said Rose.
Which proposition the ladies ill.u.s.trated for another quarter of an hour.
The gentlemen came in then, one after another, but Elizabeth did not move from her window.
"I have something of yours in my possession, Miss Haye," said Rufus, coming to the outside of the curtain within which she stood.
"What?" said Elizabeth unceremoniously.
"Your father."
"What are you going to do with him?"
Rufus laughed a little; and Winthrop remarked there was nothing like straightforward dealing to confound a manoeuvrer.
"I have a desire to put him out of my hands, into yours," said Rufus; -- "but then, I have also a desire to make him fast there."
"My bracelet!" said Elizabeth.
It had a likeness of Mr. Haye in cameo.
"Where did you get it?"
"Where you left it."
"Where was that?"
"On the table, at the left hand of your plate, covered by your napkin."
Elizabeth stretched out her hand for it.
"Not so fast -- I have it in my possession, as I told you, and I claim a reward for recovering it from its ign.o.ble condition."
"I shall set my own conditions then," said Elizabeth. "I will let anybody put it on, who will do me the pleasure to explain it first."
"Explain?" said Rufus, looking in a sort of comical doubt at the cameo; -- "I see the features of Mr. Haye, which never need explanation to me."
"Not in nature; but do you understand them when they look so brown on a white ground?"
"They look very natural!" said Rufus eyeing the cameo.
"That is to say, you do not understand them?"
"Pardon me, _you_ are the person most difficult to understand."
"I don"t ask that of you," said Elizabeth. "I want to know about this cameo, for I confess I don"t."
"And I confess I don"t," said Rufus. "I didn"t even know it had any other name but Mr. Haye."
"What"s all this?" said Rose, -- "what are you talking about here?"
"We are talking about, we don"t know what," said Rufus.
"What is it?"
"That"s the question; -- n.o.body knows."
"_What_ is the question?"
"Who shall put on Miss Elizabeth"s bracelet."
"Give it to me -- I"ll do it."
"Pardon me -- there is said to be reason in the roasting of eggs, and there must be a good deal of reason before this bracelet goes on."
"I want somebody to tell me about the cameo," said Elizabeth.
"Well, won"t somebody do it?"
"Mr. Landholm can"t -- I haven"t asked Mr. Winthrop."
"Will you?" said Rose turning to him.
"I wasn"t asked," said Winthrop.
"But I asked you."
"Do you wish to know, Miss Cadwallader?"
"No I don"t. What"s the use of knowing about everything? Do leave the cameos, and come over here and sit down and talk and be comfortable!"
"It"s impossible for me to be comfortable," said Rufus. "I"ve got Mr. Haye on my hands and I don"t know what to do with him."
"Mr. Herder!" -- Rose called out to him, -- "do come here and tell us about cameos, that we can sit down and be comfortable."
Very good-humouredly the naturalist left Mr. Haye and came to them, and presently was deep in quartz and silica, and onyx and chalcedony, and all manner of stones that are precious. He told all that Elizabeth wanted to know, and much more than she had dreamed of knowing. Even Rose listened; and Rufus was eagerly attentive; and Elizabeth after she had asked questions as far as her knowledge allowed her to push them, sighed and wished she knew everything.
"Then you would be more wise than anybody, Miss Elisabet" -- you would be too wise. The man who knows the most, knows that he knows little."
"Is that your opinion of yourself, Mr. Herder?" said Rufus.
"Certainly. I do know very little; -- I will know more, I hope."
"O Mr. Herder, you know enough," said Rose. "I shouldn"t think you would want to study any more."
"If I was to say, I know enough, -- that would be to say that I do not know nozing at all."
"Mr. Winthrop, you don"t seem as interested as the rest of us," said Elizabeth, perhaps with a little curiosity; for he had stood quietly by, letting even Mr. Satterthwaite push himself in between.