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Various

"The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 07, No. 39, January, 1861"


The jealousy which lay covered up under his surface--thoughts took this
opportunity to break out.
"You wouldn't act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you,
Elsie?" he asked.
It was with some effort that he looked steadily at her to see the effect
of his question.
Elsie _colored_,--not much, but still perceptibly. Dick could not
remember that he had ever seen her show this mark of emotion before,
in all his experience of her fitful changes of mood. It had a singular
depth of significance, therefore, for him; he knew how hardly her color
came. Blushing means nothing, in some persons; in others, it betrays
a profound inward agitation,--a perturbation of the feelings far more
trying than the passions which with many easily moved persons break
forth in tears. All who have observed much are aware that some men, who
have seen a good deal of life in its less chastened aspects and are
anything but modest, will blush often and easily, while there are
delicate and sensitive women who can turn pale, or go into fits, if
necessary, but are very rarely seen to betray their feelings in their
cheeks, even when their expression shows that their inmost soul is
blushing scarlet.


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