Page:The Semi-detached House.djvu/12

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4
THE SEMI-DETACHED HOUSE.

There was a silence, another row of netting and a turn of the mesh, and then Aunt Sarah said in her most composed tone:

"I often think, my dear, that it is a great pity you are so imaginative, and a still greater pity that you are so fastidious. You would be happier if you were as dull and as matter-of-fact as I am."

"Dear Aunt Sarah, don't say you are dull. There is nobody I like so much to talk to. You bring out such original remarks, such convincing truths, and in a quiet way, so that they do not make the black bruises which 'les vérités dures' generally produce. But am I fastidious and imaginative?"

"Yes, my dear, very painfully so. Now, just consider, Blanche; you began this week by throwing yourself into a fever because Arthur was to leave you, on a mission that may be of great future advantage to him. He is to be away only three months, and is as much grieved as you are at the separation it involves. You immediately assert that he is going for a year, at least, that he is to