"And you know she wrote the play."
"Ah, not exactly," said Mr. Stone, with a little protesting gesture; "she translated it."
"Yes; but she had to write it quite over. Do you know it in French?"—and Philip mentioned the original title.
Mr. Stone signified that he was unacquainted with the work.
"It would never have done, you know," said Philip, "to play it as it stands. I saw it in Paris. Miss Congreve eliminated the little difficulties with uncommon skill."
Mr. Stone was silent. The violin uttered a long-drawn note, and the ladies curtsied low to their gentlemen. Miss Congreve's partner stood with his back to our two friends, and her own obeisance was, therefore, executed directly in front of them. As she bent toward the ground, she raised her eyes and looked at them. If Mr. Stone's enthusiasm had been damped by Philip's irreverent freedom, it was rekindled by this glance. "I suppose you've heard her sing," he said, after a pause.
"Yes, indeed," said Philip, without hesitation.
"She sings sacred music with the most beautiful fervor."
"Yes, so I'm told. And I'm told, moreover, that she's very learned—that she has a passion for books."
"I think it very likely. In fact, she's quite an accomplished theologian. We had this morning a very lively discussion."
"You differed, then?" said Philip.
"Oh," said Mr. Stone, with charming naïveté, "I didn't differ. It was she!"
"Isn't she a little—the least bit—" and Philip paused, to select his word.
"The least bit?" asked Mr. Stone, in a benevolent tone. And then, as Philip still hesitated—"The least bit heterodox?"
"The least bit of a coquette?"
"Oh, Mr. Osborne!" cried the young divine—"that's the last thing I should call Miss Congreve."
At this moment, Mrs. Carpenter drew nigh. "What is the last thing you should call Miss Congreve?" she asked, overhearing the clergyman's words.
"A coquette."
"It seems to me," said the lady, "that it's the first thing I should call her. You have to come to it, I fancy. You always do, you know. I should get it off my mind at once, and then I should sing her charms."
"Oh, Mrs. Carpenter!" said Mr. Stone.
"Yes, my dear young man. She's quiet but she's deep—I see Mr. Osborne know," and Mrs. Carpenter passed on.
"She's deep—that's what I say," said Mr. Stone, with mild firmness.—"What do you know, Mr. Osborne?"
Philip fancied that the poor fellow had turned pale; he certainly looked grave.
"Oh, I know nothing," said Philip. "I affirmed nothing. I merely inquired."
"Well then, my dear sir"—and the young man's candid visage flushed a little with the intensity of his feelings—"I give you my word for it, that I believe Miss Congreve to be not only the most accomplished, but the most noble-minded, the most truthful, the most truly christian young lady—in this whole assembly.