Passing of the Third Floor Back
family on my mother’s side,” continued Sir William’s cousin in her placid monotone, “was connected with the Tatton-Joneses, who when King George the Fourth—” Sir William’s cousin, needing another reel of cotton, glanced up, and met the stranger’s gaze.     

       “I’m sure I don’t know why I’m telling you all this,” said Sir William’s cousin in an irritable tone. “It can’t possibly interest you.”      

       “Everything connected with you interests me,” gravely the stranger assured her.     

       “It is very kind of you to say so,” sighed Sir William’s cousin, but without conviction; “I am afraid sometimes I bore people.”      

       The polite stranger refrained from contradiction.     

       “You see,” continued the poor lady, “I really am of good family.”      

       “Dear lady,” said the stranger, “your gentle face, your gentle voice, your gentle bearing, all proclaim it.”      

       She looked without flinching into the stranger’s eyes, and gradually a smile banished the reigning dulness of her features.     

       “How foolish of me.” She spoke rather to herself than to the stranger.       “Why, of course, people—people whose opinion is worth troubling about—judge of you by what you are, not by what you go about saying you are.”      

       The stranger remained silent.     

       “I am the widow of a provincial doctor, with an income of just two hundred and thirty pounds per annum,” she argued. “The sensible thing for me to do is to make the best of it, and to worry myself about these high and mighty       relations of mine as little as they have ever worried themselves about me.”      

       The stranger appeared unable to think of anything worth saying.     

       “I have other connections,” remembered Sir William’s cousin; “those of my poor husband, to whom instead of being the ‘poor relation’ I could be the fairy god-mama. They are my people—or would be,” added Sir William’s cousin tartly, “if I wasn’t a vulgar snob.”      

       She flushed the instant she had said the words and, rising, commenced preparations for 
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