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    Chapter 4 - Page 2

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    very hot bath.

    "I hope you won't mind my sitting here," he said, timidly. "It seems
    rude to talk down at you from a height."

    She shook her head and threw two more stones into the pool. He could
    think of nothing further to say, and as she did not speak, but
    gravely watched the circles in the water, he began to stare at them
    too; and they sat in silence for some minutes, steadfastly regarding
    the waves, she as if there were matter for infinite thought in them,
    and he as though the spectacle wholly confounded him. At last she
    said,

    "Have you ever realized what a vibration is?"

    "No," said Cashel, after a blank look at her.

    "I am glad to hear you make that admission. Science has reduced
    everything nowadays to vibration. Light, sound, sensation--all the
    mysteries of nature are either vibrations or interference of
    vibrations. There," she said, throwing another pair of pebbles in,
    and pointing to the two sets of widening rings as they overlapped
    one another; "the twinkling of a star, and the pulsation in a chord
    of music, are THAT. But I cannot picture the thing in my own mind. I
    wonder whether the hundreds of writers of text-books on physics, who
    talk so glibly of vibrations, realize them any better than I do."

    "Not a bit of it. Not one of them. Not half so well," said Cashel,
    cheerfully, replying to as much of her speech as he understood.

    "Perhaps the subject does not interest you," she said, turning to
    him.

    "On the contrary; I like it of all things," said he, boldly.

    "I can hardly say so much for my own interest in it. I am told that
    you are a student, Mr. Cashel Byron. What are your favorite
    studies?--or rather, since that is generally a hard question to
    answer, what are your pursuits?"

    Alice listened.

    Cashel looked doggedly at Lydia, and his color slowly deepened. "I
    am a professor," he said.

    "A professor of what? I know I should ask of where; but that would
    only elicit the name of a college, which would convey no real
    information to me."

    "I am a professor of science," said Cashel, in a low voice, looking
    down at his left fist, which he was balancing in the air before him,

    and stealthily hitting his bent knee as if it were another person's
    face.

    "Physical or moral science?" persisted Lydia.

    "Physical science," said Cashel. "But there's more moral science in
    it than people think."

    "Yes," said Lydia, seriously. "Though I have no real knowledge of
    physics, I can appreciate the truth of that. Perhaps all the science
    that is not at bottom
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