A Fair Barbarian
Phipps, wildly excited. "I saw them flash. Ah, how I should like to see her without her wraps! I have no doubt she is a perfect blaze!"     

  

  

  

       CHAPTER X. — ANNOUNCING MR. BAROLD.     

       Lady Theobald's invited guests sat in the faded blue drawing-room, waiting. Everybody had been unusually prompt, perhaps because everybody wished to be on the ground in time to see Miss Octavia Bassett make her entrance.     

       "I should think it would be rather a trial, even to such a girl as she is said to be," remarked one matron.     

       "It is but natural that she should feel that Lady Theobald will regard her rather critically, and that she should know that American manners will hardly be the thing for a genteel and conservative English country town."     

       "We saw her a few days ago," said Lucia, who chanced to hear this speech,       "and she is very pretty. I think I never saw any one so very pretty before."     

       "But in quite a theatrical way, I think, my dear," the matron replied, in a tone of gentle correction.     

       "I have seen so very few theatrical people," Lucia answered sweetly, "that I scarcely know what the theatrical way is, dear Mrs. Burnham. Her dress was very beautiful, and not like what we wear in Slowbridge; but she       seemed to me to be very bright and pretty, in a way quite new to me, and so just a little odd."     

       "I have heard that her dress is most extravagant and wasteful," put in Miss Pilcher, whose educational position entitled her to the condescending respect of her patronesses. "She has lace on her morning gowns, which"—     

       "Miss Bassett and Miss Octavia Bassett," announced Dobson, throwing open the door.     

       Lady Theobald rose from her seat. A slight rustle made itself heard through the company, as 
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