Colonel Keith was the person, however, with whom the new comers chiefly

fraternized, and he was amused with their sense of the space for

breathing compared with the lanes and alleys of their own district. The

schools and cottages seemed to them so wonderfully large, the children

so clean, even their fishiness a form of poetical purity, the people

ridiculously well off, and even Mrs. Kelland's lace-school a palace of

the free maids that weave their thread with bones. Mr. Mitchell seemed

almost to grudge the elbow room, as he talked of the number of cubic

feet that held a dozen of his own parishioners; and needful as the

change had been for the health of both husband and wife, they almost

reproached themselves for having fled and left so many pining for want

of pure air, dwelling upon impossible castles for the importation of

favourite patients to enjoy the balmy breezes of Avonmouth.

Rachel talked to them about the F. U. E. E., and was delighted by the

flush of eager interest on Mrs. Mitchell's thin face. "Objects" swarmed

in their parish, but where were the seven shillings per week to come

from? At any rate Mr. Mitchell would, the first leisure day, come over

to St. Herbert's with her, and inspect. He did not fly off at the first

hint of Mr. Mauleverer's "opinions," but said he would talk to him, and

thereby rose steps untold in Rachel's estimation. The fact of change is

dangerously pleasant to the human mind; Mr. Mitchell walked at once into

popularity, and Lady Temple had almost conferred a public benefit by

what she so little liked to remember. At any rate she had secured an

unexceptionable companion, and many a time resorted to his wing, leaving

Bessie to amuse Lord Keith, who seemed to be reduced to carry on his

courtship to the widow by attentions to her guest.




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