Is it necessarywhen your servant is coming in a moment? the young man asked, unexpectedly, without moving. In an instant, however, he rose; and then he explained that this was only his little joke.
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Servants are too stupid, said Mrs. Mesh. But I spoil you. What would your mother say? She watched him while he placed the log. She was plump, and she was not tall; but she was a very pretty woman. She had round brown eyes, which looked as if she had been crying a littleshe had nothing in life to cry about; and dark, wavy hair, which here and there, in short, crisp tendrils, escaped artfully from the form in which it was dressed. When she smiled, she showed very pretty teeth; and the combination of her touching eyes and her parted lips was at such moments almost bewitching. She was accustomed to express herself in humorous superlatives, in pictorial circumlocutions; and had acquired in Boston the rudiments of a social dialect which, to be heard in perfection, should be heard on the lips of a native. Mrs. Mesh had picked it up; but it must be confessed that she used it without originality. It was an accident that on this occasion she had not expressed her wish for her tea by saying that she should like a pint or two of that Chinese fluid.
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My mother believes I can't be spoiled, said Florimond, giving a little push with his toe to the stick that he had placed in the embers; after which he sank back into his chair, while Mrs. Mesh resumed possession of her own. I am ever freshever pure.
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You are ever conceited. I don't see what you find so extraordinary in Boston, Mrs. Mesh added, reverting to his remark of a moment before.
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Oh, everything! the ways of the people, their ideas, their peculiar cachet. The very expression of their faces amuses me.
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Most of them have no expression at all.
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Oh, you are used to it, Florimond said. You have become one of themselves; you have ceased to notice.
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I am more of a stranger than you; I was born beneath other skies. Is it possible that you don't know yet that I am a native of Baltimore? Maryland, my Maryland!
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Have they got so much expression in Maryland? No, I thank you; no tea. Is it possible, Florimond went on, with
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