then, but the next morning I said to Farmer Hendry, 'I wish you
would keep your
savage bull chained up while we are here; aunt Celia
is
awfully afraid of them, especially those that go mad, like
yours!' 'Lor', miss,' said Farmer Hendry, 'he haven't been pastured
here for three weeks. I keep him six mile away. There ben't
nothing but gentle cows in the home medder.' But I didn't think
that you knew, you secretive person! I dare say you planned the
whole thing in advance, in order to take
advantage of my fright!"
"Never! I am
incapable of such an unnecessary subterfuge! Besides,
Kitty, I could not have made an accomplice of a cow, you know."
" Then," she said, with great
dignity, "if you had been a gentleman
and a man of honor, you would have cried, 'Unhand me, girl! You are
clinging to me under a misunderstanding!'"
SHE
CHESTER, August 8
The Grosvenor.
Jack and I are going over this same ground next summer, on our
wedding trip. We shall sail for home next week, and we haven't half
done justice to the cathedrals. After the first two, we saw nothing
but each other on a general
background of
architecture. I hope my
mind is improved, but oh, I am so hazy about all the facts I have
read since I knew Jack! Winchester and Salisbury stand out superbly
in my memory. They acquired their ground before it was occupied
with other matters. I shall never forget, for
instance, that
Winchester has the longest spire and Salisbury the highest nave of
all the English cathedrals. And I shall never forget so long as I
live that Jane Austen and Isaac Newt- Oh dear! was it Isaac Newton
or Izaak Walton that was buried in Winchester and Salisbury? To
think that that interesting fact should have slipped from my mind,
after all the trouble I took with it! But I know that it was Isaac
somebody, and that he was buried in--well, he was buried in one of
those two places. I am not certain which, but I can ask Jack; he is
sure to know.
End