"Peter!"

"Yes?"

"I wish you wouldn't."

"Wouldn't what, Charmian?"

"Stir your tea round and round and round--it is really most

--exasperating!"

"I beg your pardon!" said I humbly.

"And you eat nothing; and that is also exasperating!"

"I am not hungry."

"And I was so careful with the bacon--see it is fried

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--beautifully--yes, you are very exasperating, Peter!"

Here, finding I was absent-mindedly stirring my tea round and

round again, I gulped it down out of the way, whereupon Charmian

took my cup and refilled it; having done which, she set her

elbows upon the table, and, propping her chin in her hands,

looked at me.

"You climbed out through your window last night, Peter?"

"Yes."

"It must have been a--dreadfully tight squeeze!"

"Yes."

"And why did you go by the window?"

"I did not wish to disturb you."

"That was very thoughtful of you--only, you see, I was up and

dressed; the roar of the thunder woke me. It was a dreadful

storm, Peter!"

"Yes."

"The lightning was awful!"

"Yes."

"And you were out in it?"

"Yes."

"Oh, you poor, poor Peter! How cold you must have been!"

"On the contrary," I began, "I--"

"And wet, Peter--miserably wet and clammy!"

"I did not notice it," I murmured.

"Being a philosopher, Peter, and too much engrossed in your

thoughts?"

"I was certainly thinking."

"Of yourself!"

"Yes--"

"You are a great egoist, aren't you, Peter?"

"Am I, Charmian?"

"Who but an egoist could stand with his mind so full of himself

and his own concerns as to be oblivious to thunder and lightning,

and not know that he is miserably clammy and wet?"

"I thought of others besides myself."

"But only in connection with yourself; everything you have ever read

or seen you apply to yourself, to make that self more worthy in Mr.

Vibart's eyes. Is this worthy of Peter Vibart? Can Peter Vibart

do this, that, or the other, and still retain the respect of Peter

Vibart? Then why, being in all things so very correct and precise,

why is Peter Vibart given to prowling abroad at midnight, quite

oblivious to thunder, lightning, wet and clamminess? I answer:

Because Peter Vibart is too much engrossed by--Peter Vibart.

There! that sounds rather cryptic and very full of Peter Vibart;

but that is as it should be," and she laughed.




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