touched; for the
+words were uttered with the faint cry of a man in agony, and she saw,
+even by the dim twilight of dawn, how livid his lips turned, how ashy
+gray grew the hue of his face. But she smiled, playing with Osmin's new
+collar of pearls and coral.
+
+"Tell it you 'thus'? I would not have told it you 'thus,' monsieur, if
+you had been content with a hint, and had not evinced so strong a desire
+for candor undisguised; but if people will not comprehend a delicate
+suggestion, they must be wounded by plainer truths--it is their own
+fault. Did you think I was like a little shepherdess in a pastoral, to
+play the childish game of constancy without variations? Had you
+presumption enough to fancy you could amuse me for ever----"
+
+He stopped her, his voice broken and hoarse, as he gasped for breath.
+
+"Silence! Woman, have you no mercy? For you--for such as you--I have
+flung away heaven, steeped myself in sin, lost my church, my peace, my
+all--forfeited all right to the reverence of my fellows, all hope for
+the smile of my God! For you--for such as you--I have become a traitor,
+a hypocrite, an apostate, whose prayers are insults, whose professions
+are lies, whose oaths are perjury! At your smile, I have flung away
+eternity; for your kiss, I have risked my life here, my life hereafter;
+for your love, I held no price too vast to pay; weighed with it, honor,
+faith, heaven, all seemed valueless--all were forgotten! You lured me
+from tranquil calm, you broke in on the days of peace which but for you
+were unbroken still, you haunted my prayers, you placed yourself between
+Heaven and me, you planned to conquer my anchorite's pride, you wagered
+you would lure me from my priestly vows, and yet you have so little
+mercy, that when your bet is won, when your amusement grows stale, when
+the victory grows valueless, you can turn on me with words like these
+without one self-reproach?"
+
+"Ma foi, monsieur! it is you who may reproach yourself, not I," cried
+his hearer, insolently. "Are you so very provincial still, that you are
+ignorant that when a lover has ceased to please he has to blame his own
+lack of power to retain any love he may have won, and is far too
+well-bred to utter a complaint? Your language is very new to me. Most
+men, monsieur, would be grateful for my slightest preference; I permit
+none to rebuke me for either giving or withdrawing it."
+
+The eyes of Madame la Marquise sparkled angrily, and the smile on her
+lips was a deadly one, full of irony, full of malice. As he beheld it,
+the scales fell at last from the eyes of Gaston de Launay, and he saw
+what this woman was whom he had worshipped with such mad, blind,
+idolatrous passion.
+
+He bowed his head with a low, broken moan, as a man stunned by a mortal
+blow; while Madame la Marquise stood playing with the pearl-and-coral
+chain, and smiling the malicious and mischievous smile that showed her
+white teeth, as they are shown in the portrait by Mignard.
+
+"_Comme les hommes sont fous!_" laughed Madame la Marquise.
+
+He lifted his eyes, and looked at her as she stood in the faint light of
+the dawn, with her rich dress, her gleaming diamonds, her wicked smile,
+her matchless beauty; and the passion in him broke out in a bitter cry:
+
+"God help me! My sin has brought home its curse!"
+
+He bent over her, his burning lips scorching her own like fire, holding
+her in one last embrace, that clasped her in a vice of iron she had no
+power to break.
+
+"Angel! devil! temptress! _This_ for what I have deemed thee--_that_ for
+what thou art!"
+
+He flung her from him with unconscious violence, and left her--lying
+where she fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The gray silvery dawn rose, and broke into the warmth and sunlight of a
+summer day; the deer nestled in their couches under the chequered
+shadows of the woodlands round, and the morning chimes were rung in
+musical carillons from the campanile of the chateau; the Provence roses
+tossed their delicate heads, joyously shaking the dew off their scented
+petals; the blossoms of the limes fell in a fragrant shower on the turf
+below, and the boughs, swayed softly by the wind, brushed their leaves
+against the sparkling waters of the fountains; the woods and gardens of
+Petite Foret lay, bright and laughing, in the mellow sunlight of the
+new day to which the world was waking. And with his face turned up to
+the sky, clasped in his hand a medallion enamel on which was painted the
+head of a woman, the grass and ferns where he had fallen stained crimson
+with his life-blood, lay a dead man, while in his bosom nestled a little
+dog, moaning piteous, plaintive cries, and vainly seeking its best to
+wake him to the day that for him would never dawn.
+
+When her household, trembling, spread the news that the dead priest had
+been found lying under the limes, slain by his own hand, and it reached
+Madame la Marquise in her private chambers, she was startled, shocked,
+wept, hiding her radiant eyes in her broidered handkerchief, and called
+Azor, and bade him bring her her flask of scented waters, and bathed her
+eyes, and turned them dazzling bright on Saint-Elix, and stirred her
+chocolate and asked the news. "_On peut etre emue aux larmes et
+aimer le chocolat_," thought Madame la Marquise, with her friend
+Montespan;--while, without, under the waving shadow of the
+linden-boughs, with the sunlight streaming round him, the little dog
+nestling in his breast, refusing to be comforted, lay the man whom she
+had murdered.
+
+The portrait of Mignard still hangs on the walls of the chateau, and in
+its radiant colors Madame la Marquise still lives, fair type of her age,
+smiling her victorious smile, with the diamonds shining among her hair,
+and her brilliant eyes flashing defiance, irony, and coquetry as of
+yore, when she reigned amidst the beauties of Versailles;--and in the
+gardens beyond in the summer nights, the lime-boughs softly shake their
+fragrant flowers on the turf, and the moonlight falls in hushed and
+mournful calm, streaming through the network of the boughs on to the
+tangled mass of violets and ferns that has grown up in rank luxuriance
+over the spot where Gaston de Launay died.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
+
+
+Obvious punctuation errors have been repaired.
+
+A few obvious errors in original printing have also been repaired:
+
+ Page 82, first paragraph: "out of the Cara di Fiori" corrected to
+ "out of the Casa di Fiori".
+
+ Page 145, last paragraph: "Lady Hautton has just" corrected to
+ "Lady Hautton had just".
+
+ Page 167, 4th paragraph: "anything put a pleasant" corrected to
+ "anything but a pleasant".
+
+ Page 167, last paragraph: "nor even when he went that" corrected to
+ "nor even when he went on that".
+
+ Page 173, 4th paragraph: et C^{ie} is an abbreviation for the
+ French word "compagnie".
+
+ Page 224, last paragraph: "Helvetius" corrected to "Helvetius".
+
+Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in
+spelling, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cecil Castlemaine's Gage, Lady
+Marabout's Troubles, and Other Stories, by Ouida
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