• The door opened, very slowly and cautiously, and the Professor peeped in, Uggug's stupid face being just visible behind him.

    "It is a beautiful arrangement!" the Vice-warden was saying with enthusiasm. "You see, my precious one, that there are fifteen houses in Green Street, before you turn into West Street."

    "Fifteen houses! Is it possible?" my Lady replied. "I thought it was fourteen!" And, so intent were they on this interesting question, that neither of them even looked up till the Professor, leading Uggug by the hand, stood close before them.

    My Lady was the first to notice their approach. "Why, here's the Professor!" she exclaimed in her blandest tones. "And my precious child too! Are lessons over?"

    "A strange thing has happened!" the Professor began in a trembling tone. "His Exalted Fatness" (this was one of Uggug's many titles) "tells me he has just seen, in this very room, a Dancing-Bear and a Court- Jester!"

    The Vice-Warden and his wife shook with well-acted merriment.

    Not in this room, darling!" said the fond mother. "We've been sitting here this hour or more, reading---- ," here she referred to the book lying on her lap, "----reading the----the City-Directory."

    "Let me feel your pulse, my boy!" said the anxious father. "Now put out your tongue. Ah, I thought so! He's a little feverish, Professor, and has had a bad dream. Put him to bed at once, and give him a cooling draught."

    "I ain't been dreaming!" his Exalted Fatness remonstrated, as the Professor led him away.

    "Bad grammar, Sir!" his father remarked with some sternness. "Kindly attend to that little matter, Professor, as soon as you have corrected the feverishness. And, by the way, Professor!" (The Professor left his distinguished pupil standing at the door, and meekly returned.) "There is a rumour afloat, that the people wish to elect an----in point of fact, an ----you understand that I mean an----"

    "Not another Professor!" the poor old man exclaimed in horror.

    "No! Certainly not!" the Vice-Warden eagerly explained. "Merely an Emperor, you understand."

    "An Emperor!" cried the astonished Professor, holding his head between his hands, as if he expected it to come to pieces with the shock. "What will the Warden----"

    "Why, the Warden will most likely be the new Emperor!" my Lady explained. "Where could we find a better? Unless, perhaps----" she glanced at her husband.

    "Where indeed!" the Professor fervently responded, quite failing to take the hint.

    The Vice-Warden resumed the thread of his discourse. "The reason I mentioned it, Professor, was to ask you to be so kind as to preside at the Election. You see it would make the thing respectable----no suspicion of anything, underhand----"

    "I fear I ca'n't, your Excellency!" the old man faltered. "What will the Warden----"

    "True, true!" the Vice-Warden interrupted. "Your position, as Court-Professor, makes it awkward, I admit. Well, well! Then the Election shall be held without you."


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