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<h2> Chapter X. Apropos of advertisements. </h2>
<p>Francesca wishes to get some old hall-marked silver for her home tea-tray,
and she is absorbed at present in answering advertisements of people who
have second-hand pieces for sale, and who offer to bring them on approval.
The other day, when Willie Beresford and I came in from Westminster Abbey
(where we had been choosing the best locations for our memorial tablets),
we thought Francesca must be giving a 'small and early'; but it transpired
that all the silver-sellers had called at the same hour, and it took the
united strength of Dawson and Mr. Beresford, together with my diplomacy,
to rescue the poor child from their clutches. She came out alive, but her
safety was purchased at the cost of a George IV. cream-jug, an Elizabethan
sugar-bowl, and a Boadicea tea-caddy, which were, I doubt not,
manufactured in Wardour Street towards the close of the nineteenth
century.</p>
<p>Salemina came in just then, cold and tired. (Tower and National Gallery
the same day. It's so much more work to go to the Tower nowadays than it
used to be!) We had intended to take a sail to Richmond on a penny
steamboat, but it was drizzling, so we had a cosy fire instead, slipped
into our tea-gowns, and ordered tea and thin bread-and-butter, a basket of
strawberries with their frills on, and a jug of Devonshire cream. Willie
Beresford asked if he might stay; otherwise, he said, he should have to
sit at a cold marble table on the corner of Bond Street and Piccadilly,
and take his tea in bachelor solitude.</p>
<p>"Yes," I said severely, "we will allow you to stay; though, as you are
coming to dinner, I should think you would have to go away some time, if
only in order that you might get ready to come back. You've been here
since breakfast-time."</p>
<p>"I know," he answered calmly, "and my only error in judgment was that I
didn't take an earlier breakfast, in order to begin my day here sooner.
One has to snatch a moment when he can, nowadays; for these rooms are so
infested with British swells that a base-born American stands very little
chance!"</p>
<p>Now I should like to know if Willie Beresford is in love with Francesca.
What shall I do—that is what shall we do—if he is, when she is
in love with somebody else? To be sure, she may want one lover for foreign
and another for domestic service. He is too old for her, but that is
always the way. When Alcides, having gone through all the fatigues of
life, took a bride in Olympus, he ought to have selected Minerva, but he
chose Hebe.</p>
<p>I wonder why so many people call him 'Willie' Beresford, at his age.
Perhaps it is because his mother sets the example; but from her lips it
does not seem amiss. I suppose when she looks at him she recalls the past,
and is ever seeing the little child in the strong man, mother fashion. It
is very beautiful, that feeling; and when a girl surprises it in any
mother's eyes it makes her heart beat faster, as in the presence of
something sacred, which she can understand only because she is a woman,
and experience is foreshadowed in intuition.</p>
<p>The Honourable Arthur had sent us a dozen London dailies and weeklies, and
we fell into an idle discussion of their contents over the teacups. I had
found an 'exchange column' which was as interesting as it was novel, and I
told Francesca it seemed to me that if we managed wisely we could rid
ourselves of all our useless belongings, and gradually amass a collection
of the English articles we most desired. "Here is an opportunity, for
instance," I said, and I read aloud-"'S.G., of Kensington, will post
'Woman' three days old regularly for a box of cut flowers.'"</p>
<p>"Rather young," said Mr. Beresford, "or I'd answer that advertisement
myself."</p>
<p>I wanted to tell him I didn't suppose that he could find anything too
young for his taste, but I didn't dare.</p>
<p>"Salemina adores cats," I went on. "How is this, Sally, dear?— 'A
handsome orange male Persian cat, also a tabby, immense coat, brushes and
frills, is offered in exchange for an electro-plated revolving covered
dish or an Allen's Vapour Bath.'"</p>
<p>"I should like the cat, but alas! I have no covered dish," sighed
Salemina.</p>
<p>"Buy one," suggested Mr. Beresford. "Even then you'd be getting a bargain.
Do you understand that you receive the male orange cat for the dish, and
the frilled tabby for the bath, or do you get both in exchange for either
of these articles? Read on, Miss Hamilton."</p>
<p>"Very well, here is one for Francesca-"'A harmonium with seven stops is
offered in exchange for a really good Plymouth cockerel hatched in May.'"</p>
<p>"I should want to know when the harmonium was hatched," said Francesca
prudently. "Now you cannot usurp the platform entirely, my dear Pen.
Listen to an English marriage notice from the Times. It chances to be the
longest one to-day, but there were others just as remarkable in
yesterday's issue.</p>
<p>"'On the 17th instant, at Emmanuel Church (Countess of Padelford's
connection), Weston-super-Mare, by the Rev. Canon Vernon, B.D., Rector of
St. Edmund the King and Martyr, Suffolk Street, uncle of bride, assisted
by the Rev. Otho Pelham, M.A., Vicar of All Saints, Upper Norwood, Dr.
Philosophial Konrad Rasch, of Koetzsenbroda, Saxony, to Evelyn Whitaker
Rake, widow of the late Richard Balaclava Rake, Barrister-at-law of the
Inner Temple and Bombay, and third surviving daughter of George Frederic
Goldspink, C.B., of Sydenham House, Craig Hill, Commissioner of Her
Majesty's Customs, and formerly of the War Office.'"</p>
<p>By the time this was finished we were all quite exhausted, but we revived
like magic when Salemina read us her contribution:—</p>
<p>"'A NAME ENSHRINED IN LITERATURE AND RENOWNED IN COMMERCE,—Miss
Willard, Waddington, Essex. Deal with her whenever you possibly can. When
you want to purchase, ask her for anything under the canopy of heaven,
from jewels, bijouterie, and curios to rare books and high-class articles
of utility. When you want to sell, consign only to her, from choice gems
to mundane objects. All transactions embodying the germs of small profits
are welcome. As a sample of her stock please note: A superlatively
exquisite, essentially beautiful, and important lace flounce for sale, at
a reasonable price. Also a bargain of peerlessly choice character.—Six
grandly glittering paste cluster buttons, of important size, emitting
dazzling rays of incomparable splendour and lustre. Don't readily forget
this or her name and address,—Clara (Miss) Willard (the Lady
Trader), Waddington, Essex. Immaculate promptitude and scrupulous
liberality observed: therefore, on these credentials, ye must deal with
her; it is the duty of intellect to be reciprocal.'"</p>
<p>Just here Dawson entered, evidently to lay the dinner-cloth, but, seeing
that we had a visitor, he took the tea-tray and retired discreetly.</p>
<p>"It is five-and-thirty minutes past six, Mr. Beresford," I said. "Do you
think you can get to the Metropole and array yourself and return in less
than an hour? Because, even if you can, remember that we ladies have
elaborate toilets in prospect,—toilets intended for the complete
prostration of the British gentry. Francesca has a yellow gown which will
drive Bertie Godolphin to madness. Salemina has laid out a soft, dovelike
grey and steel combination, directed towards the Church of England; for
you may not know that Sally has a vicar in her train, Mr. Beresford, and
he will probably speak to-night. As for me-"</p>
<p>Before these shocking personalities were finished Salemina and Francesca
had fled to their rooms, and Mr. Beresford took up my broken sentence and
said, "As for you, Miss Hamilton, whatever gown you wear, you are sure to
make one man speak, if you care about it; but, I suppose, you would not
listen to him unless he were English"; and with that shot he departed.</p>
<p>I really think I shall have to give up the Francesca hypothesis, and,
alas! I am not quite ready to adopt any other.</p>
<p>We discussed international marriages while we were at our toilets,
Salemina and I prinking by the light of one small candle-end, while
Francesca, as the youngest and prettiest, illuminated her charms with the
six sitting-room candles and three filched from the little table in the
hall.</p>
<p>I gave it as my humble opinion that for an American woman an English
husband was at least an experiment; Salemina declared that for that matter
a husband of any nationality was an experiment. Francesca ended the
conversation flippantly by saying that in her judgment no husband at all
was a much more hazardous experiment.</p>
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