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y he paid his respects to Lady Camper, to inquire if her ladyship saw any further obstruction to the view. 'None,' she replied. 'And now we shall see what the two birds will do.' Apparently, then, she entertained an animosity to a pair of birds in the tree. 'Yes, yes; I say they chirp early in the morning,' said General Ople. 'At all hours.' 'The song of birds . . . ?' he pleaded softly for nature. 'If the nest is provided for them; but I don't like vagabond chirping.' The General perfectly acquiesced. This, in an engagement with a clever woman, is what you should do, or else you are likely to find yourself planted unawares in a high wind, your hat blown off, and your coat-tails anywhere; in other words, you will stand ridiculous in your bewilderment; and General Ople ever footed with the utmost caution to avoid that quagmire of the ridiculous. The extremer quags he had hitherto escaped; the smaller, into which he fell in his agile evasions of the big, he had hitherto been blest in finding none to notice. He requested her ladyship's permission to present his daughter. Lady Camper sent in her card. Elizabeth Ople beheld a tall, handsomely-mannered lady, with good features and penetrating dark eyes, an easy carriage of her person and an agreeable voice, but (the vision of her age flashed out under the compelling eyes of youth) fifty if a day. The rich colouring confessed to it. But she was very pleasing, and Elizabeth's perception dwelt on it only because her father's manly chivalry had defended the lady against one year more than forty. The richness of the colouring, Elizabeth feared, was artificial, and it caused her ingenuous young blood a shudder. For we are so devoted to nature when the dame is flattering us with her gifts, that we loathe the substitute omitting to think how much less it is an imposition than a form of practical adoration of the genuine. Our young detective, however, concealed her emotion of childish horror. Lady Camper remarked of her, 'She seems honest, and that is the most we can hope of girls.' 'She is a jewel for an honest man,' the General sighed, 'some day!' 'Let us hope it will be a distant day.' 'Yet,' said the General, 'girls expect to marry.' Lady Camper fixed her black eyes on him, but did not speak. He told Elizabeth that her ladyship's eyes were exceedingly searching: 'Only,' said he, 'as I have nothing to hide, I am able to submit to inspection'; an
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