The Small House at Allington Anthony Trollope (the top 100 crime novels of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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âAnother earl!â said Lily.
âYes; havenât you heard? Miss Bell has been here this morning, insisting that I should have over Lord De Guest and his sister for the marriage. It seems that there was some scheming between Bell and Lady Julia.â
âOf course youâll ask them.â
âOf course I must. Iâve no way out of it. Itâll be all very well for Bell, whoâll be off to Wales with her lover; but what am I to do with the earl and Lady Julia, when theyâre gone? Will you come and help me?â
In answer to this, Lily of course promised that she would come and help. âIndeed,â said she, âI thought we were all asked up for the day. And now for my favour. Uncle, you must forgive poor Hopkins.â
âForgive a fiddlestick!â said the squire.
âNo, but you must. You canât think how unhappy he is.â
âHow can I forgive a man who wonât forgive me. He goes prowling about the place doing nothing; and he sends me back his wages, and he looks as though he were going to murder someone; and all because he wouldnât do as he was told. How am I to forgive such a man as that?â
âBut, uncle, why not?â
âIt would be his forgiving me. He knows very well that he may come back whenever he pleases; and, indeed, for the matter of that he has never gone away.â
âBut he is so very unhappy.â
âWhat can I do to make him happier?â
âJust go down to his cottage and tell him that you forgive him.â
âThen heâll argue with me.â
âNo; I donât think he will. He is too much down in the world for arguing now.â
âAh! you donât know him as I do. All the misfortunes in the world wouldnât stop that manâs conceit. Of course Iâll go if you ask me, but it seems to me that Iâm made to knock under to everybody. I hear a great deal about other peopleâs feelings, but I donât know that mine are very much thought of.â He was not altogether in a happy mood, and Lily almost regretted that she had persevered; but she did succeed in carrying him off across the garden to the cottage, and as they went together she promised him that she would think of him alwaysâ âalways. The scene with Hopkins cannot be described now, as it would take too many of our few remaining pages. It resulted, I am afraid I must confess, in nothing more triumphant to the squire than a treaty of mutual forgiveness. Hopkins acknowledged, with much self-reproach, that his feelings had been too many for him; but then, look at his provocation! He could not keep his tongue from that matter, and certainly said as much in his own defence as he did in confession of his sins. The substantial triumph was altogether his, for nobody again ever dared to interfere with his operations in the farmyard. He showed his submission to his master mainly by consenting to receive his wages for the two weeks which he had passed in idleness.
Owing to this little accident, Lily was not so much oppressed by Hopkins as she had expected to be in that matter of their altered plans; but this salvation did not extend to Mrs. Hearn, to Mrs. Crump, or, above all, to Mrs. Boyce. They, all of them, took an interest more or less strong in the Hopkins controversy; but their interest in the occupation of the Small House was much stronger, and it was found useless to put Mrs. Hearn off with the gardenerâs persistent refusal of his wages, when she was big with inquiry whether the house was to be painted inside, as well as out. âAh,â said she, âI think Iâll go and look at lodgings at Guestwick myself, and pack up some of my beds.â Lily made no answer to this, feeling that it was a part of that punishment which she had expected. âDear, dear,â said Mrs. Crump to the two girls; âwell, to be sure, we should âa been âlone without âee, and mayhap we might âa got worse in your place; but why did âee go and fasten up all your things in them big boxes, just to unfasten âem all again?â
âWe changed our minds, Mrs. Crump,â said Bell, with some severity.
âYees, I know ye changed your mindses. Well, itâs all right for loiks oâ ye, no doubt; but if we changes our mindses, we hears of it.â
âSo, it seems, do we!â said Lily. âBut never mind, Mrs. Crump. Do you send us our letters up early, and then we wonât quarrel.â
âOh, letters! Drat them for letters. I wish there werenât no sich things. There was a man here yesterday with his imperence. I donât know where he come fromâ âdown from Lunâon, I bâleeve: and this was wrong, and that was wrong, and everything was wrong; and then he said heâd have me discharged the sarvice.â
âDear me, Mrs. Crump; that wouldnât do at all.â
âDischarged the sarvice! Tuppence farden a day. So I told âun to discharge hisself, and take all the old bundles and things away upon his shoulders. Letters indeed! What business have they with post-missusses, if they cannot pay âem better nor tuppence farden a day?â And in this way, under the shelter of Mrs. Crumpâs storm of wrath against the inspector who had visited her, Lily and Bell escaped much that would have fallen upon their own heads; but Mrs. Boyce still remained. I may here add, in order that Mrs. Crumpâs history may be carried on to the farthest possible point, that she was not âdischarged the sarvice,â and that she still receives her twopence farthing a day from the Crown.
âThatâs a bitter old lady,â said the inspector to the man who was driving him.
âYes, sir; they all says the same about she. There ainât none of âem get much change out of Mrs. Crump.â
Bell and Lily went together also to Mrs. Boyceâs. âIf she makes herself very disagreeable, I shall insist upon talking of your marriage,â
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