My Lady Caprice
 The Imp nodded.  "It was yesterday," he continued.  "He came to see Auntie Lisbeth, an' I found them in the summer-house in the orchard. An' I heard him say, 'Miss Elizbeth, you're prettier than ever!" 

 "Did he though, confound him!" 

 "Yes, an then Auntie Lisbeth looked silly, an' then he saw me behind a tree an' he looked silly, too, Then he said, 'Come here, little man!' An' I went, you know, though I do hate to be called 'little man.'  Then he said he'd give me a shilling if I'd call him Uncle Frank." 

 "And what did you answer?" 

 "'Fraid I'm awfull' wicked," sighed the Imp, shaking his head, "'cause I told him a great big lie." 

 "Did you, Imp?" 

 "Yes. I said I didn't want his shilling, an' I do, you know, most awfully, to buy a spring pistol with." 

 "Oh, well, we'll see what can be done about the spring pistol," I answered.  "And so you don't like him, eh?" 

 "Should think not," returned the Imp promptly.  "He's always so—so awfull' clean, an' wears a little moustache with teeny sharp points on it. 

 "Any one who does that deserves all he gets," I said, shaking my head. "And what is his name?" 

 "The Honourable Frank Selwyn, an' he lives at Selwyn Park—the next house to ours." 

 "Oho!"   I exclaimed, and whistled. 

 "Uncle Dick," said the Imp, breaking in upon a somewhat unpleasant train of thought conjured up by this intelligence, "will you come an' be 'Little-John under the merry greenwood tree? Do?" 

 "Why what do you know about 'the merry greenwood,' Imp?" 

 "Oh lots!" he answered, hastily pulling out the tattered book. "This is all about Robin Hood an' Little-John. Ben, the gardener's boy, lent it to me. Robin Hood was a fine chap an' so was Little-John an' they used to set ambushes an' capture the Sheriff of Nottingham an' all sorts of caddish barons, an' tie them to trees. 

 "My Imp," I said, shaking my head, "the times are sadly changed. One cannot tie barons—caddish or otherwise—to trees in these degenerate days." 

 "No, I s'pose not," sighed the Imp dolefully; "but I do wish you would be Little-John, Uncle Dick." 


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