"You know they were brought up together like sisters."

"All the worse, for she has the habit of passive submission. If it were

the mother it would be all right, and I should be thankful to see her in

good keeping, but the mother and sister go for nothing, and down comes

this girl to battle every suggestion with principles picked up from

every catchpenny periodical, things she does not half understand, and

enunciates as if no one had even heard of them before."

"I believe she seldom meets any one who has. I mean to whom they are

matters of thought. I really do like her vigour and earnestness."

"Don't say so, Ermine! One reason why she is so intolerable to me is

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that she is a grotesque caricature of what you used to be."

"You have hit it! I see why I always liked her, besides that it is

pleasant to have any sort of visit, and a good scrimmage is refreshing;

she is just what I should have been without papa and Edward to keep me

down, and without the civilizing atmosphere at the park."

"Never."

"No, I was not her equal in energy and beneficence, and I was younger

when you came. But I feel for her longing to be up and doing, and her

puzzled chafing against constraint and conventionality, though it breaks

out in very odd effervescences."

"Extremely generous of you when you must be bored to death with her

interminable talk."

"You don't appreciate the pleasure of variety! Besides, she really

interests me, she is so full of vigorous crudities. I believe all that

is unpleasing in her arises from her being considered as the clever

woman of the family; having no man nearly connected enough to keep her

in check, and living in society that does not fairly meet her. I want

you to talk to her, and take her in hand."

"Me! Thank you, Ermine! Why, I could not even stand her talking about

you, though she has the one grace of valuing you."

"Then you ought, in common gratitude, for there is no little greatness

of soul in patiently coming down to Mackarel Lane to be snubbed by one's

cousin's governess's sister."

"If you will come up to Myrtlewood, you don't know what you may do."

"No, you are to set no more people upon me, though Lady Temple's eyes

are very wistful."

"I did not think you would have held out against her."

"Not when I had against you? No, indeed, though I never did see anybody

more winning than she is in that meek, submissive gentleness! Alison

says she has cheered up and grown like another creature since your

arrival."

"And Alexander Keith's. Yes, poor thing, we have brought something of

her own old world, where she was a sort of little queen in her way. It

is too much to ask me to have patience with these relations, Ermine.

If you could see the change from the petted creature she was with her

mother and husband, almost always the first lady in the place, and

latterly with a colonial court of her own, and now, ordered about,

advised, domineered over, made nobody of, and taking it as meekly and

sweetly as if she were grateful for it! I verily believe she is! But she

certainly ought to come away."




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