"I'm a trifle dazzled myself. Bates has tapped a new

cellar somewhere. I'm afraid I'm not a good housekeeper,

to speak truthfully. There are times when I

hate the house; when it seems wholly ridiculous, the

whim of an eccentric old man; and then again I'm actually

afraid that I like its seclusion."

"Your seclusion is better than mine. You know my

little two-room affair behind the chapel,-only a few,

books and a punching bag. That chapel also is one of

your grandfather's whims. He provided that all the

offices of the church must be said there daily or the

endowment is stopped. Mr. Glenarm lived in the past,

or liked to think he did. I suppose you know-or maybe

you don't know-how I came to have this appointment?"

"Indeed, I should like to know."

We had reached the soup, and Bates was changing

our plates with his accustomed light hand.

"It was my name that did the business,-Paul. A

bishop had recommended a man whose given name was

Ethelbert,-a decent enough name and one that you

might imagine would appeal to Mr. Glenarm; but he

rejected him because the name might too easily be cut

down to Ethel, a name which, he said, was very distasteful

to him."

"That is characteristic. The dear old gentleman!" I

exclaimed with real feeling.

"But he reckoned without his host," Stoddard continued.

"The young ladies, I have lately learned, call

me Pauline, as a mark of regard or otherwise,-probably

otherwise. I give two lectures a week on church

history, and I fear my course isn't popular."

"But it is something, on the other hand, to be in touch

with such an institution. They are a very sightly company,

those girls. I enjoy watching them across the

garden wall. And I had a closer view of them at the

station this morning, when you ran off and deserted

me."

He laughed,-his big wholesome cheering laugh.

"I take good care not to see much of them socially."

"Afraid of the eternal feminine?"

"Yes, I suppose I am. I'm preparing to go into a

Brotherhood, as you probably don't know. And girls

are distracting."

I glanced at my companion with a new inquiry and

interest.

"I didn't know," I said.

"Yes; I'm spending my year in studies that I may

never have a chance for hereafter. I'm going into an

order whose members work hard."

He spoke as though he were planning a summer outing.

I had not sat at meat with a clergyman since the

death of my parents broke up our old home in Vermont,

and my attitude toward the cloth was, I fear, one of

antagonism dating from those days.

"Well, I saw Pickering after all," I remarked.

"Yes, I saw him, too. What is it in his case, genius

or good luck?"




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