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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    struck her as
    having been written at Helstone--beautiful, beloved Helstone! She
    lost herself in dismal thought: but at last she determined to
    take her mind away from the present; and suddenly remembered that
    she had a letter from Edith which she had only half read in the
    bustle of the morning. It was to tell of their arrival at Corfu;
    their voyage along the Mediterranean--their music, and dancing on
    board ship; the gay new life opening upon her; her house with its
    trellised balcony, and its views over white cliffs and deep blue
    sea. Edith wrote fluently and well, if not graphically. She could
    not only seize the salient and characteristic points of a scene,
    but she could enumerate enough of indiscriminate particulars for
    Margaret to make it out for herself Captain Lennox and another
    lately married officer shared a villa, high up on the beautiful
    precipitous rocks overhanging the sea. Their days, late as it was
    in the year, seemed spent in boating or land pic-nics; all
    out-of-doors, pleasure-seeking and glad, Edith's life seemed like
    the deep vault of blue sky above her, free--utterly free from
    fleck or cloud. Her husband had to attend drill, and she, the
    most musical officer's wife there, had to copy the new and
    popular tunes out of the most recent English music, for the
    benefit of the bandmaster; those seemed their most severe and
    arduous duties. She expressed an affectionate hope that, if the
    regiment stopped another year at Corfu, Margaret might come out
    and pay her a long visit. She asked Margaret if she remembered
    the day twelve-month on which she, Edith, wrote--how it rained
    all day long in Harley Street; and how she would not put on her
    new gown to go to a stupid dinner, and get it all wet and
    splashed in going to the carriage; and how at that very dinner
    they had first met Captain Lennox.

    Yes! Margaret remembered it well. Edith and Mrs. Shaw had gone to
    dinner. Margaret had joined the party in the evening. The
    recollection of the plentiful luxury of all the arrangements, the
    stately handsomeness of the furniture, the size of the house, the
    peaceful, untroubled ease of the visitors--all came vividly
    before her, in strange contrast to the present time. The smooth
    sea of that old life closed up, without a mark left to tell where

    they had all been. The habitual dinners, the calls, the shopping,
    the dancing evenings, were all going on, going on for ever,
    though her Aunt Shaw and Edith were no longer there; and she, of
    course, was even less missed. She doubted if any one of that old
    set ever thought of her, except Henry Lennox. He too, she knew,
    would strive to forget her, because of the pain she had caused
    him. She had heard him often boast of his power of putting any
    disagreeable
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