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His despotic coolness provoked her to an outcry and weeping: she repeated, 'Dewlap! Dewlap!' in sobs; she shook her shoulders and hid her face. 'You are proud of your title, are you, madam?' said he. 'I am.' She came out of her hands to answer him proudly. 'That I am!' she meant for a stronger affirmation. 'Then mark me,' he said impressively; 'I am your duke's friend, and you are under my charge here. I am your guardian and you are my ward, and you can enter the town only on the condition of obedience to me. Now, mark me, madam; no one can rob you of your real name and title saving yourself. But you are entering a place where you will encounter a thousand temptations to tarnish, and haply forfeit it. Be warned do nothing that will.' 'Then I'm to have my own title?' said she, clearing up. 'For the month of your visit you are Duchess of Dewlap.' 'I say I sha'n't!' 'You shall.' 'Never, sir!' 'I command it.' She flung herself forward, with a wail, upon Chloe's bosom. 'Can't you do something for me?' she whimpered. 'It is impossible to move Mr. Beamish,' Chloe said. Out of a pause, composed of sobs and sighs, the duchess let loose in a broken voice: 'Then I 'm sure I think--I think I'd rather have met--have met his skeleton!' Her sincerity was equal to wit. Beau Beamish shouted. He cordially applauded her, and in the genuine kindness of an admiration that surprised him, he permitted himself the liberty of taking and saluting her fingers. She fancied there was another chance for her, but he frowned at the mention of it. Upon these proceedings the exhilarating sound of the band was heard; simultaneously a festival peal of bells burst forth; and an admonishment of the necessity for concealing her chagrin and exhibiting both station and a countenance to the people, combined with the excitement of the new scenes and the marching music to banish the acuter sense of disappointment from Duchess Susan's mind; so she very soon held herself erect, and wore a face open to every wonder, impressionable as the blue lake-surface, crisped here and there by fitful breezes against a level sun. CHAPTER IV It was an axiom with Mr. Beamish, our first, if not our only philosophical beau and a gentleman of some thoughtfulness, that the social English require tyrannical government as much as the political are able to dispense with it: and this he explained by an exposition of the character of a race
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