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334 does absolutely nothing for us," said Lady Selina; but Lady Selina in her heart was well pleased that to her in reality thus fell, almost without a rival, the female representation, in the great world, of the Vipont honors. Lady Selina was fashion itself.

Lady Montfort's social peculiarity was in the eagerness with which she sought the society of persons who enjoyed a reputa- tion for superior intellect, whether statesmen, lawyers, authors, philosophers, artists. Intellectual intercourse seemed as if it was her native atmosphere, from which she was habitually banished, to which she returned with an instinctive yearning and a new zest of life; yet was she called, even here, nor seemingly without jus- tice—capricious and unsteady in her likings. These clever per- sonages, after a little while, all seemed to disappoint her expec- tations of them; she sought the acquaintance of each with cor- dial earnestness; slid from the acquaintance with weary languor; never, after all, less alone than when alone.

And so wondrous lovely! Nothing so rare as beauty of the high type; genius and beauty, indeed, are both rare; genius, which is the beauty of the mind—beauty, which is the genius of the body. But, of the two, beauty is the rarer. All of us can count on our fingers some forty or fifty persons of undoubted and illustrious genius, including those famous in action, letters, art. But can any of us remember to have seen more than four or five specimens of first-rate ideal beauty? Whosoever had seen Lady Montfort would have ranked her among such four or five in his recollection. There was in her face that lustrous dazzle to which the Latin poet, perhaps, refers when he speaks of the

"Nitor Splendentis Pario marmore purhis . . . Et voltus, nimium lubricus adspici,"

and which an English poet, with the less sensuous but more spirit- ual imagination of northern genius, has described in lines that an English reader may be pleased to see rescued from oblivion:

"Her face was like the milky way i' the sky, A meeting of gentle lights without a name."

The eyes so purely bright, the exquisite harmony of coloring between the dark (not too dark) hair, and the ivory of the skin; such sweet radiance in the lip when it broke into a smile. And it was said that in her maiden day, before Caroline Lyndsay be- came Marchioness of Montfort, that smile was the most joyous thing imaginable. Absurd now; you would not think it, but that