WILD AND TAME.
THE Lady Albinia would think of it.
She was a stately lady, of a bilious temperament,
 and disliked precipitation. And if she
 had required a week to reflect whether she
 might suffer Mr. Lamplugh to be presented
 to her without compromising her social dignity,
 she might surely take a longer time to decide
 on the offer of the hand and heart of the
 same Mr. Lamplugh, now lying (in writing)
 before her. True, she had laboured very
 hard for this result, and had displayed as
 much cleverness in her tactics as a general
 besieging a fortress; yet she was fully aware
 that she was called on for a supreme effort of
 condescension should she accept it. For,
 though Mr. Lamplugh was wealthy, while Lady
 Albinia starved aristocratically on casual help
 from her friends; and though he was the very
 ideal of a magnificent-looking man in his
 prime, while she in her virgin forty years had
 withered rather than ripened; yet she was of
 the peerage, and Mr. Lamplugh was a
commoner of low birth, whose antecedents were
 not particularly favourable even in the eyes
 of commoners themselves. His father had
 been in some horrid trade—of course the
 Lady Albinia did not know what; and he
 himself had been a merchant somewhere in
 Jamaica, or the Bermudas, or Madeira, or
 Russia, my dear. And when there—wherever
 that might be—he had married some dreadful
 creature, black most likely, and perhaps with
 a large bore through her under lip. or a piece
 of wood in her ears, or with a nose ring or
 flattened head, like the monsters one sees
 in encyclopaedias. And this creature had
 died, thank goodness! and left a family—
Lady Albinia wondered if they were black
 with woolly hair— which family Mr. Lamplugh
prudently kept in the country, away
 from civilised life, and which was confessedly
 a great drawback to his fine fortune
 and handsome face. But as the Lady
 Albinia had a decided turn for education,
and held strong notions of discipline,
the children were not such an
 obstacle to her. They would be occasions
 for the exercise of her abilities more than
 hindrances to her life, and she rather
 congratulated herself than otherwise on
 the opportunity of showing to the world
what she could do in the way of method
and training.
So, allowing herself to subside into the
easy chair, she sat and balanced the two
 sides of the question, until she herself
wondered if the scale would ever turn.
What could Mr. Lamplugh, that handsome
 man of fortune, see in the Lady Albinia
 to tempt him to brave the shame of
rejection, or the very indefinite good of
acceptance? A tall thin spinster of forty and
upwards, with an aristocratic nose and a pair of
 sharp brown eyes, a mouth that was a
 simple line, the merest indication of lips,
 and a figure which not all the art of the
 dressmaker could pad into the semblance of
 plumpness—what was there in this very
uncomfortable and uncompromising lady to
 lure Mr. Lamplugh into the bondage of matrimony
again? It could not be her fortune,
it could not be her beauty, for she had neither;
 and her temper was acid and her mind a
 blank. Perhaps it was her title, which sounded
 pleasantly to the ears of the ambitious
commoner, anxious to reap social state from his
golden seed; perhaps it was her aristocratic
 connections, which would help on his own
 children to distinction. Perhaps he wanted a
 mother for Daisy, his eldest girl, who would
 put her into a moral strait-waistcoat, and
 cramp her growth. Lady Albiuia was
 allowed by all who knew her, to be one of the
 most admirable correctives to an overflush of
 youth. Perhaps he had been captivated by
 her attentions; for Mr. Lamplugh was one
 of those weak men who are caught by
 a woman's flattery sooner than by her
 love. And Lady Albinia had certainly
 courted and flattered the handsome merchant
 to an extent that might have turned a
 stronger brain than his, if a stronger
 brain could have worshipped Debrett as much
 as he did. Whatever its nature, the secret
 feeling which prompted Mr. Lamplugh to
 make this offer was one not easy even for
 himself to define. He had said nothing to
 his children, neither had he consulted with
 his most intimate friend: dreading the "why?"
 to which he would have been puzzled to fit
 an answering "because."
Lady Albinia pondered and reflected on
 this important matter. She looked round
 her little room. It was very pretty, and