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and worn out; there was hardly a chip of me left.
To-morrow at eleven o'clock comes the meeting at Stafford House.
What it will amount to I do not know; but I take no thought for the morrow.
May 8.
My dear C.,--In fulfillment of my agreement I will tell you, as nearly as I can remember, all the details of the meeting at Stafford House.
At about eleven o'clock we drove under the arched carriage-way of a mansion externally not very showy in appearance.
When the duchess appeared, I thought she looked handsomer by daylight than in the evening.
She received us with the same warm and simple kindness which she had shown before.
We were presented to the Duke of Sutherland.
He is a tall, slender man, with rather a thin face, light-brown hair, and a mild blue eye, with an air of gentleness and dignity.
Among the first that entered were the members of the family, the Duke and Duchess of Argyll, Lord and Lady Blantyre, the Marquis and Marchioness of Stafford, and Lady Emma Campbell.
Then followed Lord Shaftesbury with his beautiful lady, and her father and mother, Lord and Lady Palmerston. Lord Palmerston is of middle height, with a keen dark eye and black hair streaked with gray.
There is something peculiarly alert and vivacious about all his movements; in short, his appearance perfectly answers to what we know of him from his public life.
One has a strange, mythological feeling about the existence of people of whom one hears for many years without ever seeing them.
While talking with Lord Palmerston I could but remember how often I had heard father and Mr. S. exulting