Meanwhile Cornelia, having said a few words to her father to excuse

Bressant's unceremonious departure--she refrained instinctively from

letting him know what had actually taken place--bade him good-night, and

went up-stairs with a more sober step than was her wont. She tapped at

Sophie's door, and stayed just long enough to make the necessary

arrangements for the night. Sophie, being drowsy, asked but few

questions, and received brief replies. When Cornelia reached her own

room, she closed the door with a feeling of relief. It had never been

her habit to fasten her door; but to-night, after advancing a few paces

into the chamber, she hesitated, turned back, and drew the bolt. Then,

having hastily pulled down the curtains, she seemed for the first time

to be free from a sensation of restraint.

She walked up to the dressing-table, which was covered with a disorderly

medley of a young lady's toilet articles--comb and brush, a paper of

pins, ribbons, a brooch, little vase for rings, an open purse, a soiled

handkerchief--and began mechanically to undo her hair, and shake out the

braids. It was dark-brown hair, not soft and delicately fine like

Sophie's, but vigorous and crisp, each hair seeming to be distinct, and

yet harmonizing with the rest. As it was loosened and fell voluminously

spreading over her shoulders, she paused, resting against the table, and

looked at her face in the glass with critical earnestness. The candle,

standing at one side of the mirror, cast soft and deep shadows beneath

the darkly-defined eyebrows, and against the straight line of the nose,

and around the clear, short curves of the mouth and upper lip. The light

rested tenderly on her firm, oval cheeks, so deep-toned, yet pale, and

brought out an almost invisible dimple on each cheek-bone beneath the

eye, usually only to be distinguished when she laughed or smiled. The

forehead, so far as it could be seen beneath the hair, was smooth and

straight, neither high nor especially wide. The ears were small and

white, but rather too much cut away below to be in perfect proportion.

Over all seemed spread a mellow, rich, transparent, laughing medium,

that was better than beauty, and without which beauty would have seemed

cold and tame, or at least passionless. There was a delicate mystery in

the face, too, not conscious or self-woven, but of that impalpable and

involuntary sort which sometimes looks from the eyes of young unmarried

women, whose natures have developed sweetly and freely, without warping

or forcing. It has nothing to do with religion, nor with what we

commonly understand by spirit. It is not to be described or analyzed;

like the blue of heaven, it is the infinitely elusive property which is

the very secret and necessity of its existence.

Cornelia looked searchingly at this face, and, though much of its

subtlest charm must necessarily have been lost upon her, she saw a great

deal that gave her pleasure. She had never been subjected to that

awakening but coarsening process which teaches a girl to call herself a

beauty; but there is a certain amount of instinctive perception, in

these matters, and she could not but know that what had virtue to

gratify her would not lack in effect over others. Nor was she in the

habit of taking stock of herself in the looking-glass; only to-night she

seemed to have an especial motive in making or renewing her own

acquaintance.




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