Barchester Towers Anthony Trollope (iphone ebook reader .TXT) š
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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āI do tell āee plainlyā āface to faceā āshe be there in madamās drawing-room; herself and Gussy, and them two walloping gals, dressed up to their very eyeses.ā This was said by a very positive, very indignant, and very fat farmerās wife, who was sitting on the end of a bench leaning on the handle of a huge, cotton umbrella.
āBut: you didnāt zee her, Dame Guffern?ā said Mrs. Greenacre, whom this information, joined to the recent peril undergone by her son, almost overpowered. Mr. Greenacre held just as much land as Mr. Lookaloft, paid his rent quite as punctually, and his opinion in the vestry room was reckoned to be every whit as good. Mrs. Lookaloftās rise in the world had been wormwood to Mrs. Greenacre. She had no taste herself for the sort of finery which had converted Barleystubb farm into Rosebank and which had occasionally graced Mr. Lookaloftās letters with the dignity of esquirehood. She had no wish to convert her own homestead into Violet Villa, or to see her goodman go about with a newfangled handle to his name. But it was a mortal injury to her that Mrs. Lookaloft should be successful in her hunt after such honours. She had abused and ridiculed Mrs. Lookaloft to the extent of her little power. She had pushed against her going out of church, and had excused herself with all the easiness of equality. āAh, dame, I axes pardon, but you be grown so mortal stout these times.ā She had inquired with apparent cordiality of Mr. Lookaloft after āthe woman that owned him,ā and had, as she thought, been on the whole able to hold her own pretty well against her aspiring neighbour. Now, however, she found herself distinctly put into a separate and inferior class. Mrs. Lookaloft was asked into the Ullathorne drawing-room merely because she called her house Rosebank and had talked over her husband into buying pianos and silk dresses instead of putting his money by to stock farms for his sons.
Mrs. Greenacre, much as she reverenced Miss Thorne, and highly as she respected her husbandās landlord, could not but look on this as an act of injustice done to her and hers. Hitherto the Lookalofts had never been recognized as being of a different class from the Greenacres. Their pretensions were all self-pretensions, their finery was all paid for by themselves and not granted to them by others. The local sovereigns of the vicinity, the district fountains of honour, had hitherto conferred on them the stamp of no rank. Hitherto their crinoline petticoats, late hours, and mincing gait had been a fair subject of Mrs. Greenacreās raillery, and this raillery had been a safety-valve for her envy. Now, however, and from henceforward, the case would be very different. Now the Lookalofts would boast that their aspirations had been sanctioned by the gentry of the country; now they would declare with some show of truth that their claims to peculiar consideration had been recognized. They had sat as equal guests in the presence of bishops and baronets; they had been curtseyed to by Miss Thorne on her own drawing-room carpet; they were about to sit down to table in company with a live countess! Bab Lookaloft, as she had always been called by the young Greenacres in the days of their juvenile equality, might possibly sit next to the Honourable George, and that wretched Gussy might be permitted to hand a custard to the Lady Margaretta De Courcy.
The fruition of those honours, or such of them as fell to the lot of the envied family, was not such as should have caused much envy. The attention paid to the Lookalofts by the De Courcys was very limited, and the amount of entertainment which they received from the bishopās society was hardly in itself a recompense for the dull monotony of their day. But of what they endured Mrs. Greenacre took no account; she thought only of what she considered they must enjoy, and of the dreadfully exalted tone of living which would be manifested by the Rosebank family, as the consequence of their present distinction.
āBut did āee zee āem there, dame, did āee zee āem there with your own eyes?ā asked poor Mrs. Greenacre, still hoping that there might be some ground for doubt.
āAnd how could I do that, unless so be I was there myself?ā asked Mrs. Guffern. āI didnāt zet eyes on none of them this blessed morning, but I zeeād them as did. You know our John; well, he will be for keeping company with Betsey Rusk, madamās own maid, you know. And Betsey isnāt none of your common kitchen wenches. So Betsey, she come out to our John, you know, and sheās always vastly polite to me, is Betsey Rusk, I must say. So before she took so much as one turn with John she told me every haāporth that was going on up in the house.ā
āDid she now?ā said Mrs. Greenacre.
āIndeed she did,ā said Mrs. Guffern.
āAnd she told you them people was up there in the drawing-room?ā
āShe told me she zeeād āem come inā āthat they was dressed finer by half nor any of the family, with all their neckses and buzoms stark naked as a born babby.ā
āThe minxes!ā exclaimed Mrs. Greenacre, who felt herself more put about by this than any other mark of aristocratic distinction which her enemies had assumed.
āYes, indeed,ā continued Mrs. Guffern, āas naked as you please, while all the quality was dressed just as you and I be, Mrs. Greenacre.ā
āDrat their impudence,ā said Mrs. Greenacre, from whose well-covered bosom all milk of human kindness was receding, as far as the family
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