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world in my well-appointed "cords and tops." Captain Hammersley had not as yet made his appearance, and many conjectures were afloat as to whether "he might have missed the road, or changed his mind," or "forgot all about it," as Miss Dashwood hinted. "Who, pray, pitched upon this cover?" said Caroline Blake, as she looked with a practised eye over the country on either side. "There is no chance of a fox late in the day at the Mill," said the huntsman, inventing a lie for the occasion. "Then of course you never intend us to see much of the sport; for after you break cover, you are entirely lost to us." "I thought you always followed the hounds," said Miss Dashwood, timidly. "Oh, to be sure we do, in any common country, but here it is out of the question; the fences are too large for any one, and if I am not mistaken, these gentlemen will not ride far over this. There, look yonder, where the river is rushing down the hill: that stream, widening as it advances, crosses the cover nearly midway,--well, they must clear that; and then you may see these walls of large loose stones nearly five feet in height. That is the usual course the fox takes, unless he heads towards the hills and goes towards Dangan, and then there's an end of it; for the deer-park wall is usually a pull up to every one except, perhaps, to our friend Charley yonder, who has tried his fortune against drowning more than once there." "Look, here he comes," said Matthew Blake, "and looking splendidly too,--a little too much in flesh perhaps, if anything." "Captain Hammersley!" said the four Miss Blakes, in a breath. "Where is he?" "No; it's the Badger I'm speaking of," said Matthew, laughing, and pointing with his finger towards a corner of the field where my servant was leisurely throwing down a wall about two feet high to let him pass. "Oh, how handsome! What a charger for a dragoon!" said Miss Dashwood. Any other mode of praising my steed would have been much more acceptable. The word "dragoon" was a thorn in my tenderest part that rankled and lacerated at every stir. In a moment I was in the saddle, and scarcely seated when at once all the _mauvais honte_ of boyhood left me, and I felt every inch a man. I often look back to that moment of my life, and comparing it with similar ones, cannot help acknowledging how purely is the self-possession which so often wins success the result of some slight and trivial association. My confidence in
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