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y out, and hung the kettle over it. I then issued forth from the dingle, and strolled round the wood that surrounded it; for a long time I was busied in meditation, looking at the ground, striking with my foot, half unconsciously, the tufts of grass and thistles that I met in my way. After some time, I lifted up my eyes to the sky, at first vacantly, and then with more attention, turning my head in all directions for a minute or two; after which I returned to the dingle. Isopel was seated near the fire, over which the kettle was now hung; she had changed her dress--no signs of the dust and fatigue of her late excursion remained; she had just added to the fire a small billet of wood, two or three of which I had left beside it; the fire cracked, and a sweet odour filled the dingle. 'I am fond of sitting by a wood fire,' said Belle, 'when abroad, whether it be hot or cold; I love to see the flames dart out of the wood; but what kind is this, and where did you get it?' 'It is ash,' said I, 'green ash. Somewhat less than a week ago, whilst I was wandering along the road by the side of a wood, I came to a place where some peasants were engaged in cutting up and clearing away a confused mass of fallen timber: a mighty aged oak had given way the night before, and in its fall had shivered some smaller trees; the upper part of the oak, and the fragments of the rest, lay across the road. I purchased, for a trifle, a bundle or two, and the wood on the fire is part of it--ash, green ash.' 'That makes good the old rhyme,' said Belle, 'which I have heard sung by the old women in the great house:-- 'Ash, when green, Is fire for a queen.' {picture:'Ash, when green, Is fire for a queen.': page543.jpg} 'And on fairer form of queen ash fire never shone,' said I, 'than on thine, O beauteous queen of the dingle.' 'I am half disposed to be angry with you, young man,' said Belle. 'And why not entirely?' said I. Belle made no reply. 'Shall I tell you?' I demanded. 'You had no objection to the first part of the speech, but you did not like being called queen of the dingle. Well, if I had the power, I would make you queen of something better than the dingle--Queen of China. Come, let us have tea.' 'Something less would content me,' said Belle, sighing, as she rose to prepare our evening meal. So we took tea together, Belle and I. 'How delicious tea is after a hot summer's day and a long walk,' said she.
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