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and grey; but the next moment I felt ashamed, for, as if she guessed what I was thinking, she turned to me and said suddenly-- "Will you tell me your name? I ought to know it to add to my collection, for you are like a flower yourself." Wasn't it a pretty compliment? I blushed like anything, and said-- "It must be a wild one, I'm afraid. I look hot-housey this afternoon, for I'm dressed up to pay calls, but really I have just left school, and feel as wild as I can be. You mustn't be shocked if you meet me in a short frock some morning tearing about the fields." She leant back against the stand, staring at me with such big eyes, and then she said the very last thing in the world which I expected to hear. "May I come with you? Will you let me come too some day?" Come with me! Rachel Greaves, with her solemn face, and dragged-back hair, and her proper conversation. To tear about the fields! I nearly had a fit. "I suppose you want to botanise?" I asked feebly, and she shook her head and said-- "No; I want to talk to you--I want to do just what you do when you are alone." "Scramble through the hedges, and jump the streams, and swing on the gates, and go bird's-nesting in the hedges?" She gave a gulp of dismay, but stuck to her guns. "Y-es! At least, I could try--you could teach me. I've learned such a number of things in my life, but I don't know how to play. That part of my education has been neglected." "Wherever did you go to school? What a dreadful place it must have been!" "I never went to school; I had governesses at home, and I have no brothers nor sisters; I am very much interested in girls of my own age, especially poor girls, and try to work among them, but I am not very successful. They are afraid of me, and I can't enter into their amusements; but if I could learn to romp and be lively, it might be different." It was such a funny thing to ask, and she looked so terribly in earnest over it, that I was simply obliged to laugh. "Do you mean to say you want to learn to be lively, as a lesson--that you are taking it up like wood-carving or poker-work--for the sake of your class and your influence there?" She blinked at me like an owl, and said-- "I think, so far as I can judge of my own motives, that that is a truthful statement of the case! I have often wished I knew someone like you--full of life and spirit; but there are not many girls in this neighbourhood, a
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