Airy Fairy Lilian. Duchess
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Название: Airy Fairy Lilian

Автор: Duchess

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4064066142476

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СКАЧАТЬ caught to-day," says she, "and twenty-nine yesterday—in all forty-eight. Isn't it, Michael?"

      "I think it makes fifty-two," suggests Sir Guy, deferentially.

      "Does it? Well, it makes no difference," says Miss Chesney, with a fine disregard of arithmetic; "at all events, either way, it is a tremendous number. I'm sure I don't know where they come from,"—despairingly—"unless they all walk back again during the night."

      "And I wouldn't wonder too," says Michael, sotto voce.

      "Walk back again!" repeats Guy, amazed. "Don't you kill them?"

      "Miss Chesney won't hear of 'en being killed, Sir Guy," says old Ronaldson, sheepishly; "she says as 'ow the cracklin' of 'en do make her feel sick all over."

      "Oh, yes," says Lilian, making a little wry face, "I hate to think of it. He used to crunch them under his heel, so," with a shudder, and a small stamp upon the ground, "and it used to make me absolutely faint. So we gave it up, and now we just throw them over the wall, so,"—suiting the action to the word, and flinging the slimy creature she holds with dainty disgust, between her first finger and thumb, over the garden boundary.

      Guy laughs, and, thus encouraged, so does old Michael.

      "Well, at all events, it must take them a long time to get back," says Lilian, apologetically.

      "On your head be it if we have no vegetables or fruit this year," says Chetwoode, who understands as much about gardening as the man in the moon, but thinks it right to say something. "Come for a walk, Lilian, will you? It is a pity to lose this charming day." He speaks with marked diffidence (his lady's moods being uncertain), which so far gains upon Miss Chesney that in return she deigns to be gracious.

      "I don't mind if I do," she replies, with much civility. "Good-morning, Michael;" and with a pretty little nod, and a still prettier smile in answer to the old man's low salutation, she walks away beside her guardian.

      Far into the woods they roam, the teeming woods all green and bronze and copper-colored, content and happy in that no actual grief disturbs them.

      "The branches cross above their eyes,

      The skies are in a net;"

      the fond gay birds are warbling their tenderest strains. "Along the grass sweet airs are blown," and all the myriad flowers, the "little wildings" of the forest, "earth's cultureless buds," are expanding and glowing, and exhaling the perfumed life that their mother, Nature, has given them.

      Chetwoode is looking its best and brightest, and Sir Guy might well be proud of his possessions; but no thought of them enters his mind just now, which is filled to overflowing with the image of this petulant, pretty, saucy, lovable ward, that fate has thrown into his path.

      "Yes, it is a lovely place!" says Lilian, after a pause spent in admiration. She has been looking around her, and has fallen into honest though silent raptures over all the undulating parks and uplands that stretch before her, far as the eye can see. "Lovely!—So," with a sigh, "was my old home."

      "Yes. I think quite as lovely as this."

      "What!" turning to him with a start, while the rich, warm, eager flush of youth springs to her cheeks and mantles there, "you have been there? You have seen the Park?"

      "Yes, very often, though not for years past. I spent many a day there when I was younger. I thought you knew it."

      "No, indeed. It makes me glad to think some one here can remember its beauties with me. But you cannot know it all as I do: you never saw my own particular bit of wood?"—with earnest questioning, as though seeking to deny the hope that strongly exists. "It lies behind the orchard, and one can get to it by passing through a little gate in the wall, that leads into the very centre of it. There at first, in the heart of the trees one sees a tangled mass with giant branches overhanging it, and straggling blackberry bushes protecting it with their angry arms, and just inside, the coolest, greenest, freshest bit of grass in all the world—my fairy nook I used to call it. But you—of course you never saw it."

      "It has a huge horse-chestnut at its head, and a silver fir at its feet."

      "Yes—yes!"

      "I know it well," says Chetwoode, smiling at her eagerness. "It was your mother's favorite spot. You know she and my mother were fast friends, and she was very fond of me. When first she was married, before you were born, I was constantly at the Park, and afterward too. She used to read in the spot you name, and I—I was a delicate little fellow at that time, obliged to lie a good deal, and I used to read there beside her with my head in her lap, by the hour together."

      "Why, you know more about my mother than I do," says Lilian, with some faint envy in her tones.

      "Yes,"—hastily, having already learned how little a thing can cause an outbreak, when one party is bent on war—"but you must not blame me for that. I could not help it."

      "No,"—regretfully—"I suppose not. Before I was born, you say. How old that seems to make you!"

      "Why?"—laughing. "Because I was able to read eighteen years ago? I was only nine, or perhaps ten, then."

      "I never could do my sums," says Lilian: "I only know it sounds as though you were the Ancient Mariner or Methuselah, or anybody in the last stage of decay."

      "And yet I am not so very old, Lilian. I am not yet thirty."

      "Well, that's old enough. When I am thirty I shall take to caps with borders, and spectacles, and long black mittens, like nurse. Ha, ha!" laughs Lilian, delighted at the portrait of herself she has drawn, "shan't I look nice then?"

      "I dare say you will," says Guy, quite seriously. "But I would advise you to put off the wearing of them for a while longer. I don't think thirty old. I am not quite that."

      "A month or two don't signify,"—provokingly; "and as you have had apparently a very good life I don't think it manly of you to fret because you are drawing to the close of it. Some people would call it mean. There, never mind your age: tell me something more about my mother. Did you love her?"

      "One could not help loving her, she was so gentle, so thoroughly kind-hearted."

      "Ah! what a pity it is I don't resemble her!" says Lilian, with a suspiciously deep sigh, accepting the reproach, and shaking her head mournfully. "Was she like that picture at home in the drawing-room? I hope not. It is very lovely, but it lacks expression, and has no tenderness about it."

      "Then the artist must have done her great injustice. She was all tenderness both in face and disposition as I remember her, and children are very correct in their impressions. She was extremely beautiful. You are very like her."

      "Am I, Sir Guy? Oh, thank you. I didn't hope for so much praise. Then in one thing at least I do resemble my mother. Am I more beautiful or less so?"

      "That is quite a matter of opinion."

      "And what is yours?" saucily.

      "What can it matter to you?" he says, quickly, almost angrily. "Besides, I dare say you know it."

      "I don't, indeed. Never mind, I shall find out for myself. I am so glad"—amiably—"you knew my mother, and СКАЧАТЬ