"That Shakespeare has come back to life!" marvelled the

Duchessa. "Do you mean to say that most literary men fancy

that?"

"I think perhaps I am acquainted with three who don't," Peter

replied; "but one of them merely wears his rue with a

difference. He fancies that it's Goethe."

"How extravagantly--how exquisitely droll!" she laughed.

"I confess, it struck me so, until I got accustomed to it,"

said he, "until I learned that it was one of the commonplaces,

one of the normal attributes of the literary temperament. It's

as much to be taken for granted, when you meet an author, as

the tail is to be taken for granted, when you meet a cat."

"I'm vastly your debtor for the information--it will stand me

in stead with the next author who comes my way. But, in that

case, your friend Mr. Felix Wildmay will be, as it were, a sort

of Manx cat?" was her smiling deduction.

"Yes, if you like, in that particular, a sort of Manx cat,"

acquiesced Peter, with a laugh.

The Duchessa laughed too; and then there was a little pause.

Overhead, never so light a breeze lisped never so faintly in

the tree-tops; here and there bird-notes fell, liquid,

desultory, like drops of rain after a shower; and constantly

one heard the cool music of the river. The sun, filtering

through worlds and worlds of leaves, shed upon everything a

green-gold penumbra. The air, warm and still, was sweet with

garden-scents. The lake, according to its habit at this hour

of the afternoon, had drawn a grey veil over its face, a thin

grey veil, through which its sapphire-blue shone furtively.

Far away, in the summer haze, Monte Sfiorito seemed a mere dim

spectre of itself--a stranger might easily have mistaken it for

a vague mass of cloud floating above the horizon.

"Are you aware that it 's a singularly lovely afternoon?" the

Duchessa asked, by and by.

"I have a hundred reasons for thinking it so," Peter hazarded,

with the least perceptible approach to a meaning bow.

In the Duchessa's face, perhaps, there flickered, for

half-a-second, the least perceptible light, as of a

comprehending and unresentful smile. But she went on,

with fine aloofness.

"I rather envy you your river, you know. We are too far from

it at the castle. Is n't the sound, the murmur, of it

delicious? And its colour--how does it come by such a subtle

colour? Is it green? Is it blue? And the diamonds on its

surface--see how they glitter. You know, of course," she

questioned, "who the owner is of those unequalled gems?"




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