XIII. — THE VICTORIAN AND THE ARROW-1

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XIII. — THE VICTORIAN AND THE ARROW The arrow that had entered the summer-house with a sound like song awakened the worthy proprietor of the place to a world without which had been entirely transformed. Why it had been transformed, and what was the nature of the transformation, he found it sufficiently bewildering to discover; but it is almost equally bewildering to describe. It began, in a sense, with the isolated insanity of one man; yet it was almost equally due, by a not uncommon paradox, to the equally isolated sanity of one woman. Mr. Herne, the librarian, had positively and finally refused to change his clothes. “Well I can’t,” he cried in despair. “I simply can’t. I should feel like a fool, just as if—.” “Well,” asked Rosamund regarding him with round eyes. “I should feel as i

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