silver gray, and everything about her, from the
neat little collar to the trim boot, pleased the eye
unconsciously without attracting the attention.
Sibyl Warrington knew what was becoming to
her peculiar style of beauty, and nothing could
induce her to depart from her inflexible rules.
Fashion might decree a tower of frizzed curls,
and Sibyl would calmly watch the elaborate
structure raised on the heads of all her friends,
but her own locks, in the meanwhile, remained
plainly folded back from her white forehead
with quaker-like smoothness. Fashion might
turn her attention to the back of the head, mid
forthwith waterfalls and chignons would appear
at her behest, but Sibyl, while congratulating
her friends upon the wonders they achieved,
would still wind her thick golden braids in a
classical coil, so that her head in profile brought
up to the beholder's mind a vision of an antique
statue. Rare was her taste ; no clashing colors
or absurd puffs and furbelows were ever allowed
to disfigure her graceful form, and thus her ap-
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The Old Stone House.