"I have read in the marvellous heart of man,

That strange and mystic scroll,

That an army of phantoms vast and wan

Beleaguer the human soul.

"Encamped beside life's rushing stream,

In Fancy's misty light,

Gigantic shapes and shadows gleam

Portentous through the night."

The Beleaguered City, LONGFELLOW.

A dinner party at the Deanery in the sessions week was an institution,

but Rachel, lying on the sofa in a cool room, had thought herself exempt

from it, and was conscious for the time of but one wish, namely, to be

let alone, and to be able to shut her eyes, without finding the lids, as

it were, lined with tiers of gazing faces, and curious looks turned on

her, and her ears from the echo of the roar of fury that had dreadfully

terrified both her and her mother, and she felt herself to have merited!

The crush of public censure was not at the moment so overwhelming as

the strange morbid effect of having been the focus of those many, many

glances, and if she reflected at all, it was with a weary speculating

wonder whether one pair of dark grey eyes had been among those levelled

at her. She thought that if they had, she could not have missed either

their ironical sting, or perchance some kindly gleam of sympathy, such

as had sometimes surprised her from under the flaxen lashes.

There she had lain, unmolested and conscious of a certain relief in the

exceeding calm; the grey pinnacle of the cathedral, and a few branches

of an elm-tree alone meeting her eye through the open window, and the

sole sound the cawing of the rooks, whose sailing flight amused and

attracted her glance from time to time with dreamy interest. Grace had

gone into court to hear Maria Hatherton's trial, and all was still.

The first break was when her mother and Miss Wellwood came in, after

having wandered gently together round the warm, walled Deanery garden,

comparing notes about their myrtles and geraniums. Then it was that amid

all their tender inquiries after her headache, and their administration

of afternoon tea, it first broke upon Rachel that they expected her to

go down to dinner.

"Pray excuse me," she said imploringly, looking at her mother for

support, "indeed, I don't know that I could sit out a dinner! A number

of people together make me so dizzy and confused."

"Poor child!" said Miss Wellwood, kindly, but looking to Mrs. Curtis

in her turn. "Perhaps, as she has been so ill, the evening might be

enough."

"Oh," exclaimed Rachel, "I hope to be in bed before you have finished

dinner. Indeed I am not good company for any one."

"Don't say that, my dear," and Miss Wellwood looked puzzled.

"Indeed, my dear," said Mrs. Curtis, evidently distressed, "I think the

exertion would be good for you, if you could only think so."




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