Here the stranger seemed to be so much amused with his sketch of

Hollingsworth's character and purposes, that he burst into a fit of

merriment, of the same nature as the brief, metallic laugh already

alluded to, but immensely prolonged and enlarged. In the excess of his

delight, he opened his mouth wide, and disclosed a gold band around the

upper part of his teeth, thereby making it apparent that every one of

his brilliant grinders and incisors was a sham. This discovery

affected me very oddly.

I felt as if the whole man were a moral and physical humbug; his

wonderful beauty of face, for aught I knew, might be removable like a

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mask; and, tall and comely as his figure looked, he was perhaps but a

wizened little elf, gray and decrepit, with nothing genuine about him

save the wicked expression of his grin. The fantasy of his spectral

character so wrought upon me, together with the contagion of his

strange mirth on my sympathies, that I soon began to laugh as loudly as

himself.

By and by, he paused all at once; so suddenly, indeed, that my own

cachinnation lasted a moment longer.

"Ah, excuse me!" said he. "Our interview seems to proceed more merrily

than it began."

"It ends here," answered I. "And I take shame to myself that my folly

has lost me the right of resenting your ridicule of a friend."

"Pray allow me," said the stranger, approaching a step nearer, and

laying his gloved hand on my sleeve. "One other favor I must ask of

you. You have a young person here at Blithedale, of whom I have

heard,--whom, perhaps, I have known,--and in whom, at all events, I

take a peculiar interest. She is one of those delicate, nervous young

creatures, not uncommon in New England, and whom I suppose to have

become what we find them by the gradual refining away of the physical

system among your women. Some philosophers choose to glorify this

habit of body by terming it spiritual; but, in my opinion, it is rather

the effect of unwholesome food, bad air, lack of outdoor exercise, and

neglect of bathing, on the part of these damsels and their female

progenitors, all resulting in a kind of hereditary dyspepsia. Zenobia,

even with her uncomfortable surplus of vitality, is far the better

model of womanhood. But--to revert again to this young person--she

goes among you by the name of Priscilla. Could you possibly afford me

the means of speaking with her?"

"You have made so many inquiries of me," I observed, "that I may at

least trouble you with one. What is your name?"




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