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house. It seemed all softness and quiet-I recall dead white

panelling and oval mirrors horizontally set and a marble fireplace

between white marble-blind Homer and marble-blind Virgil, very grave

and fine-and how Isabel came in to lunch in a shapeless thing like

a blue smock that made her bright quick-changing face seem yellow

under her cloud of black hair. Her step-sister was there, Miss

Gamer, to whom the house was to descend, a well-dressed lady of

thirty, amiably disavowing responsibility for Isabel in every phrase

and gesture. And there was a very pleasant doctor, an Oxford man,

who seemed on excellent terms with every one. It was manifest that

he was in the habit of sparring with the girl, but on this occasion

she wasn't sparring and refused to be teased into a display in spite

of the taunts of either him or her father. She was, they discovered

with rising eyebrows, shy. It seemed an opportunity too rare for

them to miss. They proclaimed her enthusiasm for me in a way that

brought a flush to her cheek and a look into her eye between appeal

and defiance. They declared she had read my books, which I thought

at the time was exaggeration, their dry political quality was so

distinctly not what one was accustomed to regard as schoolgirl

reading. Miss Gamer protested to protect her, "When once in a blue

moon Isabel is well-behaved…!"

Except for these attacks I do not remember much of the conversation

at table; it was, I know, discursive and concerned with the sort of

topographical and social and electioneering fact natural to such a

visit. Old Rivers struck me as a delightful person, modestly

unconscious of his doubly-earned V. C. and the plucky defence of

Kardin-Bergat that won his baronetcy. He was that excellent type,

the soldier radical, and we began that day a friendship that was

only ended by his death in the hunting-field three years later. He

interested Margaret into a disregard of my plate and the fact that I

had secured the illegal indulgence of Moselle. After lunch we went

for coffee into another low room, this time brown panelled and

looking through French windows on a red-walled garden, graceful even

in its winter desolation. And there the conversation suddenly

picked up and became good. It had fallen to a pause, and the

doctor, with an air of definitely throwing off a mask and wrecking

an established tranquillity, remarked: "Very probably you Liberals

will come in, though I'm not sure you'll come in so mightily as you

think, but what you do when you do come in passes my comprehension."

"There's good work sometimes," said Sir Graham, "in undoing."

"You can't govern a great empire by amending and repealing the Acts

of your predecessors," said the doctor.

There came that kind of pause that happens when a subject is

broached too big and difficult for the gathering. Margaret's blue

eyes regarded the speaker with quiet disapproval for a moment, and

then came to me in the not too confident hope that I would snub him

out of existence with some prompt rhetorical stroke. A voice spoke

out of the big arm-chair.

"We'll do things," said Isabel.

The doctor's eye lit with the joy of the fisherman who strikes his

fish at last. "What will you do?" he asked her.

"Every one knows we're a mixed lot," said Isabel.

"Poor old chaps like me!" interjected the general.

"But that's not a programme," said the doctor.

"But Mr. Remington has published a programme," said Isabel.

The doctor cocked half an eye at me.

"In some review," the girl went on. "After all, we're not going to

elect the whole Liberal party in the Kinghamstead Division. I'm a

Remington-ite!"

"But the programme," said the doctor, "the programme-"

"In front of Mr. Remington!"

"Scandal always comes home at last," said the doctor. "Let him hear

the worst."

"I'd like to hear," I said. "Electioneering shatters convictions

and enfeebles the mind."

"Not mine," said Isabel stoutly. "I mean-Well, anyhow I take it

Mr. Remington stands for constructing a civilised state out of this

muddle."

"THIS muddle," protested the doctor with an appeal of the eye to the

beautiful long room and the ordered garden outside the bright clean

windows.

"Well, THAT muddle, if you like! There's a slum within a mile of us

already. The dust and blacks get worse and worse, Sissie?"

"They do," agreed Miss Gamer.

"Mr. Remington stands for construction, order, education, discipline."

"And you?" said the doctor.

"I'm a good Remington-ite."

"Discipline!" said the doctor.

"Oh!" said Isabel. "At times one has to be-Napoleonic. They want

to libel me, Mr. Remington. A political worker can't always be in

time for meals, can she? At times one has to make-splendid cuts."

Miss Gamer said something indistinctly.

"Order, education, discipline," said Sir Graham. "Excellent things!

But I've a sort of memory-in my young days-we talked about

something called liberty."

"Liberty under the law," I said, with an unexpected approving murmur

from Margaret, and took up the defence. "The old Liberal definition

of liberty was a trifle uncritical. Privilege and legal

restrictions are not the only enemies of liberty. An uneducated,