<h2><SPAN name="2HCH0006"></SPAN> CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p class="poem">
“Croyez-vous m’avoir humiliée pour m’avoir appris que la
terre tourne autour du soleil? Je vous jure que je ne m’en estime pas
moins.”<br/>
—F<small>ONTENELLE</small>: <i>Pluralité des
Mondes</i>.</p>
<p>That lofty criticism had caused Gwendolen a new sort of pain. She would not
have chosen to confess how unfortunate she thought herself in not having had
Miss Arrowpoint’s musical advantages, so as to be able to question Herr
Klesmer’s taste with the confidence of thorough knowledge; still less, to
admit even to herself that Miss Arrowpoint each time they met raised an
unwonted feeling of jealousy in her: not in the least because she was an
heiress, but because it was really provoking that a girl whose appearance you
could not characterize except by saying that her figure was slight and of
middle stature, her features small, her eyes tolerable, and her complexion
sallow, had nevertheless a certain mental superiority which could not be
explained away—an exasperating thoroughness in her musical
accomplishment, a fastidious discrimination in her general tastes, which made
it impossible to force her admiration and kept you in awe of her standard. This
insignificant-looking young lady of four-and-twenty, whom any one’s eyes
would have passed over negligently if she had not been Miss Arrowpoint, might
be suspected of a secret opinion that Miss Harleth’s acquirements were
rather of a common order, and such an opinion was not made agreeable to think
of by being always veiled under a perfect kindness of manner.</p>
<p>But Gwendolen did not like to dwell on facts which threw an unfavorable light
on itself. The musical Magus who had so suddenly widened her horizon was not
always on the scene; and his being constantly backward and forward between
London and Quetcham soon began to be thought of as offering opportunities for
converting him to a more admiring state of mind. Meanwhile, in the manifest
pleasure her singing gave at Brackenshaw Castle, the Firs, and elsewhere, she
recovered her equanimity, being disposed to think approval more trustworthy
than objection, and not being one of the exceptional persons who have a
parching thirst for a perfection undemanded by their neighbors. Perhaps it
would have been rash to say then that she was at all exceptional inwardly, or
that the unusual in her was more than her rare grace of movement and bearing,
and a certain daring which gave piquancy to a very common egoistic ambition,
such as exists under many clumsy exteriors and is taken no notice of. For I
suppose that the set of the head does not really determine the hunger of the
inner self for supremacy: it only makes a difference sometimes as to the way in
which the supremacy is held attainable, and a little also to the degree in
which it can be attained; especially when the hungry one is a girl, whose
passion for doing what is remarkable has an ideal limit in consistency with the
highest breeding and perfect freedom from the sordid need of income. Gwendolen
was as inwardly rebellious against the restraints of family conditions, and as
ready to look through obligations into her own fundamental want of feeling for
them, as if she had been sustained by the boldest speculations; but she really
had no such speculations, and would at once have marked herself off from any
sort of theoretical or practically reforming women by satirizing them. She
rejoiced to feel herself exceptional; but her horizon was that of the genteel
romance where the heroine’s soul poured out in her journal is full of
vague power, originality, and general rebellion, while her life moves strictly
in the sphere of fashion; and if she wanders into a swamp, the pathos lies
partly, so to speak, in her having on her satin shoes. Here is a restraint
which nature and society have provided on the pursuit of striking adventure; so
that a soul burning with a sense of what the universe is not, and ready to take
all existence as fuel, is nevertheless held captive by the ordinary wirework of
social forms and does nothing particular.</p>
<p>This commonplace result was what Gwendolen found herself threatened with even
in the novelty of the first winter at Offendene. What she was clear upon was,
that she did not wish to lead the same sort of life as ordinary young ladies
did; but what she was not clear upon was, how she should set about leading any
other, and what were the particular acts which she would assert her freedom by
doing. Offendene remained a good background, if anything would happen there;
but on the whole the neighborhood was in fault.</p>
<p>Beyond the effect of her beauty on a first presentation, there was not much
excitement to be got out of her earliest invitations, and she came home after
little sallies of satire and knowingness, such as had offended Mrs. Arrowpoint,
to fill the intervening days with the most girlish devices. The strongest
assertion she was able to make of her individual claims was to leave out
Alice’s lessons (on the principle that Alice was more likely to excel in
ignorance), and to employ her with Miss Merry, and the maid who was understood
to wait on all the ladies, in helping to arrange various dramatic costumes
which Gwendolen pleased herself with having in readiness for some future
occasions of acting in charades or theatrical pieces, occasions which she meant
to bring about by force of will or contrivance. She had never acted—only
made a figure in <i>tableaux vivans</i> at school; but she felt assured that
she could act well, and having been once or twice to the Théâtre Français, and
also heard her mamma speak of Rachel, her waking dreams and cogitations as to
how she would manage her destiny sometimes turned on the question whether she
would become an actress like Rachel, since she was more beautiful than that
thin Jewess. Meanwhile the wet days before Christmas were passed pleasantly in
the preparation of costumes, Greek, Oriental, and Composite, in which Gwendolen
attitudinized and speechified before a domestic audience, including even the
housekeeper, who was once pressed into it that she might swell the notes of
applause; but having shown herself unworthy by observing that Miss Harleth
looked far more like a queen in her own dress than in that baggy thing with her
arms all bare, she was not invited a second time.</p>
<p>“Do I look as well as Rachel, mamma?” said Gwendolen, one day when
she had been showing herself in her Greek dress to Anna, and going through
scraps of scenes with much tragic intention.</p>
<p>“You have better arms than Rachel,” said Mrs. Davilow, “your
arms would do for anything, Gwen. But your voice is not so tragic as hers; it
is not so deep.”</p>
<p>“I can make it deeper, if I like,” said Gwendolen, provisionally;
then she added, with decision, “I think a higher voice is more tragic: it
is more feminine; and the more feminine a woman is, the more tragic it seems
when she does desperate actions.”</p>
<p>“There may be something in that,” said Mrs. Davilow, languidly.
“But I don’t know what good there is in making one’s blood
creep. And if there is anything horrible to be done, I should like it to be
left to the men.”</p>
<p>“Oh, mamma, you are so dreadfully prosaic! As if all the great poetic
criminals were not women! I think the men are poor cautious creatures.”</p>
<p>“Well, dear, and you—who are afraid to be alone in the
night—I don’t think you would be very bold in crime, thank
God.”</p>
<p>“I am not talking about reality, mamma,” said Gwendolen,
impatiently. Then her mamma being called out of the room, she turned quickly to
her cousin, as if taking an opportunity, and said, “Anna, do ask my uncle
to let us get up some charades at the rectory. Mr. Middleton and Warham could
act with us—just for practice. Mamma says it will not do to have Mr.
Middleton consulting and rehearsing here. He is a stick, but we could give him
suitable parts. Do ask, or else I will.”</p>
<p>“Oh, not till Rex comes. He is so clever, and such a dear old thing, and
he will act Napoleon looking over the sea. He looks just like Napoleon. Rex can
do anything.”</p>
<p>“I don’t in the least believe in your Rex, Anna,” said
Gwendolen, laughing at her. “He will turn out to be like those wretched
blue and yellow water-colors of his which you hang up in your bedroom and
worship.”</p>
<p>“Very well, you will see,” said Anna. “It is not that I know
what is clever, but he has got a scholarship already, and papa says he will get
a fellowship, and nobody is better at games. He is cleverer than Mr. Middleton,
and everybody but you call Mr. Middleton clever.”</p>
<p>“So he may be in a dark-lantern sort of way. But he <i>is</i> a stick. If
he had to say, ‘Perdition catch my soul, but I do love her,’ he
would say it in just the same tone as, ‘Here endeth the second
lesson.’”</p>
<p>“Oh, Gwendolen!” said Anna, shocked at these promiscuous allusions.
“And it is very unkind of you to speak so of him, for he admires you very
much. I heard Warham say one day to mamma, ‘Middleton is regularly
spooney upon Gwendolen.’ She was very angry with him; but I know what it
means. It is what they say at college for being in love.”</p>
<p>“How can I help it?” said Gwendolen, rather contemptuously.
“Perdition catch my soul if I love <i>him</i>.”</p>
<p>“No, of course; papa, I think, would not wish it. And he is to go away
soon. But it makes me sorry when you ridicule him.”</p>
<p>“What shall you do to me when I ridicule Rex?” said Gwendolen,
wickedly.</p>
<p>“Now, Gwendolen, dear, you <i>will not</i>?” said Anna, her eyes
filling with tears. “I could not bear it. But there really is nothing in
him to ridicule. Only you may find out things. For no one ever thought of
laughing at Mr. Middleton before you. Every one said he was nice-looking, and
his manners perfect. I am sure I have always been frightened at him because of
his learning and his square-cut coat, and his being a nephew of the
bishop’s, and all that. But you will not ridicule Rex—promise
me.” Anna ended with a beseeching look which touched Gwendolen.</p>
<p>“You are a dear little coz,” she said, just touching the tip of
Anna’s chin with her thumb and forefinger. “I don’t ever want
to do anything that will vex you. Especially if Rex is to make everything come
off—charades and everything.”</p>
<p>And when at last Rex was there, the animation he brought into the life of
Offendene and the rectory, and his ready partnership in Gwendolen’s
plans, left her no inclination for any ridicule that was not of an open and
flattering kind, such as he himself enjoyed. He was a fine open-hearted youth,
with a handsome face strongly resembling his father’s and Anna’s,
but softer in expression than the one, and larger in scale than the other: a
bright, healthy, loving nature, enjoying ordinary innocent things so much that
vice had no temptation for him, and what he knew of it lay too entirely in the
outer courts and little-visited chambers of his mind for him to think of it
with great repulsion. Vicious habits were with him “what some fellows
did”—“stupid stuff” which he liked to keep aloof from.
He returned Anna’s affection as fully as could be expected of a brother
whose pleasures apart from her were more than the sum total of hers; and he had
never known a stronger love.</p>
<p>The cousins were continually together at the one house or the
other—chiefly at Offendene, where there was more freedom, or rather where
there was a more complete sway for Gwendolen; and whatever she wished became a
ruling purpose for Rex. The charades came off according to her plans; and also
some other little scenes not contemplated by her in which her acting was more
impromptu. It was at Offendene that the charades and <i>tableaux</i> were
rehearsed and presented, Mrs. Davilow seeing no objection even to Mr.
Middleton’s being invited to share in them, now that Rex too was
there—especially as his services were indispensable: Warham, who was
studying for India with a Wanchester “coach,” having no time to
spare, and being generally dismal under a cram of everything except the answers
needed at the forthcoming examination, which might disclose the welfare of our
Indian Empire to be somehow connected with a quotable knowledge of
Browne’s Pastorals.</p>
<p>Mr. Middleton was persuaded to play various grave parts, Gwendolen having
flattered him on his enviable immobility of countenance; and at first a little
pained and jealous at her comradeship with Rex, he presently drew encouragement
from the thought that this sort of cousinly familiarity excluded any serious
passion. Indeed, he occasionally felt that her more formal treatment of himself
was such a sign of favor as to warrant his making advances before he left
Pennicote, though he had intended to keep his feelings in reserve until his
position should be more assured. Miss Gwendolen, quite aware that she was
adored by this unexceptionable young clergyman with pale whiskers and
square-cut collar, felt nothing more on the subject than that she had no
objection to being adored: she turned her eyes on him with calm mercilessness
and caused him many mildly agitating hopes by seeming always to avoid dramatic
contact with him—for all meanings, we know, depend on the key of
interpretation.</p>
<p>Some persons might have thought beforehand that a young man of Anglican
leanings, having a sense of sacredness much exercised on small things as well
as great, rarely laughing save from politeness, and in general regarding the
mention of spades by their naked names as rather coarse, would not have seen a
fitting bride for himself in a girl who was daring in ridicule, and showed none
of the special grace required in the clergyman’s wife; or, that a young
man informed by theological reading would have reflected that he was not likely
to meet the taste of a lively, restless young lady like Miss Harleth. But are
we always obliged to explain why the facts are not what some persons thought
beforehand? The apology lies on their side, who had that erroneous way of
thinking.</p>
<p>As for Rex, who would possibly have been sorry for poor Middleton if he had
been aware of the excellent curate’s inward conflict, he was too
completely absorbed in a first passion to have observation for any person or
thing. He did not observe Gwendolen; he only felt what she said or did, and the
back of his head seemed to be a good organ of information as to whether she was
in the room or out. Before the end of the first fortnight he was so deeply in
love that it was impossible for him to think of his life except as bound up
with Gwendolen’s. He could see no obstacles, poor boy; his own love
seemed a guarantee of hers, since it was one with the unperturbed delight in
her image, so that he could no more dream of her giving him pain than an
Egyptian could dream of snow. She sang and played to him whenever he liked, was
always glad of his companionship in riding, though his borrowed steeds were
often comic, was ready to join in any fun of his, and showed a right
appreciation of Anna. No mark of sympathy seemed absent. That because Gwendolen
was the most perfect creature in the world she was to make a grand match, had
not occurred to him. He had no conceit—at least not more than goes to
make up the necessary gum and consistence of a substantial personality: it was
only that in the young bliss of loving he took Gwendolen’s perfection as
part of that good which had seemed one with life to him, being the outcome of a
happy, well-embodied nature.</p>
<p>One incident which happened in the course of their dramatic attempts impressed
Rex as a sign of her unusual sensibility. It showed an aspect of her nature
which could not have been preconceived by any one who, like him, had only seen
her habitual fearlessness in active exercises and her high spirits in society.</p>
<p>After a good deal of rehearsing it was resolved that a select party should be
invited to Offendene to witness the performances which went with so much
satisfaction to the actors. Anna had caused a pleasant surprise; nothing could
be neater than the way in which she played her little parts; one would even
have suspected her of hiding much sly observation under her simplicity. And Mr.
Middleton answered very well by not trying to be comic. The main source of
doubt and retardation had been Gwendolen’s desire to appear in her Greek
dress. No word for a charade would occur to her either waking or dreaming that
suited her purpose of getting a statuesque pose in this favorite costume. To
choose a motive from Racine was of no use, since Rex and the others could not
declaim French verse, and improvised speeches would turn the scene into
burlesque. Besides, Mr. Gascoigne prohibited the acting of scenes from plays:
he usually protested against the notion that an amusement which was fitting for
every one else was unfitting for a clergyman; but he would not in this matter
overstep the line of decorum as drawn in that part of Wessex, which did not
exclude his sanction of the young people’s acting charades in his
sister-in-law’s house—a very different affair from private
theatricals in the full sense of the word.</p>
<p>Everybody of course was concerned to satisfy this wish of Gwendolen’s,
and Rex proposed that they should wind up with a tableau in which the effect of
her majesty would not be marred by any one’s speech. This pleased her
thoroughly, and the only question was the choice of the tableau.</p>
<p>“Something pleasant, children, I beseech you,” said Mrs. Davilow;
“I can’t have any Greek wickedness.”</p>
<p>“It is no worse than Christian wickedness, mamma,” said Gwendolen,
whose mention of Rachelesque heroines had called forth that remark.</p>
<p>“And less scandalous,” said Rex. “Besides, one thinks of it
as all gone by and done with. What do you say to Briseis being led away? I
would be Achilles, and you would be looking round at me—after the print
we have at the rectory.”</p>
<p>“That would be a good attitude for me,” said Gwendolen, in a tone
of acceptance. But afterward she said with decision, “No. It will not do.
There must be three men in proper costume, else it will be ridiculous.”</p>
<p>“I have it,” said Rex, after a little reflection. “Hermione
as the statue in Winter’s Tale? I will be Leontes, and Miss Merry,
Paulina, one on each side. Our dress won’t signify,” he went on
laughingly; “it will be more Shakespearian and romantic if Leontes looks
like Napoleon, and Paulina like a modern spinster.”</p>
<p>And Hermione was chosen; all agreeing that age was of no consequence, but
Gwendolen urged that instead of the mere tableau there should be just enough
acting of the scene to introduce the striking up of the music as a signal for
her to step down and advance; when Leontes, instead of embracing her, was to
kneel and kiss the hem of her garment, and so the curtain was to fall. The
antechamber with folding doors lent itself admirably to the purpose of a stage,
and the whole of the establishment, with the addition of Jarrett the village
carpenter, was absorbed in the preparations for an entertainment, which,
considering that it was an imitation of acting, was likely to be successful,
since we know from ancient fable that an imitation may have more chance of
success than the original.</p>
<p>Gwendolen was not without a special exultation in the prospect of this
occasion, for she knew that Herr Klesmer was again at Quetcham, and she had
taken care to include him among the invited.</p>
<p>Klesmer came. He was in one of his placid, silent moods, and sat in serene
contemplation, replying to all appeals in benignant-sounding syllables more or
less articulate—as taking up his cross meekly in a world overgrown with
amateurs, or as careful how he moved his lion paws lest he should crush a
rampant and vociferous mouse.</p>
<p>Everything indeed went off smoothly and according to expectation—all that
was improvised and accidental being of a probable sort—until the incident
occurred which showed Gwendolen in an unforeseen phase of emotion. How it came
about was at first a mystery.</p>
<p>The tableau of Hermione was doubly striking from its dissimilarity with what
had gone before: it was answering perfectly, and a murmur of applause had been
gradually suppressed while Leontes gave his permission that Paulina should
exercise her utmost art and make the statue move.</p>
<p>Hermione, her arm resting on a pillar, was elevated by about six inches, which
she counted on as a means of showing her pretty foot and instep, when at the
given signal she should advance and descend.</p>
<p>“Music, awake her, strike!” said Paulina (Mrs. Davilow, who, by
special entreaty, had consented to take the part in a white burnous and hood).</p>
<p>Herr Klesmer, who had been good-natured enough to seat himself at the piano,
struck a thunderous chord—but in the same instant, and before Hermione
had put forth her foot, the movable panel, which was on a line with the piano,
flew open on the right opposite the stage and disclosed the picture of the dead
face and the fleeing figure, brought out in pale definiteness by the position
of the wax-lights. Everyone was startled, but all eyes in the act of turning
toward the open panel were recalled by a piercing cry from Gwendolen, who stood
without change of attitude, but with a change of expression that was terrifying
in its terror. She looked like a statue into which a soul of Fear had entered:
her pallid lips were parted; her eyes, usually narrowed under their long
lashes, were dilated and fixed. Her mother, less surprised than alarmed, rushed
toward her, and Rex, too, could not help going to her side. But the touch of
her mother’s arm had the effect of an electric charge; Gwendolen fell on
her knees and put her hands before her face. She was still trembling, but mute,
and it seemed that she had self-consciousness enough to aim at controlling her
signs of terror, for she presently allowed herself to be raised from her
kneeling posture and led away, while the company were relieving their minds by
explanation.</p>
<p>“A magnificent bit of <i>plastik</i> that!” said Klesmer to Miss
Arrowpoint. And a quick fire of undertoned question and answer went round.</p>
<p>“Was it part of the play?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, surely not. Miss Harleth was too much affected. A sensitive
creature!”</p>
<p>“Dear me! I was not aware that there was a painting behind that panel;
were you?”</p>
<p>“No; how should I? Some eccentricity in one of the Earl’s family
long ago, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“How very painful! Pray shut it up.”</p>
<p>“Was the door locked? It is very mysterious. It must be the
spirits.”</p>
<p>“But there is no medium present.”</p>
<p>“How do you know that? We must conclude that there is, when such things
happen.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the door was not locked; it was probably the sudden vibration from
the piano that sent it open.”</p>
<p>This conclusion came from Mr. Gascoigne, who begged Miss Merry if possible to
get the key. But this readiness to explain the mystery was thought by Mrs.
Vulcany unbecoming in a clergyman, and she observed in an undertone that Mr.
Gascoigne was always a little too worldly for her taste. However, the key was
produced, and the rector turned it in the lock with an emphasis rather
offensively rationalizing—as who should say, “it will not start
open again”—putting the key in his pocket as a security.</p>
<p>However, Gwendolen soon reappeared, showing her usual spirits, and evidently
determined to ignore as far as she could the striking change she had made in
the part of Hermione.</p>
<p>But when Klesmer said to her, “We have to thank you for devising a
perfect climax: you could not have chosen a finer bit of <i>plastik</i>,”
there was a flush of pleasure in her face. She liked to accept as a belief what
was really no more than delicate feigning. He divined that the betrayal into a
passion of fear had been mortifying to her, and wished her to understand that
he took it for good acting. Gwendolen cherished the idea that now he was struck
with her talent as well as her beauty, and her uneasiness about his opinion was
half turned to complacency.</p>
<p>But too many were in the secret of what had been included in the rehearsals,
and what had not, and no one besides Klesmer took the trouble to soothe
Gwendolen’s imagined mortification. The general sentiment was that the
incident should be let drop.</p>
<p>There had really been a medium concerned in the starting open of the panel: one
who had quitted the room in haste and crept to bed in much alarm of conscience.
It was the small Isabel, whose intense curiosity, unsatisfied by the brief
glimpse she had had of the strange picture on the day of arrival at Offendene,
had kept her on the watch for an opportunity of finding out where Gwendolen had
put the key, of stealing it from the discovered drawer when the rest of the
family were out, and getting on a stool to unlock the panel. While she was
indulging her thirst for knowledge in this way, a noise which she feared was an
approaching footstep alarmed her: she closed the door and attempted hurriedly
to lock it, but failing and not daring to linger, she withdrew the key and
trusted that the panel would stick, as it seemed well inclined to do. In this
confidence she had returned the key to its former place, stilling any anxiety
by the thought that if the door were discovered to be unlocked nobody would
know how the unlocking came about. The inconvenient Isabel, like other
offenders, did not foresee her own impulse to confession, a fatality which came
upon her the morning after the party, when Gwendolen said at the
breakfast-table, “I know the door was locked before the housekeeper gave
me the key, for I tried it myself afterward. Some one must have been to my
drawer and taken the key.”</p>
<p>It seemed to Isabel that Gwendolen’s awful eyes had rested on her more
than on the other sisters, and without any time for resolve, she said, with a
trembling lip:</p>
<p>“Please forgive me, Gwendolen.”</p>
<p>The forgiveness was sooner bestowed than it would have been if Gwendolen had
not desired to dismiss from her own and every one else’s memory any case
in which she had shown her susceptibility to terror. She wondered at herself in
these occasional experiences, which seemed like a brief remembered madness, an
unexplained exception from her normal life; and in this instance she felt a
peculiar vexation that her helpless fear had shown itself, not, as usual, in
solitude, but in well-lit company. Her ideal was to be daring in speech and
reckless in braving dangers, both moral and physical; and though her practice
fell far behind her ideal, this shortcoming seemed to be due to the pettiness
of circumstances, the narrow theatre which life offers to a girl of twenty, who
cannot conceive herself as anything else than a lady, or as in any position
which would lack the tribute of respect. She had no permanent consciousness of
other fetters, or of more spiritual restraints, having always disliked whatever
was presented to her under the name of religion, in the same way that some
people dislike arithmetic and accounts: it had raised no other emotion in her,
no alarm, no longing; so that the question whether she believed it had not
occurred to her any more than it had occurred to her to inquire into the
conditions of colonial property and banking, on which, as she had had many
opportunities of knowing, the family fortune was dependent. All these facts
about herself she would have been ready to admit, and even, more or less
indirectly, to state. What she unwillingly recognized, and would have been glad
for others to be unaware of, was that liability of hers to fits of spiritual
dread, though this fountain of awe within her had not found its way into
connection with the religion taught her or with any human relations. She was
ashamed and frightened, as at what might happen again, in remembering her
tremor on suddenly feeling herself alone, when, for example, she was walking
without companionship and there came some rapid change in the light. Solitude
in any wide scene impressed her with an undefined feeling of immeasurable
existence aloof from her, in the midst of which she was helplessly incapable of
asserting herself. The little astronomy taught her at school used sometimes to
set her imagination at work in a way that made her tremble: but always when
some one joined her she recovered her indifference to the vastness in which she
seemed an exile; she found again her usual world in which her will was of some
avail, and the religious nomenclature belonging to this world was no more
identified for her with those uneasy impressions of awe than her uncle’s
surplices seen out of use at the rectory. With human ears and eyes about her,
she had always hitherto recovered her confidence, and felt the possibility of
winning empire.</p>
<p>To her mamma and others her fits of timidity or terror were sufficiently
accounted for by her “sensitiveness” or the “excitability of
her nature”; but these explanatory phrases required conciliation with
much that seemed to be blank indifference or rare self-mastery. Heat is a great
agent and a useful word, but considered as a means of explaining the universe
it requires an extensive knowledge of differences; and as a means of explaining
character “sensitiveness” is in much the same predicament. But who,
loving a creature like Gwendolen, would not be inclined to regard every
peculiarity in her as a mark of pre-eminence? That was what Rex did. After the
Hermione scene he was more persuaded than ever that she must be instinct with
all feeling, and not only readier to respond to a worshipful love, but able to
love better than other girls. Rex felt the summer on his young wings and soared
happily.</p>
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