A Bicycle of Cathay - Page 29/112

The young lady asked me if I had seen Miss Putney, and when I replied

that I had, she inquired if I did not think that she was a very pretty

girl. "I do not know her," she said, "but I have often seen her when

she was out driving. I do not believe there is any one in this part of

the country who dresses better than she does."

I laughed, and told her that I thought I knew somebody who dressed

much finer even than Miss Putney, and then I described the incident

of the Duke's dressing-gown. This delighted them all, and before I

left I was obliged to give every detail of my gorgeous attire.

It was about eleven o'clock when at last I tore myself away from this

most attractive little family. To live as they lived, to be interested

in the things that interested them--for the house seemed filled with

books and pictures--to love nature, to love each other, and to think

well of their fellow-beings, even of the super-rich--seemed to me to

be an object for which a man of my temperament should be willing to

strive and thankful to win. After meeting her parents I did not wonder

that I had thought the slender girl so honest-hearted and so lovable.

It was true that I had thought that.