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glee; the infantine sparkle was exhaled for the night: she was soft, thoughtful, and docile. It was pretty to see her bid good-night; her manner to Graham was touched with dignity: in her very slight smile and quiet bow spoke the Countess, and Graham could not but look grave, and bend responsive. I saw he hardly knew how to blend together in his ideas the dancing fairy and delicate dame.
Next day, when we were all assembled round the breakfast table, shivering and fresh from the morning's chill ablutions, Mrs. Bretton pronounced a decree that nobody, who was not forced by dire necessity, should quit her house that day.
Indeed, egress seemed next to impossible; the drift darkened the lower panes of the casement, and, on looking out, one saw the sky and air vexed and dim, the wind and snow in angry conflict. There was no fall now, but what had already descended was torn up from the earth, whirled round by brief shrieking gusts, and cast into a hundred fantastic forms.
The Countess seconded Mrs. Bretton.
»Papa shall not go out,« said she, placing a seat for herself beside her father's arm-chair. »I will look after him. You won't go into town, will you, papa?«
»Aye, and No,« was the answer. »If you and Mrs. Bretton are
very
good to me, Polly – kind, you know, and attentive; if you pet me in a very nice manner, and make much of me, I may possibly be induced to wait an hour after breakfast and see whether this razor-edged wind settles. But, you see, you give me no breakfast; you offer me nothing: you let me starve.«
»Quick! please, Mrs. Bretton, and pour out the coffee,« entreated Paulina, »whilst I take care of the Count de Bassompierre in other respects: since he grew into a Count, he has needed
so
much attention.«
She separated and prepared a roll.
»There, papa, are your ›pistolets‹ charged?« said she. »And there is some marmalade, just the same sort of marmalade we used to have at Bretton, and which you said was as good as if it had been conserved in Scotland –«
»And which your little ladyship used to beg for my boy – do you remember that?« interposed Mrs. Bretton. »Have you forgotten how you would come to my elbow and touch my sleeve with the whisper, ›please ma'am, something good for Graham – a little marmalade, or honey, or jam?‹«
»No, mama,« broke in Dr. John, laughing, yet reddening; »it surely was not so: I could not have cared for these things.«
»Did he or did he not, Paulina?«
»He liked them,« asserted Paulina.
»Never blush for it, John,« said Mr. Home, encouragingly. »I like them myself yet, and always did. And Polly showed her sense in catering for a friend's material comforts: it was I who put her into the way of such good manners – nor do I let her forget them. Polly, offer me a small slice of that tongue.«
»There, papa: but remember you are only waited upon with this assiduity, on condition of being persuadable, and reconciling yourself to La Terrasse for the day.«
»Mrs. Bretton,« said the Count, »I want to get rid of my daughter, to send her to school. Do you know of any good school?«
»There is Lucy's place – Madame Beck's.«
»Miss Snowe is in a school?«
»I am a teacher,« I said, and was rather glad of the opportunity of saying this. For a little while I had been feeling as if placed in a false position. Mrs. Bretton and son knew my circumstances; but the Count and his daughter did not. They might choose to vary by some shades their hitherto cordial manner towards me, when aware of my grade in society. I spoke then readily: but a swarm of thoughts, I had not anticipated nor invoked, rose dim at the words, making me sigh involuntarily. Mr. Home did not lift his eyes from his breakfast-plate for about two minutes, nor did he speak; perhaps he had not caught the words – perhaps he thought that on a confession of that nature, politeness would interdict comment: the Scotch are proverbially proud; and homely as was Mr. Home in look, simple in habits and tastes, I have all along intimated that he was not without his share of the national quality. Was his a pseudo pride? was it real dignity? I leave the question undecided in its wide sense. Where it concerned me individually I can only answer: then, and always, he showed himself a true-hearted gentleman.
By nature he was a feeler and a thinker; over his emotions and his reflections spread a mellowing of melancholy; more than a mellowing: in trouble and bereavement it became a
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