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only gave her a clap, that I can remember, at those two or three points in the play where clap they positively must or burst. They go to see her--but they loathe her--and they let her know it.' 'Bah!' said his opponent, 'it is only because they are tired of her. Her vagaries don't amuse them any longer--they know them by heart. And--by George! she has some pretty rivals too, now!' he added reflectively,--'not to speak of the Bernhardt.' 'Well, the Parisians _can_ be shocked,' said Count Wielandt in excellent English, bending forward so as to get a good view of his hostess. 'They are just now especially shocked by the condition of English morals!' The twinkle in his eye was irresistible. The men, understanding his reference to the avidity with which certain English aristocratic scandals had been lately seized upon by the French papers, laughed out--so did Lady Aubrey. Madame de Netteville contented herself with a smile. 'They profess to be shocked, too, by Renan's last book,' said the editor from the other side of the room. 'Dear me!' said Lady Aubrey, with meditative scorn, fanning herself lightly the while, her thin but extraordinarily graceful head and neck thrown out against the golden brocade of the cushion behind her. 'Oh! what so many of them feel in Renan's case, of course' said Madame de Netteville, 'is that every book he writes now gives a fresh opening to the enemy to blaspheme. Your eminent freethinker can't afford just yet, in the present state of the world, to make himself socially ridiculous. The cause suffers.' 'Just my feeling,' said young Evershed calmly. 'Though I mayn't care a rap about him personally, I prefer that a man on my own front bench shouldn't make a public ass of himself if he can help it--not for his sake, of course, but for mine!' Robert looked at Catherine. She sat upright by the side of Lady Aubrey; her face, of which the beauty tonight seemed lost in rigidity, pale and stiff. With a contraction of heart he plunged himself into the conversation. On his road home that evening he had found an important foreign telegram posted up at the small literary club to which he had belonged since Oxford days. He made a remark about it now to Count Wielandt; and the diplomatist, turning rather unwillingly to face his questioner, recognized that the remark was a shrewd one. Presently the young man's frank intelligence had told. On his way to and from the Holy Land three years befor
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