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Mount Music by E. Oe. Somerville;Martin Ross
page 34 of 390 (08%)
that Colonel Tom's poisoned offspring was to be received at Mount
Music and admitted to the fellowship of its children.

"No!" Evans said to Mrs. Dixon, standing on the hearthrug in the
sanctuary of the housekeeper's room, one wet afternoon, shortly after
the Coppinger return: "I see changes here, better and worse, good and
bad, but I didn't think I'd live to see what I seen to-day--the
children of this house consorting with a Papist!"

"Fie!" said Mrs. Dixon, without conviction. She was fat and
easy-tempered, and though ever anxious to conciliate him whom she
respected and feared as "Mr. Eevans," her powers of dissimulation
often failed at a pinch of this kind.

Mr. Evans looked at his table-companion with a contempt to which she
had long been resigned. He was a short, thin, bald man, with a sharp
nose curved like a reaping-hook, iron-grey whiskers and hair, and
fierce pale blue eyes. Later on, Christian, in the pride of her first
introduction to Tennyson, had been inspired by his high shoulders and
black tailed coat to entitle him "The many-wintered crow," and the
name was welcomed by her fellows, and registered in the repository of
phrases and nicknames that exists in all well-regulated families.

"'Fie!'" he repeated after Mrs. Dixon, witheringly. "I declare before
God, Mrs. Dixon, if I was to tell you the Pope o' Rome was coming to
dinner next Sunday, it's all you'd say would be 'Fie!'"

Mrs. Dixon received this supposition of catastrophe with annoying
calm, and even reverted to Mr. Evans' earlier statement in a manner
that might have bewildered a less experienced disputant than he.
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