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    Strangers Yet - Page 2

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    Iberian mixture in her ancestors, perhaps many centuries ago,
    and that these peculiar characters had come out strongly in her; she
    had the peculiar kind of blood in her veins and the peculiar sort of
    soul which goes with the blood.

    "But what a mystery it is!" she exclaimed. "I am the only small one in
    a family of tall sisters. My parents were both tall and light, and the
    others took after them. I was small and dark, and they were tall
    blondes with blue eyes and pale gold hair. And in disposition I was
    unlike them as in physique. How do you account for it?"

    It was a long question, I said, and I had told her all I could about
    it. I couldn't go further into it; I was too ignorant. I had just
    touched on the subject in one of my books. It was in other books, with
    reference to a supposed antagonism which still survives in blue-eyed
    and dark-eyed people.

    She asked me to give her the titles of the books I spoke of. "You
    imagine, I daresay," she said, "that it is mere idle curiosity on my
    part. It isn't so. The subject has a deep and painful interest for me."

    That was all, and I had forgotten all about the conversation until some
    time afterwards, when I had a letter from her recalling it. I quote one
    passage without the alteration of a syllable:

    "Oh, why did I not know before, when I was young, in the days when my
    beautiful blue-eyed but cruel and remorseless mother and sisters made
    my life an inexplicable grief and torment! It might have lifted the
    black shadows from my youth by explaining the reason of their
    persecutions--it might have taken the edge from my sufferings by
    showing that I was not personally to blame, also that nothing could
    ever obviate it, that I but wasted my life and broke my heart in for
    ever vain efforts to appease an hereditary enemy and oppressor."

    Cases of this kind cannot, however, appear conclusive. The cases in
    which mother and daughters unite in persecuting a member of the family
    are not uncommon. I have known several in my experience in which
    respectable, well-to-do, educated, religious people have displayed a
    perfectly fiendish animosity against one of the family. In all these

    cases it has been mother and daughters combining against one daughter,
    and so far as one can see into the matter, the cause is usually to be
    traced to some strangeness or marked peculiarity, physical or mental,
    in the persecuted one. The peculiarity may be a beauty of disposition,
    or some virtue or rare mental quality which the others do not possess.

    It would perhaps be worth while to form a society to investigate all
    these cases of persecution in families, to discover whether or not they
    afford any support to the notion of an
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