king to fill them with a doleful look, which was immediately
succeeded by one of superhuman indifference, he answered:
'Yes! We shall soon have to part!' and commenced tapping with his foot
the cheerful martyr's march.
Speech that has to be hauled from the depths usually betrays the effort.
Listening an instant to catch the import of this cavernous gasp upon the
brink of sound, the girl said:
'Part? what do you mean?'
Apparently it required a yet vaster effort to pronounce an explanation.
The doleful look, the superhuman indifference, were repeated in due
order: sound, a little more distinct, uttered the words:
'We cannot be as we have been, in England!' and then the cheerful martyr
took a few steps farther.
'Why, you don't mean to say you're going to give me up, and not be
friends with me, because we've come back to England?' cried the girl in
a rapid breath, eyeing him seriously.
Most conscientiously he did not mean it! but he replied with the
quietest negative.
'No?' she mimicked him. 'Why do you say "No" like that? Why are you
so mysterious, Evan? Won't you promise me to come and stop with us for
weeks? Haven't you said we would ride, and hunt, and fish together, and
read books, and do all sorts of things?'
He replied with the quietest affirmative.
'Yes? What does "Yes!" mean?' She lifted her chest to shake out the
dead-alive monosyllable, as he had done. 'Why are you so singular this
morning, Evan? Have I offended you? You are so touchy!'
The slur on his reputation for sensitiveness induced the young man to
attempt being more explicit.
'I mean,' he said, hesitating; 'why, we must part. We shall not see each
other every day. Nothing more than that.' And away went the cheerful
martyr in sublimest mood.
'Oh! and that makes you, sorry?' A shade of archness was in her voice.
The girl waited as if to collect something in her mind, and was now a
patronizing woman.
'Why, you dear sentimental boy! You don't suppose we could see each
other every day for ever?'
It was perhaps the cruelest question that could have been addressed to
the sentimental boy from her mouth. But he was a cheerful martyr!
'You dear Don Doloroso!' she resumed. 'I declare if you are not just
like those young Portugals this morning; and over there you were such a
dear English fellow; and that's why I liked you so much! Do change!
Do, please, be lively, and yourself again. Or mind; I'll call you
Don Doloroso, and that
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