<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="pch"><span class="smcap">Basil Jennico’s Memoir continued</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">My</span> great-uncle’s will, forcible, concise, indisputable
as it was, had been (so the man of law informed
me) drawn out in a great hurry, dictated,
indeed, between spasms of agony and rage. (The
poor old man died of gout in his stomach.)
Doubtless, had he felt sure of more time, he
would have burdened the inheritance with many
directions and conditions.</p>
<p>From his broken utterances, however, and from
what I had known of him in life, I gathered a fair
idea of what his wishes were. His fifty years of
foreign service had filled him, old pandour that he
seemed to have become, with but increased contempt
for the people that surrounded him, their
ways and customs, while his pride as an Englishman
was only equalled by his pride as a Jennico.</p>
<p>“Sell and settle....”</p>
<p>The meaning of the words was clear in the light
of the man as I knew him. I was to sell the
great property, carry to England the vast hoard of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
foreign wealth, marry as befitted one of the race,
and raise a new and splendid line of Jennicos, to
the utter mortification, and everlasting confusion,
of the degenerate head of the house.</p>
<p>Now, though I knew it to be in me, and felt it,
indeed, not otherwise possible, to live my life as
true a Jennico as even my uncle could desire, I by
no means deemed it incumbent upon me to set to
work and carry out his plans without first employing
my liberty and wealth as the humour prompted
me. Nor was the old country an overpoweringly
attractive place for a young man of my creed and
kidney. In Vienna I was, perhaps, for the moment,
the most noted figure—the guest most
sought after that year. In England, at daggers
drawn with my brother, I could only play an
everyday part in an unpopular social minority.</p>
<p>It was in full summer weather that, as I have
written, already tried by the first stage of my
career of wealth, I came to take possession of my
landed estates. The beauty and wildness of the
scenery, the strangeness of the life in the well-nigh
princely position to which this sudden turn of
fortune’s wheel had elevated me, the intoxicating
sensation of holding sway, as feudal lord of these
wide tracts of hill and plain, over so many hundreds
of lives—above all, the wholesome reaction<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
brought about by solitude and communion with
nature after the turmoil of the last months—in
short, everything around me and in me made me
less inclined than ever to begin ridding myself of
so fair a possession.</p>
<p>And do I wish I had not thus delayed in obeying
the injunction that accompanied the bequest?
Odds my life! I am a miserable dog this day
through my disobedience; and yet, would I now
undo the past if I could? A thousand times no!
I hate my folly, but hug it, ever closer, ever
dearer. The bitter savour of that incomprehensible
yearning clings to the place: I would not
exchange it for the tameness of peace. Weakling
that I am, I would not obliterate, if I could, the
memory of those brief, brief days of which I failed
to know the price, until the perversity of fate cut
their thread for ever—ay, perhaps for ever, after
all! And yet, if so, it were wiser to quit these
haunted walls for ever also. But, God! how
meagre and livid looks wisdom, the ghost, by the
side of love’s warm and living line!</p>
<p>And now, on! Since I have put my hand to
the task, undertaken to set forth and make clear
the actual condition of that vacillating puppet, the
new-fledged Lord of Tollendhal, I will not draw it
back, cost me what pain it may.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>No doubt it was this haunting pride of wealth,
waxing every day stronger, even as the pride of
birth which my great-uncle had fostered to such
good purpose, the overweening conceit which they
bred within me, that fogged my better judgment
and brought me to this pass. And no doubt,
likewise, it is a princely estate that these lords
of Tollendhal of old carved for themselves, and
rounded ever wider and nurtured—all that it
should some day, passing through the distaff,
come to swell the pride of Suffolk Jennicos!</p>
<p>My castle rises boldly on the northernmost spur
of the Glatzer Mounts, and defiantly overlooks the
marches of three kingdoms. Its lands and dependencies,
though chiefly Moravian, extend over the
Bohemian border as well as into that Silesia they
now are able to call Prussian. North and west it
is flanked by woods that grow wilder, denser, as
they spread inwards towards the Giant Mountains.
On the southern slopes are my vineyards,
growths of note, as I hear. My territories reach,
on the one hand, farther than can be seen under
the blue horizon, into the Eastern plains, flat and
rich, that stretch with curious suddenness immediately
at the foot of the high district; upon the
other hand, on the Moravian side, I doubt whether
even my head steward himself knows exactly how<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
much of the timber-laden hill-ranges can be claimed
as appertaining to the estate. All the peaks I can
descry in a fine day from these casements are
mine, I believe; on their flanks are forests as rich
in game—boar and buck, wolf and bear, not to
speak of lesser quarry—as are the plains below
in corn and maize and cattle—<i>que sais-je?</i> A
goodly heritage indeed!</p>
<p>I promised myself many a rare day’s sport so
soon as the time waxed ripe. Meanwhile, my
days were spent in rambles over the land, under
pretence of making acquaintance with the farms
and the villages, and the population living on the
soil and working out its wealth for my use, but
in reality for the enjoyment of delicious sylvan
and rustic idleness through which the memory of
recent Viennese dissipations was like that of a
fevered dream.</p>
<p>The spirit of my country-keeping ancestors
lived again within me and was satisfied. Yet
there were times, too, when this freedom of fancy
became loneliness—when my eyes tired of green
trees, and my ears hungered for the voice of some
human being whom I could meet as an equal, with
whom I could consort, soul and wit. Then I
would resolve that, come the autumn, I would fill
the frowning stronghouse with a rousing throng<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
of gallant hunters and fair women such as it had
never seen before. Ay, and they should come
over, even from old England, to taste of the Jennico
hospitality!</p>
<p>It was in one of these glorious moods that,
upon a September day, sultry as summer, although
there was a touch of autumn decay in the
air as well as in the tints around me, I sallied
forth, after noon, to tramp on foot an as yet unexplored
quarter of my domain. I had donned,
according to my wont (as being more suitable to
the roughness of the paths than the smallclothes,
skirted coats, high heels and cocked hat of Viennese
fashion), the dress of the Moravian peasant—I
gather that it pleases the people’s heart to
see their seigneur grace their national garb on
occasions. There was a goodly store of such costumes
among the cupboards full of hereditary
habiliments and furs preserved at Tollendhal,
after the fashion of the country, with the care
that English housewives bestow upon their stores
of linen. My peasant suit was, of course, fine of
cloth and natty of cut, and the symmetry of the
handsome figure I saw in my glass reminded me
more of the pastoral disguises that were the
courtly fashion of some years back than of our
half-savage ill-smelling boors. Thus it was pleasant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
as well as comfortable to wear, and at that
time even so trifling a sensation of gratified vanity
had its price. But, although thus freed of the
incumbrance of a gentleman’s attire, I could not
shake off the watchful tyranny of János, the solemn
heiduck who never allowed me to stir abroad
at all without his escort, nor, indeed (if my whim
took me far afield), without the further retinue
of two jägers, twin brothers, and faithful beyond a
doubt. These, carbine on shoulder, and hanger
on thigh, had their orders to follow their lord
through thick and thin, and keep within sight and
sound of whistle.</p>
<p>In such odd style of state, on this day, destined
to begin for me a new chapter in life, I took my
course; and for a long hour or so walked along
the rocky cornice that overhangs the plains. The
land looked bare and wide and solitary, the fields
lay in sallow leanness bereft of waving crops, but
I knew that all my golden grain was stacked
safely in the heart of the earth, where these folk
hoard its fruits for safety from fire. The air was
so empty of human sounds, save the monotonous
tramp of my escort behind me, that all the murmurs
of wind and foliage struck with singular
loudness upon my ear. Over night, there had, by
my leave, been songs and dancing in the courtyard<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
of Tollendhal, and the odd tunes, the capricious
rhythm of the gipsy musicians, came back
upon me as I walked in the midst of my thoughts.
These melodies are fitful and plaintive as the
sounds of nature itself, they come hurrying and
slackening, rising and falling, with as true a harmony
and as unmeasured a measure,—now in a
very passion of haste, and now with a dreamy
long-drawn sigh. I was thinking on this, and on
the love of the Empress for that music (my Empress
that had been when I wore her uniform, ay,
and my Empress still so long as I retain these
noble lands), when I came to a field, sloping from
the crag towards the plain, where an aftermath of
grass had been left to dry. There was a little belt
of trees, which threw a grateful shade; and feeling
something weary I flung me down on the
scented hay. It was on the Silesian portion of
my land. Against the horizon, the white and
brown of some townlet, clustering round the ace-of-club-shaped
roof of its church-tower, rose glittering
above the blue haze. A little beyond the
field ran a white road. So I reclined, looking
vaguely into the unknown but inviting distance,
musing on the extent of those possessions so wide-spread
that I had not as yet been able to ride all
their marches, ever and anon recognising vaguely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
in the voice of the breeze through the foliage an
echo of the music that had been haunting my
thoughts all day. Everything conspired to bring
me pleasant fancies. I began to dream of past
scenes and future fortunes, smiling at the thought
of what my dashing friends would say if they saw
<i>le beau Jennico</i> in this bucolic attitude, wondering
if any of my Court acquaintances would recognise
him in his peasant garb.</p>
<p>Ah me, how eternally and lovingly I thought
of my proud and brilliant self then!...</p>
<p>I cannot recall how soon this musing became
deep sleep, but sleep I did and dream—a singular,
vivid dream, which was in a manner a continuation
of my waking thoughts. I seemed to be at a
great <i>fête</i> at the Imperial Palace, one of the countless
throng of guests. The lights were brilliant,
blinding, but I saw many faces I knew, and we
all were waiting most eagerly for some wonderful
event. No one was speaking, and the only sounds
were the rustling and brushing of the ladies’ brocades
and the jingle of the officers’ spurs, with
over and above the wail of the czimbalom. All
at once I knew, as we do in dreams, what we
were expecting, and why this splendid feast had
been prepared. Marie Antoinette, the fair young
Dauphine of France, the memory of whose grace<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
still hangs about the Court, had come back to visit
her own country. The crowd grew closer and
closer. The crowd about me surged forward to
catch a glimpse of her as she passed, and I with
the rest, when suddenly my great-uncle stood before
me, immensely bestarred and beribboned in
his field-marshal’s uniform, and with the black
patch on his eye so black that it quite dazzled me.</p>
<p>“Na, Kerlchen,” he was saying to me, “thou
hast luck! Her Imperial and Royal Highness has
chosen the young Jennico to dance with ... as
the old one is too old.”</p>
<p>Now I, in common with the young men about
me, have grown to cherish since my coming to
this land a strange enthusiasm for the most
womanly and beautiful of all the Empress’s daughters,
and therefore, even in my dream, my heart
began to beat very fast, and I scarce knew which
way to turn. I was much troubled too by the
music, which went on always louder and quicker
above my head, somewhere in the air, for I knew
that no such things as country dances are danced
at Court, and that I myself would make but a poor
figure in such; yet a peasant dance it undoubtedly
was. Next, my uncle was gone, and though I
could not see her, I knew the Princess was coming
by the swish of her skirt as she walked. I heard<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
her voice as clear as a silver bell. “<i>Où est-il?</i>”
it said, and I felt she was looking for me. I struggled
in vain to answer or turn to her, and the voice
cried again: “<i>Où est-il?</i>” upon which another
voice with a quaver in its tones made reply: “<i>Par
ici, Altesse!</i>”</p>
<p>The sound must have been very close to me, for
it startled me from my deep sleep into, as it were,
an outer court of dreams. And between slumber
and consciousness I became aware that I was lying
somewhere very hot and comfortable; that, while
some irresistible power kept my eyes closed, my
ears were not so, and I could hear the two voices
talking together; and, in my wandering brain believed
them still to belong to the Princess Marie
Antoinette and her attendant.</p>
<p>“It is a peasant,” said the first voice: that was
the Princess of course. There was something of
scorn in the tone, and I became acutely and unpleasantly
conscious of my red embroidered shirt.
But the other made answer: “He is handsome,”
and then: “His hands are not those of a peasant,”
and, “<i>Regardez ma chère</i>; peasants do not wear
such jewelled watches!” A sudden shadow fell
over me and was gone in an instant. There was a
flicker of laughter and I sat up.</p>
<p>During my sleep the shade of the sun had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
shifted and I lay in the full glare, and so, as I
opened my eyes, I could see nothing.</p>
<p>I heard the laughter of my dream again, and I
knew that the mocking cry of “<i>Prenez garde,
Altesse!</i>” that still rang in the air did not belong
to my sleep. But as I rubbed my eyes and looked
out once again, I caught first a glimpse of a
slender creature bending over me, outlined it
seemed in fire and shimmering between black and
gold. My next glance filled me with a woeful disappointment,
for I declare, what with my dream
and my odd awakening, I expected to find before
me a beauty no less bewitching than that of her
Royal Highness herself. What I beheld was but
a slim slip of a creature who, from the tip of her
somewhat battered shepherdess hat to the hem of
her loosely hanging skirts, gave me an impression
of being all yellow, save for the dark cloud of her
hair. Her skin seemed golden yellow like old
ivory, her eyes seemed to shoot yellow sparks, her
gown was yellow as any primrose. As she bent
to watch me, her lip was arched into a smile; it
had a deep dimple on the left side. Thus I saw
her in a sort of flash and scrambled to my feet
still half drunk with drowsiness, crying out like
a fool:</p>
<p>“<i>Où est son Altesse? Où est son Altesse?</i>”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She clapped her hands and turned with a crow
of laughter to some one behind me. And then I
became aware that, as in the dream, there were
two. I also turned.</p>
<p>My eyes were in their normal state again, but
for a moment I thought myself still wandering.
Here was her Highness. A Princess, indeed, as
beautiful as any vision and yet most exquisitely
embodied in the flesh; a Princess in this wilderness!
It seemed a thing impossible, and yet my
eyes now only corroborated the evidence of my
ears.</p>
<p>I marked, almost without knowing, the rope
of pearls that bound her throat (I had become
a judge of jewels by being the possessor of so
many). I marked her garments, garments, for all
their intended simplicity, rich, and bearing to my
not untutored observation the latest stamp of fashion.
But above all I marked her air of race, her
countenance, young with the first bloom of youth,
mantled with blushes yet set with a royal dignity.</p>
<p>I have, since that eventful day, passed through
so many phases of feeling, sweet and violent, my
present sentiments are so fantastically disturbed,
that I must try to the last of this writing and
see matters still as I saw them at the time. Yes,
beyond doubt what I noticed most, what appealed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span>
to me most deeply then, was the great air of race
blended and softened by womanly candour and
grace. She looked at me gravely, with wide brown
eyes, and I stumbled into my best courtly bow.</p>
<p>“He wants to know,” said the damsel of the
yellow skirts, this time in German, the clear, clean
utterance of which had nothing of the broad Austrian
sounds I was accustomed to hear—“he
wants to know ’where is the Highness?’ But he
seems to have guessed where she stands, without
the telling. Truly ’tis a pity the Lord Chamberlain
is not at his post to make a presentation in
due form!”</p>
<p>The lady thus addressed took a step towards
her companion, with what seemed a protest on her
lip. But the latter, her small face quivering with
mischief and eagerness, whispered something in
her ear, and the beautiful brown eyes fixed themselves
once again smilingly on me.</p>
<p>“Know, sir,” continued the speaker then, “since
you are so indiscreet as to wake at the wrong
moment, and surprise an incognito, the mysteries
of which were certainly not meant for such as
you, that Altesse she is. <i>Son Altesse Sérénissime
la Princesse Marie Ottilie.</i> Marie is her Highness’s
first name, and Ottilie is her Highness’s
last name. And between the two and after those<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span>
two, being as I said an Altesse Sérénissime, she
has of course a dozen other names; but more than
this it does not suit her Highness that you should
know. Now if you will do me, a humble attendant
that I am, the courtesy to state who you are,
who, in a Silesian boor’s attire, speak French and
wear diamond watches to your belt, I can proceed
with the introduction, even in the absence of the
Lord Chamberlain.”</p>
<p>The minx had an easy assurance of manner
which could only have been bred at Court. Her
mistress listened to her with what seemed a tolerant
affection.</p>
<p>Looking round, bewildered and awkwardly conscious
of my peasant dress, I beheld my two chasseurs,
standing stolidly sentinel on the exact spot
where I had last seen them before dropping asleep.
Old János, from a nearer distance, watched us suspiciously.
As I thus looked round I became aware
of a new feature in the landscape—a ponderous
coach also attended by two chasseurs in unknown
uniforms waiting some hundred paces off, down
the road.</p>
<p>To keep myself something in countenance despite
my incongruous garb (and also perchance
for the little meanness that I was not displeased
to show this Princess that I too kept a state of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
my own), I lifted my hand and beckoned to my
retinue, which instantly advanced and halted in a
rank with rigid precision five paces behind me.</p>
<p>“Gracious madam,” said I in German, bowing
to her who had dubbed herself the lady-in-waiting,
with a touch, I flattered myself, of her own light
mockery of tone, “I shall indeed feel honoured if
her Serene Highness will deign to permit the
presentation of so unimportant a person as myself—in
other words of Basil Jennico of Farringdon
Dane, in the county of Suffolk, in the Kingdom of
Great Britain, lately a captain in his Royal Imperial
Majesty’s Moravian Regiment of Chevau-Legers,
now master of the Castle of Tollendhal,
not far distant, and lord of its domain.” Here,
led by János, my three retainers saluted.</p>
<p>I thought I saw in the Princess’s eyes that I
had created a certain impression, but my consequent
complacency did not escape the notice of
the irrepressible lady-in-waiting. She promptly
did her best to mar the situation.</p>
<p>“Fi donc,” she cried, in French, “we are at
Court, Monsieur, and at the Court of—at the
Court of her Highness we are not such savages
as to perform introductions in German.”</p>
<p>Then, drawing up her slight figure and composing
her face into preternatural gravity, she took<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span>
two steps forward and another sideways, accompanied
by as many bows, and resting her hand at
arm’s length on the china head of her stick, with
the most ridiculous assumption of finikin importance
and with a quavering voice which, although
I have never known him, I recognised instantly as
the Chamberlain’s, she announced:</p>
<p>“Monsieur Basile Jean Nigaud de la Faridondaine,
dans le comté où l’on Suffoque, ... d’importance,
au royaume de la Grande Bretagne,
maître du Castel des Fous, ici proche, et seigneur
des alentours,—ahem!”</p>
<p>Inwardly cursing the young woman’s buffoonery
and the incredible facility with which she had so
instantly burlesqued an undoubtedly impressive recital,
I had no choice but to make my three bows
with what good grace I could muster. Whereupon,
the Princess, still smiling but with a somewhat puzzled
air, made me a curtsey. As for the lady-in-waiting,
nothing abashed, she took an imaginary
pinch of most excellent snuff with a pretence of high
satisfaction; then laughed aloud and long, till my
ears burned and her own dimple literally rioted.</p>
<p>“And now, to complete the ceremony,” said
she, as soon as she could speak at all, “let me
introduce the Court, represented to-day by myself.
Mademoiselle Marie Ottilie. Two Ottilies as you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
will perceive, but easily explained, thus: Feu the
Highest her Sérénissime’s gracious ducal grandmother
being an Ottilie and godmother to us both—Mademoiselle
Ottilie: the rest concerns you not.
Well, Monsieur de la Faridondaine, Capitaine et
Seigneur, etc., etc.,—charmed to have made your
acquaintance. So far, so good. But ... these
gentlemen? Surely also nobles in disguise. Will
you not continue the ceremony?”</p>
<p>She waved a little sunburnt hand towards my
immovable body-guard, and the full absurdity of
my position struck me with the keenest sense
of mortification.</p>
<p>I looked back at the three, biting my lips, and
miserably uncertain how to conduct myself so as
to save some shred of dignity. My ancient János
had seen too many strange things during his forty
years’ attendance on my great-uncle to betray
the smallest surprise at the present singular situation;
but out of both their handsome faces, set
like bronze,—they had better not have moved
a muscle otherwise or János would have known
the reason why,—the eyes of my twin attendants
roamed from me to the ladies, and from the
ladies to me, with the most devouring curiosity.
I tartly dismissed them all again to a distance,
and then, turning to the mysterious Princess I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span>
begged to know, in my most courtlike manner
if I might presume to lay my services at her feet
for the time of her sojourn in this, my land.</p>
<p>With the same adorable yet dignified bashfulness
that I had already noted in her, the lovely
woman looked hesitatingly at her lady-in-waiting,
which lively wench, not being troubled with timidity
(as she had already sufficiently demonstrated),
promptly took upon herself to answer me. But
this time she so delightfully fell in with my own
wishes that I was fain to forgive her all that had
gone before.</p>
<p>“But certainly,” she exclaimed, “her Serene
Highness will condescend to accept the services
of M. de Jean Nigaud. It is not every day that
brings forth such romantic encounters. Know,
sir, that we are two damozels that have by the
most extraordinary succession of fortunate accidents
escaped from school. You wonder? By
school, I mean the insupportable tedium, etiquette,
and dulness of the Court of his most
gracious and worshipful Serenity the father of
her Highness. We came out this noon to make
hay, and hay we will make. Or rather we shall
sit on the hay, and you shall make a throne for
the Princess, and a little tabouret for me, and then
you may sit you down and entertain us ... but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
on the ground, and at a respectful distance, that
none may say we do not observe proper forms
and conventions, for all that we are holiday-making.
And you shall explain to us how you,
an Englishman, came to be master of Château
des Fous, and masquerading in peasant’s attire.
Is masquerading a condition of tenure? After
which, her Serene Highness having only one
fault, that being her angelic softness of heart,
which is pushed to the degree of absolute weakness,
she will permit me to narrate to you (as
much as is good for you to know) how we came
to be here at such a distance from our own country,
and in such curious freedom—for her Highness
quite sees that you are rapidly becoming
ill with suppressed curiosity, and fears that you
may otherwise burst with it on your way home
to your great castle, or at least that the pressure
on the brain may seriously affect its delicate
balance—if indeed,” with a peal of her reckless
childish laughter, “you are not already a lunatic,
and those your keepers!”</p>
<p>This last piece of impudence might have proved
even too much for my desire to cultivate an acquaintance
so extraordinarily attractive to one of
my turn of mind and so alluring by its mysteriousness,
but that I happened to catch a glance from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
her Highness’s eyes even as the speaker finished
her tirade, which glance, deprecating and at the
same time full of a kindly and gentle interest,
set my heart to beat in a curious fashion between
pleasure and pain. I hastened therefore to obey
the younger lady’s behests, and began to gather
together enough of the sweet-smelling hay to form
a throne for so noble and fair an occupant.</p>
<p>Whereupon the little creature herself—she
seemed little by reason of her slenderness and
childishness, but in truth she was as tall as her
tall and beautiful mistress—fell to helping me
with such right good-will, flashing upon me, as she
flitted hither and thither, such altogether innocently
mocking looks from her yellow-hazel eyes,
that I should have been born with a deeper vanity,
and a sourer temper, to have kept a grudge against
her.</p>
<p>Once seated in our fragrant court, in the order
laid down for us, the attendant, so soon as she had
recovered breath sufficient, began to ply me with
questions so multiplied, so searching, and so
pointed, that she very soon extracted from me
every detail she wished to know about myself, past
and present.</p>
<p>But although, as from a chartered and privileged
advocate, the sharp cross-questioning came from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
the Mademoiselle Marie Ottilie, it was to the soft
dumb inquiry I read in the Princess Marie Ottilie’s
eyes that were addressed my answers. And then
those eyes and the listening beauty of that gracious
face, made it hard for me to realise, as later reflection
proved, that their owner did not utter a single
word during the whole time we sat there together.</p>
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