which was soon after succeeded by the
present railroad.
"There were a hundred horses, at least," said she, "to drag us.
Magnificent creatures, too. But nothing pays for having one's mouth and
eyes full of grit."
As she spoke, Mr. Lewis passed by the door, and looked at her. She went
to him at once, put up her lips to be kissed, and I heard his loving
good-bye, as they went along the entry to the top of the stairway.
When she came back to my room, which was half an hour after, she was
dressed to go out, in a new hat and pelisse of green silk, with a plume
of the same. With her bright color, it was very becoming to her.
"I have just got these home. William just hates me in green, but I would
have them. They make one think of fern-leaves and the deep woods, don't
they?" said she, standing before the mirror with childish admiration of
her own dress.
She turned slowly round, and faced me.
"Now I suppose you would dress up in a blue bag, if your husband liked
to see you in it?"
I said I supposed so, too.
"That's because you love him, and know that he loves you!"
"I am sure, you may say one is true of yourself," said I, surprised at
her knitted brow and flushed cheek.
"What was that you were reading last night in Plato's Dialogues? What
does he say is real love? for the body or the soul?"
I was confounded. For I had never supposed she listened to a word that
was read.
"If any one has been in love with the body of Alcibiades, that person
has not been in love with Alcibiades," said she, reciting from memory.
"Yes, I remember."
"But one that loves your soul does not leave you, but continues constant
after the flower of your beauty has faded, and all your admirers have
retired."
I nodded, as much nonplussed as if she had been Socrates.
"That is a love worth having, is it not, which will continue, though the
cheek be white and furrowed, and the eye dim?"
I nodded again, staring at her.
"And what is that worth," said she, stamping her foot, "which does not
recognize a soul at all? If he ever encouraged me to improve,--if he
ever read to me, or talked to me as he does to you, I might make
something of myself! I am in earnest. I do want to be something,--to
think, to learn, if I only knew how!"
Childish tears ran down her face as she spoke. Presently she went into
her room and brought me a set of malachite, in exquisite cameo-cuttings.
I took up a microscope, and began admiring and examining
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