"
"I don't see anything to jest about in that."
"I'm tiring of it ... if Hildreth has a tooth-ache, or anything that the
rest of us women accept as a matter of course, she runs to Mubby, as she
calls him ... and, as if it were some abstruse, philosophical problem,
they talk on, hour after hour ... like German metaphysics, there's no
end to it. They've been at it since ten and they'll go on till four, if
they follow precedents ... Penton takes Hildreth too seriously."
"You talk as if you, you were jealous of Hildreth and in love with
Penton."
"It's neither the one nor the other. I love them both, and I want to see
them happy together."
"You see, Darrie, neither you nor I are married, and neither of us knows
anything about sex, except in the theory of the books we've read--how
can _we judge_ the troubles of a man and woman who are married?"
"There's a lot in what you say."
"I believe it would be better if we both cleared out and left them to
fight this out alone."
"Perhaps it would."
* * * * *
"Darrie, Oh, Darrie!--want to come for a walk with Hildreth and me?"
So the three set off together, leaving me and Ruth alone.
* * * * *
Ruth and I had just settled down to a discussion of the writing of
narrative poetry, how it was done, and the reason why it was no longer
customary with the poets to write longer stories out of real life, like
Chaucer's _Canterbury Tales_,--when we heard a rustling as of some wild
thing in the bushes beside the house, and here came Hildreth breaking
through, her eyes blazing, her hair down, her light walking skirt that
she had slipped on over her bloomers torn by catching on thorns.
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