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Sinclair, May, 1863-1946

"The Divine Fire"

"
He wondered more and more, and ended by wondering whether Dicky
Pilkington were really so sure of his game?
"I see. You want a catalogue _raisonne_."
"I want something like this." She opened a drawer and showed him one
of Rickman's Special Quarterly Catalogues of a year back. He
remembered; it used to be sent regularly to old Sir Joseph Harden,
their best customer.
"My grandfather said these catalogues were models of their kind--they
could only have been done by a scholar. He wanted the library
catalogued on the same lines. It was to have been done in his
lifetime--"
"I wish it had been. I should have liked to have worked for Sir Joseph
'Arden."
Stirred by the praise, and by a sudden recollection of Sir Joseph, he
spoke with a certain emotion, so that an aitch went by the board.
"Are you quite sure," said she, "that you know all about this sort of
work?"
Had she noticed that hideous accident? And did it shake her belief in
his fitness for the scholarly task?
"This _is_ my work. I made that catalogue. I have to make them every
quarter, so it keeps my hand in."
"Are you a quick worker?"
"Yes, I can be pretty quick."
"Could you finish my catalogue by the twenty-seventh? That's a little
more than three weeks."
"Well--it would depend rather on the number of notes you wanted. Let
me see--there must be about fourteen or fifteen thousand books here--"
"There are fifteen thousand.


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