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<h3>CHAPTER IV. Madame Melmotte's Ball</h3>
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<br/>The next night but one after that of the gambling transaction at
the Beargarden, a great ball was given in Grosvenor Square. It
was a ball on a scale so magnificent that it had been talked about
ever since Parliament met, now about a fortnight since. Some
people had expressed an opinion that such a ball as this was intended
to be could not be given successfully in February. Others
declared that the money which was to be spent,—an amount which would
make this affair quite new in the annals of ball-giving,—would give
the thing such a character that it would certainly be
successful. And much more than money had been expended.
Almost incredible efforts had been made to obtain the cooperation of
great people, and these efforts had at last been grandly
successful. The Duchess of Stevenage had come up from Castle
Albury herself to be present at it and to bring her daughters, though
it has never been her Grace's wont to be in London at this inclement
season. No doubt the persuasion used with the Duchess had been
very strong. Her brother, Lord Alfred Grendall, was known to be
in great difficulties, which,—so people said,—had been considerably
modified by opportune pecuniary assistance. And then it was
certain that one of the young Grendalls, Lord Alfred's second son,
had been appointed to some mercantile position, for which he received
a salary which his most intimate friends thought that he was hardly
qualified to earn. It was certainly a fact that he went to
Abchurch Lane, in the City, four or five days a week, and that he did
not occupy his time in so unaccustomed a manner for nothing.
Where the Duchess of Stevenage went all the world would go. And
it became known at the last moment, that is to say only the day
before the party, that a prince of the blood royal was to be
there. How this had been achieved nobody quite understood; but
there were rumours that a certain lady's jewels had been rescued from
the pawnbroker's. Everything was done on the same scale.
The Prime Minister had indeed declined to allow his name to appear on
the list; but one Cabinet Minister and two or three under-secretaries
had agreed to come because it was felt that the giver of the ball
might before long be the master of considerable parliamentary
interest. It was believed that he had an eye to politics, and
it is always wise to have great wealth on one's own side. There
had at one time been much solicitude about the ball. Many
anxious thoughts had been given. When great attempts fail, the
failure is disastrous, and may be ruinous. But this ball had
now been put beyond the chance of failure.
<br/>The giver of the ball was Augustus Melmotte, Esq., the father of
the girl whom Sir Felix Carbury desired to marry, and the husband of
the lady who was said to have been a Bohemian Jewess. It was
thus that the gentleman chose to have himself designated, though
within the last two years he had arrived in London from Paris, and
had at first been known as M. Melmotte. But he had declared of
himself that he had been born in England, and that he was an
Englishman. He admitted that his wife was a foreigner,—an
admission that was necessary as she spoke very little English.
Melmotte himself spoke his "native" language fluently, but with an
accent which betrayed at least a long expatriation. Miss
Melmotte,—who a very short time since had been known as Mademoiselle
Marie,—spoke English well, but as a foreigner. In regard to her
it was acknowledged that she had been born out of England,—some said
in New York; but Madame Melmotte, who must have known, had declared
that the great event had taken place in Paris.
<br/>It was at any rate an established fact that Mr Melmotte had made
his wealth in France. He no doubt had had enormous dealings in
other countries, as to which stories were told which must surely have
been exaggerated. It was said that he had made a railway across
Russia, that he provisioned the Southern army in the American civil
war, that he had supplied Austria with arms, and had at one time
bought up all the iron in England. He could make or mar any
company by buying or selling stock, and could make money dear or cheap
as he pleased. All this was said of him in his praise,—but
it was also said that he was regarded in Paris as the most gigantic
swindler that had ever lived; that he had made that City too hot to
hold him; that he had endeavoured to establish himself in Vienna, but
had been warned away by the police; and that he had at length found
that British freedom would alone allow him to enjoy, without
persecution, the fruits of his industry. He was now established
privately in Grosvenor Square and officially in Abchurch Lane; and it
was known to all the world that a Royal Prince, a Cabinet Minister,
and the very cream of duchesses were going to his wife's ball.
All this had been done within twelve months.
<br/>There was but one child in the family, one heiress for all this
wealth. Melmotte himself was a large man, with bushy whiskers
and rough thick hair, with heavy eyebrows, and a wonderful look of
power about his mouth and chin. This was so strong as to redeem
his face from vulgarity; but the countenance and appearance of the
man were on the whole unpleasant, and, I may say,
untrustworthy. He looked as though he were purse-proud and a
bully. She was fat and fair,—unlike in colour to our traditional
Jewesses; but she had the Jewish nose and the Jewish contraction of
the eyes. There was certainly very little in Madame Melmotte to
recommend her, unless it was a readiness to spend money on any object
that might be suggested to her by her new acquaintances. It
sometimes seemed that she had a commission from her husband to give
away presents to any who would accept them. The world had
received the man as Augustus Melmotte, Esq. The world so addressed
him on the very numerous letters which reached him, and so inscribed
him among the directors of three dozen companies to which he
belonged. But his wife was still Madame Melmotte. The
daughter had been allowed to take her rank with an English
title. She was now Miss Melmotte on all occasions.
<br/>Marie Melmotte had been accurately described by Felix Carbury to
his mother. She was not beautiful, she was not clever, and she
was not a saint. But then neither was she plain, nor stupid,
nor, especially, a sinner. She was a little thing, hardly over
twenty years of age, very unlike her father or mother, having no
trace of the Jewess in her countenance, who seemed to be overwhelmed
by the sense of her own position. With such people as the
Melmottes things go fast, and it was very well known that Miss
Melmotte had already had one lover who had been nearly
accepted. The affair, however, had gone off. In this
"going off" no one imputed to the young lady blame or even
misfortune. It was not supposed that she had either jilted or
been jilted. As in royal espousals interests of State regulate
their expedience with an acknowledged absence, with even a proclaimed
impossibility, of personal predilections, so in this case was money
allowed to have the same weight. Such a marriage would or would
not be sanctioned in accordance with great pecuniary
arrangements. The young Lord Nidderdale, the eldest son of the
Marquis of Auld Reekie, had offered to take the girl and make her
Marchioness in the process of time for half a million down.
Melmotte had not objected to the sum,—so it was said,—but had
proposed to tie it up. Nidderdale had desired to have it free
in his own grasp, and would not move on any other terms.
Melmotte had been anxious to secure the Marquis,—very anxious to
secure the Marchioness; for at that time terms had not been made with
the Duchess; but at last he had lost his temper, and had asked his
lordship's lawyer whether it was likely that he would entrust such a
sum of money to such a man. "You are willing to trust your only
child to him," said the lawyer. Melmotte scowled at the man for
a few seconds from under his bushy eyebrows; then told him that his
answer had nothing in it, and marched out of the room. So that
affair was over. I doubt whether Lord Nidderdale had ever said
a word of love to Marie Melmotte,—or whether the poor girl had
expected it. Her destiny had no doubt been explained to her.
<br/>Others had tried and had broken down somewhat in the same
fashion. Each had treated the girl as an encumbrance he was to
undertake,—at a very great price. But as affairs prospered
with the Melmottes, as princes and duchesses were obtained by other
means,—costly no doubt, but not so ruinously costly,—the immediate
disposition of Marie became less necessary, and Melmotte reduced his
offers. The girl herself, too, began to have an opinion.
It was said that she had absolutely rejected Lord Grasslough, whose
father indeed was in a state of bankruptcy, who had no income of his
own, who was ugly, vicious, ill-tempered, and without any power of
recommending himself to a girl. She had had experience since
Lord Nidderdale, with a half laugh, had told her that he might just
as well take her for his wife, and was now tempted from time to time
to contemplate her own happiness and her own condition. People
around were beginning to say that if Sir Felix Carbury managed his
affairs well he might be the happy man.
<br/>There was a considerable doubt whether Marie was the daughter of
that Jewish-looking woman. Enquiries had been made, but not
successfully, as to the date of the Melmotte marriage. There
was an idea abroad that Melmotte had got his first money with his
wife, and had gotten it not very long ago. Then other people
said that Marie was not his daughter at all. Altogether the
mystery was rather pleasant as the money was certain. Of the
certainty of the money in daily use there could be no doubt.
There was the house. There was the furniture. There were
the carriages, the horses, the servants with the livery coats and
powdered heads, and the servants with the black coats and unpowdered
heads. There were the gems, and the presents, and all the nice
things that money can buy. There were two dinner parties every
day, one at two o'clock called lunch, and the other at eight.
The tradesmen had learned enough to be quite free of doubt, and in
the City Mr Melmotte's name was worth any money,—though his character
was perhaps worth but little.
<br/>The large house on the south side of Grosvenor Square was all
ablaze by ten o'clock. The broad verandah had been turned into
a conservatory, had been covered with boards contrived to look like
trellis-work, was heated with hot air and filled with exotics at some
fabulous price. A covered way had been made from the door, down
across the pathway, to the road, and the police had, I fear, been
bribed to frighten foot passengers into a belief that they were bound
to go round. The house had been so arranged that it was
impossible to know where you were, when once in it. The hall
was a paradise. The staircase was fairyland. The lobbies
were grottoes rich with ferns. Walls had been knocked away and
arches had been constructed. The leads behind had been
supported and walled in, and covered and carpeted. The ball had
possession of the ground floor and first floor, and the house seemed
to be endless. "It's to cost sixty thousand pounds," said the
Marchioness of Auld Reekie to her old friend the Countess of
Mid-Lothian. The Marchioness had come in spite of her son's
misfortune when she heard that the Duchess of Stevenage was to be
there. "And worse spent money never was wasted," said the
Countess. "By all accounts it was as badly come by," said the
Marchioness. Then the two old noblewomen, one after the other,
made graciously flattering speeches to the much-worn Bohemian Jewess,
who was standing in fairyland to receive her guests, almost fainting
under the greatness of the occasion.
<br/>The three saloons on the first or drawing-room floor had been
prepared for dancing, and here Marie was stationed. The Duchess
had however undertaken to see that somebody should set the dancing
going, and she had commissioned her nephew Miles Grendall, the young
gentleman who now frequented the City, to give directions to the band
and to make himself generally useful. Indeed, there had sprung
up a considerable intimacy between the Grendall family,—that is Lord
Alfred's branch of the Grendalls,—and the Melmottes; which was as it
should be, as each could give much and each receive much. It
was known that Lord Alfred had not a shilling; but his brother was a
duke and his sister was a duchess, and for the last thirty years
there had been one continual anxiety for poor dear Alfred, who had
tumbled into an unfortunate marriage without a shilling, had spent
his own moderate patrimony, had three sons and three daughters, and
had lived now for a very long time entirely on the unwilling
contributions of his noble relatives. Melmotte could support
the whole family in affluence without feeling the burden;—and why
should he not? There had once been an idea that Miles should
attempt to win the heiress, but it had soon been found expedient to
abandon it. Miles had no title, no position of his own, and was
hardly big enough for the place. It was in all respects better
that the waters of the fountain should be allowed to irrigate mildly
the whole Grendall family;—and so Miles went into the city.
<br/>The ball was opened by a quadrille in which Lord Buntingford, the
eldest son of the Duchess, stood up with Marie. Various
arrangements had been made, and this among them. We may say
that it had been a part of the bargain. Lord Buntingford had
objected mildly, being a young man devoted to business, fond of his
own order, rather shy, and not given to dancing. But he had
allowed his mother to prevail. "Of course they are vulgar," the
Duchess had said,—"so much so as to be no longer distasteful because
of the absurdity of the thing. I dare say he hasn't been very
honest. When men make so much money, I don't know how they can
have been honest. Of course it's done for a purpose. It's
all very well saying that it isn't right, but what are we to do about
Alfred's children? Miles is to have £500 a-year. And then
he is always about the house. And between you and me they have
got up those bills of Alfred's, and have said they can lie in their
safe till it suits your uncle to pay them."
<br/>"They will lie there a long time," said Lord Buntingford.
<br/>"Of course they expect something in return; do dance with the girl
once." Lord Buntingford disapproved mildly, and did as his
mother asked him.
<br/>The affair went off very well. There were three or four
card-tables in one of the lower rooms, and at one of them sat Lord
Alfred Grendall and Mr Melmotte, with two or three other players,
cutting in and out at the end of each rubber. Playing whist was
Lord Alfred's only accomplishment, and almost the only occupation of
his life. He began it daily at his club at three o'clock, and
continued playing till two in the morning with an interval of a
couple of hours for his dinner. This he did during ten months
of the year, and during the other two he frequented some
watering-place at which whist prevailed. He did not gamble,
never playing for more than the club stakes and bets. He gave
to the matter his whole mind, and must have excelled those who were
generally opposed to him. But so obdurate was fortune to Lord
Alfred that he could not make money even of whist. Melmotte was
very anxious to get into Lord Alfred's club,—The Peripatetics.
It was pleasant to see the grace with which he lost his money, and
the sweet intimacy with which he called his lordship Alfred.
Lord Alfred had a remnant of feeling left, and would have liked to
kick him. Though Melmotte was by far the bigger man, and was
also the younger, Lord Alfred would not have lacked the pluck to kick
him. Lord Alfred, in spite of his habitual idleness and vapid
uselessness, had still left about him a dash of vigour, and sometimes
thought that he would kick Melmotte and have done with it. But
there were his poor boys, and those bills in Melmotte's safe.
And then Melmotte lost his points so regularly, and paid his bets
with such absolute good humour! "Come and have a glass of
champagne, Alfred," Melmotte said, as the two cut out together.
Lord Alfred liked champagne, and followed his host; but as he went he
almost made up his mind that on some future day he would kick the
man.
<br/>Late in the evening Marie Melmotte was waltzing with Felix
Carbury, and Henrietta Carbury was then standing by talking to one Mr
Paul Montague. Lady Carbury was also there. She was not
well inclined either to balls or to such people as the Melmottes; nor
was Henrietta. But Felix had suggested that, bearing in mind
his prospects as to the heiress, they had better accept the
invitation which he would cause to have sent to them. They did
so; and then Paul Montague also got a card, not altogether to Lady
Carbury's satisfaction. Lady Carbury was very gracious to
Madame Melmotte for two minutes, and then slid into a chair expecting
nothing but misery for the evening. She, however, was a woman
who could do her duty and endure without complaint.
<br/>"It is the first great ball I ever was at in London," said Hetta
Carbury to Paul Montague.
<br/>"And how do you like it?"
<br/>"Not at all. How should I like it? I know nobody
here. I don't understand how it is that at these parties people
do know each other, or whether they all go dancing about without
knowing."
<br/>"Just that; I suppose when they are used to it they get introduced
backwards and forwards, and then they can know each other as fast as
they like. If you would wish to dance why don't you dance with
me?"
<br/>"I have danced with you,—twice already."
<br/>"Is there any law against dancing three times?"
<br/>"But I don't especially want to dance," said Henrietta. "I
think I'll go and console poor mamma, who has got nobody to speak to
her." Just at this moment, however, Lady Carbury was not in
that wretched condition, as an unexpected friend had come to her
relief.
<br/>Sir Felix and Marie Melmotte had been spinning round and round
throughout a long waltz, thoroughly enjoying the excitement of the
music and the movement. To give Felix Carbury what little
praise might be his due, it is necessary to say that he did not lack
physical activity. He would dance, and ride, and shoot eagerly,
with an animation that made him happy for the moment. It was an
affair not of thought or calculation, but of physical
organisation. And Marie Melmotte had been thoroughly
happy. She loved dancing with all her heart if she could only
dance in a manner pleasant to herself.
<br/>She had been warned especially as to some men,—that she should not
dance with them. She had been almost thrown into Lord
Nidderdale's arms, and had been prepared to take him at her father's
bidding. But she had never had the slightest pleasure in his
society, and had only not been wretched because she had not as yet
recognised that she had an identity of her own in the disposition of
which she herself should have a voice. She certainly had never
cared to dance with Lord Nidderdale. Lord Grasslough she had
absolutely hated, though at first she had hardly dared to say
so. One or two others had been obnoxious to her in different
ways, but they had passed on, or were passing on, out of her
way. There was no one at the present moment whom she had been
commanded by her father to accept should an offer be made. But
she did like dancing with Sir Felix Carbury. It was not only
that the man was handsome but that he had a power of changing the
expression of his countenance, a play of face, which belied
altogether his real disposition. He could seem to be hearty and
true till the moment came in which he had really to expose his
heart,—or to try to expose it. Then he failed, knowing nothing
about it. But in the approaches to intimacy with a girl he could
be very successful. He had already nearly got beyond this with
Marie Melmotte; but Marie was by no means quick in discovering his
deficiencies. To her he had seemed like a god. If she
might be allowed to be wooed by Sir Felix Carbury, and to give
herself to him, she thought that she would be contented.
<br/>"How well you dance," said Sir Felix, as soon as he had breath for
speaking.
<br/>"Do I?" She spoke with a slightly foreign accent, which gave
a little prettiness to her speech. "I was never told so.
But nobody ever told me anything about myself."
<br/>"I should like to tell you everything about yourself, from the
beginning to the end."
<br/>"Ah,—but you don't know."
<br/>"I would find out. I think I could make some good
guesses. I'll tell you what you would like best in all the
world."
<br/>"What is that?"
<br/>"Somebody that liked you best in all the world."
<br/>"Ah,—yes; if one knew who?"
<br/>"How can you know, Miss Melmotte, but by believing?"
<br/>"That is not the way to know. If a girl told me that she
liked me better than any other girl, I should not know it, just
because she said so. I should have to find it out."
<br/>"And if a gentleman told you so?"
<br/>"I shouldn't believe him a bit, and I should not care to find
out. But I should like to have some girl for a friend whom I
could love, oh, ten times better than myself."
<br/>"So should I."
<br/>"Have you no particular friend?"
<br/>"I mean a girl whom I could love,—oh, ten times better than
myself."
<br/>"Now you are laughing at me, Sir Felix," said Miss Melmotte.
<br/>"I wonder whether that will come to anything?" said Paul Montague
to Miss Carbury. They had come back into the drawing-room, and
had been watching the approaches to love-making which the baronet
was opening.
<br/>"You mean Felix and Miss Melmotte. I hate to think of such
things, Mr Montague."
<br/>"It would be a magnificent chance for him."
<br/>"To marry a girl, the daughter of vulgar people, just because she
will have a great deal of money? He can't care for her
really,—because she is rich."
<br/>"But he wants money so dreadfully! It seems to me that there
is no other condition of things under which Felix can face the world,
but by being the husband of an heiress."
<br/>"What a dreadful thing to say!"
<br/>"But isn't it true? He has beggared himself."
<br/>"Oh, Mr Montague."
<br/>"And he will beggar you and your mother."
<br/>"I don't care about myself."
<br/>"Others do though." As he said this he did not look at her,
but spoke through his teeth, as if he were angry both with himself
and her.
<br/>"I did not think you would have spoken so harshly of Felix."
<br/>"I don't speak harshly of him, Miss Carbury. I haven't said
that it was his own fault. He seems to be one of those who have
been born to spend money; and as this girl will have plenty of money
to spend, I think it would be a good thing if he were to marry
her. If Felix had £20,000 a year, everybody would think him the
finest fellow in the world." In saying this, however, Mr Paul
Montague showed himself unfit to gauge the opinion of the
world. Whether Sir Felix be rich or poor, the world,
evil-hearted as it is, will never think him a fine fellow.
<br/>Lady Carbury had been seated for nearly half an hour in
uncomplaining solitude under a bust, when she was delighted by the
appearance of Mr Ferdinand Alf. "You here?" she said.
<br/>"Why not? Melmotte and I are brother adventurers."
<br/>"I should have thought you would find so little here to amuse you."
<br/>"I have found you; and, in addition to that, duchesses and their
daughters without number. They expect Prince George!"
<br/>"Do they?"
<br/>"And Legge Wilson from the India Office is here already. I
spoke to him in some jewelled bower as I made my way here, not five
minutes since. It's quite a success. Don't you think it
very nice, Lady Carbury?"
<br/>"I don't know whether you are joking or in earnest."
<br/>"I never joke. I say it is very nice. These people are
spending thousands upon thousands to gratify you and me and others,
and all they want in return is a little countenance."
<br/>"Do you mean to give it then?"
<br/>"I am giving it them."
<br/>"Ah,—but the countenance of the 'Evening Pulpit.' Do you
mean to give them that?"
<br/>"Well; it is not in our line exactly to give a catalogue of names
and to record ladies' dresses. Perhaps it may be better for our
host himself that he should be kept out of the newspapers."
<br/>"Are you going to be very severe upon poor me, Mr Alf?" said the
lady after a pause.
<br/>"We are never severe upon anybody, Lady Carbury. Here's the
Prince. What will they do with him now they've caught
him! Oh, they're going to make him dance with the
heiress. Poor heiress!"
<br/>"Poor Prince!" said Lady Carbury.
<br/>"Not at all. She's a nice little girl enough, and he'll have
nothing to trouble him. But how is she, poor thing, to talk to
royal blood?"
<br/>Poor thing indeed! The Prince was brought into the big room
where Marie was still being talked to by Felix Carbury, and was at
once made to understand that she was to stand up and dance with
royalty. The introduction was managed in a very business-like
manner. Miles Grendall first came in and found the female
victim; the Duchess followed with the male victim. Madame
Melmotte, who had been on her legs till she was ready to sink,
waddled behind, but was not allowed to take any part in the
affair. The band were playing a galop, but that was stopped at
once, to the great confusion of the dancers. In two minutes
Miles Grendall had made up a set. He stood up with his aunt,
the Duchess, as vis-à-vis to Marie and the Prince, till, about
the middle of the quadrille, Legge Wilson was found and made to take
his place. Lord Buntingford had gone away; but then there were
still present two daughters of the Duchess who were rapidly
caught. Sir Felix Carbury, being good-looking and having a
name, was made to dance with one of them, and Lord Grasslough with
the other. There were four other couples, all made up of titled
people, as it was intended that this special dance should be
chronicled, if not in the "Evening Pulpit," in some less serious
daily journal. A paid reporter was present in the house ready
to rush off with the list as soon as the dance should be a realized
fact. The Prince himself did not quite understand why he was
there, but they who marshalled his life for him had so marshalled it
for the present moment. He himself probably knew nothing about
the lady's diamonds which had been rescued, or the considerable
subscription to St. George's Hospital which had been extracted from
Mr Melmotte as a make-weight. Poor Marie felt as though the
burden of the hour would be greater than she could bear, and looked
as though she would have fled had flight been possible. But the
trouble passed quickly, and was not really severe. The Prince
said a word or two between each figure, and did not seem to expect a
reply. He made a few words go a long way, and was well trained
in the work of easing the burden of his own greatness for those who
were for the moment inflicted with it. When the dance was over
he was allowed to escape after the ceremony of a single glass of
champagne drunk in the presence of the hostess. Considerable
skill was shown in keeping the presence of his royal guest a secret
from the host himself till the Prince was gone. Melmotte would
have desired to pour out that glass of wine with his own hands, to
solace his tongue by Royal Highnesses, and would probably have been
troublesome and disagreeable. Miles Grendall had understood all
this and had managed the affair very well. "Bless my soul;—his
Royal Highness come and gone!" exclaimed Melmotte. "You and my
father were so fast at your whist that it was impossible to get you
away," said Miles. Melmotte was not a fool, and understood it
all;—understood not only that it had been thought better that he
should not speak to the Prince, but also that it might be better that
it should be so. He could not have everything at once.
Miles Grendall was very useful to him, and he would not quarrel with
Miles, at any rate as yet.
<br/>"Have another rubber, Alfred?" he said to Miles's father as the
carriages were taking away the guests.
<br/>Lord Alfred had taken sundry glasses of champagne, and for a
moment forgot the bills in the safe, and the good things which his
boys were receiving. "Damn that kind of nonsense," he
said. "Call people by their proper names." Then he left
the house without a further word to the master of it. That
night before they went to sleep Melmotte required from his weary wife
an account of the ball, and especially of Marie's conduct.
"Marie," Madame Melmotte said, "had behaved well, but had certainly
preferred 'Sir Carbury' to any other of the young men."
Hitherto Mr Melmotte had heard very little of Sir Carbury, except
that he was a baronet. Though his eyes and ears were always
open, though he attended to everything, and was a man of sharp
intelligence, he did not yet quite understand the bearing and
sequence of English titles. He knew that he must get for his
daughter either an eldest son, or one absolutely in possession
himself. Sir Felix, he had learned, was only a baronet; but
then he was in possession. He had discovered also that Sir
Felix's son would in course of time also become Sir Felix. He
was not therefore at the present moment disposed to give any positive
orders as to his daughter's conduct to the young baronet. He
did not, however, conceive that the young baronet had as yet
addressed his girl in such words as Felix had in truth used when they
parted. "You know who it is," he whispered, "likes you better
than any one else in the world."
<br/>"Nobody does;—don't, Sir Felix."
<br/>"I do," he said as he held her hand for a minute. He looked
into her face and she thought it very sweet. He had studied the
words as a lesson, and, repeating them as a lesson, he did it fairly
well. He did it well enough at any rate to send the poor girl
to bed with a sweet conviction that at last a man had spoken to her
whom she could love.
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