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    Chapter X

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    It had seemed to him a good idea to interrogate Mrs. Vivian; but there are a great many good ideas that are never put into execution. As he approached her with a smile and a salutation, and, with the air of asking leave to take a liberty, seated himself in the empty chair beside her, he felt a humorous relish of her own probable dismay which relaxed the investigating impulse. His impulse was now simply to prove to her that he was the most unobjectionable fellow in the world-- a proposition which resolved itself into several ingenious observations upon the weather, the music, the charms and the drawbacks of Baden, the merits of the volume that she held in her lap. If Mrs. Vivian should be annoyed, should be fluttered, Bernard would feel very sorry for her; there was nothing in the world that he respected more than the moral consciousness of a little Boston woman whose view of life was serious and whose imagination was subject to alarms. He held it to be a temple of delicacy, where one should walk on tiptoe, and he wished to exhibit to Mrs. Vivian the possible lightness of his own step. She herself was incapable of being rude or ungracious, and now that she was fairly confronted with the plausible object of her mistrust, she composed herself to her usual attitude of refined liberality. Her book was a volume of Victor Cousin.

    "You must have an extraordinary power of abstracting your mind," Bernard said to her, observing it. "Studying philosophy at the Baden Kursaal strikes me as a real intellectual feat."

    "Don't you think we need a little philosophy here?"

    "By all means--what we bring with us. But I should n't attempt the use of the text-book on the spot."

    "You should n't speak of yourself as if you were not clever," said Mrs. Vivian. "Every one says you are so very clever."

    Longueville stared; there was an unexpectedness in the speech and an incongruity in Mrs. Vivian's beginning to flatter him. He needed to remind himself that if she was a Bostonian, she was a Bostonian perverted.

    "Ah, my dear madam, every one is no one," he said, laughing.

    "It was Mr. Wright, in particular," she rejoined. "He has always told us that."

    "He is blinded by friendship."

    "Ah yes, we know about your friendship," said Mrs. Vivian. "He has told us about that."

    "You are making him out a terrible talker!"

    "We think he talks so well--we are so very fond of his conversation."


    "It 's usually excellent," said Bernard. "But it depends a good deal on the subject."

    "Oh," rejoined Mrs. Vivian, "we always let him choose his subjects." And dropping her eyes as if in sudden reflection, she began to smooth down the crumpled corner of her volume.

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