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    Chapter 11 - Page 2

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    was, alas, simply not serious. Maisie wept
    on Mrs. Wix's bosom after hearing that Sir Claude was a butterfly;
    considering moreover that her governess but half-patched it up in coming
    out at various moments the next few days with the opinion that it was
    proper to his "station" to be careless and free. That had been proper to
    every one's station that she had yet encountered save poor Mrs. Wix's
    own, and the particular merit of Sir Claude had seemed precisely that he
    was different from every one. She talked with him, however, as time went
    on, very freely about her mother; being with him, in this relation,
    wholly without the fear that had kept her silent before her father--the
    fear of bearing tales and making bad things worse. He appeared to accept
    the idea that he had taken her over and made her, as he said, his
    particular lark; he quite agreed also that he was an awful fraud and an
    idle beast and a sorry dunce. And he never said a word to her against
    her mother--he only remained dumb and discouraged in the face of her
    ladyship's own overtopping earnestness. There were occasions when he
    even spoke as if he had wrenched his little charge from the arms of a
    parent who had fought for her tooth and nail.

    This was the very moral of a scene that flashed into vividness one day
    when the four happened to meet without company in the drawing-room and
    Maisie found herself clutched to her mother's breast and passionately
    sobbed and shrieked over, made the subject of a demonstration evidently
    sequent to some sharp passage just enacted. The connexion required that
    while she almost cradled the child in her arms Ida should speak of her
    as hideously, as fatally estranged, and should rail at Sir Claude as the
    cruel author of the outrage. "He has taken you FROM me," she cried; "he
    has set you AGAINST me, and you've been won away and your horrid little
    mind has been poisoned! You've gone over to him, you've given yourself
    up to side against me and hate me. You never open your mouth to me--you
    know you don't; and you chatter to him like a dozen magpies. Don't lie
    about it--I hear you all over the place. You hang about him in a way
    that's barely decent--he can do what he likes with you. Well then, let
    him, to his heart's content: he has been in such a hurry to take you

    that we'll see if it suits him to keep you. I'm very good to break my
    heart about it when you've no more feeling for me than a clammy little
    fish!" She suddenly thrust the child away and, as a disgusted admission
    of failure, sent her flying across the room into the arms of Mrs. Wix,
    whom at this moment and even in the whirl of her transit Maisie saw,
    very red, exchange a quick queer look with Sir Claude.

    The impression of the look
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