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when he paid his compliments, would be to shock the good breeding of which he was master;-but as certain it was, that he did not pay those compliments with his usual ease.

"I fear we break in upon your privacy," said Evelyn.

"At least most agreeably," replied he.

"We presumed," observed Miss Evelyn, "upon the permission of Monsieur Dupuis, who, when he went one way to seek you, gave us leave to go another. We asked which way you went; to which we had the satisfactory answer,' He no know himself.""

"From all which we suspected," said Evelyn, looking at his book, "that you were, as we find you, enacting the part of Master Touchstone in the Forest of Ardennes."

"I am much obliged to you for making me a clown, when at least I fancied myself a duke," said Tremaine.

"The resemblance, pardon me, is perhaps nearer than you are aware of. Nay, don't be angry, for it was Georgy there first pointed it out."

"Me! Oh papa!-sure you-indeed Mr. Tremaine "

"I have no doubt the resemblance is very just," said Tremaine, with rather more politeness in his manner than Georgina was disposed to like.

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Sçavoir," said Evelyn; and he began to read. "And how like you this shepherd's life, Master "Touchstone? Truly shepherd, in respect to itself "it is a good life; but in respect that it is a shep"herd's life, it is naught. In respect that it is soli

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tary, I like it very well; but in respect that it is "private, it is a very vile life. Now in respect it is "in the fields, it pleaseth me well; but in respect it " is not in court, it is tedious.”

“And all this is fastened upon me by Miss Evelyn! and not Miss Evelyn's father!" observed Tremaine. "Perhaps it lay between us both," cried the Doctor; "but you will at least allow that the portrait is a very good portrait."

Now Tremaine allowed no such thing; so to turn the conversation, he asked what had brought him the honour of their company so soon.- -"Can all that business which employs you so much, be finished so soon in a morning ?"

"We are going to Lord Bellenden's," replied Evelyn, "which is fifteen miles; he dines early, to let people get home again, and we want you to go too."

"I am not invited," returned Tremaine.

""Tis a public day," said Evelyn.

"And would you

have me on that account attend

it !-excuse me, my good friend; you little know me

-I consider a public day as little less than an insult ! -Who is this Lord Bellenden, that —”

"Lord Bellenden," said Evelyn, stopping him, "is a very worthy nobleman, of immense fortune, and therefore of influence,-placed by the king at the head of the Riding,-living, but not shutting himself up, upon his estate."

"I am going to be schooled, I see," cried Tremaine—“ pray spare me."

"I will," answered the Doctor, "provided you will allow there is neither harm nor insult in such a man opening his house to all his neighbours, and telling them he has done so."

"What, in the newspapers!" cried Tremaine. "No! I am not proud

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"Not in the least," retorted the Doctor; "those who ever said so wronged you unmercifully."

“I am, however, I hope, above being advertised for as a guest," said his friend. "Let us see!"There will be public days at Bellenden House every Thursday, for the next month."

"So says the paragraph, which, being interpreted, means, that my Lord Bellenden being very lonely, and not knowing what to do with himself in his fine house, is very willing to be diverted by any one who will take the trouble to come twenty or thirty miles to divert him."

"You forget," said Evelyn, " that he diverts, as well as is diverted, and that he is as much honoured as he honours. So much for pride: Au reste, neighbours and families who see one another seldom, have a pleasant opportunity of meeting under the auspices of a person of rank, power, and good breeding; and all that promotes good neighbourhood cannot but be good in itself."

"Yes! but to be advertised for!"

"Well, are you not advertised for in town?" "As how?"

"Whenever my lady A-, or Mrs. B-, sends a small card to your house, not treating you with the least ceremony of compliment, not even honouring you with an invitation, but merely apprising you, (gracious intimation!) that she is at home!—and yet you go for all that!"

"That is not in the papers," answered Tremaine. "It is not always out of them," said Evelyn; "at least I have sometimes observed, with a preface of,6 we are authorized to say, Lady A,'s assembly is put off, or Lady B.'s is put on; or that if it rains, the Duke of D-'s breakfast will not take place at the C— Villa.'—Now what is this but advertising in the papers, or what does it want but a Whereas,' in large letters, to give it a place in the Hue and Cry itself?"

"You may overpower, but you cannot convince

me," answered Tremaine, in a tone which shewed that though he might not be convinced, he was at least much shaken. "Yet how can I make you believe I am not proud?"

"By going," said Georgina, with a look which did more than all her father's argument; "by going, for it is quite a curricle day

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"But I have no curricle," replied Tremaine, “and if I had, fifteen miles' driving in such heat would be insupportable.”

"Your barouche, then," said Georgina, with a smile there was no withstanding.

"You drive me out of all my principles," exclaimed the proud man, acquiescingly.

As the carriage was getting ready, "You will give us places, I suppose, and I shall at least gain by it," said Evelyn.

"No you won't, for we will have no arguments," said Tremaine, "not one the whole way."

It is not above two miles from Bellenden House, and as the road turns suddenly to the left, branching off from the turnpike towards the outer gates of the park, that one of those substantial summer-houses, which our ancestors were so fond of building sixty or seventy years ago, filled up the exact corner of the two roads, so that a window to the south, and another to the west, commanded a view of every man, woman, child, horse, higgler's cart, stage, or gen.

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