He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (ebook reader with internet browser txt) 📖
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‘He is an excellent man, I’m sure,’ said Dorothy.
‘Nevertheless I am very glad. But I did not think you would accept him,
and I congratulate you on your escape. You would have been nothing to
me as Mrs Gibson.’
‘Shouldn’t I?’ said Dorothy, not knowing what else to say.
‘But now I think we shall always be friends.’
‘I’m sure I hope so, Mr Burgess. But indeed I must go now. It is ever
so late, and you will hardly get any sleep. Good night.’ Then he took
her hand, and pressed it very warmly, and referring to a promise before
made to her, he assured her that he would certainly make acquaintance
with her brother as soon as he was back in London. Dorothy, as she went
up to bed, was more than ever satisfied with herself, in that she had
not yielded in reference to Mr Gibson.
TREVELYAN AT VENICE
Trevelyan passed on moodily and alone from Turin to Venice, always
expecting letters from Bozzle, and receiving from time to time the
dispatches which that functionary forwarded to him, as must be
acknowledged, with great punctuality. For Mr Bozzle did his work, not
only with a conscience, but with a will. He was now, as he had declared
more than once, altogether devoted to Mr Trevelyan’s interest; and as
he was an active, enterprising man, always on the alert to be doing
something, and as he loved the work of writing dispatches, Trevelyan
received a great many letters from Bozzle. It is not exaggeration to
say that every letter made him for the time a very wretched man. This
ex-policeman wrote of the wife of his bosom, of her who had been the
wife of his bosom, and who was the mother of his child, who was at this
very time the only woman whom he loved with an entire absence of
delicacy. Bozzle would have thought reticence on his part to he
dishonest. We remember Othello’s demand of Iago. That was the demand
which Bozzle understood that Trevelyan had made of him, and he was
minded to obey that order. But Trevelvan, though he had in truth given
the order, was like Othello also in this that he would have preferred
before all the prizes of the world to have had proof brought home to
him exactly opposite to that which he demanded. But there was nothing
so terrible to him as the grinding suspicion that he was to be kept in
the dark. Bozzle could find out facts. Therefore he gave, in effect,
the same order that Othello gave and Bozzle went to work determined to
obey it. There came many dispatches to Venice, and at last there came
one, which created a correspondence which shall be given here at
length. The first is a letter from Mr Bozzle to his employer:
‘55, Stony Walk, Union Street, Borough,
September 29, 186-, 4.30 p.m.
HOND. SIR,
Since I wrote yesterday morning, something has occurred which, it may
be, and I think it will, will help to bring this melancholy affair to a
satisfactory termination and conclusion. I had better explain, Mr
Trewilyan, how I have been at work from the beginning about watching
the Colonel. I couldn’t do nothing with the porter at the Albany, which
he is always mostly muzzled with beer, and he wouldn’t have taken my
money, not on the square. So, when it was tellegrammed to me as the
Colonel was on the move in the North, I put on two boys as knows the
Colonel, at eighteenpence a day, at each end, one Piccadilly end, and
the other Saville Row end, and yesterday morning, as quick as ever
could be, after the Limited Express Edinburgh Male Up was in, there
comes the Saville Row End Boy here to say as the Colonel was lodged
safe in his downey. Then I was off immediate myself to St. Diddulph’s,
because I knows what it is to trust to inferiors when matters gets
delicate. Now, there hadn’t been no letters from the Colonel, nor none
to him as I could make out, though that mightn’t be so sure. She might
have had ‘em addressed to A. Z., or the like of that, at any of the
Post-offices as was distant, as nobody could give the notice to ‘em
all. Barring the money, which I know ain’t an object when the end is so
desirable, it don’t do to be too ubiketous, because things will go
astray. But I’ve kept my eye uncommon open, and I don’t think there
have been no letters since that last which was sent, Mr Trewilyan, let
any of ‘em, parsons or what not, say what they will. And I don’t see as
parsons are better than other folk when they has to do with a lady as
likes her fancy-man.’
Trevelyan, when he had read as far as this, threw down the letter and
tore his hair in despair. ‘My wife,’ he exclaimed, ‘Oh, my wife!’ But
it was essential that he should read Bozzle’s letter, and he
persevered.
‘Well; I took to the ground myself as soon as ever I heard that the
Colonel was among us, and I hung out at the Full Moon. They had been
quite on the square with me at the Full Moon, which I mention, because,
of course, it has to be remembered, and it do come up as a hitem. And
I’m proud, Mr Trewilyan, as I did take to the ground myself; for what
should happen but I see the Colonel as large as life ringing at the
parson’s bell at 1.47 p.m. He was let in at 1.49, and he was let out at
2.17. He went away in a cab which it was kept, and I followed him till
he was put down at the Arcade, and I left him having his ‘ed washed and
greased at Trufitt’s rooms, half-way up. It was a wonder to me when I
see this, Mr Trewilyan, as he didn’t have his ‘ed done first, as they
most of ‘em does when they’re going to see their ladies; but I couldn’t
make nothing of that, though I did try to put too and too together, as
I always does.
What he did at the parson’s, Mr Trewilyan, I won’t say I saw, and I
won’t say I know. It’s my opinion the young woman there isn’t on the
square, though she’s been remembered too, and is a hitem of course.
And, Mr Trewilyan, it do go against the grain with me when they’re
remembered and ain’t on the square. I doesn’t expect too much of Human
Nature, which is poor, as the saying goes; but when they’re remembered
and ain’t on the square after that, it’s too bad for Human Nature. It’s
more than poor. It’s what I calls beggarly.
He ain’t been there since, Mr Trewilyan, and he goes out of town
tomorrow by the 1.15 p.m. express to Bridport. So he lets on; but of
course I shall see to that. That he’s been at St. Diddulph’s, in the
house from 1.47 to 2.17, you may take as a fact. There won’t be no
shaking of that, because I have it in my mem. book, and no Counsel can
get the better of it. Of course he went there to see her, and it’s my
belief he did. The young woman as was remembered says he didn’t, but
she isn’t on the square. They never is when a lady wants to see her
gentleman, though they comes round afterwards, and tells up everything
when it comes before his ordinary lordship.
If you ask me, Mr Trewilyan, I don’t think it’s ripe yet for the court,
but we’ll have it ripe before long. I’ll keep a look-out, because it’s
just possible she may leave town. If she do, I’ll be down upon them
together, and no mistake.
Yours most respectful,
S. BOZZLE.’
Every word in the letter had been a dagger to Trevelyan, and yet he
felt himself to be under an obligation to the man who had written it.
No one else would or could make facts known to him. If she were
innocent, let him know that she were innocent, and he would proclaim
her innocence, and believe in her innocence and sacrifice himself to
her innocence, if such sacrifice were necessary. But if she were
guilty, let him also know that. He knew how bad it was, all that
bribing of postmen and maidservants, who took his money, and her money
also, very likely. It was dirt, all of it. But who had put him into the
dirt? His wife had, at least, deceived him had deceived him and
disobeyed him, and it was necessary that he should know the facts. Life
without a Bozzle would now have been to him a perfect blank.
The Colonel had been to the parsonage at St. Diddulph’s, and had been
admitted! As to that he had no doubt. Nor did he really doubt that his
wife had seen the visitor. He had sent his wife first into a remote
village on Dartmoor, and there she had been visited by her lover! How
was he to use any other word? Iago, oh, Iago! The pity of it, Iago!
Then, when she had learned that this was discovered, she had left the
retreat in which he had placed her without permission from him and had
taken herself to the house of a relative of hers. Here she was visited
again by her lover! Oh, Iago; the pity of it, Iago! And then there had
been between them an almost constant correspondence. So much he had
ascertained as fact; but he did not for a moment believe that Bozzle
had learned all the facts. There might be correspondence, or even
visits, of which Bozzle could learn nothing. How could Bozzle know
where Mrs Trevelyan was during all those hours which Colonel Osborne
passed in London? That which he knew, he knew absolutely, and on that
he could act; but there was, of course, much of which he knew nothing.
Gradually the truth would unveil itself, and then he would act. He
would tear that Colonel into fragments, and throw his wife from him
with all the ignominy which the law made possible to him.
But in the meantime he wrote a letter to Mr Outhouse. Colonel Osborne,
after all that had been said, had been admitted at the parsonage, and
Trevelyan was determined to let the clergyman know what he thought
about it. The oftener he turned the matter in his mind, as he walked
slowly up and down the piazza of St. Mark, the more absurd it appeared
to him to doubt that his wife had seen the man. Of course she had seen
him. He walked there nearly the whole night, thinking of it, and as he
dragged himself off at last to his inn, had almost come to have but one
desire namely, that he should find her out, that the evidence should be
conclusive, that it should be proved, and so brought to an end. Then he
would destroy her, and destroy that man and afterwards destroy himself,
so bitter to him would be his ignominy. He almost revelled in the idea
of the tragedy he would make. It was three o’clock before he was in his
bedroom, and then he wrote his letter to Mr Outhouse before he took
himself to his bed. It was as follows:
‘Venice, Oct. 4, 186-.
Sir
Information of a certain kind, on which I can place a firm reliance,
has reached me, to the effect that Colonel Osborne has been allowed to
visit at
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