<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<h3>A TALK ABOUT SHYNESS.</h3>
<div class='unindent'><br/>CANNIE," said Mrs. Gray, a few
days after the sailing-party,
"would you like to study French
this summer, with Marian for
company?"</div>
<p>"Y-es," replied Cannie; but she said it
more because she saw that a yes was expected
of her, than because of any real pleasure
at the idea. Like most girls who have
had scanty or poor teaching, she liked to read
a great deal better than she liked to study.</p>
<p>"Do you know any French at all?" continued
her cousin.</p>
<p>"No, not any. There wasn't anybody at
home who taught it; and if there had been,
I don't believe Aunt Myra would have let me
learn. She thinks English is a good enough
language for anybody. I did study Latin a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
little while, though. Aunt Myra consented to
that, because we had papa's Latin books in
the house, and she said they might as well be
useful."</p>
<p>"Well, your Latin won't come amiss to
your French," said Mrs. Gray, laughing to
herself over this thrifty reason for learning a
language. "Marian is, of course, far ahead
of you in speaking, for she learned it by ear,
as they say of music, during the year we
spent in France on our way home; but she
knows but little of the rules and grammar.
I think you will do very well together; for
her fluency will tempt you on to talk, and
your perseverance will keep her up to the
exercises and conjugations, which are sad
drudgery, but very needful if you are ever
really to know anything of the language.
You are persevering, are you not, Cannie?"</p>
<p>"I don't know whether I am or not,"
replied Candace, inly resolving to justify
Cousin Kate's good opinion.</p>
<p>"I have confidence in you," said Mrs. Gray,
smiling kindly at her. "And another thing I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
wanted to say is, that I think both you and
Marian will enjoy the summer a great deal
better for having one regular study to prepare
for. It gives a sort of backbone to your
lives, don't you see? Clear fun is like clear
honey,—it cloys and loses its charm; but
when it is mixed with occupation it keeps
its flavor, and you don't get tired of it."</p>
<p>"I can understand that," said Candace,
thoughtfully. "I recollect how nice Saturday
afternoons used to seem when Aunt Myra
had kept me busy darning stockings all the
morning. I think I <i>would</i> like the French
lessons, Cousin Kate; only I am afraid the
teacher will think me very stupid."</p>
<p>Candace's fears were not realized. As a beginner,
her first steps were necessarily slow;
but she took pains, and had no bad habits
or evil accents to unlearn, and after a while
she "got hold" of the language and went on
more rapidly. Marian's fluent chatter stimulated
her to try to talk as fast also, though
Mademoiselle Bougereau, their teacher, found
a great deal of fault with Marian, and said<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span>
that many of the phrases which came so
glibly out of her mouth partook of the nature
of slang, and were not finished or elegant
French. Still, with all drawbacks, the little
class of two made fair progress; and Candace
realized that what Mrs. Gray had said was
true, and that all the bits of amusement and
pleasure which came in her way were doubly
enjoyed by reason of the little "backbone"
of real work thus put into her days.</p>
<p>Another pleasure which she and Marian
shared in common was a surf-bath before
breakfast. Berry Joy had got up an omnibus
party of girls, which she called "The Early
Dip Club," in which all four of Mrs. Gray's
young people were included. Punctually at
a quarter before seven on every fair morning
the omnibus rattled up the Avenue; and the
"Club" set out, under the care of an old experienced
maid of Mrs. Joy's, who had nursed
Berry, and could be trusted to see that none
of the young ladies did anything very imprudent,—such
as staying too long in the water
or standing about in their wet bathing-dresses.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span>
At that early hour there were no loungers to
stare at the party. The beach, cleanly swept
by the tide of the night before, had scarcely
a footprint to mar its smooth, firm sands.
There was something delightful in the perfect
freshness of the hour and place. Some of the
girls had taken lessons in the "School of
Natation" in the lower bay, and could swim
very well. Candace could not swim, and made
no attempt to learn; but she soon acquired
the art of floating, under the tuition of Alice
Frewen, who, next to Marian and herself,
was the youngest of the party, and to whom
she had taken a great fancy. The three
"children," as Berenice Joy called them, made
common cause, and generally kept together,
a little apart from the others, holding each
other's hands and splashing up and down in
the rollers with great enjoyment.</p>
<p>Bathing over, the "Early Dippers" returned
home in their omnibus about the time that
other people were waking up, bringing with
them such cheeks and such appetites as
were a satisfaction to their families, and did<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
great credit to the powers of the Newport
surf.</p>
<p>So the days sped on. It was full summer-tide
now; yet the weather never seemed hot,
except perhaps for an hour or two at a time.
Morning after morning the sun would rise in
a blaze of yellow, which anywhere else would
have betokened a scorching day; and just
as people had begun to say, "What a sultry
morning!" lo, in one moment the wind would
set in from the sea, strong, salty, fresh, invigorating;
and, behold, it was cool! Or if
the afternoon seemed for a little while oppressive
in the streets of the old town, it was
only necessary to go down to the end of the
Avenue to find a temperature cool enough to
be called chilly. Nobody ever thought of driving
without a shawl, and the shawl was almost
always needed. Mrs. Gray was wont to say
that Newport had three different climates,—a
warm one and a cold one and an in-between
one,—and it had them all three every day,
and people could take their choice, which was
much more convenient than having only one.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The large places on the Cliffs were all
open and occupied now. The flower-beds,
newly planted when Candace came, made
wonderful spaces of color everywhere in the
emerald turf. Geraniums seemed as universal
as grass, and their splendid reds and
pinks were such as are seldom seen anywhere
except in Newport. Foliage plants grew into
enormous crimson or golden mats, which
showed not one break in their luxuriant fulness.
In the more ornate places were beds
planted to look like Turkish carpets or Indian
shawls, the pattern reproduced by hundreds
of small plants of carefully adjusted hues,
kept closely shaven so as to lie as flat as the
objects they simulated. Roses were everywhere;
and the soft drifting mists which now
and again blew in from the sea, and the constant
underlying moisture of the climate kept
everything in a state of perfect freshness.</p>
<p>The Casino balls and lawn-tennis matches
had begun. Visitors were pouring into the
Ocean House; and every day increased the
number of carriages, drags, dog-carts, pony<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
phaetons, and village carts, which on all
bright afternoons thronged the Avenue from
end to end. Dinners and lawn-parties were
of frequent occurrence, and during calling-hours
the bell seemed always in vibration at
the Gray cottage.—"Cottage" I call it; for
in Newport everything that is not a "villa"
is styled a "cottage," no matter how big
or square or uncompromising its appearance
may be.</p>
<p>Candace was rather too young to be taken
into general society, and she saw much less
of these entertainments than Georgie; less
even than Gertrude, who, by reason of her
intimacy with Georgie's set, was often included
in their parties, though not yet formally
"out." Mrs. Gray, however, thought
it good for Candace to share a little of what
was going on; and she took pains to have
her invited now and then with the others to
lawn-parties, excursions, or afternoon teas. If
Mrs. Gray herself was present on these occasions,
Cannie did pretty well; for she invariably
got behind her cousin or beside her, made<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
no attempt to talk, and just amused herself
by watching what went on. But when Mrs.
Gray did not go, and she was left to the tender
mercies of Georgie and Gertrude, she was
apt to feel lonely and unfriended; for with
all the better resolutions of these pleasure-loving
young people, they still found it "easy
to forget Cannie."</p>
<p>"What are you going to do this morning,
children?" asked Mrs. Gray, one day at
breakfast. "Is the great tennis-match that
we have heard so much about to come off, or
have I forgotten the date?"</p>
<p>"No, this is the eventful day," replied
Gertrude; "and I am so nervous about it
that I don't feel as if I could play at all."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! you played beautifully yesterday,"
said Georgie.</p>
<p>"There wasn't anything depending on me
yesterday. It is queer how people never
do their best when it is important that they
should. I feel as if I were going to be all
thumbs this morning."</p>
<p>"Oh, you won't. You'll get excited and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
forget about the thumbs," remarked Georgie,
consolingly. "Mamma, aren't you coming to
see us?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I think I shall; and I will bring Cannie
with me. She hasn't seen the Casino yet."</p>
<p>Candace had become familiar with the
street side of the pretty Casino building, and
admired greatly its long façade, with the
quaintly shingled curves and balconies, and
the low gables, ornamented with disks and
half suns in dull gilding,—all looking, Mrs.
Gray said, as old as if it had stood there for
a couple of centuries, instead of for three or
four years only. But the street side, picturesque
as it is, had by no means prepared
her for what she saw as she followed her
cousin through the entrance hall and into
the quadrangle beyond.</p>
<p>What did she see? An open space of
greenest turf, broken only by two long curving
beds of foliage plants and a stone basin
from which a fountain threw up a cool jet
to refresh the air. On either hand, and on
the side from which they had entered, was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
a line of low buildings, with balconies and
<i>grilles</i> of quaintly designed wood-work, windows
filled with oddly tinted glass, and at
one point a clock tower of rough masonry,
over which vines were clustering. Connecting
the buildings to right and left, was a
raised covered gallery, semi-circular in shape,
with a second gallery overhead; and on these
ladies in fresh morning toilettes were sitting,
some with pieces of embroidery in their hands,
others collected in knots for conversation or
to listen to the music of the band.</p>
<p>Beyond this gallery lay another and much
larger quadrangle, with lines of trees and
shrubs to veil its boundaries, on which lawn-tennis
was being played in five or six courts
at once. At the back of this quadrangle was
another long low building, in the same picturesque
style as the rest, which, Mrs. Gray
explained, contained on one side a charming
little theatre which could also be used as a
ball-room, and on the other an admirable
bowling-alley and racket-court for the use of
the members. The band was playing gay<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
music; a hum of conversation filled the air;
pretty girls in white or blue or rose color were
moving about; the wind drew with delicious
coolness through the galleries; altogether it
would have been hard to find on a summer
morning a prettier place or a livelier scene.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray was too much of a favorite not
to be at once sought out. She was soon the
centre of a little group of friends; and Candace
sat beside her, silent as usual, but gazing
with enchanted eyes at the animated figures
on the tennis ground, at the gables and loggias
of the restaurant building, at the curious
clock-tower, with the heavy iron rings depending
above the base, and its top like a bellflower.
It was all like a fairy tale to her.
Her imagination was actively at work, but
no one would have guessed it from her quiet
little face; and when Mrs. Gray introduced
her to one person and another, she shrank
into herself, and after her shy little bow and
"How do you do?" relapsed again into stillness,
and made no attempt to keep up a conversation.
People were kind; but it is always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
easy to secure solitude in a crowd, and Cannie
soon found herself let alone to her heart's
content.</p>
<p>Gertrude was playing her best. Her nervousness
had disappeared in the excitement
of the game, as Georgie had predicted that it
would, and some of her strokes were so clever
as to win a little volley of applause from
the by-standers. Candace did not know the
game well enough to appreciate fine points
of play, but she could perfectly appreciate
the fun of winning; and when Gertrude,
flushed and radiant, came to show her mother
the prize she had won, a lace pin of gold filigree
in the form of a racket, Cannie's face
lighted up with a bright sympathy which was
pleasant to see. A lady who had been watching
her whispered to Mrs. Gray, "What a
sweet face that little niece of yours has!"</p>
<p>"So she has," replied Mrs. Gray; "only
she is so very timid. She never does herself
justice."</p>
<p>"Is it timidity? I had a fancy that she had
an unhappy temper, or was troubled about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
something. Her face has always seemed so
sad and overcast till just now, when it lit up
at Gertrude's good fortune, and then I caught
the true expression."</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray recollected this remark as she
drove home with Candace, who, perfectly at
ease now that she was alone with her cousin
Kate, chattered and laughed like any other
girl, and showed herself the happy young
thing that she was. At home, even when
with Georgie and Gertrude, she was no longer
shy; but the moment a stranger came in,
all was changed. It was like an evil spell cast
by some enchanter. The pleasant smile and
simple childish manner vanished, and Cannie
became stiff, cold, awkward even; for her discomfort
made her feel constrained in every
limb and muscle. Her manner grew frigid,
because she was frightened and wanted to
hide it. If she had to shake hands, she did
it without smiling and with downcast eyes;
she was too ill at ease to be cordial. People
thought that she was out of humor or troubled
about something, and set her down as dull and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
unattractive; and with a natural reaction, Cannie
felt that they did not like her, and that
made her more uncomfortable than ever.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gray pitied Cannie very much, and
had tried various methods to shake her out
of her shyness and teach her confidence
in herself. None of them so far had done
any good. She now began to wonder if
her analysis of the case was not wrong; if
shyness was not a fault rather than a misfortune,
and needed to be disciplined accordingly.
She watched Candace for a day or
two, and then she made up her mind. "It
will be kill or cure," she thought, as she
ordered the coupé and proposed to Cannie to
take the ocean drive. Marian wanted to go
too, and protested that there was plenty of
room on the little let-down seat, and that she
wouldn't crowd them a bit; but her mother
was quite firm, and despatched her on an
errand in the other direction without any
compunctions.</p>
<p>"I must have Cannie all to myself," she
thought.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was not till they were out of the Avenue
and rolling along the smooth road beyond
Bailey's Beach, with the fresh-water ponds
on one hand and on the other the points
and indentations of the coast, that Mrs. Gray
led to the subject which was on her mind.
The sea was intensely blue that afternoon,
with shoots of creamy foam over every rock
and ledge, and for a while they talked of
nothing but the beauty of the day and the
view. Finally Mrs. Gray began,—</p>
<p>"How did you like Mrs. Endicott?"</p>
<p>Mrs. Endicott was one of various visitors
who had called that morning. Candace had
been sent for, and had been more than usually
awkward and unresponsive.</p>
<p>"I liked her pretty well," said Candace.
"She didn't talk to me but a little while."</p>
<p>"I know she didn't. It was on her account
specially that I sent for you to come
down," continued Mrs. Gray. "Did she tell
you that she was at school with your mother
when they were quite little girls?"</p>
<p>"No!" said Candace, surprised.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes; they were great friends, and she
wrote to me before she came up that she was
looking forward to seeing you. Shall I tell
you why she so soon stopped talking to you?
She told me afterward. She said: 'I wanted
to talk to your niece about her mother, and
to ask her to come to me for a visit; but
she looked so frightened and seemed so stiff
and shy and hard to get at, that I thought
the kindest thing I could do would be to let
her alone for the moment, till she was a little
more used to me, and to talk to some one
else. Next time I come, we shall get on
better, I hope.'"</p>
<p>Candace looked much mortified.</p>
<p>"Was I stiff?" she asked. "I didn't
know it. I didn't mean to be."</p>
<p>"You are almost always stiff with strangers,"
said her cousin. "I know you do
not mean it, and you are not conscious of
the effect of your own manner; but all the
same it is stiff. Now, Cannie, will you
promise me not to be hurt at what I am
going to say?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Why, of course I won't," said Cannie,
looking at her with trustful eyes.</p>
<p>"Well then, listen! If I didn't know
you,—if you were not my own dear little
Cannie, whose warm heart I am sure of, and
whose good intentions I know all about,—if
I met you for the first time and judged of you
merely from your manner, as all strangers
must judge,—do you know what I should
think?"</p>
<p>"What?"</p>
<p>"I should think you rather a cold-hearted
girl, who didn't like people and didn't mind
letting them know it."</p>
<p>"Oh, Cousin Kate!"</p>
<p>"Or else, if I were more charitably inclined,
I should think you a dull girl who
did not take much interest in what went on
about her."</p>
<p>"Oh, Cousin Kate!"</p>
<p>"Or," continued her cousin, relentlessly,
"if I were a real angel, and disposed to make
the very best of everybody, I should say to
myself, 'The poor thing is so shy that she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
can't show what she really is.' Unluckily,
there are few perfect angels in this world, and
a great many of the other sort. And even as
a perfect angel, my dear Cannie, I don't think
I should consider you exactly agreeable."</p>
<p>"But what can I do?" demanded Candace,
looking very unhappy. "I can't make myself
not shy."</p>
<p>"No; but you can mend matters by forcing
yourself to hide your shyness. I have been
meditating on the subject, Cannie, and I have
made up my mind that shyness is one form
of selfishness."</p>
<p>"Cousin Kate, how can you say that? I
thought selfishness was doing what you liked
and what is pleasant. I'm sure I don't <i>like</i>
to be shy."</p>
<p>"Oh, it's not that kind of selfishness," said
Mrs. Gray, smiling. "There is nothing pleasant
about shyness; that I am quite ready to
admit. But can't you see that it is self-occupation,
the being absorbed with your own
sensations and feelings, and with trying to
imagine what people are thinking about you,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
that makes you so miserable? If you could
forget and occupy yourself with others, this
shyness would go. Now, this morning, had
you been full of Mrs. Endicott, and what she
was like, and what she wanted to talk about,
instead of little Candace Arden, and what
Mrs. Endicott considered her like, it would
all have been different, and much pleasanter
for both of you."</p>
<p>"Oh, if I only could," said Candace, with
a catch in her voice, "I would give anything
I have in the world! I hate to seem so
awkward and dull. But you've no idea how
uncomfortable I feel, Cousin Kate.
The moment I come downstairs and see that roomful
of company, my face twitches and my
cheeks burn, and I can't think of anything to
say, and I keep wishing I could run upstairs
again and hide somewhere."</p>
<p>"Yes, because, as I said, your mind is full
of yourself. If instead of coming in with this
miserable self-consciousness full upon you,
you could look upon the roomful as just so
many people to whom you owe the little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
duties of politeness and cordiality, for whom
you have the chance to do something kind
or pleasant, you would forget your face and
your cheeks and the desire to run away. You
would be thinking of them, and in thinking
of them you would forget to be shy."</p>
<p>Candace did not reply.</p>
<p>"You are a conscientious child," her cousin
went on. "I think that you sincerely wish to
do what is right, and to make God's rule the
rule of your life. And, Candace, in my opinion
you should consider it a part of religious
duty to try to get rid of this false shame, this
bondage to the idea of self, and to learn to
live for others instead."</p>
<p>Candace looked up, with the dawn of a
new idea in her face.</p>
<p>"How do you mean?" she asked.</p>
<p>"You cannot always run away," continued
her cousin. "Big as it is, the world is not
big enough to furnish hiding-places for all
the people who are afraid to face their fellow-men.
And since you cannot run away, your
plain duty is to be brave and make the best<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
of it. Now, Cannie, there are two things
which may help you to do this, two thoughts
which you can keep in mind; and I wish you
would try to remember them when you feel
a fit of fright or of stiffness coming on."</p>
<p>"What are they?"</p>
<p>"One is, that you are but one little insignificant
atom among thousands. People are
not thinking about you or noticing you very
particularly. You are not of much consequence
except to yourself and the few friends
who love you. This would be a mortifying
fact, if vanity were your trouble; but as it is
not, it is a comfortable one. And just as nobody
notices you specially, so all the world is
not engaged afterward in recollecting all your
little mistakes and the stupid things you have
said. Unless you have done something <i>very</i>
queer, they forget about you as soon as they
lose sight of you. I know what miseries sensitive
girls undergo in thinking over their
foolish speeches and actions, and imagining
that every one remembers them as distinctly
as they themselves do."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Cannie couldn't help smiling. "Cousin
Kate, how can you know about all those
things?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Because I was a girl myself once, and as
foolish as any of the rest of you; and I have
not forgotten how it feels to be a girl," said
her cousin, gayly. "That is the use of growing
old, Cannie. You can show the way to
younger people, and make the road you have
walked over a little easier for them.—But
to go back to what we were talking about,
<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Our'">our</ins> own insignificance is one helpful thought,
as I said; the other is, that kindliness is one
of the Christian virtues, and it is just as much
a duty to practise it as it is to be honest and
temperate."</p>
<p>Candace drew a long breath.</p>
<p>"It would be perfectly delightful to keep
thinking like that always," she said; "the
only thing is that I am afraid I should forget
when the time came. I wish you could give
me an exact rule, Cousin Kate, just what to
say and how to act. I would try ever so
hard to follow it."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I know you would," said Mrs. Gray;
"but there is no exact rule that I can give,
except the Golden one, to do to others just
as you would like them to do to you. If you
feel stiff, be sure to look cordial. Smile, and
shake hands as if you meant it. Try to look
interested in what people are saying to you.
A good listener helps on conversation as well
as a good talker. If you are friendly and warm
in your manner, other people will warm to
you instinctively. Try it, Cannie, and see
if I am not right. And now we will not talk
any more about ourselves or our shyness, but
drive into the Fort and listen to the music.
I caught a strain from the Band just then, and
I recollect that this is a 'Fort Day.'"</p>
<p>So in they drove, clattered between walls
and embankments, and over a steep paved
incline beneath a great arch, and found themselves
in an open square, with buildings of
solid masonry on all sides, in the midst of
which the band was stationed. Other carriages
were drawn up to listen to the music,
and officers in uniform were coming and going,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
and talking to the ladies in the carriages.
One of these officers, a nice old Major, with
a bald spot under his gold-banded cap, knew
Mrs. Gray, and came to welcome her. His
"girls" were gone over to Newport to a
lawn-party, he said; but he insisted on taking
Mrs. Gray and Cannie in to see their quarters,
which were in a casemate, in close neighborhood
to one of the great guns. Here he
brewed them a delicious cup of tea; and afterward,
at Mrs. Gray's request, he took Candace
to see the magazines, and some of the curious
underground passages which connect one side
of the Fort with the other. Cannie thought
these extremely interesting, and like all the
caves on desert islands which she had ever
read about; for they were narrow, dark, and
mysterious, they smelt very close, and all sorts
of odd funguses and formations were growing
on the roofs overhead.</p>
<p>These adventures chased the worry from
her mind and the anxious puckers from her
forehead; and she went home quite happily,
without recurring again to the subject of their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span>
late conversation. But she did not forget it,
and it bore fruit. Mrs. Gray noted, without
seeming to be on the watch, the efforts which
Candace thenceforward made to overcome her
shyness. She saw her force herself to come
forward, force herself to smile, to speak,
when all the time she was quaking inwardly;
and she felt that there was real power of
character required for such an effort. Quiet
Candace would always be; modest and retiring
it was her nature to be: but gradually she
learned not to seem cold and stiff; and when
her cousin saw her, as she sometimes did, forgetting
herself in talking to some one, and
lighting up into her easy, natural, bright manner,
she felt that the rather hard lesson administered
that afternoon on the ocean drive
had not been in vain. Rome was not built in
a day, and ease of manner is not acquired in
a moment; but Candace had at last got hold
of a right idea, and there was hope that with
time people less charitable even than "perfect
angels" might pronounce her "agreeable."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />