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arble--"does it not make one feel as if all the world were being bathed in its subdued glow?" A pale tremulous smile widens her lips. Sir Adrian, plucking a tall pale lily growing near him, flings it upward with such an eager aim that it alights upon her window-sill. She sees it. Her fingers close upon it. "Fit emblem of its possessor," says Adrian softly, and rather unsteadily. "Do you know of what you remind me, sitting there in your white robes? A medieval saint cut in stone--a pure angel, too good, too far above all earthly passion to enter into it, or understand it, and the grief that must ever attend upon it." He speaks bitterly. It seems to him that she is indeed cold not to have guessed before this the intensity of his love for her. However much she may have given her affection to another, it still seems to him inexpressibly hard that she can have no pity for his suffering. He gazes at her intently. Do the mystic moonbeams deceive him, or are there tears in her great dark eyes? His heart beats quickly. Once again he remembers her emotion of the past evening. He hears again her passionate sobs. Is she unhappy? Are there thorns in her path that are difficult to remove? "Florence, once again I entreat you to confide in me," he says, after a pause. "I can not," she returns, sadly but firmly. "But there is one thing I must say to you--think of me as you may for saying it--I am not cold as you seemed to imply a moment since; I am not made of stone; and, alas, the grief you think me incapable of understanding is mine already! You have wronged me in your thoughts. I have here," she exclaims with some vehemence, laying the hand in which she still holds the drooping lily upon her breast, "what I would gladly be without--a heart." "Nay," says Adrian hastily; "you forget. It is no longer yours, you have given it away." For an instant she glances at him keenly, while her breath comes and goes with painful quickness. "You have no right to say so," she murmurs at last. "No, of course not; I beg your pardon," he says apologetically. "It is your own secret." "There is no secret," she declares nervously. "None." "I have offended you. I should not have said that. You will forgive me?" he entreats, with agitation. "You are quite forgiven;" and, as a token of the truth of her words, she leans a little further out of the window, and looks down at him with a face pale indeed, but full of an unutterable sweetn
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