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All
that
day
Miss
Trelawny
was
in
better
spirits
and
looked
in
better
strength
than
she
had
yet
been
,
despite
the
new
shock
and
annoyance
of
the
theft
which
must
ultimately
bring
so
much
disappointment
to
her
father
.
We
spent
most
of
the
day
looking
over
the
curio
treasures
of
Mr.
Trelawny
.
From
what
I
had
heard
from
Mr.
Corbeck
I
began
to
have
some
idea
of
the
vastness
of
his
enterprise
in
the
world
of
Egyptian
research
;
and
with
this
light
everything
around
me
began
to
have
a
new
interest
.
As
I
went
on
,
the
interest
grew
;
any
lingering
doubts
which
I
might
have
had
changed
to
wonder
and
admiration
.
The
house
seemed
to
be
a
veritable
storehouse
of
marvels
of
antique
art
.
In
addition
to
the
curios
,
big
and
little
,
in
Mr.
Trelawny
's
own
room
--
from
the
great
sarcophagi
down
to
the
scarabs
of
all
kinds
in
the
cabinets
--
the
great
hall
,
the
staircase
landings
,
the
study
,
and
even
the
boudoir
were
full
of
antique
pieces
which
would
have
made
a
collector
's
mouth
water
.
Miss
Trelawny
from
the
first
came
with
me
,
and
looked
with
growing
interest
at
everything
.
After
having
examined
some
cabinets
of
exquisite
amulets
she
said
to
me
in
quite
a
naive
way
:
"
You
will
hardly
believe
that
I
have
of
late
seldom
even
looked
at
any
of
these
things
.
It
is
only
since
Father
has
been
ill
that
I
seem
to
have
even
any
curiosity
about
them
.
But
now
,
they
grow
and
grow
on
me
to
quite
an
absorbing
degree
.
I
wonder
if
it
is
that
the
collector
's
blood
which
I
have
in
my
veins
is
beginning
to
manifest
itself
.
If
so
,
the
strange
thing
is
that
I
have
not
felt
the
call
of
it
before
.
Of
course
I
know
most
of
the
big
things
,
and
have
examined
them
more
or
less
;
but
really
,
in
a
sort
of
way
I
have
always
taken
them
for
granted
,
as
though
they
had
always
been
there
.
I
have
noticed
the
same
thing
now
and
again
with
family
pictures
,
and
the
way
they
are
taken
for
granted
by
the
family
.
If
you
will
let
me
examine
them
with
you
it
will
be
delightful
!
"
It
was
a
joy
to
me
to
hear
her
talk
in
such
a
way
;
and
her
last
suggestion
quite
thrilled
me
.
Together
we
went
round
the
various
rooms
and
passages
,
examining
and
admiring
the
magnificent
curios
.
There
was
such
a
bewildering
amount
and
variety
of
objects
that
we
could
only
glance
at
most
of
them
;
but
as
we
went
along
we
arranged
that
we
should
take
them
seriatim
,
day
by
day
,
and
examine
them
more
closely
.
In
the
hall
was
a
sort
of
big
frame
of
floriated
steel
work
which
Margaret
said
her
father
used
for
lifting
the
heavy
stone
lids
of
the
sarcophagi
.
It
was
not
heavy
and
could
be
moved
about
easily
enough
.
By
aid
of
this
we
raised
the
covers
in
turn
and
looked
at
the
endless
series
of
hieroglyphic
pictures
cut
in
most
of
them
.
In
spite
of
her
profession
of
ignorance
Margaret
knew
a
good
deal
about
them
;
her
year
of
life
with
her
father
had
had
unconsciously
its
daily
and
hourly
lesson
.
She
was
a
remarkably
clever
and
acute-minded
girl
,
and
with
a
prodigious
memory
;
so
that
her
store
of
knowledge
,
gathered
unthinkingly
bit
by
bit
,
had
grown
to
proportions
that
many
a
scholar
might
have
envied
.
And
yet
it
was
all
so
naive
and
unconscious
;
so
girlish
and
simple
.
She
was
so
fresh
in
her
views
and
ideas
,
and
had
so
little
thought
of
self
,
that
in
her
companionship
I
forgot
for
the
time
all
the
troubles
and
mysteries
which
enmeshed
the
house
;
and
I
felt
like
a
boy
again
...
.
The
most
interesting
of
the
sarcophagi
were
undoubtedly
the
three
in
Mr.
Trelawny
's
room
.
Of
these
,
two
were
of
dark
stone
,
one
of
porphyry
and
the
other
of
a
sort
of
ironstone
.
These
were
wrought
with
some
hieroglyphs
.
But
the
third
was
strikingly
different
.
It
was
of
some
yellow-brown
substance
of
the
dominating
colour
effect
of
Mexican
onyx
,
which
it
resembled
in
many
ways
,
excepting
that
the
natural
pattern
of
its
convolutions
was
less
marked
.
Here
and
there
were
patches
almost
transparent
--
certainly
translucent
.
The
whole
chest
,
cover
and
all
,
was
wrought
with
hundreds
,
perhaps
thousands
,
of
minute
hieroglyphics
,
seemingly
in
an
endless
series
.
Back
,
front
,
sides
,
edges
,
bottom
,
all
had
their
quota
of
the
dainty
pictures
,
the
deep
blue
of
their
colouring
showing
up
fresh
and
sharply
edge
in
the
yellow
stone
.
It
was
very
long
,
nearly
nine
feet
;
and
perhaps
a
yard
wide
.
The
sides
undulated
,
so
that
there
was
no
hard
line
.
Even
the
corners
took
such
excellent
curves
that
they
pleased
the
eye
.
"
Truly
,
"
I
said
,
"
this
must
have
been
made
for
a
giant
!
"