CHAPTER 10
the Spell Seems Broken
te of rooms opening into eac Park s and floeen couples tendant parents and guardians. t forion of to one end ion of maturity, tty sitting- room ory attac as an occasional cool retreat. Lucy, ime and ty slimness set off by an abundant dress of s ties, including no member of any aristocracy of St Oggs, and stretco treme limits of commercial and professional gentility. Maggie at first refused to dance, saying t sten all t is ill dancing . But at lengt in orry o try and persuade s dance anyt a country dance, but o for t y, meaning only to be complimentary ervals t it bore t s z - o z at last it urn of t of vanity and t of merriment in it, and Maggie quite forgot roublous life in a c of t ic ro banisentious etiquette. S quite cably toorry, as fire of young joy in t if it can find t breato fan it; and s bit of black lace, seemed like tting of a jewel.
Step yet asked o dance - yet paid y. Since yesterday, t in of like a blot: ttac bet ttac on epold o resist ttraction t inually tening to overpo a certain savage resistance, and at anot a so trusion of P made it a neement to rusoo do t aloof from o Lucy. But noo kick young torry out of take ed to end t get rid of ner. ty t oo so possess . But even noing in ting still to t, ther.
Step automatic ies of politeness in terval, until ed alone again, at toz, and e of all ts t . ill brig to joy and tenderness: - even t seem bitter - so as a part of life, for life at t seemed a k