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hrenthal asked no more. It was a pity that the baron did not see the expression of the tradesman's face as he got into his conveyance and drove away. He told the coachman to go slowly through the grounds, and looked with delight at the flourishing crops on either side. "A fine property," he went on muttering to himself; "truly a fine property." Meanwhile the baroness sat in the shrubbery, and turned over the leaves of a new magazine, every now and then casting a look at her daughter, who was occupied in framing, with old newspapers and flowers, a grotesque decoration for the pony's head and neck, while he kept tearing away all of it that he could reach. As soon as she caught her mother's glance, she flew to her, and began to talk nonsense to the smart ladies and gentlemen who displayed the fashions in the pages of the magazine. At first her mother laughed, but by-and-by she said, "Lenore, you are now a great girl, and yet a mere child. We have been too careless about your education; it is high time that you should begin and learn more systematically, my poor darling." "I thought I was to have done with learning," said Lenore, pouting. "Your French is still very imperfect, and your father wishes you to practice drawing, for which you have a talent." "I only care for drawing caricatures," cried Lenore; "they are so easy." "You must leave off drawing these; they spoil your taste, and make you satirical." Lenore hung her head. "And who was the young man with whom I saw you a short time ago?" continued the baroness, reprovingly. "Do not scold me, dear mother," cried Lenore; "he was a stranger--a handsome, modest youth, on his way to the capital. He has neither father nor mother, and that made me so sorry for him." Her mother kissed her, and said, "You are my own dear, wild girl. Go and call your father; his coffee will get cold." As soon as the baron appeared, his head still full of his conversation with Ehrenthal, his wife laid her hand in his, and said, "Oscar, I am uneasy about Lenore!" "Is she ill?" inquired her father, in alarm. "No, she is well and good-hearted, but she is more free and unconventional than she should be at her age." "She has been brought up in the country, and a fine, clever girl she is," replied the baron, soothingly. "Yes, but she is too frank in her manner toward strangers," continued his wife; "I fear that she is in danger of becoming an original." "Well, and is that a
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