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'I?' said Stuart. 'Or what?'
'Either. Both.'
The janissary laughed somewhat uneasily. Just then a knight, extremely well got up in the habiliments of the 13th century, stepped near and accosted the witch in a confidential tone.
'Everybody here, I suppose, is known to you. Pray who is that very handsome, very _decolletee_, lady from the court of Charles the Second? Upon my word! she does it well.'
'That is Miss Fisher.'
'Well, if women knew!'--said the knight slowly. It was evident he thought himself speaking to safe ears, probably not handsome enough to be displayed. 'If they knew!' he repeated.
'Does she not do it well?'
'Does she?' said the witch. 'I was not in England just then.'
'Don't you wish you had been! It's a very fair show,'-- continued the knight as he looked. 'We ought to be much obliged to the lady. Really, she leaves--nothing--to be desired!
If you please, merely as a subject of curiosity, from what part of the world and time does yonder figure come? the broad- brimmed hat?'
The figure was a very fine one, by the way. His dress was a quaintly-cut suit of dark blue cloth, the edges bound with crimson, and fastened with silver b.u.t.tons. White fine thread stockings were tied at the knee with crimson riband, and silver buckles were in his shoes.
'You must know,' said the witch, 'that there are several parts of the world from which I have been banished.'
'In an aesthetic point of view, I should say the edict was justified,' returned the knight, surveying the bale of brown serge before him. He pa.s.sed on, and the man in the blue cloth presently took his place.
'They tell me you are a witch,' said he, speaking in rather a low tone; 'and as you see, I am a countryman. Will you have the goodness to explain to me--I suppose you understand it--what all the these people are?'
'They are people who for the present find their happiness in being other people,' said the witch, with a grave voice, in which however a laugh was somewhat imperfectly m.u.f.fled. 'Like yourself, sir.'
'Like me? Quite the contrary. I was never more myself, I a.s.sure you. For that very reason I find myself not at home.
Excuse my curiosity. Why, if you please, do they seek their happiness out of themselves, as it were, in this way?'
'Well,' said the witch confidentially, 'to tell you the truth, I don't know. You see I am in your predicament, and was never more myself.'
'But I thought you had a familiar spirit? I have read so much as that.'
'At your service'--said the witch.
'Then be so good as to enlighten me. I see a moving kaleidoscope view of figures--it's very pretty--but why are they all here?'
'Some because they were invited,' said the witch critically.
'And doubtless some because others were. And a good many for fun--and a few for mischief.'
'Is it the custom in this country to make mischief one of the pleasures of society?'
'Yes!' said the witch with some emphasis. 'And to tell you the truth again, that is just one of the points in which society might be improved.'
'But how do fun and mischief go along together?'
'Well, that depends,' said the witch. 'The wrong sort of mischief spoils the right sort of fun.'
'And does that often happen, among such well-dressed people as these?'
'O, where if her Grace?'--cried a gay voice in the distance.
'I've sworn to find her.'
The witch was silent a moment, then answered slowly, 'It happens--quite often.'
'Can people find nothing pleasanter to do with their time,'
said the countryman, 'than to spend it in mischief? or in fun which the mischief spoils? These things you tell me sound very strange in my ears.'
'The right sort of mischief _is_ fun,--and the right sort of fun is -not- mischief,' she said impatiently. 'And what people find in the wrong sorts, I don't know!'
'By the way,' said the countryman, 'how come _you_ to be here?
How did you escape, when Saul killed all the rest of the witches?'
'It is queer, isn't it?' she said. 'Wouldn't you have supposed I should be the first one to fall?'
'And in this country, are you using your experience to make or to mend mischief?'
'Make all I can! Are there any Sauls on hand, do you think?'
'Pray, what sort of man would you characterize by that name?'
'Well,' said she of Endor with again the hidden laugh in her voice, 'some men have a hidden weakness for witches which conflicts with their duty,--and some men don't!'
'I hope I am not a Saul, then,' said the countryman laughing, though softly; 'but in any case you are safe to take my arm for a walk round the rooms. I should like to see all that is to be seen; and perhaps you could help me to understand.'
It was not a more incongruous pair than were to be seen in many parts of the a.s.sembly. The beauty of Charles the Second's court was flirting with Rob Roy; a lady in the wonderful ruff of Elizabeth's time talked with a Roman toga; a Franciscan monk with bare feet gesticulated in front of a Swiss maiden; as the Witch of Endor sauntered through the rooms on the arm of n.o.body knew exactly what countryman.
'Your prejudices must be very often shocked here,' said the countryman with a smothered tone of laughter again. 'Or, I beg pardon!--has a witch any prejudices, seeing she can have no gravity?'
'What does prejudice mean in your country?'
'Much the same, I am afraid, that it does elsewhere. What are we coming to?'
Pa.s.sing slowly through the rooms, they had arrived at the great saloon, at one end of which large folding doors opened into another and smaller apartment. This smaller room was hung with green baize; candelabra shed gentle light upon it from within the doors, so placed as not to be seen from the princ.i.p.al room; and over the folding doors was hung a hick red curtain; rolled up now.
'What is all this?'
'O, if you wait a while,' said the witch, 'you will see further transformations--that is all.'
'And what is _this_ for?' said the countryman, pointing to the rolled-up rend curtain.
'To hide the transformed, till they are ready to be seen.'
'But it does not hide anything,' said the countryman obtusely.
'How do they get it down?'
He went examining about the door-posts, with undoubted curiosity, till he found the mechanism attached to the curtain and touched the spring. Down fell the red folds in an instant.