Lady Rose's Daughter by Mrs. Humphry Ward
page 11 of 531 (02%)
page 11 of 531 (02%)
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"He won't want to. Lady Henry pays no more attention to his cloth than
to my gray hairs. The rating she has just given me for my speech of last night! Well, good-night, dear lady--good-night. You _are_ better, I think?" Mr. Montresor threw a look of scrutiny no less friendly than earnest at the lady to whom he was speaking; and immediately afterwards Sir Wilfrid, who was wedged in by an entering group of people, caught the murmured words: "Consult me when you want me--at any time." Mademoiselle Le Breton raised her beautiful eyes to the speaker in a mute gratitude. "And five minutes ago I thought her plain!" said Sir Wilfrid to himself as he moved away. "Upon my word, for a _dame de compagnie_ that young woman is at her ease! But where the deuce have I seen her, or her double, before?" He paused to look round the room a moment, before yielding himself to one of the many possible conversations which, as he saw, it contained for him. It was a stately panelled room of the last century, furnished with that sure instinct both for comfort and beauty which a small minority of English rich people have always possessed. Two glorious Gainsboroughs, clad in the subtlest brilliance of pearly white and shimmering blue, hung on either side of the square opening leading to the inner room. The fair, clouded head of a girl, by Romney, looked down from the panelling above the hearth. A gowned abbé, by Vandyck, made the centre of another wall, facing the Gainsboroughs. The pictures were all |
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