[East Lynne by Mrs. Henry Wood]@TWC D-Link book
East Lynne

CHAPTER IX
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Was Lord Mount Severn right, when he accused her of dressing so in self-gratification?
Very likely, for has not the great preacher said that childhood and youth are vanity?
Miss Carlyle, the justice, and Barbara also had seats near the orchestra; for Miss Carlyle, in West Lynne, was a person to be considered, and not hidden behind others.

Mr.Carlyle, however, preferred to join the gentlemen who congregated and stood round about the door inside and out.

There was scarcely standing room in the place; Mr.Kane had, as was anticipated, got a bumper, and the poor man could have worshipped Lady Isabel, for he knew he owed it to her.
It was very long--country concerts generally are--and was about three parts over when a powdered head, larger than any cauliflower ever grown, was discerned ascending the stairs, behind the group of gentlemen; which head, when it brought its body in full view, was discovered to belong to one of the footmen of Lord Mount Severn.

The calves alone, cased in their silk stockings, were a sight to be seen; and these calves betook themselves inside the concert room, with a deprecatory bow for permission to the gentlemen they had to steer through--and there they came to a standstill, the cauliflower extending forward and turning itself about from right to left.
"Well, I'll be jiffled!" cried an astonished old fox-hunter, who had been elbowed by the footman; "the cheek these fellows have!" The fellow in question did not appear, however, to be enjoying any great amount of cheek just at that moment, for he looked perplexed, humble and uneasy.

Suddenly his eye fell upon Mr.Carlyle, and it lighted up.
"Beg pardon, sir; could you happen to inform me where-abouts my young lady is sitting ?" "At the other end of the room, near the orchestra." "I'm sure I don't know however I am to get to her, then," returned the man more in self-soliloquy than to Mr.Carlyle.


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