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Phyllis of Philistia by Frank Frankfort Moore
page 47 of 326 (14%)

"I'm certain to like him: you like him."

"Ah, that's what you said to the young women who put off their colors
and took to sackcloth in the presence of Mr. Holland. Don't be too sure
that you will like any man because other women like him. Now, I have,
as usual, remained too long with you. I'm greatly impressed with the
situation of the moment. I don't say that I think you are wrong, mind
you. Girls should always be on the side of the Bible. At any rate you
have, I repeat, _la physionomie du role_, and you can't be far astray if
you act up to it. Good-bye, my dearest."



CHAPTER VII.

THE DEFENSE OF HOLLAND.

Ella Linton drove to a certain shop not far from Piccadilly,--the only
shop where the arranging of feathers is treated as a science independent
of the freaks of fashion,--and at the door she met a tall man with the
complexion of mahogany but with fair hair and mustache. People nudged
one another and whispered his name as they walked past him before
standing at the shop window, pretending to admire the feathers, but in
reality to glance furtively round at the man.

The name that they whispered to one another after the nudge was Herbert
Courtland.

He took off his hat--it was a tall silk one, but no one who knew
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