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re unerring than the other in dividing the sheep from the goats. I am the guilty person who made discord where there had been harmony." "You, Emile! How was that?" "One day I said, in a bitter mood, 'It is so easy to be a critic, so difficult to be a creator. You two, now would you even dare to try to create?' They were nettled by my tone, and showed it. I said, 'I have a magnificent subject for a conte, no work de longue haleine, a conte. If you like I will give it you, and leave you to create--separately, not together--what you have so often written about, the perfect conte.' They accepted my challenge. I gave them my subject and a month to work it out. At the end of that time the two contes were to be submitted to a jury of competent literary men, friends of ours. It was all a sort of joke, but created great interest in our circle--you know it, Hermione, that dines at Reneau's on Thursday nights?" "Yes. Well, what happened?" "Madame Lagrande made a failure of hers, but Robert Meunier astonished us all. He produced certainly one of the best contes that was ever written in the French language." "And Madame Lagrande?" "It is not too much to say that from that moment she has almost hated Robert." "And you dare to say she has a noble nature?" "Yes, a noble nature from which, under some apparently irresistible impulse, she has lapsed." "Maurice," said Hermione, leaning her long arms on the table and leaning forward to her fiance, "you're not in literature any more than I am, you're an outsider--bless you! What d'you say to that?" Delarey hesitated and looked modestly at Artois. "No, no," cried Hermione, "none of that, Maurice! You may be a better judge in this than Emile is with all his knowledge of the human heart. You're the man in the street, and sometimes I'd give a hundred pounds for his opinion and not twopence for the big man's who's in the profession. Would--could a noble nature yield to such an impulse?" "I should hardly have thought so," said Delarey. "Nor I," said Hermione. "I simply don't believe it's possible. For a moment, yes, perhaps. But you say, Emile, that there's an actual breach between them." "There is certainly. Have you ever made any study of jealousy in its various forms?" "Never. I don't know what jealousy is. I can't understand it." "Yet you must be capable of it." "You think every one is?" "Very few who are really alive in the spirit are not. And you, I
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