Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope (interesting books to read TXT) đź“–
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to him; “so very, very glad:” and, taking the doctor’s arm, he led
him away into a window, where they were alone. “And how is Mary?”
said he, almost in a whisper. “Oh, I wish she were here! But, doctor,
it shall all come in time. But tell me, doctor, there is no news
about her, is there?”
“News—what news?”
“Oh, well; no news is good news: you will give her my love, won’t
you?”
The doctor said that he would. What else could he say? It appeared
quite clear to him that some of Mary’s fears were groundless.
Frank was again very much altered. It has been said, that though
he was a boy at twenty-one, he was a man at twenty-two. But now,
at twenty-three, he appeared to be almost a man of the world. His
manners were easy, his voice under his control, and words were at his
command: he was no longer either shy or noisy; but, perhaps, was open
to the charge of seeming, at least, to be too conscious of his own
merits. He was, indeed, very handsome; tall, manly, and powerfully
built, his form was such as women’s eyes have ever loved to look
upon. “Ah, if he would but marry money!” said Lady Arabella to
herself, taken up by a mother’s natural admiration for her son. His
sisters clung round him before dinner, all talking to him at once.
How proud a family of girls are of one, big, tall, burly brother!
“You don’t mean to tell me, Frank, that you are going to eat soup
with that beard?” said the squire, when they were seated round the
table. He had not ceased to rally his son as to this patriarchal
adornment; but, nevertheless, any one could have seen, with half an
eye, that he was as proud of it as were the others.
“Don’t I, sir? All I require is a relay of napkins for every course:”
and he went to work, covering it with every spoonful, as men with
beards always do.
“Well, if you like it!” said the squire, shrugging his shoulders.
“But I do like it,” said Frank.
“Oh, papa, you wouldn’t have him cut it off,” said one of the twins.
“It is so handsome.”
“I should like to work it into a chair-back instead of floss-silk,”
said the other twin.
“Thank’ee, Sophy; I’ll remember you for that.”
“Doesn’t it look nice, and grand, and patriarchal?” said Beatrice,
turning to her neighbour.
“Patriarchal, certainly,” said Mr Oriel. “I should grow one myself if
I had not the fear of the archbishop before my eyes.”
What was next said to him was in a whisper, audible only to himself.
“Doctor, did you know Wildman of the 9th. He was left as surgeon at
Scutari for two years. Why, my beard to his is only a little down.”
“A little way down, you mean,” said Mr Gazebee.
“Yes,” said Frank, resolutely set against laughing at Mr Gazebee’s
pun. “Why, his beard descends to his ankles, and he is obliged to tie
it in a bag at night, because his feet get entangled in it when he is
asleep!”
“Oh, Frank!” said one of the girls.
This was all very well for the squire, and Lady Arabella, and the
girls. They were all delighted to praise Frank, and talk about him.
Neither did it come amiss to Mr Oriel and the doctor, who had both a
personal interest in the young hero. But Sir Louis did not like it
at all. He was the only baronet in the room, and yet nobody took any
notice of him. He was seated in the post of honour, next to Lady
Arabella; but even Lady Arabella seemed to think more of her own
son than of him. Seeing how he was ill-used, he meditated revenge;
but not the less did it behove him to make some effort to attract
attention.
“Was your ladyship long in London, this season?” said he.
Lady Arabella had not been in London at all this year, and it
was a sore subject with her. “No,” said she, very graciously;
“circumstances have kept us at home.”
Sir Louis only understood one description of “circumstances.”
Circumstances, in his idea, meant the want of money, and he
immediately took Lady Arabella’s speech as a confession of poverty.
“Ah, indeed! I am very sorry for that; that must be very distressing
to a person like your ladyship. But things are mending, perhaps?”
Lady Arabella did not in the least understand him. “Mending!” she
said, in her peculiar tone of aristocratic indifference; and then
turned to Mr Gazebee, who was on the other side of her.
Sir Louis was not going to stand this. He was the first man in the
room, and he knew his own importance. It was not to be borne that
Lady Arabella should turn to talk to a dirty attorney, and leave him,
a baronet, to eat his dinner without notice. If nothing else would
move her, he would let her know who was the real owner of the
Greshamsbury title-deeds.
“I think I saw your ladyship out to-day, taking a ride.” Lady
Arabella had driven through the village in her pony-chair.
“I never ride,” said she, turning her head for one moment from Mr
Gazebee.
“In the one-horse carriage, I mean, my lady. I was delighted with the
way you whipped him up round the corner.”
Whipped him up round the corner! Lady Arabella could make no answer
to this; so she went on talking to Mr Gazebee. Sir Louis, repulsed,
but not vanquished—resolved not to be vanquished by any Lady
Arabella—turned his attention to his plate for a minute or two, and
then recommenced.
“The honour of a glass of wine with you, Lady Arabella,” said he.
“I never take wine at dinner,” said Lady Arabella. The man was
becoming intolerable to her, and she was beginning to fear that it
would be necessary for her to fly the room to get rid of him.
The baronet was again silent for a moment; but he was determined not
to be put down.
“This is a nice-looking country about here,” said he.
“Yes; very nice,” said Mr Gazebee, endeavouring to relieve the lady
of the mansion.
“I hardly know which I like best; this, or my own place at Boxall
Hill. You have the advantage here in trees, and those sort of things.
But, as to the house, why, my box there is very comfortable, very.
You’d hardly know the place now, Lady Arabella, if you haven’t seen
it since my governor bought it. How much do you think he spent about
the house and grounds, pineries included, you know, and those sort of
things?”
Lady Arabella shook her head.
“Now guess, my lady,” said he. But it was not to be supposed that
Lady Arabella should guess on such a subject.
“I never guess,” said she, with a look of ineffable disgust.
“What do you say, Mr Gazebee?”
“Perhaps a hundred thousand pounds.”
“What! for a house! You can’t know much about money, nor yet about
building, I think, Mr Gazebee.”
“Not much,” said Mr Gazebee, “as to such magnificent places as Boxall
Hill.”
“Well, my lady, if you won’t guess, I’ll tell you. It cost twenty-two
thousand four hundred and nineteen pounds four shillings and
eightpence. I’ve all the accounts exact. Now, that’s a tidy lot of
money for a house for a man to live in.”
Sir Louis spoke this in a loud tone, which at least commanded the
attention of the table. Lady Arabella, vanquished, bowed her head,
and said that it was a large sum; Mr Gazebee went on sedulously
eating his dinner; the squire was struck momentarily dumb in the
middle of a long chat with the doctor; even Mr Oriel ceased to
whisper; and the girls opened their eyes with astonishment. Before
the end of his speech, Sir Louis’s voice had become very loud.
“Yes, indeed,” said Frank; “a very tidy lot of money. I’d have
generously dropped the four and eightpence if I’d been the
architect.”
“It wasn’t all one bill; but that’s the tot. I can show the bills:”
and Sir Louis, well pleased with his triumph, swallowed a glass of
wine.
Almost immediately after the cloth was removed, Lady Arabella
escaped, and the gentlemen clustered together. Sir Louis found
himself next to Mr Oriel, and began to make himself agreeable.
“A very nice girl, Miss Beatrice; very nice.”
Now Mr Oriel was a modest man, and, when thus addressed as to his
future wife, found it difficult to make any reply.
“You parsons always have your own luck,” said Sir Louis. “You get all
the beauty, and generally all the money, too. Not much of the latter
in this case, though—eh?”
Mr Oriel was dumbfounded. He had never said a word to any creature as
to Beatrice’s dowry; and when Mr Gresham had told him, with sorrow,
that his daughter’s portion must be small, he had at once passed away
from the subject as one that was hardly fit for conversation, even
between him and his future father-in-law; and now he was abruptly
questioned on the subject by a man he had never before seen in his
life. Of course, he could make no answer.
“The squire has muddled his matters most uncommonly,” continued Sir
Louis, filling his glass for the second time before he passed the
bottle. “What do you suppose now he owes me alone; just at one lump,
you know?”
Mr Oriel had nothing for it but to run. He could make no answer, nor
would he sit there to hear tidings as to Mr Gresham’s embarrassments.
So he fairly retreated, without having said one word to his
neighbour, finding such discretion to be the only kind of valour left
to him.
“What, Oriel! off already?” said the squire. “Anything the matter?”
“Oh, no; nothing particular. I’m not just quite—I think I’ll go out
for a few minutes.”
“See what it is to be in love,” said the squire, half-whispering to
Dr Thorne. “You’re not in the same way, I hope?”
Sir Louis then shifted his seat again, and found himself next to
Frank. Mr Gazebee was opposite to him, and the doctor opposite to
Frank.
“Parson seems peekish, I think,” said the baronet.
“Peekish?” said the squire, inquisitively.
“Rather down on his luck. He’s decently well off himself, isn’t he?”
There was another pause, and nobody seemed inclined to answer the
question.
“I mean, he’s got something more than his bare living.”
“Oh, yes,” said Frank, laughing. “He’s got what will buy him bread
and cheese when the Rads shut up the Church:—unless, indeed, they
shut up the Funds too.”
“Ah, there’s nothing like land,” said Sir Louis: “nothing like the
dirty acres; is there, squire?”
“Land is a very good investment, certainly,” said Mr Gresham.
“The best going,” said the other, who was now, as people say when
they mean to be good-natured, slightly under the influence of liquor.
“The best going—eh, Gazebee?”
Mr Gazebee gathered himself up, and turned away his head, looking out
of the window.
“You lawyers never like to give an opinion without money, ha! ha! ha!
Do they, Mr Gresham? You and I have had to pay for plenty of them,
and will have to pay for plenty more before they let us alone.”
Here Mr Gazebee got up, and followed Mr Oriel out of the room. He was
not, of course, on such intimate terms in
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