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e old Southern worthy came, a widower with a young son and several negroes, to take his pleasure in Paris in the time of Louis Philippe--and the devoted part she had played in marrying his sisters. He was quite aware that her friendship and all its exertions were often mentioned as explaining their position, so remarkable in a society in which they had begun after all as outsiders. But he would have guessed, even if he had not been told, what his father said to that. To offer the Proberts a position was to carry water to the fountain; they hadn't left their own behind them in Carolina; it had been large enough to stretch across the sea. As to what it was in Carolina there was no need of being explicit. This adoptive Parisian was by nature presupposing, but he was admirably urbane--that was why they let him talk so before the fire; he was the oracle persuasive, the conciliatory voice--and after the death of his wife and of Mme. de Marignac, who had been her friend too, the young man's mother's, he was gentler, if more detached, than before. Gaston had already felt him to care in consequence less for everything--except indeed for the true faith, to which he drew still closer--and this increase of indifference doubtless helped to explain his present charming accommodation. "We shall be thankful for any rooms you may give us," his son said. "We shall fill out the house a little, and won't that be rather an improvement, shrunken as you and I have become?" "You'll fill it out a good deal, I suppose, with Mr. Dosson and the other girl." "Ah Francie won't give up her father and sister, certainly; and what should you think of her if she did? But they're not intrusive; they're essentially modest people; they won't put themselves upon us. They have great natural discretion," Gaston declared. "Do you answer for that? Susan does; she's always assuring one of it," Mr. Probert said. "The father has so much that he wouldn't even speak to me." "He didn't, poor dear man, know what to say." "How then shall I know what to say to HIM?" "Ah you always know!" Gaston smiled. "How will that help us if he doesn't know what to answer?" "You'll draw him out. He's full of a funny little shade of bonhomie." "Well, I won't quarrel with your bonhomme," said Mr. Probert--"if he's silent there are much worse faults; nor yet with the fat young lady, though she's evidently vulgar--even if you call it perhaps too a funny little shade.
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