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ἐσ What a noise somebody is making down stairs!" said Hugh. "I don't think I should ever want to go to large parties, Fleda, do you?"

"I don't know," said Fleda, whose natural taste for soci ety was strongly developed;-"it would depend upon what kind of parties they were."

"I shouldn't like them, I know, of whatever kind," said Hugh. "What are you smiling at?"

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Only Mr. Pickwick's face, that I am drawing here." Hugh came round to look and laugh, and then began again.

"I can't think of anything pleasanter than this room as we are now."

"You should have seen Mr. Carleton's library," said Fleda in a musing tone, going on with her drawing. "Was it so much better than this?"

Fleda's eyes gave a slight glance at the room and then looked down again with a little shake of her head suffi ciently expressive.

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"Well," said Hugh, "you and I do not want any better than this, do we, Fleda?"

Fleda's smile, a most satisfactory one, was divided between him and King.

"I don't believe," said Hugh, "you would have loved that dog near so well if anybody else had given him to you."

"I don't believe I should!-not a quarter," said Fleda with sufficient distinctness.

"I never liked that Mr. Carleton as well as you did." "That is because you did not know him," said Fleda quietly.

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"Do you think he was a good man, Fleda ?" "He was very good to me," said Fleda, always. What rides I did have on that great black horse of his !""A black horse?"

"Yes, a great black horse, strong, but so gentle, and he went so delightfully. His name was Harold. Oh I should like to see that horse!-When I wasn't with him, Mr. Carleton used to ride another, the greatest beauty of a horse, Hugh; a brown Arabian-so slender and delicateher name was Zephyr, and she used to go like the wind to

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be sure. Mr. Carleton said he wouldn't trust me on such a fly-away thing."

"6 But you didn't use to ride alone?" said Hugh.

"Oh no!-and I wouldn't have been afraid if he had chosen to take me on any one."

"But do you think, Fleda, he was a good man? as I

mean?"

"I am sure he was better than a great many others," answered Fleda evasively;-"the worst of him was infinitely better than the best of half the people down stairs,Mr. Sweden included."

"Sweden !—you don't call his name right.”

"The worse it is called, the better, in my opinion," said Fleda.

"

'Well, I don't like him; but what makes you dislike him so much?"

"I don't know--partly because Uncle Rolf and Marion like him so much, I believe--I don't think there is any moral expression in his face."

"I wonder why they like him," said Hugh.

It was a somewhat irregular and desultory education that the two children gathered under this system of things. The masters they had were rather for accomplishments and languages than for anything solid; the rest they worked out for themselves. Fortunately they both loved books, and rational books; and hours and hours, when Mrs. Rossitur and her daughter were paying or receiving visits, they, always together, were stowed away behind the book-cases or in the library window poring patiently over pages of various complexion; the soft turning of the leaves or Fleda's frequent attentions to King the only sound in the room. They walked together, talking of what they had read, though indeed they ranged beyond that into nameless and numberless fields of speculation, where if they sometimes found fruit they as often lost their way. However the habit of ranging was something. Then when they joined the rest of the family at the dinner-table, especially if others were present, and most especially if a certain German gentleman happened to be there who the second winter after their return Fleda thought came very often, she and Hugh would be sure to find the strange talk of the world

that was going on unsuited and wearisome to them, and they would make their escape up stairs again to handle the pencil and to play the flute and to read, and to draw plans for the future, while King crept upon the skirts of his mistress's gown and laid his little head on her feet. Nobody ever thought of sending them to school. Hugh was a child of frail health, and though not often very ill was often near ít; and as for Fleda, she and Hugh were inseparable; and besides by this time her uncle and aunt would almost as soon have thought of taking the mats off their delicate shrubs in winter as of exposing her to any atmosphere less genial than that of home.

For Fleda this doubtful course of mental training wrought singularly well. An uncommonly quick eye and strong memory and clear head, which she had even in childhood, passed over no field of truth or fancy without making their quiet gleanings; and the stores thus gathered, though somewhat miscellaneous and unarranged, were both rich and uncommon, and more than any one or she herself knew. Perhaps such a mind thus left to itself knew a more free and luxuriant growth than could ever have flourished within the confinement of rules. Perhaps a plant at once so strong and so delicate was safest without the hand of the dresser. At all events it was permitted to spring and to put forth all its native gracefulness alike unhindered and unknown. Cherished as little Fleda dearly was, her mind kept company with no one but herself, and Hugh. As to externals,-music was uncommonly loved by both the children, and by both cultivated with great success. So much came under Mrs. Rossitur's knowledge. Also every foreign Signor and Madame that came into the house to teach them spoke with enthusiasm of the apt minds and flexile tongues that honoured their instructions. In private and in public the gentle, docile, and affectionate children answered every wish both of taste and judgment. And perhaps, in a world where education is not understood, their guardians might be pardoned for taking it for granted that all was right where nothing appeared that was wrong; certainly they took no pains to make sure of the fact. In this case, one of a thousand, their neglect was not punished with disappointment. They never found out that Hugh's

mind wanted the strengthening that early skilful training might have given it. His intellectual tastes were not so strong as Fleda's; his reading was more superficial; his gleanings not so sound and in far fewer fields, and they went rather to nourish sentiment and fancy than to stimulate thought or lay up food for it. But his parents saw nothing of this.

The third winter had not passed, when Fleda's discernment saw that Mr. Sweden, as she called him, the German gentleman, would not cease coming to the house till he had carried off Marion with him. Her opinion on the subject was delivered to no one but Hugh.

That winter introduced them to a better acquaintance. One evening Dr. Gregory, an uncle of Mrs. Rossitur's, had been dining with her and was in the drawing-room. Mr. Schwiden had been there too, and he and Marion and one or two other young people had gone out to some popular entertainment. The children knew little of Dr. Gregory but that he was a very respectable-looking elderly gentleman, a little rough in his manners; the doctor had not long been returned from a stay of some years in Europe where he had been collecting rare books for a fine public library, the charge of which was now entrusted to him. After talking some time with Mr. and Mrs. Rossitur the doctor pushed round his chair to take a look at the children. "So that's Amy's child," said he. "That is not my name," said the ward.

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"Come here Amy." little girl coming for

What is then ?"

Elfleda!-Where in the name of all that is auricular you get such an outlandish name?"

"My father gave it to me, sir," said Fleda, with a dignified sobriety which amused the old gentleman.

"Your father!--Hum-I understand. And couldn't your father find a cap that fitted you without going back to the old-fashioned days of King Alfred?"

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Yes sir; it was my grandmother's cap."

"I am afraid your grandmother's cap isn't all of her that's come down to you," said he, tapping his snuff-box and looking at her with a curious twinkle in his eyes. "What do you

call yourself? Haven't you some variations of this tonguetwisting appellative to serve for every day and save trouble?" They call me Fleda," said the little girl, who could not help laughing.

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Nothing better than that?”

Fleda remembered two prettier nick-names which had been hers; but one had been given by dear lips long ago, and she was not going to have it profaned by common use; and "Elfie" belonged to Mr. Carleton. She would own to nothing but Fleda.

"Well Miss Fleda," said the doctor, 66 school?"

"No sir."

are you going to

"You intend to live without such a vulgar thing as learning?"

"No sir-Hugh and I have our lessons at home?"
"Teaching each other, I suppose?"
"Ono, sir," said Fleda laughing

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"Mme. Lascelles and

Mr. Schweppenhesser and Signor Barytone come to teach us, besides our music masters."

"Do you ever talk German with this Mr. What's-his-name who has just gone out with your cousin Marion ?"

"I never talk to him at all, sir."

"Don't you? why not? Don't you like him?"

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Fleda said "not particularly," and seemed to wish to let the subject pass, but the doctor was amused and pressed it. Why why don't you like him?" said he; "I am sure he's a fine-looking dashing gentleman,-dresses as well as anybody, and talks as much as most people,-why don't you like him? Isn't he a handsome fellow, eh?”

"I dare say he is, to many people," said Fleda.

"She said she didn't think there was any moral expres sion in his face," said Hugh, by way of settling the matter. "Moral expression!" cried the doctor,-"moral expression !—and what if there isn't, you Elf!-what if there isn't?" "I shouldn't care what other kind of expression it had," said Fleda, colouring a little.

Mr. Rossitur 'pished' rather impatiently. The doctor glanced at his niece, and changed the subject.

"Well who teaches you English, Miss Fleda? you haven't told me that yet,'

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