VOLUME III
7. CHAPTER VII
 (continued)
"How much I am obliged to you," said he, "for telling me to come to-day!--
 If it had not been for you, I should certainly have lost all the
 happiness of this party.  I had quite determined to go away again." 
"Yes, you were very cross; and I do not know what about,
 except that you were too late for the best strawberries.
 I was a kinder friend than you deserved.  But you were humble.
 You begged hard to be commanded to come." 
"Don't say I was cross.  I was fatigued.  The heat overcame me." 
"It is hotter to-day." 
"Not to my feelings.  I am perfectly comfortable to-day." 
"You are comfortable because you are under command." 
"Your command?--Yes." 
"Perhaps I intended you to say so, but I meant self-command. You had,
 somehow or other, broken bounds yesterday, and run away from your
 own management; but to-day you are got back again--and as I cannot
 be always with you, it is best to believe your temper under your
 own command rather than mine." 
"It comes to the same thing.  I can have no self-command without
 a motive.  You order me, whether you speak or not.  And you can
 be always with me.  You are always with me." 
"Dating from three o'clock yesterday.  My perpetual influence
 could not begin earlier, or you would not have been so much
 out of humour before." 
"Three o'clock yesterday!  That is your date.  I thought I had seen
 you first in February." 
"Your gallantry is really unanswerable.  But (lowering her voice)--
 nobody speaks except ourselves, and it is rather too much to be
 talking nonsense for the entertainment of seven silent people." 
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