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                        <title>The Yellow Book: An Illustrated Quarterly, Volume 3 October
                              1894</title>
                        <title type="YBV3_moore_second"/>
                        <editor>Lorraine Janzen Kooistra</editor>
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                              <date>2019</date>
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                        <publisher>Yellow Nineties 2.0</publisher>
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                                    <editor>
                                          <persName>Henry Harland &amp; Aubrey Beardsley</persName>
                                    </editor>
                                    <author>Arthur Moore</author>
                                    <title>Second Thoughts</title>
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                                          <publisher>John Lane</publisher>
                                          <pubPlace> London </pubPlace>
                                          <publisher>Copeland &amp; Day</publisher>
                                          <pubPlace>Boston</pubPlace>
                                          <date>October 1894</date>
                                          <biblScope>Moore, Arthur. "Second Thoughts." <emph
                                                  rend="italic">The Yellow Book</emph>, vol. 3 October
                                                1894, pp. 112-133. <emph rend="italic">Yellow
                                                  Book Digital Edition</emph>, edited by Dennis Denisoff and
                                                Lorraine Janzen Kooistra 2010-2014. <emph rend="italic">Yellow Nineties 2.0</emph>,
                                                Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019.
                                                https://1890s.ca/YBV3_moore_second/</biblScope>
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                  <div n="YBV3_18pr" type="prose">
                        <head>
                              <title level="a">Second Thoughts</title>
                        </head>
                        <byline>By <docAuthor>
                                    <ref target="#AMO">Arthur Moore</ref>
                              </docAuthor>
                        </byline>
                        <p>I</p>
                        <p>As the clock struck eight Sir Geoffrey Vincent cast aside the<lb/> dull
                              society journal with which he had been beguiling the<lb/> solitude of
                              his after-dinner coffee and cigar, and abandoned, with<lb/> an
                              alacrity eloquent of long boredom, his possession of one of the<lb/>
                              capacious chairs which invited repose in the dingy smoking-room<lb/>
                              of an old-fashioned club. It had been reserved for him, after<lb/>
                              twenty monotonous years of almost unbroken exile, spent, for the<lb/>
                              most part, amid the jungles and swamps of Lower Burma, to<lb/> realise
                              that a friendless man, alone in the most populous city of the<lb/>
                              world, may encounter among thousands of his peers a desolation<lb/>
                              more supreme than the solitude of the most ultimate wilderness ;<lb/>
                              and he found himself wondering, a little savagely, why, after
                              all,<lb/> he had expected his home-coming to be so different from
                              the<lb/> reality that now confronted him. When he landed at Brindisi,
                              a<lb/> short ten days ago, misgivings had already assailed him vaguely
                              ;<lb/> the fact that he was practically homeless, that, although
                              not<lb/> altogether bereft of kith and kin, he had no family circle
                              to<lb/> welcome him as an addition to its circumference, had made
                              it<lb/> inevitable that his rapid passage across the Continent should
                              be<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">haunted</fw>
                        <pb n="137"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">113</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>haunted by forebodings to which he had not cared to assign a<lb/> shape
                              too definite ; phantoms which he exorcised hopefully, with<lb/> a
                              tacit reliance on a trick of falling on his feet which had seldom<lb/>
                              failed his need. He consoled himself with the thought that<lb/> London
                              was home, England was home ; he would meet old<lb/> comrades in the
                              streets perhaps, assuredly at his club, and such<lb/> encounters would
                              be so much the more delightful if they were<lb/> fortuitous,
                              unexpected. The plans which he had laid so carefully<lb/> pacing the
                              long deck of the P. and O. boat in the starlight, or,<lb/> more
                              remotely, lying awake through the hot night hours under a<lb/> whining
                              punkah in his lonely bungalow, had all implied, however<lb/> vaguely
                              and impersonally, a certain companionship. He was dimly<lb/> conscious
                              that he had cousins somewhere in the background ; he<lb/> had long
                              since lost touch with them, but he would look them up.<lb/> He had two
                              nieces, still in their teens, the children of his only<lb/> sister who
                              had died ten years ago ; he had never seen them, but<lb/> their
                              photographs were charming—they should be overwhelmed<lb/> with such
                              benefactions as a bachelor uncle with a well-lined purse<lb/> may
                              pleasantly bestow. His friends—the dim legion that was to<lb/> rise
                              about his path—should take him to see Sarah Bernhardt (a<lb/> mere
                              name to him as yet) at the Gaiety, to the new Gilbert and<lb/>
                              Sullivan opera at the Savoy ; they should enlighten him as to the<lb/>
                              latent merits of the pictures at Burlington House ; they should<lb/>
                              dine with him, shoot with him, be introduced to his Indian<lb/>
                              falcons ; in a word, he would keep open house, in town and<lb/>
                              country too, for all good fellows and their pretty wives. It had<lb/>
                              even occurred to him, as a possibility neither remote nor
                              unattrac-<lb/> tive, that he might himself one day possess a pretty
                              wife to<lb/> welcome them.</p>
                        <p>His sanguine expectations encountered their first rebuff when<lb/> he
                              found the Piccadilly Club, which had figured so often in the<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">dreams</fw>
                        <pb n="138"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">114</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>dreams of its exiled member, abandoned to a horde of workmen,<lb/> a mere
                              wilderness of paint and whitewash ; and it was with a<lb/> touch of
                              resentment that he accepted the direction of an indifferent<lb/>
                              hall-porter to an unfamiliar edifice in Pall Mall as its
                              temporary<lb/> substitute. Entering the smoking-room, a little
                              diffidently, on<lb/> the evening of his arrival in London, he found
                              himself eyed, at<lb/> first with faint curiosity, by two or three of
                              the men upon whom<lb/> his gaze rested expectantly, but in no case was
                              this curiosity—<lb/> prompted doubtless by that touch of the exotic
                              which sometimes<lb/> clings to dwellers in the East—the precursor of
                              the kindly<lb/> recognition, the surprised, incredulous greeting which
                              he had<lb/> hoped for. After a few days he was simply ignored ; his
                              face,<lb/> rather stern, with its distinctive Indian tan through which
                              the<lb/> grey eyes looked almost blue, his erect figure, and dark
                              hair<lb/> sparsely flecked with a frosty white, had become familiar ;
                              he had<lb/> visited his tailor, and his garments no longer betrayed
                              him to the<lb/> curious by their fashion of Rangoon.</p>
                        <p>The Blue-book, which he had been quick to interrogate,<lb/> informed him
                              that his old friend Hibbert lived in Portman Square,<lb/> and that the
                              old lady who was the guardian of his nieces had a<lb/> house at
                              Hampstead : further inquiry at the addresses thus<lb/> obtained left
                              him baffled by the intelligence that Colonel<lb/> Hibbert was in
                              Norway, his nieces at school in Switzerland.<lb/> Mackinnon, late of
                              the Woods and Forests, whom he met at<lb/> Burlington House, raised
                              his hopes for an instant by a greeting<lb/> which sounded precisely
                              the note of cordiality that he yearned for,<lb/> only to dash them by
                              expressing a hope that he should see more<lb/> of his old friend in
                              the autumn ; he was off to Southampton to<lb/> join a friend's yacht
                              on the morrow, and after his cruise he had<lb/> designs on Scotland
                              and the grouse.</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey, chained to the neighbourhood of London by legal<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">business</fw>
                        <pb n="139"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">115</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>business, already too long deferred, connected with the succession<lb/>
                              which had made him a rich man and brought him home, could<lb/> only
                              rebel mutely against the ill-fortune which left him solitary<lb/> at a
                              time when he most longed for fellowship, acknowledging the<lb/> while,
                              with a touch of self-reproach, that the position which he<lb/>
                              resented was very largely due to his own shortcomings ; he had<lb/>
                              always figured as a lamentably bad correspondent, and his invete-<lb/>
                              rate aversion to letter-writing had allowed the links of many old<lb/>
                              friendships to fall asunder, had operated to leave such friends
                              as<lb/> were still in touch with him in ignorance of his
                              home-coming.</p>
                        <p>Now, as he paused in the hall of his club to light a cigarette<lb/>
                              before passing out into the pleasant July twilight, he told
                              himself<lb/> that for the present he had done with London ; he would
                              shake<lb/> the dust of the inhospitable city from off his feet, and go
                              down to<lb/> the place in Wiltshire which was learning to call him
                              master, to<lb/> await better days in company with his beloved falcons.
                              He even<lb/> found himself taking comfort from this prospect while a
                              hansom<lb/> bore him swiftly to the Savoy Theatre, and when he was
                              safely<lb/> ensconced in his stall he beguiled the interval before the
                              rising of<lb/> the curtain—a period which his impatience to escape
                              from the club<lb/> rather than any undue passion for punctuality had
                              made somewhat<lb/> lengthy—by considering, speculatively, the chances
                              of society<lb/> which the Willescombe neighbourhood seemed to afford.
                              He<lb/> enjoyed the first act of the extravaganza with the zest of a
                              man to<lb/> whom the work of the famous collaborators was an entire
                              novelty,<lb/> his pleasure unalloyed by the fact, of which he was
                              blissfully uncon-<lb/> scious, that one of the principal parts was
                              played by an understudy.<lb/> His <emph rend="italic">ennui</emph>
                              returning with the fall of the curtain, he prepared to<lb/> spend the
                              entr'acte in contemplation of the people who composed<lb/> the house,
                              rather than to incur the resentment of the placid<lb/> dowagers who
                              were his neighbours, by passing and repassing, like<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">the</fw>
                        <pb n="140"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">116</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>the majority of his fellow-men, in search of the distant haven where<lb/>
                              cigarettes and drinks, obtained with difficulty, could be hastily<lb/>
                              appreciated. More than once his wandering eyes returned to a<lb/> box
                              next the stage on a dress-circle tier, and finally they rested<lb/>
                              rather wistfully on its occupants, or, to be more accurate, on
                              the<lb/> younger of the two ladies who were seated in front. It was
                              not<lb/> simply because the girl was pretty, though her beauty, the
                              flower-<lb/> like charm of a young Englishwoman fresh from the
                              schoolroom,<lb/> a fine example of a type not particularly rare, would
                              have furnished<lb/> a sufficient pretext : he was struck by a
                              resemblance, a haunting<lb/> reminiscence, which at first exercised
                              his curiosity, and ended by<lb/> baffling and tantalising him. There
                              was something vaguely<lb/> familiar, he thought, in the manner of her
                              smile, the inclination of<lb/> her head as she turned now and then to
                              address a remark to her<lb/> companion, the lady in grey, whose face
                              was hidden from him by<lb/> the drapery at the side of the box. When
                              she laughed, furling a<lb/> feathery fan, and throwing a bright glance
                              back at the gentleman<lb/> whose white shirt-front was dimly visible
                              in the background, Sir<lb/> Geoffrey felt himself on the verge of
                              solving his riddle, but at this<lb/> point, while a name seemed to
                              tremble on his lips, the lights of the<lb/> auditorium were lowered,
                              and the rising of the curtain on the<lb/> fairyland of the second
                              scene diverted his attention to the stage.<lb/> Later, when he had
                              passed into the crowded lobby, and was making<lb/> his way slowly
                              through a jungle of pretty dresses towards the<lb/> door, he
                              recognised in front of him the amber-coloured hair and<lb/> dainty,
                              pale-blue opera cloak of the damsel who had puzzled him.<lb/> The two
                              ladies (her companion of the grey dress was close at<lb/> hand) halted
                              near the door while their cavalier passed out in search<lb/> of their
                              carriage ; the elder lady turned, adjusting a cloud of soft<lb/> lace
                              about her shoulders, and Sir Geoffrey was struck on the instant<lb/>
                              by a swift thrill. Here, at last, was an old friend—that face
                              could<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">belong</fw>
                        <pb n="141"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">117</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>belong to no one else than Margaret Addison. It was natural that<lb/> her
                              maiden name should first occur to him, but he remembered, as<lb/> he
                              edged his way laboriously towards her, that she had married just<lb/>
                              after he sailed for Burma ; yes, she had married that amiable
                              scape-<lb/> grace Dick Vandeleur, who had met his death in the
                              hunting-field<lb/> nearly fifteen years ago.</p>
                        <p> As he drew near, Mrs. Vandeleur's gaze fell upon him for a<lb/> brief
                              instant ; he thought that she had not recognised him, but<lb/> before
                              his spirits had time to suffer any consequent depression, her<lb/>
                              eyes returned to him, and as he smiled in answer to the surprise<lb/>
                              which he read in them, he saw her face flush, and then grow a
                              little<lb/> pale, before a responsive light of recognition dawned upon
                              it. She<lb/> took his hand silently when he offered it, eyeing him
                              with the<lb/> same faint smile, an expression in which welcome seemed
                              to be<lb/> gleaming through a cloud of apprehension.</p>
                        <p>"I'm not a ghost," he said, laughing ; "I'm Geoffrey Vincent.<lb/> Don't
                              be ashamed of owning that you had quite forgotten me !"</p>
                        <p>"I knew you at once," she said simply. "So you are home at<lb/> last :
                              you must come and see me as soon as you can. This is my<lb/> daughter
                              Dorothy, and here is my brother—of course you re-<lb/> member Philip
                              ?—coming to tell us that the carriage is waiting.<lb/> You will come,
                              to-morrow—to prove that you are not a ghost ?<lb/> We shall expect
                              you."</p>
                        <p>II</p>
                        <p>A fortnight later Sir Geoffrey was sitting in a punt, beguiling<lb/> the
                              afternoon of a rainy day by luring unwary roach to their de-<lb/>
                              struction with a hair-line and pellets of paste, delicately
                              kneaded<lb/> by the taper fingers of Miss Dorothy Vandeleur. He was
                              the<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">guest</fw>
                        <pb n="142"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">118</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>guest of Mrs. Vandeleur's brother, his school friend, Philip Addison<lb/>
                              the Q.C., and Mrs. Vandeleur and her daughter were also staying<lb/>
                              at the delighful old Elizabethan house which nestled, with such
                              an<lb/> air of immemorial occupation, halfway down the wooded side
                              of<lb/> one of the Streatley hills, its spotless lawn sloping steeply
                              to the<lb/> margin of the fairest river in the world. Miss Vandeleur
                              had<lb/> enshrined herself among a pile of rugs and cushions at the
                              stern of<lb/> the punt, where the roof of her uncle's boat-house
                              afforded shelter<lb/> from the persistent rain. She was arrayed in the
                              blue serge dear<lb/> to the modern water-nymph ; and at intervals she
                              relieved her feel-<lb/> ings by shaking a small fist at the leaden
                              vault of sky. For the<lb/> rest, her attention was divided impartially
                              between her novel, with<lb/> which she did not seem to make much
                              progress, her fox-terrier<lb/> Sancho, and the slowly decreasing lump
                              of paste, artfully compounded<lb/> with cotton-wool for consistency,
                              with which, as occasion arose, she<lb/> ministered to her companion's
                              predatory needs. The capture of a<lb/> fish was followed inevitably by
                              a disarrangement of her nest of<lb/> cushions, and a pathetic petition
                              for its instant release and restora-<lb/> tion to the element from
                              which it had been untimely inveigled.<lb/> Occasionally, the rain
                              varied the monotony of the dolorous drizzle<lb/> by a vehement and
                              spirited downpour, lasting for some minutes,<lb/> prompting one of the
                              occupants of the punt to remark, with mis-<lb/> placed confidence,
                              that it must clear up soon, after that. Then<lb/> Sir Geoffrey would
                              abandon his rod, and beat a retreat to the stern<lb/> of the punt ;
                              and during these interludes, much desultory conver-<lb/> sation
                              ensued. Once, Miss Vandeleur startled her companion by<lb/> asking,
                              suddenly, how it was that he seemed so absurdly young ?</p>
                        <p>"I hope I am not rude ?" she added, "but really you do strike<lb/> me as
                              almost the youngest person I know. You are much younger<lb/> than
                              Jack—Mr. Wilgress—for instance, and it's only about three<lb/> years
                              since he left Eton."</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">Sir</fw>
                        <pb n="143"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">119</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey smiled, wondering a little whether the girl was<lb/>
                              laughing at him ; for though a man of forty-seven, who has for<lb/>
                              twenty years successfully resisted a trying climate, may consider<lb/>
                              himself as very far from the burden of old age, it was
                              conceivable<lb/> that the views of a maiden in her teens might be very
                              different.</p>
                        <p>"It's because I am having such a good time," he hazarded.<lb/> "You and
                              your mother are responsible, you know ; before I met<lb/> you at the
                              Savoy, on that memorable evening, I was feeling as<lb/> blue as—as the
                              sky ought to be if it had any decency, and at least<lb/> as old as the
                              river. I suppose it's true that youth and good spirits<lb/> are
                              contagious."</p>
                        <p>Dorothy gazed at him for a moment reflectively."How lucky<lb/> it was
                              that Uncle Philip took us to the theatre on that evening !<lb/> It was
                              just a chance. And we might never have met you."</p>
                        <p>"It was lucky for me!" declared the other simply. "But<lb/> would you
                              have cared ?"</p>
                        <p>"Of course!" said the girl promptly, but lowering her blue<lb/> eyes.
                              "You see, I have never known a real live hero before.<lb/> Do tell me
                              about your fight in the hill-fort, or how you caught<lb/> the Dacoits
                              ! Uncle Philip says that you ought to have had the<lb/> V.C."</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey replied by a little disparaging murmur. "Oh, it<lb/> was
                              quite a commonplace affair—all in the day's work. Any one<lb/> else
                              would have done the same."</p>
                        <p>Dorothy settled herself back among her cushions resentfully,<lb/>
                              clasping her hands, rather sunburned, across her knees.</p>
                        <p>"I should like to see them !" she declared contemptuously.<lb/> "That's
                              just what that Jack Wilgress said—at least he implied<lb/> it. It is
                              true, he apologised afterwards. How I despise Oxford<lb/> boys !"</p>
                        <p>"I thought he was a very good fellow," said Sir Geoffrey,<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">diplomatically</fw>
                        <pb n="144"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">120</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>diplomatically turning the subject from his own achievements, <lb/>"I
                              suppose it might improve him to have something to do ; but he<lb/>
                              strikes me as a very good specimen of the ornamental young<lb/>
                              man."</p>
                        <p>"Ornamental !" echoed Dorothy sarcastically. " It would do<lb/> him good
                              to have to work for his living."</p>
                        <p>"Poor beggar, he couldn't help being born with a silver spoon<lb/> in his
                              mouth—it isn't his fault."</p>
                        <p>"Spoon!" exclaimed Miss Vandeleur. "A whole dinner<lb/> service I should
                              think. A soup-ladle at the very least. It's quite<lb/> big enough :
                              perhaps that accounts for it !"</p>
                        <p>The girl laughed, swaying back, with the grace of her years,<lb/> against
                              her cushions ; then, observing that her companion's grave<lb/> grey
                              eyes were fixed upon her, she grew suddenlv demure, sighing<lb/> with
                              a little air of penitence.</p>
                        <p>"I am very wicked to-day," she confessed. "It's the rain, I<lb/> suppose,
                              and want of exercise. Do you ever feel like that, Sir<lb/> Geoffrey ?
                              Do you ever get into an omnibus and simply loathe<lb/> and detest
                              every single person in it ? Do you long to swear—<lb/> real swears,
                              like our army in Flanders—at everybody you meet,<lb/> just because
                              it's rainy or foggy, and because they are all so ugly<lb/> and horrid
                              ? I do, frequently."</p>
                        <p>"I know, I know," said the other sympathetically, while he<lb/> reeled in
                              his line and deftly untied the tiny hook. "Only, the<lb/> omnibus has
                              not figured very often in my case ; it has generally<lb/> been a hot
                              court-house, or a dusty dak-bungalow full of com-<lb/> mercial
                              travellers. But I don't feel like that now, at all. I hope<lb/> I am
                              not responsible for your frame of mind ?"</p>
                        <p>"Oh," protested Dorothy, "don't make me feel such an<lb/> abandoned
                              wretch ! I should have been much worse if you had<lb/> not been here.
                              I should have quarrelled with Uncle Phil, or<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">been</fw>
                        <pb n="145"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">121</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>been rude to my mother, or something dreadful. I'm perfectly<lb/> horrid
                              to her sometimes. And as it is, I have let her go up to<lb/> town all
                              alone—to see my dressmaker."</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey stood up and began to take his rod to pieces.<lb/> "And are
                              you quite sure that you haven't been 'loathing and<lb/> detesting' me
                              all the afternoon ?"</p>
                        <p>Dorothy picked up her novel and smoothed its leaves reflectively.</p>
                        <p>"I—— But no. I won't make you too conceited. Look, the<lb/> sun is
                              actually coming out ! Don't you think we might take the<lb/> Canadian
                              up to the weir ? You really ought to be introduced to<lb/> the big
                              chub under the bridge."</p>
                        <p>The rain had almost ceased, and when they had transferred<lb/> themselves
                              into the dainty canoe, a few strokes of the paddle<lb/> which Miss
                              Vandeleur wielded with such effective grace swept<lb/> them out into a
                              full flood of delicate evening sunlight. The sky<lb/> smiled blue
                              through rapidly increasing breaks in the clouds ; the<lb/> sunbeams,
                              slanting from the west, touched with pale gold the<lb/> quivering
                              trees, which seemed to lift their wet branches and<lb/> spread their
                              leaves to court the warm caress. A new radiance of<lb/> colour crept
                              into the landscape, as if it had been a picture from<lb/> which a
                              smoky glass was withdrawn ; the water grew very still—<lb/> this too
                              was in the manner of a picture—with the peace of a<lb/> summer
                              evening, brimming with an unbroken surface luminously<lb/> from bank
                              to bank. Strange guttural cries of water-birds<lb/> sounded from the
                              reed-beds ; from the next reach came the<lb/> rhythmic pulse of oars,
                              faint splashes, and the brisk rattle of row-<lb/> locks ; voices and
                              laughter floated down from the lock, travelling<lb/> far beyond belief
                              in the hushed stillness of the evening. The<lb/> wake of the light
                              canoe trailed unbroken to the shadows of the<lb/> boathouse, and the
                              wet paddle gleamed as it slid through the<lb/> water. Presently
                              Dorothy stayed her hand.</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">"What</fw>
                        <pb n="146"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">122</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>"What an enchanting world it is !" she murmured, with wide eyes<lb/> full
                              of the glamour of the setting sun. "Beautiful, beautiful——!<lb/> How
                              soon one forgets the fogs, and rain, and cold ! I feel as if I<lb/>
                              had lived in this fairyland always."</p>
                        <p>Her lips trembled a little as she spoke, and Sir Geoffrey found<lb/>
                              something in the pathos of her youth which held him silent.<lb/> When
                              they broke the spell of silence, their words were trivial,<lb/>
                              perhaps, but the language was that of old friends, simple and<lb/>
                              direct. Sir Geoffrey at least, for whom the charm of the occasion<lb/>
                              was a gift so rare that he scarcely dared to desecrate it by
                              mental<lb/> criticism, was far from welcoming the interruption which
                              presently<lb/> occurred, in the shape of a youth, arrayed in
                              immaculate flannels and<lb/> the colours of a popular rowing club, who
                              hailed them cheerfully<lb/> from a light skiff, resting on his sculls
                              and drifting alongside while<lb/> he rolled a cigarette.</p>
                        <p>III</p>
                        <p>Dorothy sank down, rather wearily, in the low basket-chair<lb/> which
                              stood near the open window of her mother's bedroom—<lb/> a tall French
                              window, with a wide balcony overrun by climbing<lb/> roses, and a view
                              of the river, and waited for Mrs. Vandeleur to<lb/> dismiss her maid.
                              As she lay there, adjusting absently the loose<lb/> tresses of her
                              hair, she could feel the breath of the faint breeze as<lb/> it
                              wandered, gathering a light burden of fragrance, through the<lb/>
                              dusky roses ; she could see the river, dimly, where the moonbeams<lb/>
                              touched its ripples, and once or twice the sound of voices
                              reached<lb/> her from the distant smoking-room. The closing of the
                              door as<lb/> the maid went out disturbed her reverie, and turning a
                              little in her<lb/> chair she found her mother regarding her
                              thoughtfully.</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">"No,"</fw>
                        <pb n="147"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">123</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>"No," said Dorothy, swiftly interpreting her mother's glance.<lb/> "You
                              mustn't send me away, my pretty little mother. I'll promise<lb/> not
                              to catch cold. I haven't been able to talk to you all day."</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur half closed the window, and then seated herself<lb/> with
                              an expression of resignation on the arm of her daughter's<lb/> chair.
                              In the dim light shed by the two candles on the dressing-<lb/> table,
                              one would have thought them two sisters, plotting innocently<lb/> the
                              discomfiture of man. The occasion did not prove so stimu-<lb/> lating
                              to conversation as might have been expected. For a few<lb/> minutes
                              both were silent ; Dorothy began to hum an air from the<lb/> Savoy
                              opera, rather recklessly ; she kicked off one of her slippers,<lb/>
                              and it fell on the polished oak floor with a little clatter.</p>
                        <p>"Little donkey !" murmured her mother sweetly. "So much<lb/> for your
                              talking. I'm going to bed at once." Then she added,<lb/> carelessly,
                              "Did you see Jack to-day ?"</p>
                        <p>The humming paused abruptly ; then it went on for a second,<lb/> and
                              paused again.</p>
                        <p>"Oh yes, the inevitable Mr. Wilgress was on the river, as<lb/> usual. He
                              nearly ran us down in that idiotic skiff of his."</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur raised her eyebrows, gazing at her unconscious<lb/>
                              daughter reflectively.</p>
                        <p>"You didn't see him alone, then ?" she inquired presently.</p>
                        <p>"Who ? Mr. Wilgress ? Ye-es, I think so. When we got<lb/> back to the
                              boathouse he insisted on taking me out again in the<lb/> canoe, to
                              show me the correct Indian stroke. Much he knows<lb/> about it !
                              That's why I was so late for dinner. Oh, please<lb/> don't talk about
                              Mr. Wilgress."</p>
                        <p>"Mr. Wilgress again?" murmured Mrs. Vandeleur. "I<lb/> thought it always
                              used to be 'Jack.'"</p>
                        <p>"Only, only by accident, said the girl weakly. "And when<lb/> he wasn't
                              there."</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">"Well,</fw>
                        <pb n="148"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">124</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>"Well, he isn't here now. At least I hope not. You—you<lb/> haven't
                              quarrelled, have you Dolly ?"</p>
                        <p>"No—yes. I don't know. He—he asked me—oh, he was<lb/> ridiculous. How I
                              hate boys—and jealousy."</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur shivered, then rose abruptly and closed the<lb/> window
                              against which she leaned, gazing down at the formless<lb/> mass of the
                              shrubs which cowered over their shadows on the lawn.<lb/> Her mind,
                              vaguely troubled for some days past, and now keenly on<lb/> the alert,
                              travelled swiftly back, bridging a space of nearly twenty<lb/> years,
                              to a scene strangely like this, in which she and her mother<lb/> had
                              held the stage. She too, a girl then of Dorothy's eighteen<lb/> years,
                              had brought the halting story of her doubts and scruples to<lb/> her
                              natural counsellor : she could remember still how the instinct<lb/> of
                              reticence had struggled with the yearning for sympathy, for the<lb/>
                              comfort of the confessional. She could recall now and appreciate<lb/>
                              her mother's tact and patient questioning, her own perversity,
                              the<lb/> dumbness which seemed independent of her own volition. A<lb/>
                              commonplace page of life. Two men at her feet, and the girl<lb/>
                              unskilled to read her heart : one had spoken—that was Dick<lb/>
                              Vandeleur, careless, brilliant, the heir to half a county ; the
                              other<lb/>— her old friend ; she could not bear to think of him
                              now.<lb/> Knowledge had come too late, and the light which made
                              her<lb/> wonder scornfully at her blindness. And her mother—she
                              of<lb/> course had played the worldly part ; but her counsel had
                              been<lb/> honest, without bias : it were cruel to blame her now.
                              Loyal<lb/> though she was, Margaret Vandeleur had asked herself an
                              hundred<lb/> times, yielding to that love of threading a labyrinth
                              which rules<lb/> most women, what would have been the story of her
                              life if she had<lb/> steeled herself to stand or fall by her own
                              judgment, if she had<lb/> refused to allow her mother to drop into the
                              wavering scale the<lb/> words which had turned it, ever so slightly,
                              in favour of the<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">richer</fw>
                        <pb n="149"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">125</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>richer man, the man whom she had married, whose name she<lb/> bore.</p>
                        <p>It seemed plain enough, to a woman's keen vision—what sense<lb/> so
                              subtle, yet so easily beguiled—that Dorothy's choice was<lb/>
                              embarrassed, just as her own had been. The girl and her two<lb/>
                              admirers—how the old story repeated itself !—one, Jack Wilgress,<lb/>
                              the good-natured, good-looking idler, whose devotion to the river<lb/>
                              threatened to make him amphibious, and whose passion for<lb/>
                              scribbling verse bade fair to launch him adrift among the cockle-<lb/>
                              shell fleet of Minor Poets ; the other—Geoffrey Vincent ! To<lb/> call
                              upon Margaret Vandeleur to guide her daughter's choice<lb/> between
                              two men of whom Geoffrey Vincent was one—surely<lb/> here was the end
                              and crown of Fate's relentless irony. She felt<lb/> herself blushing
                              as she pressed her forehead against the cool<lb/> window-pane, put to
                              shame by the thoughts which the comparison<lb/> suggested, which would
                              not be stifled. Right or wrong, at least<lb/> her mother had been
                              impartial : there was a sting in this, a<lb/> failure of her
                              precedent. She sighed, concluding mutely that silence<lb/> was her
                              only course ; even if she would, she could not follow in her<lb/>
                              mother's footsteps—the girl must abide by her own judgment.</p>
                        <p>When she turned, smiling faintly, the light of the flickering<lb/>
                              candles fell upon her face, betraying a pallor which startled<lb/>
                              Dorothy from her reverie. She sprang from her chair, reproaching<lb/>
                              her selfishness.</p>
                        <p>"You poor, tired, little mother," she murmured penitently, with<lb/> a
                              hasty kiss. "How could I be so cruel as to keep you up after<lb/> your
                              journey ! I'm a wretch, but I'm really going now. Good-<lb/>
                              night."</p>
                        <p>"Good-night," said her mother, caressing the vagrant coils of the<lb/>
                              girl's amber-coloured hair. "Don't worry yourself; everything<lb/>
                              will come right if—if you listen to your own heart."</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">Dorothy's</fw>
                        <pb n="150"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">126</fw> Second Thoughts </fw>
                        <p> Dorothy's answer was precluded by another kiss. "It's so full<lb/> of
                              you that it can't be bothered to think of any one else," she<lb/>
                              declared plaintively, as she turned towards the door. Then she<lb/>
                              paused, fingering nervously a little heap of books which lay upon<lb/>
                              a table. "He—he isn't so very old, you know," she murmured<lb/> softly
                              before she made her escape.</p>
                        <p>When she was alone Mrs. Vandeleur sank into the chair which<lb/> her
                              daughter had just quitted, nestling among the cushions and<lb/>
                              knitting her brows in thought. The clock on the mantelpiece<lb/> had
                              struck twelve before she rose, and then she paused for an<lb/> instant
                              in front of the looking-glass, gazing into it half timidly<lb/> before
                              she extinguished the candles. The face which she saw<lb/> there was
                              manifestly pretty, in spite of the trouble which lurked in<lb/> the
                              tired eyes, and when she turned away, a hovering smile was<lb/>
                              struggling with the depression at the corners of the delicate,<lb/>
                              mobile lips.</p>
                        <p>IV</p>
                        <p>When Sir Geoffrey returned to Riverside, three days later,<lb/> after a
                              brief sojourn in London, spent for the most part at the<lb/> office of
                              his solicitor in Lincoln's Inn, he found Mrs. Vandeleur<lb/> presiding
                              over a solitary tea-table in a shady corner of the garden.<lb/> A few
                              chairs sociably disposed under the gnarled walnut-tree, and<lb/> a
                              corresponding number of empty tea-cups, suggested that her<lb/>
                              solitude had not been of long duration, and this impression was<lb/>
                              confirmed when Mrs. Vandeleur told her guest that if he had<lb/>
                              presented himself a short quarter of an hour earlier he would
                              have<lb/> been welcomed in a manner more worthy of his deserts.</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey drew one of the low basket chairs up to the table,<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">protesting,</fw>
                        <pb n="151"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">127</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>protesting, as he accepted a cup of tea, that he could not have<lb/>
                              wished for better fortune.</p>
                        <p>"This is very delightful," he declared. "I don't regret the<lb/>
                              tardiness of my train in the least. The other charming people are<lb/>
                              on the river, I suppose ?"</p>
                        <p> Mrs. Vandeleur nodded. "Yes, the Patersons have just taken<lb/> up their
                              quarters in that house-boat, which you must have noticed,<lb/> near
                              the lock, and my brother and Dorothy have gone with Jack<lb/> Wilgress
                              and his sisters to call upon them. You ought to have<lb/> seen Daisy
                              Wilgress ; she is very pretty."</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey smiled gravely, sipping his tea.</p>
                        <p>"If she is prettier than your daughter, Miss Wilgress must be<lb/> very
                              dangerous. But I must see her with my own eyes before I<lb/> believe
                              that."</p>
                        <p>"Oh, she is !" declared Mrs. Vandeleur, laughing lightly, but<lb/>
                              throwing a quick glance at him. "Ask Philip; he is more<lb/> wrapped
                              up in her than he has been in anything since his first<lb/>
                              brief."</p>
                        <p>"Poor Philip !" said the other quietly, stooping to pick a fallen<lb/>
                              leaf from the grass at his feet. "I—I have a fellow-feeling for<lb/>
                              him."</p>
                        <p>"You know you may smoke if you want to," interposed Mrs.<lb/> Vandeleur,
                              rather hurriedly. "And perhaps—if you really won't<lb/> have any more
                              tea—you might like to go in pursuit of the other<lb/> people ; I don't
                              think they have taken all the boats. But I<lb/> daresay you are tired
                              ? London is so fatiguing—and business."</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey smiled, his white teeth showing pleasantly against<lb/> the
                              tan of his lean, good-humoured face.</p>
                        <p>"I <emph rend="italic">am</emph> rather tired, I believe," he owned. "I
                              have been<lb/> spending a great deal of time in my solicitor's
                              waiting-room,<lb/> pretending to read <emph rend="italic">The
                                    Times</emph>. And I have been thinking—that is<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="footer">The Yellow Book—Vol. III. <emph>H</emph>
                        </fw>
                        <fw type="catchword">always</fw>
                        <pb n="152"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">128 </fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>always fatiguing. If I am not in your way, I should like to stay<lb/>
                              here."</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur professed her satisfaction by a polite little<lb/> murmur,
                              leaning forward in her chair to marshal the scattered<lb/> tea-cups on
                              the tray, while Sir Geoffrey watched her askance,<lb/> rather timidly,
                              with a keen appreciation of the subtle charm of her<lb/> personality ;
                              her face, like a perfect cameo, or some rare pale flower,<lb/> seeming
                              to have gained rather in beauty by the deliberate passage<lb/> from
                              youth ; winning, just as some pictures do, an added grace of<lb/>
                              refinement, a delicacy, which the slight modification of contours<lb/>
                              served only to intensify.</p>
                        <p>"I told you just now that I had been thinking," he said<lb/> presently,
                              when she had resumed her task of embroidering initials<lb/> in the
                              corner of a handkerchief : "would it surprise you if I said<lb/> that
                              I had been thinking of you ?"</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur raised her eyebrows slightly, her gaze still intent<lb/>
                              upon her patient needle.</p>
                        <p>"Perhaps it was natural that you should think of us," she<lb/>
                              hazarded.</p>
                        <p>"But I meant you," he continued ; "you, the Margaret of the<lb/> old
                              days, before I went away. For I used to call you 'Margaret'<lb/> then.
                              We were great friends, you know."</p>
                        <p>"I have always thought of you as a friend," she said simply.<lb/> "Yes,
                              we were great friends before—before you went away."</p>
                        <p>"It doesn't seem so long ago to me," he declared, almost plain-<lb/>
                              tively, struck by something in the tone of her voice. Mrs.<lb/>
                              Vandeleur smiled tolerantly, scrutinising her embroidery, with<lb/>
                              her head poised on one side, a little after the manner of a<lb/>
                              bird.</p>
                        <p>"And now that I have found you again," he added with inten-<lb/> tion,
                              dropping his eyes till they rested on the river, rippling past<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">the</fw>
                        <pb n="153"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">129</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>the wooden landing-stage below in the sunshine, "I—I don't<lb/> want to
                              lose you, Margaret !"</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur met this declaration with a smile, which was<lb/>
                              courteous rather than cordial, merely acknowledging, as of right,<lb/>
                              the propriety of the aspiration, treating it as quite
                              conventional.<lb/> The simplicity of the gesture testified eloquently
                              of the discipline<lb/> of twenty years ; only a woman would have
                              detected the shadow<lb/> of apprehension in her eyes, the trembling of
                              the hands which<lb/> seemed so placidly occupied. Her mind was already
                              anxiously on the<lb/> alert, racing rapidly over the now familiar
                              ground which she had<lb/> quartered of late so heedfully. For her, his
                              words were ominous ;<lb/> it was of Dorothy surely that he wished to
                              speak, and yet——!<lb/> In the stress of expectation her thoughts took
                              strange flights,<lb/> following vague clues fantastically. The
                              inveterate habit of retro-<lb/> spection carried her back, in spite of
                              her scruples; her honest desire<lb/> to think singly of Dorothy,
                              regarding the fortune of her own<lb/> life as irrevocably settled,
                              impelled her irresistibly to call to the<lb/> stage of her imagination
                              a scene which she had often set upon it,<lb/> a duologue, entirely
                              fictive, which might, but for her perversity,<lb/> have been
                              enacted—twenty years ago.</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey rose, and stood leaning with one hand on the back<lb/> of
                              his chair. This interruption—or perhaps it was the sound of<lb/> oars
                              and voices which floated in growing volume from the river—<lb/> served
                              to recall his companion to the present. The silence, of<lb/> brief
                              duration actually, seemed intolerable. She must break it,<lb/> and
                              when she spoke it was to name her daughter, aimlessly.</p>
                        <p>"Dorothy ?" repeated Sir Geoffrey, as she paused. "She is<lb/>
                              extraordinarily like you were before I went away. Not that you<lb/>
                              are changed—it is delightful to come back and find you the same.<lb/>
                              It's only when she is with you that I can realise that there is a<lb/>
                              difference, a——"</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">"I was</fw>
                        <pb n="154"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">130 </fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>"I was never so good as Dorothy," put in Mrs. Vandeleur<lb/> quickly ;
                              "she will never have the same reason to blame her-<lb/> self—— I don't
                              think you could imagine what she has been<lb/> to me."</p>
                        <p>"I think I can," said Sir Geoffrey simply. Then he added,<lb/> rather
                              shyly : "Really, we seem to be very good friends already :<lb/> it's
                              very nice of her—it would be so natural for her to—to resent<lb/> the
                              intrusion of an old fellow like me."</p>
                        <p>"You need not be afraid of that ; she looks upon you as—as a<lb/> friend
                              already."</p>
                        <p>"Thank you !" murmured the other. "And you think she<lb/> might grow
                              to—to like me, in time ?"</p>
                        <p> Mrs. Vandeleur nodded mutely. Sir Geoffrey followed for a<lb/> moment
                              the deliberate entry and re-entry of her needle, reflect-<lb/> ively ;
                              then, as his eyes wandered, he realised vaguely that a boat<lb/> had
                              reached the landing-stage, and that people were there : he<lb/>
                              recognised young Wilgress and Miss Vandeleur.</p>
                        <p>"You said just now that you always thought of me as a friend,"<lb/> he
                              began. "I wonder—— Oh ! it's no good," he added quickly,<lb/> with a
                              nervous movement of his hands, "I can't make pretty<lb/> speeches !
                              After all, it's simple ; why should I play the coward ?<lb/> I can
                              take 'no' for answer, if the worst comes to the worst,<lb/> and——
                              Margaret, I know it's asking a great deal, but—I<lb/> want you to
                              marry me."</p>
                        <p>She cast a swift, startled glance at him, turning in her chair,<lb/> and
                              then dropped her eyes, asking herself bewilderedly whether this<lb/>
                              was still some fantasy. The words which he murmured now,<lb/> pleading
                              incoherently with her silence, confirmed the hopes which,<lb/> in
                              spite of her scrupulous devotion, refused to be gainsaid,
                              thrusting<lb/> themselves shamelessly into the foreground of her
                              troubled thoughts.<lb/> An inward voice, condemned by her wavering
                              resolution as a<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">whisper</fw>
                        <pb n="155"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">131</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>whisper from the lips of treachery, suggested plausibly that after<lb/>
                              all Dorothy might have made a mistake ; she repelled it fiercely,<lb/>
                              taking a savage pleasure in her pain, accusing herself, with
                              vehe-<lb/> ment blame, as one who would fain stand in the way of
                              her<lb/> daughter's happiness. Even if she had deserved these fruits
                              of late<lb/> harvest which seemed to dangle within her grasp, even if
                              her<lb/> right to garner them had not been forfeited long ago by
                              her<lb/> folly of the past, how could she endure to figure as a
                              rival,<lb/> triumphing in her own daughter's discomfiture ?
                              Womanly<lb/> pride and a thousand scruples barred the way.</p>
                        <p>"I love you," she heard him say again ; "I believe I have<lb/> always
                              loved you since—— But you know how it was in the<lb/> old days."</p>
                        <p>"Don't remind me of that !" she pleaded, almost fiercely ; "I<lb/> was—I
                              can't bear to think of what I did ! You ought not to<lb/> forgive me ;
                              I don't deserve it."</p>
                        <p>"Forgive ?" he echoed, blankly.</p>
                        <p>"Oh, you are generous—but it is impossible, impossible ; it is<lb/> all a
                              mistake ; let us forget it."</p>
                        <p>"I don't understand ! Is it that—that you don't care for me ?"</p>
                        <p>Margaret gave a despairing little sigh, dropping her hands on<lb/> the
                              sides of her chair.</p>
                        <p>"You don't know," she murmured. "It isn't right. No—<lb/> oh, it must be
                              No !"</p>
                        <p>Sir Geoffrey echoed her sigh. As he watched her silently, the<lb/>
                              instinct of long reticence making his forbearance natural, he saw<lb/>
                              a new expression dawn into her troubled face. Her eyes were<lb/> fixed
                              intently on the river ; that they should be fixed was not<lb/>
                              strange, but there was a light of interest in them which induced<lb/>
                              Sir Geoffrey, half involuntarily, to bend his gaze in the same<lb/>
                              direction. He saw that Dorothy had now disembarked, and was<lb/>
                        </p>
                        <fw type="catchword">standing,</fw>
                        <pb n="156"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">
                              <fw type="pageNum">132</fw> Second Thoughts</fw>
                        <p>standing, a solitary figure, close to the edge of the landing-stage.<lb/>
                              Something in her pose seemed to imply that she was talking, and<lb/>
                              just at this moment she moved to one side, revealing the head and<lb/>
                              shoulders of Jack Wilgress, which overtopped the river-bank in<lb/>
                              such a manner as to suggest that he was standing in the punt, of<lb/>
                              which the bamboo pole rose like a slender mast above his head.<lb/>
                              The group was certainly pictorial : the silhouette of Dorothy's<lb/>
                              pretty figure telling well against the silvery river, and the
                              young<lb/> man's pose, too, lending itself to an effective bit of
                              composition ;<lb/> but Sir Geoffrey felt puzzled, and even a little
                              hurt, by the interest<lb/> that Margaret displayed at a moment which
                              he at least had found<lb/> sufficiently strenuous. He turned, stooping
                              to pick up his hat ;<lb/> then he paused, and was about to speak, when
                              Mrs. Vandeleur<lb/> interrupted him, mutely, with a glance, followed
                              swiftly by the<lb/> return of her eyes to the river. Acquiescing
                              patiently, Sir<lb/> Geoffrey perceived that a change had occurred in
                              the grouping of<lb/> the two young people. Wilgress had drawn nearer
                              to the girl ;<lb/> his figure stood higher against the watery
                              background, apparently<lb/> he had one foot on the step of the
                              landing-stage. Dorothy<lb/> extended a hand, which he clasped and held
                              longer than one would<lb/> have reckoned for in the ordinary farewell.
                              The girl shook her<lb/> head ; another movement, and the punt began to
                              glide reluctantly<lb/> from the shore ; then it turned slowly,
                              swinging round and<lb/> heading down-stream. Dorothy raised one hand
                              to the bosom of<lb/> her dress, and before she dropped it to her side
                              threw something<lb/> maladroitly towards her departing companion.
                              Wilgress caught<lb/> the flower—it was evidently a flower—making a
                              dash which<lb/> involved the loss of his punt-pole ; a ripple of
                              laughter, and<lb/> Dorothy, unconscious of the four eyes which watched
                              her from<lb/> the shadows of the walnut tree, turned slowly, and began
                              to climb<lb/> the grassy slope.</p>
                        <fw type="catchword">Mrs. Vandeleur's</fw>
                        <pb n="157"/>
                        <fw type="runningHead">By Arthur Moore <fw type="pageNum">133</fw>
                        </fw>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur's eyelids drooped, and her lips, which had been<lb/>
                              parted for an instant in a pensive smile, trembled a little ; she<lb/>
                              sighed, tapping the ground lightly with her foot, then sank back
                              in<lb/> her chair and seemed lost in contemplation of the needlework
                              that<lb/> lay upon her lap. Sir Geoffrey began to move away, but
                              turned<lb/> suddenly, and stooping, took one of her hands reverently
                              in his<lb/> own, clasping it as it lay upon the arm of her chair.</p>
                        <p>"Margaret," he said, "forgive me; but must it be good-bye,<lb/> after all
                              these years, or is there a chance for me ?"</p>
                        <p>Mrs. Vandeleur's reply was inaudible ; but her hand, though it<lb/>
                              fluttered for a moment, was not withdrawn. </p>
                  </div>
            </body>
      </text>
</TEI>
