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window with a kitten. "I don't know," Shelton was obliged to answer. Thea shook back her hair. "I call it awfully slack of you not to have found out," she said. Antonia frowned. "You were very sweet to that young foreigner, Dick," she murmured with a smile at Shelton. "I wish that we could see him." But Shelton shook his head. "It seems to me," he muttered, "that I did about as little for him as I could." Again her face grew thoughtful, as though his words had chilled her. "I don't see what more you could have done," she answered. A desire to get close to her, half fear, half ache, a sense of futility and bafflement, an inner burning, made him feel as though a flame were licking at his heart. CHAPTER XXI ENGLISH Just as Shelton was starting to walk back to Oxford he met Mr. Dennant coming from a ride. Antonia's father was a spare man of medium height, with yellowish face, grey moustache, ironical eyebrows, and some tiny crow's-feet. In his old, short grey coat, with a little slit up the middle of the back, his drab cord breeches, ancient mahogany leggings, and carefully blacked boats, he had a dry, threadbare quality not without distinction. "Ah, Shelton!" he said, in his quietly festive voice; "glad to see the pilgrim here, at last. You're not off already?" and, laying his hand on Shelton's arm, he proposed to walk a little way with him across the fields. This was the first time they had met since the engagement; and Shelton began to nerve himself to express some sentiment, however bald, about it. He squared his shoulders, cleared his throat, and looked askance at Mr. Dennant. That gentleman was walking stiffly, his cord breeches faintly squeaking. He switched a yellow, jointed cane against his leggings, and after each blow looked at his legs satirically. He himself was rather like that yellow cane-pale, and slim, and jointed, with features arching just a little, like the arching of its handle. "They say it'll be a bad year for fruit," Shelton said at last. "My dear fellow, you don't know your farmer, I 'm afraid. We ought to hang some farmers--do a world of good. Dear souls! I've got some perfect strawberries." "I suppose," said Shelton, glad to postpone the evil moment, "in a climate like this a man must grumble." "Quite so, quite so! Look at us poor slaves of land-owners; if I couldn't abuse the farmers I should be wretched. Did you ever see anything f
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