THE GUESTS.Who was responsible for the reform of the summer-house? The new tenant at Windygates was responsible. And who was the new tenant? Come, and see. In the spring of eighteen hundred and sixty-eight the summer-house had been the dismal dwelling-place of a pair of owls. In the autumn of the same year the summer-house was the lively gathering-place of a crowd of ladies and gentlemen, assembled at a lawn party—the guests of the tenant who had taken Windygates. The scene—at the opening of the party—was as pleasant to look at as light and beauty and movement could make it. Inside the summer-house the butterfly-brightness of the women in their summer dresses shone radiant out of the gloom shed round it by the dreary modern clothing of the men. Outside the summer-house, seen through t