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PAGE 13

Heart
by [?]

“What, tete-a-tete!” exclaimed Maria; “you should discharge your footman, Charlotte, for saying that you were at home. A young lady is never supposed to be at home when she is alone–with a gentleman.”

“I shall then know how to understand the servant of Mr. Osgood, when I inquire for his daughter,” cried Seymour gayly.

“Ah! Mr. Delafield, it is seldom that I have an opportunity of hearing soft things, for I am never alone with a gentleman in my father’s house”–

“And is Mrs. Osgood so rigid?” returned the gentleman; “surely the gravity of her daughter should create more confidence”–

“Most humbly I thank you, Sir,{“} said Maria, courtseying low before she took the chair that he handed; “but it is not the caution of Mrs. Osgood that prevents any solos in her mansion, unless it be on a harp or flute, or any possibility of a tete-a- tete.”

“Now you have excited my curiosity to a degree that is painfully unpleasant,” said Delafield, “I know you to be too generous not to allay it”–

“Oh! it is nothing more than a magical number, that frightens away all applicants for such a favour, unless indeed it may be such as would not be very likely to be successful were they to apply; and which even would render it physically impossible to have a tender interview within the four walls of the mansion”–

“It is a charmed number, indeed! and is it on the door? is it the number of the house?”

“Oh! not at all–only the number of the family, the baker’s dozen, that I mentioned last evening; now in visiting Miss Henly there is no such interruption to be apprehended.”

Charlotte could not refrain from smiling at the vivacity of her friend, who, perceiving that her wish to banish the look of care that clouded the brow of the other had vanished, changed the discourse as abruptly as she had introduced it.

“I met George Morton at the door, and chatted with him for several minutes. He appears quite ill, but I know he has gone two miles in the country for his mother this raw day; unless he is more careful of himself he will ruin his constitution, which is none of the best now.”

Maria spoke with feeling, and with a manner that plainly showed that her ordinary levity was assumed, and that she had at the bottom, much better feelings than the trifling intercourse of the world would usually permit her to exhibit. Charlotte did not reply, but her brightening looks once more changed to that pensive softness which so well became her delicate features, and which gave to her countenance an expression such as might be supposed to shadow the glory of angels, when, from their abode of purity and love, they look down with pity on the sorrows of man.

The quick glance of Delafield not only watched, but easily detected, both the rapid transitions and the character of these opposite emotions. Under the sudden influence of passions, that probably will not escape our readers, he could not forbear uttering, in a tone in which pique might have been too apparent.

“Really, Mr. Morton is a happy fellow!”

The blue eyes of Charlotte were turned to the speaker with a look of innocent inquiry, but she continued silent. Maria, however, not only bestowed a glance at the youth from her laughing hazel ones, but found utterance for her tongue also.

“How so?” she asked–“He is not of a strong constitution, not immensely rich, nor over and above–that is, not particularly handsome. Why is he so happy?”

“Ah! I have discovered that a man may be happy without one of those qualifications.”

“And miserable who has them all?”

“Nay, nay, Miss Osgood, my experience does not extend so far–I am not quite the puppy you think me.”

Maria, in her turn, was silent; but she arose from her seat, and moved with an absent air to a distant part of the room, and for a short time seemed to be particularly occupied in examining the beauties of a port-folio of prints, with every one of which she was perfectly familiar. The conversation was resumed by her friend.