It was a students' day, and the galleries were crowded with embryonic

geniuses. Courtenay waxed sarcastic anent the rig of Claude's ships;

he was laughing at the careless grace with which several of the Baozan

maidens were standing in a boat just putting off from a wharf, when a

lady cried sharply: "George, how careless of you! You are sitting on my mahl-stick."

"Sorry, my dear," said a tall thin man, rising from a camp-stool.

"Good gracious, it's Mr. Tollemache," whispered Elsie.

"Gad, so it is. Let's hail him."

Tollemache's solemn face brightened when he heard the hail. He

introduced his wife, an eminently artistic being who answered to the

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name of Jennie. She at once enlisted Elsie in an argument as to

atmospheres, but Tollemache drew Courtenay aside.

"Got married when I reached home that trip," he explained. "The wife

comes here every Thursday, an' I have to carry the kit. Rather rot,

isn't it?"

"It is certainly a change from stoking the donkey-boiler, and bowling

over Alaculofs like nine-pius."

"That's what I tell her, but she says the Indians were Boeotian, and

the landscape, as I describe it, had the crude coloring of the Newlyn

school, which she abominates. She thinks Turner might approve of

Suarez in his black and white stripes, but the Guanaco crater reminds

her of Gustave Doré, who always exaggerated his tone values. I learn

that sort of gabble by heart. Jennie's a good sort, yet sometimes she

talks rot--"

"George," said Mrs. Tollemache, "pack up my portfolio. We are going to

lunch with your friends. Mrs. Courtenay and I have so much to talk

about. We find we think alike on many points. I am delighted to have

met your wife, Captain Courtenay. My husband raves about her."

"So do I, ma'am," cried Courtenay, gallantly, yet with a subtle glance

at Elsie which told her he meant what he said.



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