Seen and Unseen
Transcriber's Note: Inconsistency between TOC and Chapter headings have been retained as in the original.
NEW YORK DODGE PUBLISHING COMPANY 214-220 EAST 23rd STREET
First Published July 1907 Second Impression October 1907 Third Impression March 1908
To C. E. B. IN MEMORY OF ONE WHO LOVED AND SUFFERED AND IN THE SURE AND CERTAIN HOPE OF A JOYFUL MEETING WITH HIM, AND WITH OTHERS WHO HAVE CROSSED THE BAR
CONTENTS
Many years ago, whilst living at Oxford, I was invited by a very old friend, who had recently taken his degree, to a river picnic; with Nuneham, I think, as its alleged object.
Unfortunately, the day proved unfavourable, and we returned in open boats, also with open umbrellas; a generally drenched and bedraggled appearance, and nothing to cheer us on the physical plane except a quantity of iced coffee which had been ordered in anticipation of a tropical day.
Under these rather trying conditions I can remember getting a good deal of amusement out of the companions in the special boat which proved to be my fate. Our host, being a clever and interesting man himself, had collected clever and interesting people round him, on the Birds of a Feather principle, and I happened to sit between two ladies, one the wife (now, alas! the widow) of a man who was to become later on one of our most famous bishops; the other—her bosom friend and deadly rival—the wife of an equally distinguished Oxford don.
The iced coffee combined with the pouring rain may have been partly to blame, but certainly the conversation that went on between the two ladies, across my umbrella, was decidedly Feline .
To pass the time we were valiantly endeavouring to play Twenty Questions from the bottom of the boat, and the Bishop's widow was asking the questions. She had triumphantly elicited the fact that we had thought of a cinder —and an historical cinder—and the twentieth and last permissible question was actually hovering on her lips. It was the cinder that Richard Cœur de Lion's horse fell upon, she said eagerly. Of course, we all realised that this was a most obvious slip in the case of so highly educated a woman; but the Bosom Friend could not resist putting out the velvet paw: A little confusion in the centuries, I think, dear, she said sweetly. The unfortunate questioner practically never smiled again during that expedition. But a still more crushing blow was in store for her.
E. Katherine Bates
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EARLY RECOLLECTIONS
INVESTIGATIONS IN AMERICA, 1885-1886
INVESTIGATIONS IN AMERICA, 1885-1886
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND
HONG KONG, ALASKA, AND NEW YORK
INDIA, 1890-1891
SWEDEN AND RUSSIA, 1892
SWEDEN AND RUSSIA, 1892
LADY CAITHNESS AND AVENUE WAGRAM
FROM OXFORD TO WIMBLEDON
FURTHER EXPERIENCES IN AMERICA
A HAUNTED CASTLE IN IRELAND
1900-1901
A SECOND VISIT TO INDIA, 1903
A FAMILY PORTRAIT AND PSYCHIC PHOTOGRAPHY
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