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ars since they had danced it. But they did it very well; Porter's somewhat stiff bearing accorded with its stateliness, and Mary, having added to her green velvet gown a little Juliet cap of lace and a lace fan, showed the radiant, almost boyish beauty which had charmed Roger on the night of the wedding. His pulses throbbed as he watched her. They were a well-matched pair, this young millionaire and the pretty maid. And as their orderly steps went through the dance, so would their orderly lives, if they married, continue to the end. But what could Porter Bigelow teach Mary Ballard of the things which touch the stars? And now the candles were seven! And the spirit of the carnival was upon the company. Song was followed by story, and story by song--until at last the room seemed to swim in a golden mist. And through that mist Mary saw Roger Poole! He was leaning forward a little, and there was about him the air of a man who waited. She spoke impetuously. "Mr. Poole," she said, "please----" There was not a trace of awkwardness, not a hint of self-consciousness in his manner as he answered her. "May I sit here?" he asked. "You see, my pussy cat holds me, and as I shall tell you about a cat, she gives the touch of local color." And then he began, his right hand resting on the gray cat's head, his left upon his knee. He used no gestures, yet as he went on, the room became still with the stillness of a captured audience. Here was no stumbling elocution, but a controlled and perfect method, backed by a voice which soared and sang and throbbed and thrilled--the voice either of a great orator, or of a great actor. The story that he told was of Whittington and his cat. But it was not the old nursery rhyme. He gave it as it is written by one of England's younger poets. Since he lacked the time for it all, he sketched the theme, rounding it out here and there with a verse--and it seemed to Mary that, as he spoke, all the bells of London boomed! "'_Flos Mercatorum_,' moaned the bell of All Hallowes, 'There was he an orphan, O, a little lad, alone!' 'Then we all sang,' echoed happy St. Saviour's, 'Called him and lured him, and made him our own.'" And now they saw the little lad stealing toward the big city, saw all the color and glow as he entered upon its enchantment, saw his meeting with the green-gowned Alice, saw him cold and hungry, faint and footsore, saw him aswoon on a door-step.
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