The Woman in White Wilkie Collins (bts books to read txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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âMy object,â I went on, âis to entreat you to reconsider your letter, and not to force me to abandon the just rights of your niece, and of all who belong to her. Let me state the case to you once more, and for the last time.â
Mr. Fairlie shook his head and sighed piteously.
âThis is heartless of you, Gilmoreâ âvery heartless,â he said. âNever mind, go on.â
I put all the points to him carefullyâ âI set the matter before him in every conceivable light. He lay back in the chair the whole time I was speaking with his eyes closed. When I had done he opened them indolently, took his silver smelling-bottle from the table, and sniffed at it with an air of gentle relish.
âGood Gilmore!â he said between the sniffs, âhow very nice this is of you! How you reconcile one to human nature!â
âGive me a plain answer to a plain question, Mr. Fairlie. I tell you again, Sir Percival Glyde has no shadow of a claim to expect more than the income of the money. The money itself if your niece has no children, ought to be under her control, and to return to her family. If you stand firm, Sir Percival must give wayâ âhe must give way, I tell you, or he exposes himself to the base imputation of marrying Miss Fairlie entirely from mercenary motives.â
Mr. Fairlie shook the silver smelling-bottle at me playfully.
âYou dear old Gilmore, how you do hate rank and family, donât you? How you detest Glyde because he happens to be a baronet. What a Radical you areâ âoh, dear me, what a Radical you are!â
A Radical!!! I could put up with a good deal of provocation, but, after holding the soundest Conservative principles all my life, I could not put up with being called a Radical. My blood boiled at itâ âI started out of my chairâ âI was speechless with indignation.
âDonât shake the room!â cried Mr. Fairlieâ ââfor Heavenâs sake donât shake the room! Worthiest of all possible Gilmores, I meant no offence. My own views are so extremely liberal that I think I am a Radical myself. Yes. We are a pair of Radicals. Please donât be angry. I canât quarrelâ âI havenât stamina enough. Shall we drop the subject? Yes. Come and look at these sweet etchings. Do let me teach you to understand the heavenly pearliness of these lines. Do now, thereâs a good Gilmore!â
While he was maundering on in this way I was, fortunately for my own self-respect, returning to my senses. When I spoke again I was composed enough to treat his impertinence with the silent contempt that it deserved.
âYou are entirely wrong, sir,â I said, âin supposing that I speak from any prejudice against Sir Percival Glyde. I may regret that he has so unreservedly resigned himself in this matter to his lawyerâs direction as to make any appeal to himself impossible, but I am not prejudiced against him. What I have said would equally apply to any other man in his situation, high or low. The principle I maintain is a recognised principle. If you were to apply at the nearest town here, to the first respectable solicitor you could find, he would tell you as a stranger what I tell you as a friend. He would inform you that it is against all rule to abandon the ladyâs money entirely to the man she marries. He would decline, on grounds of common legal caution, to give the husband, under any circumstances whatever, an interest of twenty thousand pounds in his wifeâs death.â
âWould he really, Gilmore?â said Mr. Fairlie. âIf he said anything half so horrid, I do assure you I should tinkle my bell for Louis, and have him sent out of the house immediately.â
âYou shall not irritate me, Mr. Fairlieâ âfor your nieceâs sake and for her fatherâs sake, you shall not irritate me. You shall take the whole responsibility of this discreditable settlement on your own shoulders before I leave the room.â
âDonât!â ânow please donât!â said Mr. Fairlie. âThink how precious your time is, Gilmore, and donât throw it away. I would dispute with you if I could, but I canâtâ âI havenât stamina enough. You want to upset me, to upset yourself, to upset Glyde, and to upset Laura; andâ âoh, dear me!â âall for the sake of the very last thing in the world that is likely to happen. No, dear friend, in the interests of peace and quietness, positively No!â
âI am to understand, then, that you hold by the determination expressed in your letter?â
âYes, please. So glad we understand each other at last. Sit down againâ âdo!â
I walked at once to the door, and Mr. Fairlie resignedly âtinkledâ his hand-bell. Before I left the room I turned round and addressed him for the last time.
âWhatever happens in the future, sir,â I said, âremember that my plain duty of warning you has been performed. As the faithful friend and servant of your family, I tell you, at parting, that no daughter of mine should be married to any man alive under such a settlement as you are forcing me to make for Miss Fairlie.â
The door opened behind me, and the valet stood waiting on the threshold.
âLouis,â said Mr. Fairlie, âshow Mr. Gilmore out, and then come back and hold up my etchings for me again. Make them give you a good lunch downstairs. Do, Gilmore, make my idle beasts of servants give you a good lunch!â
I was too much disgusted to replyâ âI turned on my heel, and left him in silence. There was an up train at two oâclock in the afternoon, and by that train I returned to London.
On the Tuesday I sent in the altered settlement, which practically disinherited the very persons whom Miss Fairlieâs own lips had informed me she was most anxious to benefit. I had no choice. Another lawyer would have drawn up the deed if I had refused to undertake it.
My task is done. My personal share in the events of the family story extends
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