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    Chapter 12

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    CHAPTER XII.

    It was a day of rather bright weather for the season. Miss
    Melbury went out for a morning walk, and her ever-regardful
    father, having an hour's leisure, offered to walk with her. The
    breeze was fresh and quite steady, filtering itself through the
    denuded mass of twigs without swaying them, but making the point
    of each ivy-leaf on the trunks scratch its underlying neighbor
    restlessly. Grace's lips sucked in this native air of hers like
    milk. They soon reached a place where the wood ran down into a
    corner, and went outside it towards comparatively open ground.
    Having looked round about, they were intending to re-enter the
    copse when a fox quietly emerged with a dragging brush, trotted
    past them tamely as a domestic cat, and disappeared amid some dead
    fern. They walked on, her father merely observing, after watching
    the animal, "They are hunting somewhere near."

    Farther up they saw in the mid-distance the hounds running hither
    and thither, as if there were little or no scent that day. Soon
    divers members of the hunt appeared on the scene, and it was
    evident from their movements that the chase had been stultified by
    general puzzle-headedness as to the whereabouts of the intended
    victim. In a minute a farmer rode up to the two pedestrians,
    panting with acteonic excitement, and Grace being a few steps in
    advance, he addressed her, asking if she had seen the fox.

    "Yes," said she. "We saw him some time ago--just out there."

    "Did you cry Halloo?"

    "We said nothing."

    "Then why the d--- didn't you, or get the old buffer to do it for
    you?" said the man, as he cantered away.

    She looked rather disconcerted at this reply, and observing her
    father's face, saw that it was quite red.

    "He ought not to have spoken to ye like that!" said the old man,
    in the tone of one whose heart was bruised, though it was not by
    the epithet applied to himself. "And he wouldn't if he had been a
    gentleman. 'Twas not the language to use to a woman of any
    niceness. You, so well read and cultivated--how could he expect
    ye to know what tom-boy field-folk are in the habit of doing? If
    so be you had just come from trimming swedes or mangolds--joking
    with the rough work-folk and all that--I could have stood it. But

    hasn't it cost me near a hundred a year to lift you out of all
    that, so as to show an example to the neighborhood of what a woman
    can be? Grace, shall I tell you the secret of it? 'Twas because I
    was in your company. If a black-coated squire or pa'son had been
    walking with you instead of me he wouldn't have spoken so."

    "No, no, father; there's nothing in you rough or ill-mannered!"

    "I tell you it is that! I've noticed, and I've noticed it many
    times,
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