The Way We Live Now Anthony Trollope (classic books for 11 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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âYou couldnât take any interest in me?â
âNot the least.â
âSuppose you try. Wouldnât you like to know anything about the place where we live?â
âItâs a castle, I know.â
âYes;â âCastle Reekie; ever so many hundred years old.â
âI hate old places. I should like a new house, and a new dress, and a new horse every weekâ âand a new lover. Your father lives at the castle. I donât suppose we are to go and live there too.â
âWe shall be there sometimes. When shall it be?â
âThe year after next.â
âNonsense, Marie.â
âTomorrow.â
âYou wouldnât be ready.â
âYou may manage it all just as you like with papa. Oh, yesâ âkiss me; of course you may. If Iâm to belong to you what does it matter? No;â âI wonât say that I love you. But if ever I do say it, you may be sure it will be true. Thatâs more than you can say of yourselfâ âJohn.â
So the interview was over and Nidderdale walked back to the house thinking of his lady love, as far as he was able to bring his mind to any operation of thinking. He was fully determined to go on with it. As far as the girl herself was concerned, she had, in these latter days, become much more attractive to him than when he had first known her. She certainly was not a fool. And, though he could not tell himself that she was altogether like a lady, still she had a manner of her own which made him think that she would be able to live with ladies. And he did think that, in spite of all she said to the contrary, she was becoming fond of himâ âas he certainly had become fond of her. âHave you been up with the ladies?â Melmotte asked him.
âOh yes.â
âAnd what does Marie say?â
âThat you must fix the day.â
âWeâll have it very soon then;â âsome time next month. Youâll want to get away in August. And to tell the truth so shall I. I never was worked so hard in my life as Iâve been this summer. The election and that horrid dinner had something to do with it. And I donât mind telling you that Iâve had a fearful weight on my mind in reference to money. I never had to find so many large sums in so short a time! And Iâm not quite through it yet.â
âI wonder why you gave the dinner then.â
âMy dear boy,ââ âit was very pleasant to him to call the son of a marquis his dear boyâ ââas regards expenditure that was a flea-bite. Nothing that I could spend myself would have the slightest effect upon my conditionâ âone way or the other.â
âI wish it could be the same way with me,â said Nidderdale.
âIf you chose to go into business with me instead of taking Marieâs money out, it very soon would be so with you. But the burden is very great. I never know whence these panics arise, or why they come, or whither they go. But when they do come, they are like a storm at sea. It is only the strong ships that can stand the fury of the winds and waves. And then the buffeting which a man gets leaves him only half the man he was. Iâve had it very hard this time.â
âI suppose you are getting right now.â
âYes;â âI am getting right. I am not in any fear if you mean that. I donât mind telling you everything as it is settled now that you are to be Marieâs husband. I know that you are honest, and that if you could hurt me by repeating what I say you wouldnât do it.â
âCertainly I would not.â
âYou see Iâve no partnerâ ânobody that is bound to know my affairs. My wife is the best woman in the world, but is utterly unable to understand anything about it. Of course I canât talk freely to Marie. Cohenlupe whom you see so much with me is all very wellâ âin his way, but I never talk over my affairs with him. He is concerned with me in one or two thingsâ âour American railway for instance, but he has no interest generally in my house. It is all on my own shoulders, and I can tell you the weight is a little heavy. It will be the greatest comfort to me in the world if I can get you to have an interest in the matter.â
âI donât suppose I could ever really be any good at business,â said the modest young lord.
âYou wouldnât come and work, I suppose. I shouldnât expect that. But I should be glad to think that I could tell you how things are going on. Of course you heard all that was said just before the election. For forty-eight hours I had a very bad time of it then. The fact was that Alf and they who were supporting him thought that they could carry the election by running me down. They were at it for a fortnightâ âperfectly unscrupulous as to what they said or what harm they might do me and others. I thought that very cruel. They couldnât get their man in, but they could and did have the effect of depreciating my property suddenly by nearly half a million of money. Think what that is!â
âI donât understand how it could be done.â
âBecause you donât understand how delicate a thing is credit. They persuaded a lot of men to stay away from that infernal dinner, and consequently it was spread about the town that I was ruined. The effect upon shares which I held was instantaneous and tremendous. The Mexican railway were at 117, and they fell from that in two days to something quite nominalâ âso that selling was out of the question. Cohenlupe and I between us had about 8,000 of these shares. Think what that comes to!â Nidderdale tried to calculate what it did come to, but failed altogether. âThatâs what I call a blow;â âa terrible blow. When a man is concerned as
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