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Upon this Lucian insisted that Miss Naylor must accept him only as her Harvard guide; otherwise she would get an utterly wrong impression.
"Let me tell you," he began, "about the squirrels. Really, they are of more consequence than most other dwellers in the Yard. They will eat anything, from mushrooms to pate de foie gras, and although it's rather expensive, we try to give them whatever they demand. The tree trunks here are probably filled with treasures that they have hidden away; some of them even are fond of books, and I heard of one who had an intimate acquaintance with Greek roots. No nuts are too hard for them to crack; they are real philosophers, and here," he cried as he threw some acorns on the gra.s.s, "they are so tame one doesn't have even to throw salt on their tails to catch them."
Upon this, with a deft movement, he picked up a bushy-tailed gray squirrel that had been attracted by the bait he had thrown down, and as he held it toward Elinor, "Here," he exclaimed, "if you wish a souvenir of Harvard, is the real thing," and extending his arm, he pressed the little creature's head against Elinor's cheek. Then, to everyone's surprise, Elinor Naylor, the dignified Miss Elinor Naylor of Philadelphia, screamed loudly, and turning her back on Lucian, ran up to Martine, who happened to be nearest her, and laid her head on Martine's arm, crying loudly, "Take it away, take it away, it's just like a big rat."
Lucian, decidedly crestfallen at this little episode, let the squirrel whisk itself away, while he walked up to Elinor to offer his apologies.
In his heart he was saying, "Thank heaven that Martine has some nerve,"
and Martine herself, by a sudden revulsion of feeling, at once became the champion of the girl she had recently been criticising.
Elinor accepted Lucian's apologies very graciously. "I know that I am foolish," she said, "but I never have liked those little creepy animals; they all seem to be like rats and mice, except at a distance."
"You were certainly very thoughtless, Lucian." Martine spoke in a tone of deep reproof, and during the remainder of their walk she had Elinor hanging on her arm.
The suite of rooms occupied by Lucian and Robert Pringle was in a dormitory outside the Yard, in the neighborhood of the old ballground, Jarvis Field. To reach it the party went across the Memorial Delta, past the statue of John Harvard--concerning which the boys had various strange tales to tell--and along a quiet street on which were several other dormitories.
"How delightful! This suite is much more attractive than Joe's rooms at Yale, as I remember them," cried Elinor.
"Yes," sighed Arthur Weston, "Joe and I were not sybarites. We went in for hard work, plain living, and high thinking," and he looked reproachfully toward Lucian and Robert.
"We work too, I can a.s.sure you," insisted Robert. "Of course we had to furnish up a little."
"Work! I should say so," added Lucian. "Don't judge us by our surroundings."
"We'll try not to," retorted Martine, "for this tea-table is almost too ladylike for two tall boys like you."
"Oh, when we're alone we never look at the tea-table. We fold it up and keep it in the closet. To-day we brought it out only for you girls," and Lucian bowed profoundly to his guests.
"I think that your belongings are rather frivolous," and Brenda took the little silver tea caddy in her hand.
"Oh, I picked that up in Holland; it's a mere trifle," cried Robert.
"These things are wasted on boys," added Martine, examining the little coffee spoons that lay on the tray.
Amy, walking round the room, gazed critically at the two or three water-color sketches and the fine photographs hanging on the walls, and she thought that the easy-chairs, the broad divan, and all the other handsome belongings were really too elaborate for the rooms of boys under twenty.
"But there's one good thing," she said aloud; "you have plenty of books, Lucian, and you have made an excellent choice in many cases."
"Yes," replied Lucian, "thanks to Fritz, our library has made a good beginning; he took it in hand last spring, and what do you think? Fritz says that if it hadn't been for you, he couldn't have helped us half as well. So, Miss Amy Redmond, when you praise our library, indirectly you praise yourself."
Before their hour in Lucian's room was over, few things in the sitting-room had escaped the scrutiny of the three younger girls. They handled the steins on the mantelpiece, read the certificates of members.h.i.+p in various clubs and athletic societies, and admired the photographs of all, and finally Martine struck up a few chords on the piano, which Lucian and Robert recognizing, accompanied with a jolly college song. At Lucian's request Priscilla made tea, and although, while the water was boiling, she wondered whether she would remember just what proportion of tea should be used for each cup of water, she pa.s.sed through the ordeal successfully and was highly praised for her skill.
When the boys indiscreetly offered Elinor her choice among the sights they might see before their return to the city, Elinor too promptly chose the Botanic Garden. In spite of their soph.o.m.orific air of worldly wisdom, Robert and Lucian could not quite conceal their dismay at this suggestion, especially as she expressed a desire to see the Shakespeare garden, of which they knew nothing.
"In that case I fear that you will have to lose the gla.s.s flowers, as the garden is in just the opposite direction," said Lucian, politely.
"The gla.s.s flowers!" cried Elinor, perceiving that her former suggestion had not been received with favor. "Why, of course I would much rather see the gla.s.s flowers." And so the whole party set out toward the great museum.
"Not to throw cold water on the efforts of Lucian to guide you to the best that Cambridge offers," said Fritz, "I must tell you that a visit to the gla.s.s flowers is almost commonplace. They share with tourists from afar the attraction of Bunker Hill; in the minds of many not to have seen the gla.s.s flowers is not to have seen Cambridge. If you wish to be original, pa.s.s them by."
"Thank you," replied Elinor; "but really I never have cared especially to be original."
Later, after Elinor had seen not only the gla.s.s flowers but many of the other treasures in the great museum, she admitted that even Yale had little better to offer. From the museum the party went on to Memorial Hall.
"It's a pity that you cannot wait a little longer, it would be such fun to see the students at dinner," sighed Martine, for whom human nature always had more interest than tablets and pictures.
"I should love to stay, but I promised to be at my cousin's before six.
Yet there is so much to see here in Memorial, these windows and portraits are so fascinating, that it's very hard to go away without studying them all more carefully."
Elinor had barely time for a glance at the portraits and the stained gla.s.s windows in the great hall.
"It's the finest hall I ever saw," said the girl from Philadelphia; "I like everything about it except--"
"Except what? This is an age of improvements, and if you'll just mention what you have in mind, so far as Lucian and I can carry out your suggestion it shall be accomplished," and Robert Pringle bowed low to Elinor. Elinor seemed so embarra.s.sed by this mock courtesy that Martine hastened to her rescue. The older members of the party were out of hearing.
"You are as great a tease now as Lucian. I could mention dozens of things that could be done to improve Memorial Hall, handsome as it is."
Martine cast about in her mind for something to strengthen her a.s.sertion. Up to this moment she had never realized any special imperfection in the great building. But now--
"For example!" she exclaimed emphatically, "just look at these dining-tables in a hall like this. It's casting your pearls before swine. They ought to be taken away."
"Well, I'm glad that Robert and I board at a club table. I should hate to be included in your group of swine, whom you wish to have taken away--"
"Oh, Lucian!"
It was now Elinor's turn to come to Martine's rescue.
"Why, that is just what I meant. I think that the tables ought to be taken away. It seems a pity that Memorial Hall should be a mere dining-room. I should like to see it quite clear of them."
"Then you must come here Cla.s.s Day. Can't you wait for ours? I'll show you Memorial Hall as it should be--filled with youth and beauty dancing, and not a tablecloth in sight."
"Oh, it doesn't seem the place for dancing either," and Elinor gazed solemnly at one of the cla.s.s windows, on which were portrayed Epaminondas and Sir Philip Sidney, as examples of valor.
"You must remember, Miss Naylor, that in the long waits between courses, the undergraduates who board here have a fine chance to study these windows, with their lessons of patriotism and valor. This food for reflection goes a long way toward making them forget the real nature of the food served here--"
"Come, come, Robert! Remember you are talking to a Yale girl, and not an ingenuous Harvard maiden. We must not have derogatory reports get abroad."
But Elinor and Martine had no intention of wasting their time listening to Robert's nonsense, and were now pus.h.i.+ng through the doors into the transept.
"The real Memorial is here," said Elinor, reverently, pa.s.sing from one tablet to another, on which were inscribed the names of those Harvard men who fell in the Civil War.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "'The real Memorial is here,' said Elinor, reverently, pa.s.sing from one tablet to another."]
"A short life hath Nature given to man, but the remembrance of a life n.o.bly rendered up is eternal!" she murmured, translating one of the inscriptions on the wall.
"Oh!" sighed Martine. "How wonderful that you can translate Latin at sight! I have taken a tremendous fancy to Latin, but now I'm only in the beginning of Virgil, and I have to look up every other word, and you are not much older than I."
In her admiration for Elinor's ability, she wondered if Elinor had realized the prejudice she had felt when they started on their drive.
How strange that in a few hours her feeling toward anyone should change so completely.