Now it happened that I came to that same spot where she had

leaned and, flinging myself down, I fell to studying my

reflection in the water, even as she had done.

Heretofore, though I had paid scant heed to my appearance, I had

been content (in a certain impersonal sort of way), had dressed

in the fashion, and taken advantage of such adornments as were in

favor, as much from habit as from any set design; but now, lying

beside the brook with my chin propped in my hands, I began to

study myself critically, feature by feature, as I had never

dreamed of doing before.

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Mirrored in the clear waters I beheld a face lean and brown, and

with lank, black hair; eyes, dark and of a strange brilliance,

looked at me from beneath a steep prominence of brow; I saw a

somewhat high-bridged nose with thin, nervous nostrils, a long,

cleft chin, and a disdainful mouth.

Truly, a saturnine face, cold and dark and unlovely, and thus

--even as I gazed--the mouth grew still more disdainful, and the

heavy brow lowered blacker and more forbidding. And yet, in that

same moment, I found myself sighing, while I strove to lend some

order to the wildness of my hair.

"Fool!" said I, and plunged my head beneath the water, and held

it there so long that I came up puffing and blowing; whereupon I

caught up the towel and fell to rubbing myself vigorously, so

that presently, looking down into the water again, I saw that my

hair was wilder than ever--all rubbed into long elf-locks.

Straightway I lifted my hands, and would have smoothed it

somewhat, but checked the impulse.

"Let be," said I to myself, turning away, "let be. I am as I am,

and shall be henceforth in very truth a village blacksmith--and

content so to be--absolutely content."

At sight of me Charmian burst out laughing, the which, though I

had expected it, angered me nevertheless.

"Why, Peter!" she exclaimed, "you look like--"

"A very low fellow!" said I, "say a village blacksmith who has

been at his ablutions."

"If you only had rings in your ears, and a scarf round your head,

you would be the image of a Spanish brigand--or like the man Mina

whose exploits The Gazette is full of--a Spanish general, I think."

"A guerrilla leader," said I, taking my place at the table, "and

a singularly cold-blooded villain--indeed I think it probable

that we much resemble one another; is it any wonder that I am

shunned by my kind--avoided by the ignorant and regarded askance

by the rest?"




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