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least that the big one, with the red hair, was in the Guards and the other in the Rifles; the latter looked like a rosy child, and as if he ought to be sent up to play with Scratch and Parson: his social nickname, indeed, was the Baby. Selina's admirers were of all ages-they ranged from infants to octogenarians.

She introduced the third gentleman to her sister; a tall, fair, slender young man, who suggested that he had made a mistake in the shade of his tight, perpendicular coat, ordering it of too light a blue. This added, however, to the candor of his appearance, and if he was a dose, as Selina had described him, he could only operate beneficently. There were moments when Laura's heart rather yearned towards her countrymen, and now, though she was preoccupied and a little disappointed at having been detained, she tried to like Mr. Wendover, whom her sister had compared invidiously, as it seemed to her, with her other companions. It struck her that his surface, at least, was as glossy as theirs. The Baby, whom she remembered to have heard spoken of as a dangerous flirt, was in conversation with Lady Ringrose, and the guardsman with Mrs. Berrington; so she did her best to entertain the American visitor, as to whom any one could easily see (she thought) that he had brought a letter of introduction-he wished so to maintain the credit of those who had given it to him. Laura scarcely knew these people, American friends of her sister, who had spent a period of festivity in London and gone back across the sea before her own advent; but Mr. Wendover gave her all possible information about them. He lingered upon them, returned to them, corrected statements he had made at first, discoursed upon them, in short, earnestly and exhaustively. He seemed to fear to leave them, lest he should find nothing again so good, and he indulged in a parallel that was almost elaborate between Miss Fanny and Miss Katie. Selina told her sister afterwards that she had overheard him-that he talked of them as if he had been a nursemaid; upon which Laura defended the young man even to extravagance. She reminded her sister that people in London

were always saying Lady Mary and Lady Susan; why then shouldn't Americans use the Christian name, with the humbler prefix with which they had to content themselves? There had been a time when Mrs. Berrington had been happy enough to be Miss Lina, even though she was the elder sister; and the girl liked to think there were still old friends-friends of the family, at home, for whom, even should she live to sixty years of spinsterhood, she would never be anything but Miss Laura. This was as good as Donna Anna or Donna Elvira; English people could never call people as other people did, for fear of resembling the servants.

Mr. Wendover was very attentive, as well as communicative; however his letter might be regarded in Grosvenor Place he evidently took it very seriously himself; but his eyes wandered considerably, none the less, to the other side of the room, and Laura felt that though he had often seen persons like her before (not that he betrayed this too crudely), he had never seen any one like Lady Ringrose. His glance rested also on Mrs. Berrington, who, to do her justice, didn't show, by the way she returned it, that she wished her sister to get him out of the room. Her smile was particularly pretty on Sunday afternoons, and he was welcome to enjoy it, as a part of the decoration of the place. Whether or no the young man should prove interesting, he was at any rate interested; indeed she afterwards learned that what Selina deprecated in him was the fact that he would eventually display a fatiguing intensity of observation. He would be one of the sort who noticed all kinds of little things-things she never saw or heard of-in the newspapers or in society, and would call upon her (a dreadful prospect), to explain or even to defend them. She hadn't come there to explain England to the Americans; the more particularly as her life had been a burden to her during the first years of her marriage through her having to explain America to the English. As for defending England to her countrymen she had much rather defend it from them; there were too many-too many for those who were already there. This was the class she wished to spare-she

didn't care about the English. They could obtain an eye for an eye, and a cutlet for a cutlet, by going over there; which she had no desire to do-not for all the cutlets in Christendom !

When Mr. Wendover and Laura had at last cut loose from the Schoolings he let her know, confidentially, that he had come over really to see London: he had time, that year; he didn't know when he should have it again (if ever, as he said) and he had made up his mind that this was about the best use he could make of four months and a half. He had heard so much of it; it was talked of so much to-day; a man felt as if he ought to know something about it. Laura wished the others could hear that-that England was coming up, was making her way at last to a place among the topics of societies more universal. She thought Mr. Wendover, after all, remarkably like an Englishman, in spite of his saying that he believed she had resided in London quite a time. He talked a great deal about things being characteristic, and wanted to know, lowering his voice to make the inquiry, whether Lady Ringrose were not particularly so. He had heard of her very often, he said; and he observed that it was very interesting to see her; he couldn't have used a different tone if he had been speaking of the prime minister or the laureate. Laura didn't know what he had heard of Lady Ringrose; she doubted whether it could be the same as what she had heard from her brother-in-law: if this had been the case he wouldn't have mentioned it. She foresaw that his friends in London would have a good deal to do in the way of telling him whether this or that were characteristic or not; he would go about in much the same way that English travellers did in America, fixing his attention mainly on society (he let Laura know that this was especially what he wished to go into) and neglecting the antiquities and sights, quite as if he didn't believe in their importance. He would ask questions it was impossible to answer; as to whether, for instance, society were very different in the two countries. If you said yes you gave a wrong impression, and if you said no you didn't give a right one; that was the kind of thing that Selina had

suffered from. Laura found her new acquaintance, on the present occasion and later, more philosophically analytic of his impressions than those of her countrymen she had hitherto encountered in her new home: the latter, in regard to such impressions, usually exhibited either a profane levity or a tendency to romantic mawkishness.

Mrs. Berrington called out at last to Laura that she must not stay, if she had prepared herself to go out; whereupon the girl, having nodded and smiled good-bye at the other members of the circle, took a more formal leave of Mr. Wendover-expressed the hope, as an American girl does in such a case, that they should see him again. Selina asked him to come and dine, three days later; which was as much as to say that relations might be suspended till then. Mr. Wendover took it so, and having accepted the invitation, he departed at the same time as Laura. He passed out of the house with her, and in the street she asked him which way he was going. He was too tender, but she liked him; he didn't deal in chaff, and that was a change that relieved her-she had so often had to pay out that coin when she felt wretchedly poor. She hoped he would ask her leave to go with her the way she was going-and this not on particular but on general grounds. would be American, it would remind her of old times, and she should like him to be as American as that. There was no reason for her taking so quick an interest in his nature, inasmuch as she hadn't fallen under his spell; but there were moments when she felt a whimsical desire to be reminded of the way people felt and acted at home. Mr. Wendover didn't disappoint her, and the bright chocolate-colored vista of the Fifth Avenue seemed to surge before her as he said, "May I have the pleasure of making my direction the same as yours?" and moved round, systematically, to take his place between her and the curbstone. She had never walked much with young men in America (she had been brought up in the new school, the school of attendant maids and the avoidance of certain streets) and she had very often done so in England, in the country; yet, as at the top

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of Grosvenor Place she crossed over to the park, proposing they should take that way, the breath of her native land was in her nostrils. It was certainly only an American who could have the tension of Mr. Wendover; his solemnity almost made her laugh, just as her eyes grew dull when people "slanged" each other, hilariously, in her sister's house; but at the same time he gave her a feeling of high respectability. It would be respectable still if she were to go on with him indefinitely—if she never were to come home at all. He asked her after a while, as they went, whether he had violated the custom of the English in offering her his company; whether in that country a gentleman might walk with a young lady-the first time he saw her-not because their roads lay together but for the sake of the walk. "Why should it matter to me whether it is the custom of the English? I am not English," said Laura Wing. Then her companion explained that he only wanted a general guidance that with her (she was so kind) he had not the sense of having taken a liberty. The point was simply-and rather comprehensively and strenuously he began to set forth the point. Laura interrupted him; she said she didn't care about it, and he almost irritated her by telling her she was kind. She was, but she was not pleased at its being recognized so soon; and he was still too heavy when he asked her whether she continued to go by American usage, didn't find that if one lived there one had to conform in a great many ways to the English. She was weary of the perpetual comparison, for she not only heard it from othersshe heard it a great deal from herself. She held that there were certain differences you felt, if you belonged to one or the other nation, and that was the end of it; there was no use trying to express them. Those you could express were not real, or not important ones, and were not worth talking about. Mr. Wendover asked her if she liked English society and if it was superior to American, and if the tone were very high in London; she thought his questions "academic "-the term she used to see applied in the Times to certain speeches in Parliament. Bending his long leanness over

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her (she had never seen a man so slim his waist was almost as small as Selina's, and evidently he was not squeezed) and walking almost sidewise, to give her a proper attention, he struck her as innocent, as incapable of guessing that she had had a certain observation of life. They were talking about totally different things; English society, as he asked her judgment upon it and she had happened to see it, was an affair that he didn't suspect. If she were to give him that judgment it would be more than he, doubtless, bargained for; but she wouldn't do it to make him open his eyes-only to relieve herself. She had thought of that before, in regard to two or three persons she had met-of the satisfaction of breaking out with some of her feelings. It wouldn't make much difference whether the person understood her or not; the one who should do so best wouldn't understand everything. "I want to get out of it, please

out of the set I live in, the one I have tumbled into through my sister, the people you saw just now. There are thousands of people in London who are different from that and ever so much nicer; but I don't see them, I don't know how to get at them; and after all, poor dear man, what power have you to help me?" That was, in the last analysis, the gist of what she had to say.

Mr. Wendover asked her about Selina in the tone of a person who thought Mrs. Berrington a very important phenomenon, and that, by itself, was irritating to Laura Wing. Importantgracious heaven, no! She might have to live with her, to hold her tongue about her; but at least she was not bound to exaggerate her significance. The young man didn't make use of the expression but she could see that he supposed Selina to be a professional beauty, and she guessed that as this product had not yet been domesticated in the western world the desire to behold it, after having read so much about it, had been one of the motives of Mr. Wendover's pilgrimage. Mrs. Schooling, who must have been a goose, had told him that Mrs. Berrington, though transplanted, was the finest flower of a rich, ripe society, and as clever and virtuous as she was beautiful. Meanwhile

Laura knew what Selina thought of Fanny Schooling and her incurable provinciality. "Now was that a good example of London talk-what I heard (I only heard a little of it, but the conversation was more general before you came in) in your sister's drawing-room? I don't mean literary, intellectual talk-I suppose there are special places to hear that; I mean-I mean" Mr. Wendover went on with a deliberation which gave his companion an opportunity to interrupt him. They had arrived at Lady Davenant's door, and she cut his meaning short. A fancy had taken her, on the spot, and the fact that it was incongruous seemed only to recommend it.

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"Oh, you are very kind-I should be delighted," replied Mr. Wendover, emulating naturally her own candor. They stepped into the porch and the young man, anticipating his companion, lifted the knocker and gave a postman's rap. She laughed at him for this and he looked bewildered; the idea of taking him in with her had become agreeably exhilarating. She explained to him who Lady Davenant was, and that if he was in search of the characteristic it would be a pity he shouldn't know her; and then she added, before he could put the question:

"And what I am doing is not in the least usual. No, it is not the custom for young ladies here to take strange gentlemen off to call on their friends the first time they see them."

"So that Lady Davenant will think it rather extraordinary?" Mr. Wendover eagerly inquired; not as if that idea frightened him, but so that his observation on this point should also be well founded. He had entered into Laura's proposal with complete serenity.

“Oh, most extraordinary!" said Laura, as they went in. The old lady, however, concealed such surprise as she may have felt, and greeted Mr. Wendover as if he were any one of fifty familiars. She took him altogether for granted, and asked him no questions about his arrival, his departure, his hotel, or his

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business in England. He noticed, as he afterwards confided to Laura, her omission of these forms; but he was not wounded by it-he only made a mark against it as an illustration of the difference between English and American manners: in New York people always asked the arriving stranger the first thing about the steamer and the hotel. Mr. Wendover appeared greatly impressed with Lady Davenant's antiquity, though he confessed to his companion, on a subsequent occasion, that he thought her a little flippant, a little frivolous even, for her years. Oh, yes," said the girl, on that occasion, "I have no doubt that you considered she talked too much, for one so old. In America old ladies sit silent and listen to the young." Mr. Wendover stared a little and replied to this that with her-with Laura Wingit was impossible to tell which side she was on, the American or the English : sometimes she seemed to take one, sometimes the other. At any rate, he added, smiling, with regard to the other great division it was easy to see-she was on the side of the old. "Of course I am," she said; "when one is old!" And then he inquired, according to his wont, if she were thought so in England, and she answered that it was England that had made her so.

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Lady Davenant's bright drawing-room was filled with mementoes, and especially with a collection of portraits of distinguished people, mainly fine old prints with signatures, an array of precious autographs. "Oh, it's a cemetery," she said, when the young man asked her some question about one of the pictures; they are my contemporaries, they are all dead, and those things are the tomb-stones, with the inscriptions. I'm the grave-digger, I look after the place and try to keep it a little tidy. I have dug my own little hole," she went on, to Laura, "and when you are sent for you must come and put me in." This evocation of mortality led Mr. Wendover to ask her if she had known Charles Lamb; at which she stared for an instant, replying: "Dear me, no-one didn't meet him."

"Oh, I meant to say Lord Byron," said Mr. Wendover.

"Bless me, yes; I was in love with

him. But he didn't notice me, fortu

very

nately we were so many. He was nice-looking, but he was very vulgar." Lady Davenant talked to Laura as if Mr. Wendover had not been there; or, rather, as if his interests and knowledge were identical with hers. Before they went away the young man asked her if she had known Garrick, and she replied: "Oh, dear, no, we didn't have them in our houses, in those days." "He must have been dead long before you were born!" Laura exclaimed.

"I dare say; but one used to hear of him."

"I think I meant Edmund Kean," said Mr. Wendover.

"You make little mistakes of a century or two," Laura Wing remarked, laughing. She felt now as if she had known Mr. Wendover a long time.

"Oh, he was very clever," said Lady Davenant.

"Very magnetic, I suppose," Mr. Wendover went on.

"What's that? I believe he used to get tipsy."

"Perhaps you don't use that expression in England?" Laura's companion inquired.

"Oh, I dare say we do, if it's American; we talk American now. You seem very good-natured people, but such a jargon as you do speak!

"I like your way, Lady Davenant," said Mr. Wendover, benevolently, smiling.

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"For a husband, of course." "For a husband-for whom?" "Why-for me," said Lady Davenant. "I don't know-I think he might tire you."

"Oh-if he's tiresome!" the old lady continued, smiling at the girl.

"I think he's very good," said Laura. "Well, then, he'll do."

"Ah, perhaps you won't!" Laura exclaimed, smiling back at her and turning away.

VIII.

SHE was of a serious turn by nature, and, unlike many serious people, she made no particular study of the art of being gay. Had her circumstances been different she might have done so, but she lived in a merry house (heaven save the mark! as she used to say), and therefore was not driven to amuse herself for conscience sake. The diversions she sought were of a serious cast, and she liked those best which showed most the note of difference from Selina's interests and Lionel's. She felt that she was most divergent when she attempted to cultivate her mind, and it was a branch of such cultivation to visit the curiosities, the antiquities, the monuments of London. She was fond of the Abbey and the British Museum-she had extended her researches as far as the Tower. She read the works of Mr. John Timbs and made notes of the old corners of history that had not yet been abolished the houses in which great men had lived and died. She planned a general tour of inspection of the ancient churches of the City and a pilgrimage to the queer places commemorated by Dickens. It must be added that though her intentions were great her adventures had as yet been small. She had wanted for opportunity and independence; people had other things to do than to go with her, and it was not till she had been some time in the country, and till a good while after she had begun to go out alone, that she entered upon the privilege of visiting public institutions by herself. were some aspects of London that frightened her, but there were certain spots, such as the Poet's Corner in the Abbey, or the room of the Elgin marbles, where she liked better to be alone than not to have the right companion. At the time Mr. Wendover presented himself in Grosvenor Place she had begun to put in, as they said, a museum, or something of that sort, whenever she had a chance. Besides her idea that such places were sources of knowledge (it is to be feared that the poor girl's notions of knowledge were at once conventional and crude) they were also occasions for detachment, an escape

There

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