Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ
- Author: George Eliot
Book online «Daniel Deronda George Eliot (best book clubs TXT) đ». Author George Eliot
Rex broke down. He thought he discerned an intention fatal to his happiness, nay, his life. He was accustomed to believe in his fatherâs penetration, and to expect firmness. âFather, I canât go away without telling her that I love her, and knowing that she loves me.â
Mr. Gascoigne was inwardly going through some self-rebuke for not being more wary, and was now really sorry for the lad; but every consideration was subordinate to that of using the wisest tactics in the case. He had quickly made up his mind and to answer the more quietly,
âMy dear boy, you are too young to be taking momentous, decisive steps of that sort. This is a fancy which you have got into your head during an idle week or two: you must set to work at something and dismiss it. There is every reason against it. An engagement at your age would be totally rash and unjustifiable; and moreover, alliances between first cousins are undesirable. Make up your mind to a brief disappointment. Life is full of them. We have all got to be broken in; and this is a mild beginning for you.â
âNo, not mild. I canât bear it. I shall be good for nothing. I shouldnât mind anything, if it were settled between us. I could do anything then,â said Rex, impetuously. âBut itâs of no use to pretend that I will obey you. I canât do it. If I said I would, I should be sure to break my word. I should see Gwendolen again.â
âWell, wait till tomorrow morning, that we may talk of the matter againâ âyou will promise me that,â said Mr. Gascoigne, quietly; and Rex did not, could not refuse.
The rector did not even tell his wife that he had any other reason for going to Offendene that evening than his desire to ascertain that Gwendolen had got home safely. He found her more than safeâ âelated. Mr. Quallon, who had won the brush, had delivered the trophy to her, and she had brought it before her, fastened on the saddle; more than that, Lord Brackenshaw had conducted her home, and had shown himself delighted with her spirited riding. All this was told at once to her uncle, that he might see how well justified she had been in acting against his advice; and the prudential rector did feel himself in a slight difficulty, for at that moment he was particularly sensible that it was his nieceâs serious interest to be well regarded by the Brackenshaws, and their opinion as to her following the hounds really touched the essence of his objection. However, he was not obliged to say anything immediately, for Mrs. Davilow followed up Gwendolenâs brief triumphant phrases with,
âStill, I do hope you will not do it again, Gwendolen. I should never have a momentâs quiet. Her father died by an accident, you know.â
Here Mrs. Davilow had turned away from Gwendolen, and looked at Mr. Gascoigne.
âMamma, dear,â said Gwendolen, kissing her merrily, and passing over the question of the fears which Mrs. Davilow had meant to account for, âchildren donât take after their parents in broken legs.â
Not one word had yet been said about Rex. In fact there had been no anxiety about him at Offendene. Gwendolen had observed to her mamma, âOh, he must have been left far behind, and gone home in despair,â and it could not be denied that this was fortunate so far as it made way for Lord Brackenshawâs bringing her home. But now Mr. Gascoigne said, with some emphasis, looking at Gwendolen,
âWell, the exploit has ended better for you than for Rex.â
âYes, I dare say he had to make a terrible round. You have not taught Primrose to take the fences, uncle,â said Gwendolen, without the faintest shade of alarm in her looks and tone.
âRex has had a fall,â said Mr. Gascoigne, curtly, throwing himself into an armchair resting his elbows and fitting his palms and fingers together, while he closed his lips and looked at Gwendolen, who said,
âOh, poor fellow! he is not hurt, I hope?â with a correct look of anxiety such as elated mortals try to super-induce when their pulses are all the while quick with triumph; and Mrs. Davilow, in the same moment, uttered a low âGood heavens! There!â
Mr. Gascoigne went on: âHe put his shoulder out, and got some bruises, I believe.â Here he made another little pause of observation; but Gwendolen, instead of any such symptoms as pallor and silence, had only deepened the compassionateness of her brow and eyes, and said again, âOh, poor fellow! it is nothing serious, then?â and Mr. Gascoigne held his diagnosis complete. But he wished to make assurance doubly sure, and went on still with a purpose.
âHe got his arm set again rather oddly. Some blacksmithâ ânot a parishioner of mineâ âwas on the fieldâ âa loose fish, I suppose, but handy, and set the arm for him immediately. So after all, I believe, I and Primrose come off worst. The horseâs knees are cut to pieces. He came down in a hole, it seems, and pitched Rex over his head.â
Gwendolenâs face had allowably become contented again, since Rexâs arm had been reset; and now, at the descriptive suggestions in the latter part of her uncleâs speech, her elated spirits made her features less unmanageable than usual; the smiles broke forth, and finally a descending scale of laughter.
âYou are a pretty young ladyâ âto laugh at other peopleâs calamities,â said Mr. Gascoigne, with a milder sense of disapprobation than if he had not had counteracting reasons to be glad that Gwendolen showed no deep feeling on the occasion.
âPray forgive me, uncle. Now Rex is safe, it is so droll to fancy the figure he and Primrose would cutâ âin a lane all by themselvesâ âonly a blacksmith running up. It would make a capital caricature of âFollowing the Hounds.âââ
Gwendolen rather valued herself on her superior freedom in laughing where others might only see matter for seriousness. Indeed, the laughter became her person so well that her opinion
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