Page:The venture; an annual of art and literature.djvu/187

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JILL'S CAT.

Where Jill's cat came from I have no idea; she just came. I first set eyes on her when one night, returning from dinner, I found her coiled up in an arm-chair in the drawing-room very fast asleep. So with a certain amount of mild, though I think, justifiable indignation, I thereupon opened the door of the room and the door into the garden, and advanced upon her clapping my hands and emitting loud and terrible noises in order to drive her out. But she merely stretched one paw with extreme laziness, looked at me with half a yellow eye, as if to say: "That noise is in deplorably bad taste, but I suppose you don't know any better," and went to sleep again.

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