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so;〃 said the English Annex。  〃I wish you would tell him so;  I do;

awfully。〃  〃I'll fix it;〃 said the American girl。  So; after the

teacups were emptied and the company had left the table; she went up

to the Professor。  〃You read this lecture; don't you; Professor?〃 she

said。  〃I do;〃 he answered。  〃I should think that lock of hair which

falls down over your forehead would trouble you;〃 she said。  〃It does

sometimes;〃 replied the Professor。  〃Let our little maid trim it for

you。  You're equal to that; aren't you?〃 turning to the handmaiden。

〃I always used to cut my father's hair;〃 she answered。  She brought a

pair of glittering shears; and before she would let the Professor go

she had trimmed his hair and beard as they had not been dealt with

for many a day。  Everybody said the Professor looked ten years

younger。  After that our little handmaiden was always called Delilah;

among the talking Teacups。



The Mistress keeps a watchful eye on this young girl。  I should not

be surprised to find that she was carrying out some ideal; some fancy

or whim;possibly nothing more; but springing from some generous;

youthful impulse。  Perhaps she is working for that little sister at

the Blind Asylum。  Where did she learn French?  She did certainly

blush; and betrayed every sign of understanding the words spoken

about her in that language。  Sometimes she sings while at her work;

and we have all been struck with the pure; musical character of her

voice。  It is just such a voice as ought to come from that round

white throat。  We made a discovery about it the other evening。



The Mistress keeps a piano in her room; and we have sometimes had

music in the evening。  One of The Teacups; to whom I have slightly

referred; is an accomplished pianist; and the two Annexes sing very

sweetly together;the American girl having a clear soprano voice;

the English girl a mellow contralto。  They had sung several tunes;

when the Mistress rang for Avis;for that is our Delilah's real

name。  She whispered to the young girl; who blushed and trembled。

〃Don't be frightened;〃 said the Mistress encouragingly。  〃I have

heard you singing 'Too Young for Love;' and I will get our pianist to

play it。  The young ladies both know it; and you must join in。〃



The two voices; with the accompaniment; had hardly finished the first

line when a pure; ringing; almost childlike voice joined the vocal

duet。  The sound of her own voice seemed to make her forget her

fears; and she warbled as naturally and freely as any young bird of a

May morning。  Number Five came in while she was singing; and when she

got through caught her in her arms and kissed her; as if she were her

sister; and not Delilah; our table…maid。  Number Five is apt to

forget herself and those social differences to which some of us

attach so much importance。  This is the song in which the little maid

took part:





          TOO YOUNG FOR LOVE。



          Too young for love?

          Ah; say not so!

     Tell reddening rose…buds not to blow!

     Wait not for spring to pass away;

     Love's summer months begin with May!

          Too young for love?

          Ah; say not so!

          Too young?  Too young?

          Ah; no!  no!  no!



          Too young for love?

          Ah; say not so;

     While daisies bloom and tulips glow!

     June soon will come with lengthened day

     To practise all love learned in May。

          Too young for love?

          Ah; say not so!

          Too young?  Too young?

          Ah; no!  no!  no!









IX



I often wish that our Number Seven could have known and corresponded

with the author of 〃The Budget of Paradoxes。〃  I think Mr。 De Morgan

would have found some of his vagaries and fancies not undeserving of

a place in his wonderful collection of eccentricities; absurdities;

ingenuities;mental freaks of all sorts。  But I think he would have

now and then recognized a sound idea; a just comparison; a suggestive

hint; a practical notion; which redeemed a page of extravagances and

crotchety whims。  I confess that I am often pleased with fancies of

his; and should be willing to adopt them as my own。  I think he has;

in the midst of his erratic and tangled conceptions; some perfectly

clear and consistent trains of thought。



So when Number Seven spoke of sending us a paper; I welcomed the

suggestion。  I asked him whether he had any objection to my looking

it over before he read it。  My proposal rather pleased him; I

thought; for; as was observed on a former occasion; he has in

connection with a belief in himself another side;a curious self…

distrust。  I have no question that he has an obscure sense of some

mental deficiency。  Thus you may expect from him first a dogma; and

presently a doubt。  If you fight his dogma; he will do battle for it

stoutly; if you let him alone; he will very probably explain its

extravagances; if it has any; and tame it into reasonable limits。

Sometimes he is in one mood; sometimes in another。



The first portion of what we listened to shows him at his best; in

the latter part I am afraid you will think he gets a little wild。



I proceed to lay before you the paper which Number Seven read to The

Teacups。  There was something very pleasing in the deference which

was shown him。  We all feel that there is a crack in the teacup; and

are disposed to handle it carefully。  I have left out a few things

which he said; feeling that they might give offence to some of the

company。  There were sentences so involved and obscure that I was

sure they would not be understood; if indeed he understood them

himself。  But there are other passages so entirely sane; and as it

seems to me so just; that if any reader attributes them to me I shall

not think myself wronged by the supposition。  You must remember that

Number Seven has had a fair education; that he has been a wide reader

in many directions; and that he belongs to a family of remarkable

intellectual gifts。  So it was not surprising that he said some

things which pleased the company; as in fact they did。  The reader

will not be startled to see a certain abruptness in the transition

from one subject to another;it is a characteristic of the squinting

brain wherever you find it。  Another curious mark rarely wanting in

the subjects of mental strabismus is an irregular and often sprawling

and deformed handwriting。  Many and many a time I have said; after

glancing at the back of a letter; 〃This comes from an insane asylum;

or from an eccentric who might well be a candidate for such an

institution。〃  Number Seven's manuscript; which showed marks of my

corrections here and there; furnished good examples of the

chirography of persons with ill…mated cerebral hemispheres。  But the

earlier portions of the manuscript are of perfectly normal

appearance。



Conticuere omnes; as Virgil says。  We were all silent as Number Seven

began the reading of his paper。





                    Number Seven reads。



I am the seventh son of a seventh son; as I suppose you all know。  It

is commonly believed that some extraordinary gifts belong to the

fortunate individuals born under these exceptional conditions。

However this may be; a peculiar virtue was supposed to dwell in me

from my earliest years。  My touch was believed to have the influence

formerly attributed to that of the kings and queens of England。  You

may remember that the great Dr。 Samuel Johnson; when a child; was

carried to be touched by her Majesty Queen Anne for the 〃king's

evil;〃 as scrofula used to be called。  Our honored friend The

Dictator will tell you that the brother of one of his Andover

schoolmates was taken to one of these gifted persons; who touched

him; and hung a small bright silver coin; either a 〃fourpence

ha'penny〃 or a 〃ninepence;〃 about his neck; which; strange to say;

after being worn a certain time; became tarnished; and finally

black;a proof of the poisonous matters which had become eliminated

from the system and gathered upon the coin。  I remember that at one

time I used to carry fourpence ha'pennies with holes bored through

them; which I furnished to children or to their mothers; under

pledges of secrecy;receiving a piece of silver of larger dimensions

in exchange。  I never felt quite sure about any extraordinary

endowment being a part of my inheritance in virtue of my special

conditions of birth。  A phrenologist; who examined my head when I was

a boy; said the two sides were unlike。  My hatter's measurement told

me the same thing; but in looking over more than a bushel of the

small cardboard hat…patterns which give the exact shape of the head;

I have found this is not uncommon。  The phrenologist made all sorts

of predictions of what I should be and do; which proved about as near

the truth as those recorded in Miss Edith Thomas's charming little

poem; 〃Augury;〃 which some of us were reading the other day。



I have never been through college; but I had a relative who was

famous as a teacher of rhetoric in one of our universities; and

especially for taking the nonsense out of sophomorical young fellows

who could not say anything without rigging it up in showy and

sounding phrases。  I think I learned from him to express myself in

good old…fashioned English; and without making as much fuss about it

as our Fourth of July orators and political haranguers were in the

habit of making。



I read a good many stories during my boyhood; one of which left a

lasting impression upon me; and which I have always commended to

young people。  It is too late; generally; to try to teach old people;

yet one may profit by it at any period of life before the sight has

become too dim to be of any use。  The story I refer to is in

〃Evenings at Home;〃 and is called 〃Eyes and No Eyes。〃  I ought to

have it by me; but it is constantly happening that the best old

things get overlaid by the newest tr

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