The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (ebook reader with highlight function TXT) đ
- Author: Jeffery Farnol
- Performer: -
Book online «The Broad Highway by Jeffery Farnol (ebook reader with highlight function TXT) đ». Author Jeffery Farnol
Again Mr. Grainger laid down the will, and again he regarded me over the rim of his spectacles.
âGood God!â cried Sir Richard, leaping to his feet, âthe man must have been mad. Ten guineasâwhy, itâs an insultâdamme!âitâs an insultâyouâll never take it of course, Peter.â
âOn the contrary, sir,â said I.
âButâten guineas!â bellowed the baronet; âon my soul now, George was a cold-blooded fish, but I didnât think even he was capable of such a despicable trickânoâcurse me if I did! Why, it would have been kinder to have left you nothing at allâbut it was like Georgeâbitter to the endâten guineas!â
âIs ten guineas,â said I, âand when one comes to think of it, much may be done with ten guineas.â
Sir Richard grew purple in the face, but before he could speak, Mr. Grainger began to read again:
ââMoreover, the sum of five hundred thousand pounds, now vested in the funds, shall be paid to either Maurice or Peter Vibart aforesaid, if either shall, within one calendar year, become the husband of the Lady Sophia Sefton of Cambourne.ââ
âGood God!â exclaimed Sir Richard.
ââFailing which,ââ read Mr. Grainger, ââthe said sum, namely, five hundred thousand pounds, shall be bestowed upon such charity or charities as the trustees shall select. Signed by me, this tenth day of April, eighteen hundred andâ, GEORGE VIBRART. Duly witnessed by ADAM PENFLEET, MARTHA TRENT.ââ
Here Mr. Graingerâs voice stopped, and I remember, in the silence that followed, the parchment crackled very loudly as he folded it precisely and laid it on the table before him. I remember also that Sir Richard was swearing vehemently under his breath as he paced to and fro between me and the window.
âAnd that is all?â I inquired at last.
âThat,â said Mr. Grainger, not looking at me now, âis all.â
âThe Lady Sophia,â murmured Sir Richard as if to âhimself, âthe Lady Sophia!â And then, stopping suddenly before me in his walk, âOh, Peter!â said he, clapping his hand down upon my shoulder, âoh, Peter, that settles it; youâre done for, boyâa crueller will was never made.â
âMarriage!â said I to myself. âHum!â
âA damnable iniquity,â exclaimed Sir Richard, striding up and down the room again.
âThe Lady Sophia Sefton of Cambourne!â said I, rubbing my chin.
âWhy, thatâs just it,â roared the baronet; âsheâs a reigning toastâmost famous beauty in the country, Londonâs mad over herâshe can pick and choose from all the finest gentlemen in England. Oh, itâs âgood-byâ to all your hopes of the inheritance, Peter, and thatâs the devil of it.â
âSir, I fail to see your argument,â said I.
âWhat?â cried Sir Richard, facing round on me, âdâyou think youâd have a chance with her then?â
âWhy not?â
âWithout friends, position, of money? Pish, boy! donât I tell you that every buck and dandyâevery mincing macaroni in the three kingdoms would give his very legs to marry herâeither for her beauty or her fortune?â spluttered the baronet. âAnd let me inform you further that sheâs devilish high and haughty with it allâthey do say she even rebuffed the Prince Regent himself.â
âBut then, sir, I consider myself a better man than the Prince Regent,â said I.
Sir Richard sank into the nearest chair and stared at me openmouthed.
âSir,â I continued, âyou doubtless set me down as an egoist of egoists. I freely confess it; so are you, so is Mr. Grainger yonder, so are we all of us egoists in thinking ourselves as good as some few of our neighbors and better than a great many.â
âDeuce take me!â said Sir Richard.
âReferring to the Lady Sophia, I have heard that she once galloped her horse up the steps of St. Paulâs Cathedralââ
âAnd down again, Peter,â added Sir Richard.
âAlso she is said to be possessed of a temper,â I continued, âand is above the average height, I believe, and I have a natural antipathy to termagants, more especially tall ones.â
âTermagant!â cried Sir Richard. âWhy, sheâs the handsomest woman in London, boy. Sheâs none of your milk-and-watery, meek-mouthed missesâcurse me, no! Sheâs all fire and blood and high mettleâa woman, sir gloriousâdivineâdamme, sir, a black-browed goddessâa positive plum!â
âSir Richard,â said I, âshould I ever contemplate marriage, which is most improbable, my wife must be sweet and shy, gentle-eyed and soft of voice, instead of your bold, strong-armed, horse-galloping creature; above all, she must be sweet and clingingââ
âSweet and sticky, oh, the devil! Hark to the boy, Grainger,â cried Sir Richard, âhark to himâand one glance of the glorious Seftonâs bright eyesâone glance only, Grainger, and heâd be at her feetâon his kneesâon his confounded knees, sir!â
âThe question is, how do you propose to maintain yourself in the future?â said Mr. Grainger at this point; âlife under your altered fortunes must prove necessarily hard, Mr. Peter.â
âAnd yet, sir,â I answered, âa fortune with a wife tagged on to it must prove a very mixed blessing after all; and then again, there may be a certain amount of satisfaction in stepping into a dead manâs shoes, but I, very foolishly, perhaps, have a hankering for shoes of my own. Surely there must be some position in life that I am competent to fill, some position that would maintain me honorably and well; I flatter myself that my years at Oxford were not altogether barren of resultââ
âBy no means,â put in Sir Richard; âyou won the High Jump, I believe?â
âSir, I did,â said I; âalso âThrowing the Hammer.ââ
âAnd spent two thousand pounds per annum?â said Sir Richard.
âSir, I did, but between whiles managed to do fairly well in the Tripos, to finish a new and original translation of Quintilian, another of Petronius Arbiter and also a literal rendering into the English of the Memoirs of the Sieur de Brantome.â
âFor none of which you have hitherto found a publisher?â inquired Mr. Grainger.
âNot as yet,â said I, âbut I have great hopes of my Brantome, as you are probably aware this is the first time he has ever been translated into the English.â
âHum!â said Sir Richard, âha!âand in the meantime what do you intend to do?â
âOn that head I have as yet come to no definite conclusion, sir,â I answered.
âI have been wondering,â began Mr. Grainger, somewhat diffidently, âif you would care to accept a position in my office. To be sure the remuneration would be small at first and quite insignificant in comparison to the income you have been in the receipt of.â
âBut it would have been money earned,â said I, âwhich is infinitely preferable to that for which we never turn a handâat least, I think so.â
âThen you accept?â
âNo, sir,â said I, âthough I am grateful to you, and thank you most sincerely for your offer, yet I have never felt the least inclination to the practice of law; where there is no interest oneâs work must necessarily suffer, and I have no desire that your business should be injured by any carelessness of mine.â
âWhat do you think of a private tutorship?â
âIt would suit me above all things were it not for the fact that the genus âBoyâ is the most aggravating of all animals, and that I am conscious of a certain shortness of temper at times, which might result in pain to my pupil, loss of dignity to myself, and general unpleasantness to all concernedâotherwise a private tutorship would suit most admirably.â
Here Sir Richard took another pinch of snuff and sat frowning up at the ceiling, while Mr. Grainger began tying up that document which had so altered my prospects. As for me, I crossed to the window and stood staring out at the evening. Everywhere were trees tinted by the rosy glow of sunset, trees that stirred sleepily in the gentle wind, and far away I could see that famous highway, built and paved for the march of Roman Legions, winding away to where it vanished over distant Shooterâs Hill.
âAnd pray,â said Sir Richard, still frowning at the ceiling, âwhat do you propose to do with yourself?â
Now, as I looked out upon this fair evening, I became, of a sudden, possessed of an overmastering desire, a great longing for field and meadow and hedgerow, for wood and coppice and shady stream, for sequestered inns and wide, wind-swept heaths, and ever the broad highway in front. Thus I answered Sir Richardâs question unhesitatingly, and without turning from the window:
âI shall go, sir, on a walking tour through Kent and Surrey into Devonshire, and thence probably to Cornwall.â
âAnd with a miserable ten guineas in your pocket? Preposterous âabsurd!â retorted Sir Richard.
âOn the contrary, sir,â said I, âthe more I ponder the project, the more enamored of it I become.â
âAnd when your money is all goneâhow then?â
âI shall turn my hand to some useful employment,â said I; âdigging, for instance.â
âDigging!â ejaculated Sir Richard, âand you a scholarâand what is more, a gentleman!â
âMy dear Sir Richard,â said I, âthat all depends upon how you would define a gentleman. To me he would appear, of late years, to have degenerated into a creature whose chief end in life is to spend money he has never earned, to reproduce his species with a deplorable frequency and promiscuity, habitually to drink more than is good for him, and, between whiles, to fill in his time hunting, cock-fighting, or watching entranced while two men pound each other unrecognizable in the prize ring. Occasionally he has the good taste to break his neck in the hunting field, or get himself gloriously shot in a duel, but the generality live on to a good old age, turn their attention to matters political and, following the dictates of their class, damn reform with a whole-hearted fervor equalled only by their rancor.â
âDeuce take me!â ejaculated Sir Richard feebly, while Mr. Grainger buried his face in his pocket-handkerchief.
âTo my mind,â I ended, âthe man who sweats over a spade or follows the tail of a plough is far nobler and higher in the Scheme of Things than any of your young âbloodsâ driving his coach and four to Brighton to the danger of all and sundry.â
Sir Richard slowly got up out of his chair, staring at me open-mouthed. âGood God!â he exclaimed at last, âthe boyâs a Revolutionary.â
I smiled and shrugged my shoulders, but, before I could speak, Mr. Grainger interposed, sedate and solemn as usual:
âReferring to your proposed tour, Mr. Peter, when do you expect to start?â
âEarly to-morrow morning, sir.â
âI will not attempt to dissuade you, well knowing the difficulty,â said he, with a faint smile, âbut a letter addressed to me at Lincolnâs Inn will always find me and receive my most earnest attention.â So saying, he rose, bowed, and having shaken my hand, left the room, closing the door behind him.
âPeter,â exclaimed the baronet, striding up and down, âPeter, you are a fool, sir, a hot-headed, self-sufficient, pragmatical young fool, sir, curse me!â
âI am sorry you should think so,â I answered.
âAnd,â he continued, regarding me with a defiant eye, âI shall expect you to draw upon me for any sum thatâthat you may require for the presentâfriendshipâs sakeâboyhood andâand all
Comments (0)