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is something that the world, nowadays, reckons far above any of the classes you have named, Stella—she is a great beauty."

      "Oh, is that all!" said Stella, curtly.

      "All!" he echoed, amused.

      "Yes," and she nodded. "It seems so easy."

      "So easy!" and he laughed.

      "Yes," she continued; "so very easy, if you happen to be born so. There is no merit in it. And is that all she is?"

      He was staggered by her sang froid for a moment.

      "Well, I was scarcely fair, perhaps. As you say, it is very easy to be a great beauty—if you are one—but it is rather difficult if you are not; but Lenore is something more than that—she is an enchantress."

      "That's better," remarked Stella. "I like that. And how does she enchant? Does she keep tame snakes, and play music to them, or mesmerize people, or what?"

      The painter laughed again with great enjoyment at her naivete.

      "You are quite a cynic, Stella. Where did you learn the trick; from your father, or is it a natural gift? No, she does not keep tame snakes, and I don't know that she has acquired the art of mesmerism; but she can charm for all that. First, she is, really and truly, very beautiful——"

      "Tell me what she is like?" interrupted Stella, softly.

      The old man paused a moment to light his pipe.

      "She is very fair," he said.

      "I know," said Stella, dreamily, and with a little smile; "with yellow hair and blue eyes, and a pink and white complexion, and blue veins and a tiny mouth."

      "All wrong," he said, with, a laugh. "You have, woman-like, pictured a china doll. Lenore is as unlike a china doll as it is possible to imagine. She has golden hair it is true—but golden hair, not yellow; there is a difference. Then her eyes are not blue; they are violet."

      "Violet!"

      "Violet!" he repeated, gravely. "I have seen them as violet as the flowers that grow on the bank over there. Her mouth is not small; there was never yet a woman worth a fig who had a small mouth. It is rather large than otherwise, but then it is—a mouth."

      "Expressive?" said Stella, quietly.

      "Eloquent," he corrected. "The sort of mouth that can speak volumes with a curve of the lip. You think I exaggerate? Wait until you see her."

      "I don't think," said Stella, slowly, "that I am particularly desirous of seeing her, uncle. It reminds we of what they say of Naples—see Naples and die! See Lenore and die!"

      He laughed.

      "Well, it is not altogether false; many have seen her—many men, and been ready to die for love of her."

      Stella laughed, softly.

      "She must be very beautiful for you to talk like this, uncle. She is charming too?"

      "Yes, she is charming," he said, low; "with a charm that one is bound to admit at once and unreservedly."

      "But what does she do?" asked Stella, with a touch of feminine impatience.

      "What does she not?" he answered. "There is scarcely an accomplishment under the sun or moon that she has not at her command. In a word, Stella, Lenore is the outcome of the higher civilization; she is the type of our latest requirement, which demands more than mere beauty, and will not be satisfied with mere cleverness; she rides beautifully and fearlessly; she plays and sings better than one-half the women one hears at concerts; they tell me that no woman in London can dance with greater grace, and I have seen her land a salmon of twenty pounds with all the skill of a Scotch gillie."

      Stella was silent a moment.

      "You have described a paragon, uncle. How all her women friends must detest her."

      He laughed.

      "I think you are wrong. I never knew a woman more popular with her sex."

      "How proud her husband must be of her," murmured Stella.

      "Her husband! What husband? She is not married."

      Stella laughed.

      "Not married! Such a perfection unmarried! Is it possible that mankind can permit such a paragon to remain single. Uncle, they must be afraid of her!"

      "Well, perhaps they are—some of them," he assented, smiling. "No," he continued, musingly; "she is not married. Lenore might have been married long before this: she has had many chances, and some of them great ones. She might have been a duchess by this time if she had chosen."

      "And why did she not?" said Stella. "Such a woman should be nothing less than a duchess. It is a duchess whom you have described, uncle."

      "I don't know," he said, simply. "I don't think anyone knows; perhaps she does not know herself."

      Stella was silent for a moment; her imagination was hard at work.

      "Is she rich, poor—what, uncle?"

      "I don't know. Rich, I should think," he answered.

      "And what is her other name, or has she only one name, like a princess or a church dignitary?"

      "Her name is Beauchamp—Lady Lenore Beauchamp."

      "Lady!" repeated Stella, surprised. "She has a title, then; it was all that was wanted."

      "Yes, she is the daughter of a peer."

      "What a happy woman she must be;—is she a woman or a girl, though. I have imagined her a woman of thirty."

      He laughed.

      "Lady Lenore is—is"—he thought a moment—"just twenty-three."

      "That's a woman," said Stella, decidedly. "And this wonderful creature is at the Hall, within sight of us. Tell me, uncle, do they keep her in a glass case, and only permit her to be seen as a curiosity at so much a head? They ought to do so, you know."

      He laughed, and his hand stroked her hair.

      "What is it Voltaire says, Stella," he remarked. "'If you want a woman to hate another, praise her to the first one.'"

      Stella's face flushed hotly, and she laughed with just a touch of scorn.

      "Hate! I don't hate her, uncle—I admire her; I should like to see her, to touch her—to feel for myself the wonderful charm of which you speak. I should like to see how she bears it; it must be strange, you know, to be superior to all one's kind."

      "If she feels strange," he said, thoughtfully, "she does not show it. I never saw more perfect grace and ease than hers. I do not think anything in the world would ruffle her. I think if she were on board a ship that was going down inch by inch, and she knew that she was within, say, five minutes of death, she would not flinch, or drop for a moment the smile which usually rests upon her lips. That is her charm, Stella—the perfect ease and perfect grace which spring from a consciousness of her power."

      There was silence for a moment. The painter had spoken in his usual dreamy fashion, more like communion with his own thoughts than a direct address to his hearer, and Stella, listening, allowed every word to sink into her mind.

      His description impressed her strongly, more than she cared to admit. Already, so it seemed to her, she felt fascinated by this beautiful creature, who appeared as perfect and faultless as one of the heathen goddesses—say Diana.

      "Where does she live?" she asked, dreamily.

      He smoked in silence for a moment.

      "Live? I scarcely know; she is everywhere. In London in the season, visiting in country houses at other times. There is not a house in England where she would not be received with a welcome accorded to princes. It is rather strange that she should be down here just now; the season has commenced, most of the visitors have

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