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The Young Duke, by Benjamin Disraeli
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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Young Duke, by Benjamin Disraeli
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: The Young Duke
Author: Benjamin Disraeli
Release Date: December 3, 2006 [EBook #20008]
Last Updated: September 6, 2016
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE YOUNG DUKE ***
Produced by David Widger
</pre>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<h1>
THE YOUNG DUKE
</h1>
<h2>
By Benjamin Disraeli
</h2>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
<!-- IMG --></a>
</p>
<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
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</p>
<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/spines.jpg" alt="Spines " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003">
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<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/coverplates.jpg" alt="Coverplates " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
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</p>
<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/frontis_p79.jpg" alt="Frontis-p79 " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
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</p>
<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/frontis_label.jpg" alt="Frontislable " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
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</p>
<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/titlepage1.jpg" alt="Titlepage1 " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<hr />
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="toc">
<big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>BOOK I.</b> </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0016"> <b>BOOK II.</b> </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER I. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER II. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER III. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER V. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER X. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0031"> <b>BOOK III.</b> </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER I. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER II. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER III. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER V. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER X. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0050"> <b>BOOK IV.</b> </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER I. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0048"> CHAPTER II. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0049"> CHAPTER III. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0050"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0051"> CHAPTER V. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0052"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0053"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0054"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0055"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0056"> CHAPTER X. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0057"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0058"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0063"> <b>BOOK V.</b> </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0059"> CHAPTER I. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0060"> CHAPTER II. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0061"> CHAPTER III. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0062"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0063"> CHAPTER V. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0064"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p>
<a href="#link2H_4_0070"> <b>BOOK V</b> [Continued] </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0065"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0066"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0067"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0068"> CHAPTER X. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0069"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0070"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#link2HCH0071"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
</p>
<p>
<br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
</p>
<p class="toc">
<big><b>ILLUSTRATIONS</b></big>
</p>
<p>
<br />
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0001"> Cover </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0002"> Spines </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0003"> Coverplates </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0004"> Frontis-p79 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0005"> Frontislabel </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0006"> Titlepage1 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0007"> Frontis-p79 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0008"> Page106 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0009"> Page243 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0010"> Page338 </a>
</p>
<p class="toc">
<a href="#linkimage-0011"> Coverplate </a>
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
<br /> <br />
</p>
<hr />
<p>
<br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h1>
BOOK I.
</h1>
<p>
<a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER I.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Fortune’s Favourite</i>
</pre>
<p>
GEORGE AUGUSTUS FREDERICK, DUKE OF ST. JAMES, completed his twenty-first
year, an event which created almost as great a sensation among the
aristocracy of England as the Norman Conquest. A minority of twenty years
had converted a family always amongst the wealthiest of Great Britain into
one of the richest in Europe. The Duke of St. James possessed estates in
the north and in the west of England, besides a whole province in Ireland.
In London there were a very handsome square and several streets, all made
of bricks, which brought him in yearly more cash than all the palaces of
Vicenza are worth in fee-simple, with those of the Grand Canal of Venice
to boot. As if this were not enough, he was an hereditary patron of
internal navigation; and although perhaps in his two palaces, three
castles, four halls, and lodges <i>ad libitum</i>, there were more fires
burnt than in any other establishment in the empire, this was of no
consequence, because the coals were his own. His rent-roll exhibited a sum
total, very neatly written, of two hundred thousand pounds; but this was
independent of half a million in the funds, which we had nearly forgotten,
and which remained from the accumulations occasioned by the unhappy death
of his father.
</p>
<p>
The late Duke of St. James had one sister, who was married to the Earl of
Fitz-pompey. To the great surprise of the world, to the perfect
astonishment of the brother-in-law, his Lordship was not appointed
guardian to the infant minor. The Earl of Fitz-pompey had always been on
the best possible terms with his Grace: the Countess had, only the year
before his death, accepted from his fraternal hand a diamond bracelet; the
Lord Viscount St. Maurice, future chief of the house of Fitz-pompey, had
the honour not only of being his nephew, but his godson. Who could
account, then, for an action so perfectly unaccountable? It was quite
evident that his Grace had no intention of dying.
</p>
<p>
The guardian, however, that he did appoint was a Mr. Dacre, a Catholic
gentleman of ancient family and large fortune, who had been the companion
of his travels, and was his neighbour in his county. Mr. Dacre had not
been honoured with the acquaintance of Lord Fitz-pompey previous to the
decease of his noble friend; and after that event such an acquaintance
would probably not have been productive of agreeable reminiscences; for
from the moment of the opening of the fatal will the name of Dacre was
wormwood to the house of St. Maurice. Lord Fitz-pompey, who, though the
brother-in-law of a Whig magnate, was a Tory, voted against the Catholics
with renewed fervour.
</p>
<p>
Shortly after the death of his friend, Mr. Dacre married a beautiful and
noble lady of the house of Howard, who, after having presented him with a
daughter, fell ill, and became that common character, a confirmed invalid.
In the present day, and especially among women, one would almost suppose
that health was a state of unnatural existence. The illness of his wife
and the non-possession of parliamentary duties rendered Mr. Dacre’s visits
to his town mansion rare, and the mansion in time was let.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke, with the exception of an occasional visit to his uncle,
Lord Fitz-pompey, passed the early years of his life at Castle Dacre. At
seven years of age he was sent to a preparatory school at Richmond, which
was entirely devoted to the early culture of the nobility, and where the
principal, the Reverend Doctor Coronet, was so extremely exclusive in his
system that it was reported that he had once refused the son of an Irish
peer. Miss Coronet fed her imagination with the hope of meeting her
father’s noble pupils in after-life, and in the meantime read fashionable
novels.
</p>
<p>
The moment that the young Duke was settled at Richmond, all the intrigues
of the Fitz-pompey family were directed to that quarter; and as Mr. Dacre
was by nature unsuspicious, and was even desirous that his ward should
cultivate the friendship of his only relatives, the St. Maurice family had
the gratification, as they thought, of completely deceiving him. Lady
Fitz-pompey called twice a week at Crest House with a supply of
pine-apples or bonbons, and the Rev. Dr. Coronet bowed in adoration. Lady
Isabella St. Maurice gave a china cup to Mrs. Coronet, and Lady Augusta a
paper-cutter to Miss. The family was secured. All discipline was
immediately set at defiance, and the young Duke passed the greater part of
the half-year with his affectionate relations. His Grace, charmed with the
bonbons of his aunt and the kisses of his cousins, which were even sweeter
than the sugar-plums; delighted with the pony of St. Maurice, which
immediately became his own; and inebriated by the attentions of his uncle,—who,
at eight years of age, treated him, as his Lordship styled it, ‘like a
man’—contrasted this life of early excitement with what now appeared
the gloom and the restraint of Castle Dacre, and he soon entered into the
conspiracy, which had long been hatching, with genuine enthusiasm. He
wrote to his guardian, and obtained permission to spend his vacation with
his uncle. Thus, through the united indulgence of Dr. Coronet and Mr.
Dacre, the Duke of St. James became a member of the family of St. Maurice.
</p>
<p>
No sooner had Lord Fitz-pompey secured the affections of the ward than he
entirely changed his system towards the guardian. He wrote to Mr. Dacre,
and in a manner equally kind and dignified courted his acquaintance. He
dilated upon the extraordinary, though extremely natural, affection which
Lady Fitz-pompey entertained for the only offspring of her beloved
brother, upon the happiness which the young Duke enjoyed with his cousins,
upon the great and evident advantages which his Grace would derive from
companions of his own age, of the singular friendship which he had already
formed with St. Maurice; and then, after paying Mr. Dacre many compliments
upon the admirable manner in which he had already fulfilled the duties of
his important office, and urging the lively satisfaction that a visit from
their brother’s friend would confer both upon Lady Fitz-pompey and
himself, he requested permission for his nephew to renew the visit in
which he had been ‘so happy!’ The Duke seconded the Earl’s diplomatic
scrawl in the most graceful round-text. The masterly intrigues of Lord
Fitz-pompey, assisted by Mrs. Dacre’s illness, which daily increased, and
which rendered perfect quiet indispensable, were successful, and the young
Duke arrived at his twelfth year without revisiting Dacre. Every year,
however, when Mr. Dacre made a short visit to London, his ward spent a few
days in his company, at the house of an old-fashioned Catholic nobleman; a
visit which only afforded a dull contrast to the gay society and constant
animation of his uncle’s establishment.
</p>
<p>
It would seem that fate had determined to counteract the intentions of the
late Duke of St. James, and to achieve those of the Earl of Fitz-pompey.
At the moment that the noble minor was about to leave Dr. Coronet for
Eton, Mrs. Dacre’s state was declared hopeless, except from the assistance
of an Italian sky, and Mr. Dacre, whose attachment to his lady was
romantic, determined to leave England immediately.
</p>
<p>
It was with deep regret that he parted from his ward, whom he tenderly
loved; but all considerations merged in the paramount one; and he was
consoled by the reflection that he was, at least, left to the care of his
nearest connections. Mr. Dacre was not unaware of the dangers to which his
youthful pledge might be exposed by the indiscriminate indulgence of his
uncle, but he trusted to the impartial and inviolable system of a public
school to do much; and he anticipated returning to England before his ward
was old enough to form those habits which are generally so injurious to
young nobles. In this hope Mr. Dacre was disappointed. Mrs. Dacre
lingered, and revived, and lingered, for nearly eight years; now filling
the mind of her husband and her daughter with unreasonable hope, now
delivering them to that renewed anguish, that heart-rending grief, which
the attendant upon a declining relative can alone experience, additionally
agonizing because it cannot be indulged. Mrs. Dacre died, and the widower
and his daughter returned to England. In the meantime, the Duke of St.
James had not been idle.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER II.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Tender Relatives</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE departure and, at length, the total absence of Mr. Dacre from England
yielded to Lord Fitz-pompey all the opportunity he had long desired.
Hitherto he had contented himself with quietly sapping the influence of
the guardian: now that influence was openly assailed. All occasions were
seized of depreciating the character of Mr. Dacre, and open lamentations
were poured forth on the strange and unhappy indiscretion of the father
who had confided the guardianship of his son, not to his natural and
devoted friends, but to a harsh and repulsive stranger. Long before the
young Duke had completed his sixteenth year all memory of the early
kindness of his guardian, if it had ever been imprinted on his mind, was
carefully obliterated from it. It was constantly impressed upon him that
nothing but the exertions of his aunt and uncle had saved him from a life
of stern privation and irrational restraint: and the man who had been the
chosen and cherished confidant of the father was looked upon by the son as
a grim tyrant, from whose clutches he had escaped, and in which he
determined never again to find himself. ‘Old Dacre,’ as Lord Fitz-pompey
described him, was a phantom enough at any time to frighten his youthful
ward. The great object of the uncle was to teaze and mortify the guardian
into resigning his trust, and infinite were the contrivances to bring
about this desirable result; but Mr. Dacre was obstinate, and, although
absent, contrived to carry on and complete the system for the management
of the Hauteville property which he had so beneficially established and so
long pursued.
</p>
<p>
In quitting England, although he had appointed a fixed allowance for his
noble ward, Mr. Dacre had thought proper to delegate a discretionary
authority to Lord Fitz-pompey to furnish him with what might be called
extraordinary necessaries. His Lordship availed himself with such
dexterity of this power that his nephew appeared to be indebted for every
indulgence to his uncle, who invariably accompanied every act of this
description with an insinuation that he might thank Mrs. Dacre’s illness
for the boon.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, George,’ he would say to the young Etonian, ‘you shall have the
boat, though I hardly know how I shall pass the account at head-quarters;
and make yourself easy about Flash’s bill, though I really cannot approve
of such proceedings. Thank your stars you have not got to present that
account to old Dacre. Well, I am one of those who are always indulgent to
young blood. Mr. Dacre and I differ. He is your guardian, though.
Everything is in his power; but you shall never want while your uncle can
help you; and so run off to Caroline, for I see you want to be with her.’
</p>
<p>
The Lady Isabella and the Lady Augusta, who had so charmed Mrs. and Miss
Coronet, were no longer in existence. Each had knocked down her earl.
Brought up by a mother exquisitely adroit in female education, the Ladies
St. Maurice had run but a brief, though a brilliant, career. Beautiful,
and possessing every accomplishment which renders beauty valuable, under
the unrivalled chaperonage of the Countess they had played their popular
parts without a single blunder. Always in the best set, never flirting
with the wrong man, and never speaking to the wrong woman, all agreed that
the Ladies St. Maurice had fairly won their coronets. Their sister
Caroline was much younger; and although she did not promise to develop so
unblemished a character as themselves, she was, in default of another
sister, to be the Duchess of St. James.
</p>
<p>
Lady Caroline St. Maurice was nearly of the same age as her cousin, the
young Duke. They had been play-fellows since his emancipation from the
dungeons of Castle Dacre, and every means had been adopted by her
judicious parents to foster and to confirm the kind feelings which had
been first engendered by being partners in the same toys and sharing the
same sports. At eight years old the little Duke was taught to call
Caroline his ‘wife;’ and as his Grace grew in years, and could better
appreciate the qualities of his sweet and gentle cousin, he was not
disposed to retract the title. When George rejoined the courtly Coronet,
Caroline invariably mingled her tears with those of her sorrowing spouse;
and when the time at length arrived for his departure for Eton, Caroline
knitted him a purse and presented him with a watch-ribbon. At the last
moment she besought her brother, who was two years older, to watch over
him, and soothed the moment of final agony by a promise to correspond. Had
the innocent and soft-hearted girl been acquainted with, or been able to
comprehend, the purposes of her crafty parents, she could not have adopted
means more calculated to accomplish them. The young Duke kissed her a
thousand times, and loved her better than all the world.
</p>
<p>
In spite of his private house and his private tutor, his Grace did not
make all the progress in his classical studies which means so calculated
to promote abstraction and to assist acquirement would seem to promise.
The fact is, that as his mind began to unfold itself he found a perpetual
and a more pleasing source of study in the contemplation of himself. His
early initiation in the school of Fitz-pompey had not been thrown away. He
had heard much of nobility, and beauty, and riches, and fashion, and
power; he had seen many individuals highly, though differently, considered
for the relative quantities which they possessed of these qualities; it
appeared to the Duke of St. James that among the human race he possessed
the largest quantity of them all: he cut his private tutor. His private
tutor, who had been appointed by Mr. Dacre, remonstrated to Lord
Fitz-pompey, and with such success that he thought proper shortly after to
resign his situation. Dr. Coronet begged to recommend his son, the Rev.
Augustus Granville Coronet. The Duke of St. James now got on rapidly, and
also found sufficient time for his boat, his tandem, and his toilette.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James appeared at Christ Church. His conceit kept him
alive for a few terms. It is delightful to receive the homage of two
thousand young men of the best families in the country, to breakfast with
twenty of them, and to cut the rest. In spite, however, of the glories of
the golden tuft and a delightful private establishment which he and his
followers maintained in the chaste suburbs of Alma Mater, the Duke of St.
James felt ennuied. Consequently, one clear night, they set fire to a
pyramid of caps and gowns in Peckwater. It was a silly thing for any one:
it was a sad indiscretion for a Duke; but it was done. Some were expelled;
his Grace had timely notice, and having before cut the Oxonians, now cut
Oxford.
</p>
<p>
Like all young men who get into scrapes, the Duke of St. James determined
to travel. The Dacres returned to England before he did. He dexterously
avoided coming into contact with them in Italy. Mr. Dacre had written to
him several times during the first years of his absence; and although the
Duke’s answers were short, seldom, and not very satisfactory, Mr. Dacre
persisted in occasionally addressing him. When, however, the Duke had
arrived at an age when he was at least morally responsible for his own
conduct, and entirely neglected answering his guardian’s letters, Mr.
Dacre became altogether silent.
</p>
<p>
The travelling career of the young Duke may be conceived by those who have
wasted their time, and are compensated for that silliness by being called
men of the world. He gamed a little at Paris; he ate a good deal at
Vienna; and he studied the fine arts in Italy. In all places his homage to
the fair sex was renowned. The Parisian duchess, the Austrian princess,
and the Italian countess spoke in the most enthusiastic terms of the
English nobility. At the end of three years the Duke of St. James was of
opinion that he had obtained a great knowledge of mankind. He was
mistaken; travel is not, as is imagined, the best school for that sort of
science. Knowledge of mankind is a knowledge of their passions. The
traveller is looked upon as a bird of passage, whose visit is short, and
which the vanity of the visited wishes to make agreeable. All is show, all
false, and all made up. Coterie succeeds coterie, equally smiling—the
explosions take place in his absence. Even a grand passion, which teaches
a man more, perhaps, than anything else, is not very easily excited by the
traveller. The women know that, sooner or later, he must disappear; and
though this is the case with all lovers, they do not like to miss the
possibility of delusion. Thus the heroines keep in the background, and the
visitor, who is always in a hurry, falls into the net of the first
flirtation that offers.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had, however, acquired a great knowledge; if not of
mankind, at any rate of manners. He had visited all Courts, and sparkled
in the most brilliant circles of the Continent. He returned to his own
country with a taste extremely refined, a manner most polished, and a
person highly accomplished.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER III.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Duke Returns</i>
</pre>
<p>
A SORT of scrambling correspondence had been kept up between the young
Duke and his cousin, Lord St. Maurice, who had for a few months been his
fellow-traveller. By virtue of these epistles, notice of the movements of
their interesting relative occasionally reached the circle at Fitz-pompey
House, although St. Maurice was scanty in the much-desired communications;
because, like most young Englishmen, he derived singular pleasure from
depriving his fellow-creatures of all that small information which every
one is so desirous to obtain. The announcement, however, of the
approaching arrival of the young Duke was duly made. Lord Fitz-pompey
wrote and offered apartments at Fitz-pompey House. They were refused. Lord
Fitz-pompey wrote again to require instructions for the preparation of
Hauteville House. His letter was unanswered. Lord Fitz-pompey was quite
puzzled.
</p>
<p>
‘When does your cousin mean to come, Charles?’ ‘Where does your cousin
mean to go, Charles?’ ‘What does your cousin mean to do, Charles?’ These
were the hourly queries of the noble uncle.
</p>
<p>
At length, in the middle of January, when no one expected him, the Duke of
St. James arrived at Mivart’s.
</p>
<p>
He was attended by a French cook, an Italian valet, a German jäger, and a
Greek page. At this dreary season of the year this party was, perhaps, the
most distinguished in the metropolis.
</p>
<p>
Three years’ absence and a little knowledge of life had somewhat changed
the Duke of St. James’s feelings with regard to his noble relatives. He
was quite disembarrassed of that Panglossian philosophy which had hitherto
induced him to believe that the Earl of Fitz-pompey was the best of all
possible uncles. On the contrary, his Grace rather doubted whether the
course which his relations had pursued towards him was quite the most
proper and the most prudent; and he took great credit to himself for
having, with such unbounded indulgence, on the whole deported himself with
so remarkable a temperance. His Grace, too, could no longer innocently
delude himself with the idea that all the attention which had been
lavished upon him was solely occasioned by the impulse of consanguinity.
Finally, the young Duke’s conscience often misgave him when he thought of
Mr. Dacre. He determined, therefore, on returning to England, not to
commit himself too decidedly with the Fitz-pompeys, and he had cautiously
guarded himself from being entrapped into becoming their guest. At the
same time, the recollection of old intimacy, the general regard which he
really felt for them all, and the sincere affection which he entertained
for his cousin Caroline, would have deterred him from giving any outward
signs of his altered feelings, even if other considerations had not
intervened.
</p>
<p>
And other considerations did intervene. A Duke, and a young Duke, is an
important personage; but he must still be introduced. Even our hero might
make a bad tack on his first cruise. Almost as important personages have
committed the same blunder. Talk of Catholic emancipation! O! thou
Imperial Parliament, emancipate the forlorn wretches who have got into a
bad set! Even thy omnipotence must fail there!
</p>
<p>
Now, the Countess of Fitz-pompey was a brilliant of the first water. Under
no better auspices could the Duke of St. James bound upon the stage. No
man in town could arrange his club affairs for him with greater celerity
and greater tact than the Earl; and the married daughters were as much
like their mother as a pair of diamond ear-rings are like a diamond
necklace.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, therefore, though he did not choose to get caged in Fitz-pompey
House, sent his page, Spiridion, to the Countess, on a special embassy of
announcement on the evening of his arrival, and on the following morning
his Grace himself made his appearance at an early hour.
</p>
<p>
Lord Fitz-pompey, who was as consummate a judge of men and manners as he
was an indifferent speculator on affairs, and who was almost as finished a
man of the world as he was an imperfect philosopher, soon perceived that
considerable changes had taken place in the ideas as well as in the
exterior of his nephew. The Duke, however, was extremely cordial, and
greeted the family in terms almost of fondness. He shook his uncle by the
hand with a fervour with which few noblemen had communicated for a
considerable period, and he saluted his aunt on the cheek with a delicacy
which did not disturb the rouge. He turned to his cousin.
</p>
<p>
Lady Caroline St. Maurice was indeed a right beautiful being. She, whom
the young Duke had left merely a graceful and kind-hearted girl, three
years had changed into a somewhat dignified but most lovely woman. A
little perhaps of her native ease had been lost; a little perhaps of a
manner rather too artificial had supplanted that exquisite address which
Nature alone had prompted; but at this moment her manner was as unstudied
and as genuine as when they had gambolled together in the bowers of
Malthorpe. Her white and delicate arm was extended with cordial grace, her
full blue eye beamed with fondness, and the soft blush that rose on her
fair cheek exquisitely contrasted with the clusters of her dark brown
hair.
</p>
<p>
The Duke was struck, almost staggered. He remembered their infant loves;
he recovered with ready address. He bent his head with graceful affection
and pressed her lips. He almost repented that he had not accepted his
uncle’s offer of hospitality.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Social Triumph</i>
</pre>
<p>
LORD FITZ-POMPEY was a little consoled for the change which he had
observed in the character of the Duke by the remembrance of the embrace
with which his Grace had greeted Lady Caroline. Never indeed did a process
which has, through the lapse of so many ages, occasioned so much delight,
produce more lively satisfaction than the kiss in question. Lord
Fitz-pompey had given up his plan of managing the Duke after the family
dinner which his nephew had the pleasure to join the first day of his
first visit. The Duke and he were alone, and his Lordship availed himself
of the rare opportunity with that adroitness for which he was celebrated.
Nothing could be more polite, more affable, more kind, than his Grace’s
manner! but the uncle cared little for politeness, or affability, or
kindness. The crafty courtier wanted candour, and that was absent. That
ingenuous openness of disposition, that frank and affectionate demeanour,
for which the Duke of St. James had been so remarkable in his early youth,
and with the aid of which Lord Fitz-pompey had built so many Spanish
castles, had quite disappeared.
</p>
<p>
Nothing could be more artificial, more conventional, more studied, than
his whole deportment. In vain Lord Fitz-pompey pumped; the empty bucket
invariably reminded him of his lost labour. In vain his Lordship laid his
little diplomatic traps to catch a hint of the purposes or an intimation
of the inclinations of his nephew; the bait was never seized. In vain the
Earl affected unusual conviviality and boundless affection; the Duke
sipped his claret and admired his pictures. Nothing would do. An air of
habitual calm, a look of kind condescension, and an inclination to a
smile, which never burst into a beam, announced that the Duke of St. James
was perfectly satisfied with existence, and conscious that he was himself,
of that existence, the most distinguished ornament. In fact, he was a
sublime coxcomb; one of those rare characters whose finished manner and
shrewd sense combined prevent their conceit from being contemptible. After
many consultations it was determined between the aunt and uncle that it
would be most prudent to affect a total non-interference with their
nephew’s affairs, and in the meantime to trust to the goodness of
Providence and the charms of Caroline.
</p>
<p>
Lady Fitz-pompey determined that the young Duke should make his debut at
once, and at her house. Although it was yet January, she did not despair
of collecting a select band of guests, Brahmins of the highest caste. Some
choice spirits were in office, like her lord, and therefore in town;
others were only passing through; but no one caught a flying-fish with
more dexterity than the Countess. The notice was short, the whole was
unstudied. It was a felicitous impromptu, and twenty guests were
assembled, who were the Corinthian capitals of the temple of fashion.
</p>
<p>
There was the Premier, who was invited, not because he was a minister, but
because he was a hero. There was another Duke not less celebrated, whose
palace was a breathing shrine which sent forth the oracles of mode. True,
he had ceased to be a young Duke; but he might be consoled for the
vanished lustre of youth by the recollection that he had enjoyed it, and
by the present inspiration of an accomplished manhood. There were the
Prince and the Princess Protocoli: his Highness a first-rate diplomatist,
unrivalled for his management of an opera; and his consort, with a
countenance like Cleopatra and a tiara like a constellation, famed alike
for her shawls and her snuff. There were Lord and Lady Bloomerly, who were
the best friends on earth: my Lord a sportsman, but soft withal, his talk
the Jockey Club, filtered through White’s; my Lady a little blue, and very
beautiful. Their daughter, Lady Charlotte, rose by her mother’s side like
a tall bud by a full-blown flower. There were the Viscountess Blaze, a
peeress in her own right, and her daughter, Miss Blaze Dash-away, who,
besides the glory of the future coronet, moved in all the confidence of
independent thousands. There was the Marquess of Macaroni, who was at the
same time a general, an ambassador, and a dandy; and who, if he had liked,
could have worn twelve orders; but this day, being modest, only wore six.
There, too, was the Marchioness, with a stomacher stiff with brilliants
extracted from the snuff-boxes presented to her husband at a Congress.
</p>
<p>
There were Lord Sunium, who was not only a peer but a poet; and his lady,
a Greek, who looked just finished by Phidias. There, too, was Pococurante,
the epicurean and triple millionaire, who in a political country dared to
despise politics, in the most aristocratic of kingdoms had refused
nobility, and in a land which showers all its honours upon its cultivators
invested his whole fortune in the funds. He lived in a retreat like the
villa of Hadrian, and maintained himself in an elevated position chiefly
by his wit and a little by his wealth. There, too, were his noble wife,
thoroughbred to her fingers’ tips, and beaming like the evening star; and
his son, who was an M.P., and thought his father a fool. In short, our
party was no common party, but a band who formed the very core of
civilisation; a high court of last appeal, whose word was a fiat, whose
sign was a hint, whose stare was death, and sneer——damnation!
</p>
<p>
The Graces befriend us! We have forgotten the most important personage. It
is the first time in his life that Charles Annesley has been neglected. It
will do him good.
</p>
<p>
Dandy has been voted vulgar, and beau is now the word. It may be doubted
whether the revival will stand; and as for the exploded title, though it
had its faults at first, the muse of Byron has made it not only English,
but classical. Charles Annesley could hardly be called a dandy or a beau.
There was nothing in his dress—though some mysterious arrangement in
his costume, some rare simplicity, some curious happiness, always made it
distinguished—there was nothing, however, in his dress, which could
account for the influence which he exercised over the manners of his
contemporaries. Charles Annesley was about thirty. He had inherited from
his father, a younger brother, a small estate; and, though heir to a
wealthy earldom, he had never abused what the world called ‘his
prospects.’ Yet his establishment, his little house in Mayfair, his
horses, his moderate stud at Melton, were all unique, and everything
connected with him was unparalleled for its elegance, its invention, and
its refinement. But his manner was his magic. His natural and subdued
nonchalance, so different from the assumed non-emotion of a mere dandy;
his coldness of heart, which was hereditary, not acquired; his cautious
courage, and his unadulterated self-love, had permitted him to mingle much
with mankind without being too deeply involved in the play of their
passions; while his exquisite sense of the ridiculous quickly revealed
those weaknesses to him which his delicate satire did not spare, even
while it refrained from wounding. All feared, marry admired, and none
hated him. He was too powerful not to dread, too dexterous not to admire,
too superior to hate. Perhaps the great secret of his manner was his
exquisite superciliousness, a quality which, of all, is the most difficult
to manage. Even with his intimates he was never confidential, and
perpetually assumed his public character with the private coterie which he
loved to rule. On the whole, he was unlike any of the leading men of
modern days, and rather reminded one of the fine gentlemen of our old
brilliant comedy, the Dorimants, the Bellairs, and the Mirabels.
</p>
<p>
Charles Annesley was a member of the distinguished party who were this day
to decide the fate of the young Duke. Let him come forward!
</p>
<p>
His Grace moved towards them, tall and elegant in figure, and with that
air of affable dignity which becomes a noble, and which adorns a court;
none of that affected indifference which seems to imply that nothing can
compensate for the exertion of moving, and ‘which makes the dandy, while
it mars the man.’ His large and somewhat sleepy grey eye, his clear
complexion, his small mouth, his aquiline nose, his transparent forehead,
his rich brown hair, and the delicacy of his extremities, presented, when
combined, a very excellent specimen of that style of beauty for which the
nobility of England are remarkable. Gentle, for he felt the importance of
the tribunal, never loud, ready, yet a little reserved, he neither courted
nor shunned examination. His finished manner, his experience of society,
his pretensions to taste, the gaiety of his temper, and the liveliness of
his imagination, gradually developed themselves with the developing hours.
</p>
<p>
The banquet was over: the Duke of St. James passed his examination with
unqualified approval; and having been stamped at the mint of fashion as a
sovereign of the brightest die, he was flung forth, like the rest of his
golden brethren, to corrupt the society of which he was the brightest
ornament.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER V.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Sweeping Changes</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE morning after the initiatory dinner the young Duke drove to Hauteville
House, his family mansion, situated in his family square. His Grace
particularly prided himself on his knowledge of the arts; a taste for
which, among other things, he intended to introduce into England. Nothing
could exceed the horror with which he witnessed the exterior of his
mansion, except the agony with which he paced through the interior.
</p>
<p>
‘Is this a palace?’ thought the young Duke; ‘this hospital a palace!’
</p>
<p>
He entered. The marble hall, the broad and lofty double staircase painted
in fresco, were not unpromising, in spite of the dingy gilding; but with
what a mixed feeling of wonder and disgust did the Duke roam through
clusters of those queer chambers which in England are called
drawing-rooms!
</p>
<p>
‘Where are the galleries, where the symmetrical saloons, where the
lengthened suite, where the collateral cabinets, sacred to the statue of a
nymph or the mistress of a painter, in which I have been customed to
reside? What page would condescend to lounge in this ante-chamber? And is
this gloomy vault, that you call a dining-room, to be my hall of Apollo?
Order my carriage.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke sent immediately for Sir Carte Blanche, the successor, in
England, of Sir Christopher Wren. His Grace communicated at the same time
his misery and his grand views. Sir Carte was astonished with his Grace’s
knowledge, and sympathised with his Grace’s feelings. He offered
consolation and promised estimates. They came in due time. Hauteville
House, in the drawing of the worthy Knight, might have been mistaken for
the Louvre. Some adjoining mansions were, by some magical process for
which Sir Carte was famous, to be cleared of their present occupiers, and
the whole side of the square was in future to be the site of Hauteville
House. The difficulty was great, but the object was greater. The expense,
though the estimate made a bold assault on the half million, was a mere
trifle, ‘considering.’ The Duke was delighted. He condescended to make a
slight alteration in Sir Carte’s drawing, which Sir Carte affirmed to be a
great improvement. Now it was Sir Carte’s turn to be delighted. The Duke
was excited by his architect’s admiration, and gave him a dissertation on
Schönbrunn.
</p>
<p>
Although Mr. Dacre had been disappointed in his hope of exercising a
personal influence over the education of his ward, he had been more
fortunate in his plans for the management of his ward’s property. Perhaps
there never was an instance of the opportunities afforded by a long
minority having been used to greater advantage. The estates had been
increased and greatly improved, all and very heavy mortgages had been paid
off, and the rents been fairly apportioned. Mr. Dacre, by his constant
exertions and able dispositions since his return to England, also made up
for the neglect with which an important point had been a little treated;
and at no period had the parliamentary influence of the house of
Hauteville been so extensive, so decided, and so well bottomed as when our
hero became its chief.
</p>
<p>
In spite of his proverbial pride, it seemed that Mr. Dacre was determined
not to be offended by the conduct of his ward. The Duke had not yet
announced his arrival in England to his guardian; but about a month after
that event he received a letter of congratulation from Mr. Dacre, who at
the same time expressed a desire to resign a trust into his Grace’s hand
which, he believed, had not been abused. The Duke, who rather dreaded an
interview, wrote in return that he intended very shortly to visit
Yorkshire, when he should have the pleasure of availing himself of the
kind invitation to Castle Dacre; and having thus, as he thought,
dexterously got rid of the old gentleman for the present, he took a ride
with Lady Caroline St. Maurice.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Duke Visits Hauteville</i>
</pre>
<p>
PARLIAMENT assembled, the town filled, and every moment in the day of the
Duke of St. James was occupied. Sir Carte and his tribe filled up the
morning. Then there were endless visits to endless visitors; dressing;
riding, chiefly with Lady Caroline; luncheons, and the bow window at
White’s. Then came the evening with all its crash and glare; the banquet,
the opera, and the ball.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James took the oaths and his seat. He was introduced by
Lord Fitz-pompey. He heard a debate. We laugh at such a thing, especially
in the Upper House; but, on the whole, the affair is imposing,
particularly if we take part in it. Lord Ex-Chamberlain thought the nation
going on wrong, and he made a speech full of currency and constitution.
Baron Deprivyseal seconded him with great effect, brief but bitter,
satirical and sore. The Earl of Quarterday answered these, full of
confidence in the nation and in himself. When the debate was getting
heavy, Lord Snap jumped up to give them something light. The Lords do not
encourage wit, and so are obliged to put up with pertness. But Viscount
Memoir was very statesmanlike, and spouted a sort of universal history.
Then there was Lord Ego, who vindicated his character, when nobody knew he
had one, and explained his motives, because his auditors could not
understand his acts. Then there was a maiden speech, so inaudible that it
was doubted whether, after all, the young orator really did lose his
virginity. In the end, up started the Premier, who, having nothing to say,
was manly, and candid, and liberal; gave credit to his adversaries and
took credit to himself, and then the motion was withdrawn.
</p>
<p>
While all this was going on, some made a note, some made a bet, some
consulted a book, some their ease, some yawned, a few slept; yet, on the
whole, there was an air about the assembly which can be witnessed in no
other in Europe. Even the most indifferent looked as if he would come
forward if the occasion should demand him, and the most imbecile as if he
could serve his country if it required him. When a man raises his eyes
from his bench and sees his ancestor in the tapestry, he begins to
understand the pride of blood.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke had not experienced many weeks of his career before he
began to sicken of living in an hotel. Hitherto he had not reaped any of
the fruits of the termination of his minority. He was a <i>cavalier seul</i>,
highly considered, truly, but yet a mere member of society. He had been
this for years. This was not the existence to enjoy which he had hurried
to England. He aspired to be society itself. In a word, his tastes were of
the most magnificent description, and he sighed to be surrounded by a
court. As Hauteville House, even with Sir Carte’s extraordinary exertions,
could not be ready for his reception for three years, which to him
appeared eternity, he determined to look about for an establishment. He
was fortunate. A nobleman who possessed an hereditary mansion of the first
class, and much too magnificent for his resources, suddenly became
diplomatic, and accepted an embassy. The Duke of St. James took everything
off his hands: house, furniture, wines, cooks, servants, horses. Sir Carte
was sent in to touch up the gilding and make a few temporary improvements;
and Lady Fitz-pompey pledged herself to organise the whole establishment
ere the full season commenced and the early Easter had elapsed, which had
now arrived.
</p>
<p>
It had arrived, and the young Duke had departed to his chief family seat,
Hauteville Castle, in Yorkshire. He intended at the same time to fulfil
his long-pledged engagement at Castle Dacre. He arrived at Hauteville amid
the ringing of bells, the roasting of oxen, and the crackling of bonfires.
The Castle, unlike most Yorkshire castles, was a Gothic edifice, ancient,
vast, and strong; but it had received numerous additions in various styles
of architecture, which were at the same time great sources of convenience
and great violations of taste. The young Duke was seized with a violent
desire to live in a genuine Gothic castle: each day his refined taste was
outraged by discovering Roman windows and Grecian doors. He determined to
emulate Windsor, and he sent for Sir Carte.
</p>
<p>
Sir Carte came as quick as thunder after lightning. He was immediately
struck with Hauteville, particularly with its capabilities. It was a
superb place, certainly, and might be rendered unrivalled. The situation
seemed made for the pure Gothic. The left wing should decidedly be pulled
down, and its site occupied by a Knight’s hall; the old terrace should be
restored; the donjon keep should be raised, and a gallery, three hundred
feet long, thrown through the body of the castle. Estimates, estimates,
estimates! But the time? This was a greater point than the expense.
Wonders should be done. There were now five hundred men working for
Hauteville House; there should be a thousand for Hauteville Castle. Carte
Blanche, Carte Blanche, Carte Blanche!
</p>
<p>
On his arrival in Yorkshire the Duke had learnt that the Dacres were in
Norfolk on a visit. As the Castle was some miles off, he saw no necessity
to make a useless exertion, and so he sent his jäger with his card. He had
now been ten days in his native county. It was dull, and he was restless.
He missed the excitement of perpetual admiration, and his eye drooped for
constant glitter. He suddenly returned to town, just when the county had
flattered itself that he was about to appoint his public days.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The First Fancy</i>
</pre>
<p>
EASTER was over, the sun shone, the world was mad, and the young Duke made
his début at Almack’s. He determined to prove that he had profited by a
winter at Vienna. His dancing was declared consummate. He galloped with
grace and waltzed with vigour. It was difficult to decide which was more
admirable, the elegance of his prance or the precision of his whirl. A fat
Russian Prince, a lean Austrian Count, a little German Baron, who, somehow
or other, always contrived to be the most marked characters of the
evening, disappeared in despair.
</p>
<p>
There was a lady in the room who attracted the notice of our hero. She was
a remarkable personage. There are some sorts of beauty which defy
description, and almost scrutiny. Some faces rise upon us in the tumult of
life like stars from out the sea, or as if they had moved out of a
picture. Our first impression is anything but fleshly. We are struck dumb,
we gasp, our limbs quiver, a faintness glides over our frame, we are awed;
instead of gazing upon the apparition, we avert the eyes, which yet will
feed upon its beauty. A strange sort of unearthly pain mixes with the
intense pleasure. And not till, with a struggle, we call back to our
memory the commonplaces of existence, can we recover our commonplace
demeanour. These, indeed, are rare visions, early feelings, when our young
existence leaps with its mountain torrents; but as the river of our life
rolls on, our eyes grow dimmer or our blood more cold.
</p>
<p>
Some effect of this kind was produced on the Duke of St. James by the
unknown dame. He turned away his head to collect his senses. His eyes
again rally; and this time, being prepared, he was more successful in his
observations.
</p>
<p>
The lady was standing against the wall; a young man was addressing some
remarks to her which apparently were not very interesting. She was tall
and young, and, as her tiara betokened, married; dazzling fair, but
without colour; with locks like night and features delicate, but precisely
defined. Yet all this did not at first challenge the observation of the
young Duke. It was the general and peculiar expression of her countenance
which had caused in him such emotion. There was an expression of
resignation, or repose, or sorrow, or serenity, which in these excited
chambers was strange, and singular, and lone. She gazed like some genius
invisible to the crowd, and mourning over its degradation.
</p>
<p>
He stopped St. Maurice, as his cousin passed by, to inquire her name, and
learnt that she was Lady Aphrodite Grafton, the wife of Sir Lucius
Grafton.
</p>
<p>
‘What, Lucy Grafton!’ exclaimed the Duke. ‘I remember; I was his fag at
Eton. He was a handsome dog; but I doubt whether he deserves such a wife.
Introduce me.’
</p>
<p>
Lady Aphrodite received our hero with a gentle bow, and did not seem quite
as impressed with his importance as most of those to whom he had been
presented in the course of the evening. The Duke had considerable tact
with women, and soon perceived that the common topics of a hack flirtation
would not do in the present case. He was therefore mild and modest, rather
piquant, somewhat rational, and apparently perfectly unaffected. Her
Ladyship’s reserve wore away. She refused to dance, but conversed with
more animation. The Duke did not leave her side. The women began to stare,
the men to bet: Lady Aphrodite against the field. In vain his Grace laid a
thousand plans to arrange a tea-room tête-à -tête. He was unsuccessful. As
he was about to return to the charge her Ladyship desired a passer-by to
summon her carriage. No time was to be lost. The Duke began to talk hard
about his old friend and schoolfellow, Sir Lucius. A greenhorn would have
thought it madness to take an interest in such a person of all others; but
women like you to enter their house as their husband’s friend. Lady
Aphrodite could not refrain from expressing her conviction that Sir Lucius
would be most happy to renew his acquaintance with the Duke of St. James,
and the Duke of St. James immediately said that he would take the earliest
opportunity of giving him that pleasure.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Noble Reprobate</i>
</pre>
<p>
SIR LUCIUS GRAFTON was five or six years older than the Duke of St. James,
although he had been his contemporary at Eton. He, too, had been a minor,
and had inherited an estate capable of supporting the becoming dignity of
an ancient family. In appearance he was an Antinous. There was, however,
an expression of firmness, almost of ferocity, about his mouth, which
quite prevented his countenance from being effeminate, and broke the
dreamy voluptuousness of the rest of his features. In mind he was a roué.
Devoted to pleasure, he had racked the goblet at an early age; and before
he was five-and-twenty procured for himself a reputation which made all
women dread and some men shun him. In the very wildest moment of his
career, when he was almost marked like Cain, he had met Lady Aphrodite
Maltravers. She was the daughter of a nobleman who justly prided himself,
in a degenerate age, on the virtue of his house. Nature, as if in
recompense for his goodness, had showered all her blessings on his only
daughter. Never was daughter more devoted to a widowed sire; never was
woman influenced by principles of purer morality.
</p>
<p>
This was the woman who inspired Sir Lucius Grafton with an ungovernable
passion. Despairing of success by any other method, conscious that, sooner
or later, he must, for family considerations, propagate future baronets of
the name of Grafton, he determined to solicit her hand. But for him to
obtain it, he was well aware, was difficult. Confident in his person, his
consummate knowledge of the female character, and his unrivalled powers of
dissimulation, Sir Lucius arranged his dispositions. The daughter feared,
the father hated him. There was indeed much to be done; but the
remembrance of a thousand triumphs supported the adventurer. Lady
Aphrodite was at length persuaded that she alone could confirm the
reformation which she alone had originated. She yielded to a passion which
her love of virtue had alone kept in subjection. Sir Lucius and Lady
Aphrodite knelt at the feet of the old Earl. The tears of his daughter,
ay! and of his future son-in-law—for Sir Lucius knew when to weep—were
too much for his kind and generous heart. He gave them his blessing, which
faltered on his tongue.
</p>
<p>
A year had not elapsed ere Lady Aphrodite woke to all the wildness of a
deluded woman. The idol on whom she had lavished all the incense of her
innocent affections became every day less like a true divinity. At length
even the ingenuity of a passion could no longer disguise the hideous and
bitter truth. She was no longer loved. She thought of her father. Ah, what
was the madness of her memory!
</p>
<p>
The agony of her mind disappointed her husband’s hope of an heir, and the
promise was never renewed.
</p>
<p>
In vain she remonstrated with the being to whom she was devoted: in vain
she sought by meek endurance again to melt his heart. It was cold; it was
callous. Most women would have endeavoured to recover their lost influence
by different tactics; some, perhaps, would have forgotten their
mortification in their revenge. But Lady Aphrodite had been the victim of
passion, and now was its slave. She could not dissemble.
</p>
<p>
Not so her spouse. Sir Lucius knew too well the value of a good character
to part very easily with that which he had so unexpectedly regained.
Whatever were his excesses, they were prudent ones. He felt that boyhood
could alone excuse the folly of glorying in vice; and he knew that, to
respect virtue, it was not absolutely necessary to be virtuous. No one
was, apparently, more choice in his companions than Sir Lucius Grafton; no
husband was seen oftener with his wife; no one paid more respect to age,
or knew better when to wear a grave countenance. The world praised the
magical influence of Lady Aphrodite; and Lady Aphrodite, in private, wept
over her misery. In public she made an effort to conceal all she felt;
and, as it is a great inducement to every woman to conceal that she is
neglected by the man whom she adores, her effort was not unsuccessful. Yet
her countenance might indicate that she was little interested in the scene
in which she mixed. She was too proud to weep, but too sad to smile.
Elegant and lone, she stood among her crushed and lovely hopes like a
column amid the ruins of a beautiful temple.
</p>
<p>
The world declared that Lady Aphrodite was desperately virtuous, and the
world was right. A thousand fireflies had sparkled round this myrtle, and
its fresh and verdant hue was still unsullied and un-scorched. Not a very
accurate image, but pretty; and those who have watched a glancing shower
of these glittering insects will confess that, poetically, the bush might
burn. The truth is, that Lady Aphrodite still trembled when she recalled
the early anguish of her broken sleep of love, and had not courage enough
to hope that she might dream again. Like the old Hebrews, she had been so
chastened for her wild idolatry that she dared not again raise an image to
animate the wilderness of her existence. Man she at the same time feared
and despised. Compared with her husband, all who surrounded her were, she
felt, in appearance inferior, and were, she believed, in mind the same.
</p>
<p>
We know not how it is, but love at first sight is a subject of constant
ridicule; but, somehow, we suspect that it has more to do with the affairs
of this world than the world is willing to own. Eyes meet which have never
met before, and glances thrill with expression which is strange. We
contrast these pleasant sights and new emotions with hackneyed objects and
worn sensations. Another glance and another thrill, and we spring into
each other’s arms. What can be more natural?
</p>
<p>
Ah, that we should awake so often to truth so bitter! Ah, that charm by
charm should evaporate from the talisman which had enchanted our
existence!
</p>
<p>
And so it was with this sweet woman, whose feelings grow under the pen.
She had repaired to a splendid assembly to play her splendid part with the
consciousness of misery, without the expectation of hope. She awaited
without interest the routine which had been so often uninteresting; she
viewed without emotion the characters which had never moved. A stranger
suddenly appeared upon the stage, fresh as the morning dew, and glittering
like the morning star. All eyes await, all tongues applaud him. His step
is grace, his countenance hope, his voice music! And was such a being born
only to deceive and be deceived? Was he to run the same false, palling,
ruinous career which had filled so many hearts with bitterness and dimmed
the radiancy of so many eyes? Never! The nobility of his soul spoke from
his glancing eye, and treated the foul suspicion with scorn. Ah, would
that she had such a brother to warn, to guide, to love!
</p>
<p>
So felt the Lady Aphrodite! So felt; we will not say so reasoned. When
once a woman allows an idea to touch her heart, it is miraculous with what
rapidity the idea is fathered by her brain. All her experience, all her
anguish, all her despair, vanished like a long frost, in an instant, and
in a night. She felt a delicious conviction that a knight had at length
come to her rescue, a hero worthy of an adventure so admirable. The image
of the young Duke filled her whole mind; she had no ear for others’
voices; she mused on his idea with the rapture of a votary on the
mysteries of a new faith.
</p>
<p>
Yet strange, when he at length approached her, when he addressed her, when
she replied to that mouth which had fascinated even before it had spoken,
she was cold, reserved, constrained. Some talk of the burning cheek and
the flashing eye of passion; but a wise man would not, perhaps, despair of
the heroine who, when he approaches her, treats him almost with scorn, and
trembles while she affects to disregard him.
</p>
<p>
Lady Aphrodite has returned home: she hurries to her apartment, she falls
in a sweet reverie, her head leans upon her hand. Her soubrette, a pretty
and chattering Swiss, whose republican virtue had been corrupted by Paris,
as Rome by Corinth, endeavours to divert Mer lady’s ennui: she excruciates
her beautiful mistress with tattle about the admiration of Lord B———and
the sighs of Sir Harry. Her Ladyship reprimands her for her levity, and
the soubrette, grown sullen, revenges herself for her mistress’s reproof
by converting the sleepy process of brushing into lively torture.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James called upon Lady Aphrodite Grafton the next day, and
at an hour when he trusted to find her alone. He was not disappointed.
More than once the silver-tongued pendule sounded during that somewhat
protracted but most agreeable visit. He was, indeed, greatly interested by
her, but he was an habitual gallant, and always began by feigning more
than he felt. She, on the contrary, who was really in love, feigned much
less. Yet she was no longer constrained, though calm. Fluent, and even
gay, she talked as well as listened, and her repartees more than once
called forth the resources of her guest. She displayed a delicate and even
luxurious taste, not only in her conversation, but (the Duke observed it
with delight) in her costume. She had a passion for music and for flowers;
she sang a romance, and she gave him a rose. He retired perfectly
fascinated.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IX.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Old Friends Meet</i>
</pre>
<p>
SIR LUCIUS GRAFTON called on the Duke of St. James. They did not
immediately swear an eternal friendship, but they greeted each other with
considerable warmth, talked of old times and old companions, and compared
their former sensations with their present. No one could be a more
agreeable companion than Sir Lucius, and this day he left a very
favourable impression with his young friend. From this day, too, the
Duke’s visits at the Baronet’s were frequent; and as the Graftons were
intimate with the Fitz-pompeys, scarcely a day elapsed without his having
the pleasure of passing a portion of it in the company of Lady Aphrodite:
his attentions to her were marked, and sometimes mentioned. Lord
Fitz-pompey was rather in a flutter. George did not ride so often with
Caroline, and never alone with her. This was disagreeable; but the Earl
was a man of the world, and a sanguine man withal. These things will
happen. It is of no use to quarrel with the wind; and, for his part, he
was not sorry that he had the honour of the Grafton acquaintance; it
secured Caroline her cousin’s company; and as for the <i>liaison</i>, if
there were one, why it must end, and probably the difficulty of
terminating it might even hasten the catastrophe which he had so much at
heart. ‘So, Laura, dearest! let the Graftons be asked to dinner.’
</p>
<p>
In one of those rides to which Caroline was not admitted, for Lady
Aphrodite was present, the Duke of St. James took his way to the Regent’s
Park, a wild sequestered spot, whither he invariably repaired when he did
not wish to be noticed; for the inhabitants of this pretty suburb are a
distinct race, and although their eyes are not unobserving, from their
inability to speak the language of London they are unable to communicate
their observations.
</p>
<p>
The spring sun was setting, and flung a crimson flush over the blue waters
and the white houses. The scene was rather imposing, and reminded our hero
of days of travel. A sudden thought struck him. Would it not be delightful
to build a beautiful retreat in this sweet and retired land, and be able
in an instant to fly from the formal magnificence of a London mansion?
Lady Aphrodite was charmed with the idea; for the enamoured are always
delighted with what is fanciful. The Duke determined immediately to
convert the idea into an object. To lose no time was his grand motto. As
he thought that Sir Carte had enough upon his hands, he determined to
apply to an artist whose achievements had been greatly vaunted to him by a
distinguished and noble judge.
</p>
<p>
M. Bijou de Millecolonnes, Chevalier of the Legion of Honour and member of
the Academy of St. Luke’s, except in his title, was the antipodes of Sir
Carte Blanche. Sir Carte was all solidity, solemnity, and correctness;
Bijou de Millecolonnes all lightness, gaiety, and originality. Sir Carte
was ever armed with the Parthenon, Palladio, and St. Peter’s; Bijou de
Millecolonnes laughed at the ancients, called Palladio and Michel
barbarians of the middle ages, and had himself invented an order. Bijou
was not so plausible as Sir Carte; but he was infinitely more
entertaining. Far from being servile, he allowed no one to talk but
himself, and made his fortune by his elegant insolence. How singular it is
that those who love servility are always the victims of impertinence!
</p>
<p>
Gaily did Bijou de Millecolonnes drive his pea-green cabriolet to the spot
in question. He formed his plan in an instant. ‘The occasional retreat of
a noble should be something picturesque and poetical. The mind should be
led to voluptuousness by exquisite associations, as well as by the
creations of art. It is thus their luxury is rendered more intense by the
reminiscences that add past experience to present enjoyment! For instance,
if you sail down a river, imitate the progress of Cleopatra. And here,
here, where the opportunity is so ample, what think you of reviving the
Alhambra?’
</p>
<p>
Splendid conception! The Duke already fancied himself a Caliph. ‘Lose no
time, Chevalier! Dig, plant, build!’
</p>
<p>
Nine acres were obtained from the Woods and Forests; mounds were thrown
up, shrubs thrown in; the paths emulated the serpent; the nine acres
seemed interminable. All was surrounded by a paling eight feet high, that
no one might pierce the mystery of the preparations.
</p>
<p>
A rumour was soon current that the Zoological Society intended to keep a
Bengal tiger <i>au naturel</i>, and that they were contriving a residence
which would amply compensate him for his native jungle. The Regent’s Park
was in despair, the landlords lowered their rents, and the tenants
petitioned the King. In a short time some hooded domes and some Saracenic
spires rose to sight, and the truth was then made known that the young
Duke of St. James was building a villa. The Regent’s Park was in rapture,
the landlords raised their rents, and the tenants withdrew their petition.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER X.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
His Grace Entertains
</pre>
<p>
MR. DACRE again wrote to the Duke of St. James. He regretted that he had
been absent from home when his Grace had done him the honour of calling at
Castle Dacre. Had he been aware of that intended gratification, he could
with ease, and would with pleasure, have postponed his visit to Norfolk.
He also regretted that it would not be in his power to visit London this
season; and as he thought that no further time should be lost in resigning
the trust with which he had been so honoured, he begged leave to forward
his accounts to the Duke, and with them some notes which he believed would
convey some not unimportant information to his Grace for the future
management of his property. The young Duke took a rapid glance at the sum
total of his rental, crammed all the papers into a cabinet with a
determination to examine them the first opportunity, and then rolled off
to a morning concert of which he was the patron.
</p>
<p>
The intended opportunity for the examination of the important papers was
never caught, nor was it surprising that it escaped capture. It is
difficult to conceive a career of more various, more constant, or more
distracting excitement than that in which the Duke of St. James was now
engaged. His life was an ocean of enjoyment, and each hour, like each
wave, threw up its pearl. How dull was the ball in which he did not bound!
How dim the banquet in which he did not glitter! His presence in the
Gardens compensated for the want of flowers; his vision in the Park for
the want of sun. In public breakfasts he was more indispensable than
pine-apples; in private concerts more noticed than an absent prima donna.
How fair was the dame on whom he smiled! How dark was the tradesman on
whom he frowned! Think only of prime ministers and princes, to say nothing
of princesses; nay! think only of managers of operas and French actors, to
say nothing of French actresses; think only of jewellers, milliners,
artists, horse-dealers, all the shoals who hurried for his sanction; think
only of the two or three thousand civilised beings for whom all this
population breathed, and who each of them had claims upon our hero’s
notice! Think of the statesmen, who had so much to ask and so much to
give; the dandies to feed with and to be fed; the dangerous dowagers and
the desperate mothers; the widows, wild as early partridges; the budding
virgins, mild as a summer cloud and soft as an opera hat! Think of the
drony bores, with their dull hum; think of the chivalric guardsmen, with
their horses to sell and their bills to discount; think of Willis, think
of Crockford, think of White’s, think of Brooks’, and you may form a faint
idea how the young Duke had to talk, and eat, and flirt, and cut, and pet,
and patronise!
</p>
<p>
You think it impossible for one man to do all this. There is yet much
behind. You may add to the catalogue Melton and Newmarket; and if to hunt
without an appetite and to bet without an object will not sicken you, why,
build a yacht!
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James gave his first grand entertainment for the season.
It was like the assembly of the immortals at the first levee of Jove. All
hurried to pay their devoirs to the young king of fashion; and each who
succeeded in becoming a member of the Court felt as proud as a peer with a
new title, or a baronet with an old one. An air of regal splendour, an
almost imperial assumption, was observed in the arrangements of the fête.
A troop of servants in rich liveries filled the hall; grooms lined the
staircase; Spiridion, the Greek page, lounged on an ottoman in an
ante-chamber, and, with the assistance of six young gentlemen in
crimson-and-silver uniforms, announced the coming of the cherished guests.
Cartloads of pine-apples were sent up from the Yorkshire Castle, and
waggons of orange-trees from the Twickenham Villa.
</p>
<p>
A brilliant coterie, of which his Grace was a member, had amused
themselves a few nights before by representing in costume the Court of
Charles the First. They agreed this night to reappear in their splendid
dresses; and the Duke, who was Villiers, supported his character, even to
the gay shedding of a shower of diamonds. In his cap was observed an
hereditary sapphire, which blazed like a volcano, and which was rumoured
to be worth his rent-roll.
</p>
<p>
There was a short concert, at which the most celebrated Signora made her
début; there was a single vaudeville, which a white satin play-bill,
presented to each guest as they entered the temporary theatre, indicated
to have been written for the occasion; there was a ball, in which was
introduced a new dance. Nothing for a moment was allowed to lag. <i>Longueurs</i>
were skilfully avoided, and the excitement was so rapid that every one had
an appetite for supper.
</p>
<p>
A long gallery lined with bronzes and <i>bijouterie</i>, with cabinets and
sculpture, with china and with paintings, all purchased for the future
ornament of Hauteville House, and here stowed away in unpretending, but
most artificial, confusion, offered accommodation to all the guests. To a
table covered with gold, and placed in a magnificent tent upon the stage,
his Grace loyally led two princes of the blood and a child of France.
Madame de Protocoli, Lady Aphrodite Grafton, the Duchess of Shropshire,
and Lady Fitz-pompey, shared the honours of the pavilion, and some might
be excused for envying a party so brilliant and a situation so
distinguished. Yet Lady Aphrodite was an unwilling member of it; and
nothing but the personal solicitation of Sir Lucius would have induced her
to consent to the wish of their host.
</p>
<p>
A pink <i>carte</i> succeeded to the satin play-bill. Vi-tellius might
have been pleased with the banquet. Ah, how shall we describe those soups,
which surely must have been the magical elixir! How paint those ortolans
dressed by the inimitable artist, Ã la St. James, for the occasion, and
which look so beautiful in death that they must surely have preferred such
an euthanasia even to flying in the perfumed air of an Auso-nian heaven!
</p>
<p>
Sweet bird! though thou hast lost thy plumage, thou shalt fly to my
mistress! Is it not better to be nibbled by her than mumbled by a
cardinal? I, too, will feed on thy delicate beauty. Sweet bird! thy
companion has fled to my mistress; and now thou shalt thrill the nerves of
her master! Oh! doff, then, thy waistcoat of wine-leaves, pretty rover!
and show me that bosom more delicious even than woman’s. What gushes of
rapture! What a flavour! How peculiar! Even how sacred I Heaven at once
sends both manna and quails. Another little wanderer! Pray follow my
example! Allow me. All Paradise opens! Let me die eating ortolans to the
sound of soft music!
</p>
<p>
Even the supper was brief, though brilliant; and again the cotillon and
the quadrille, the waltz and the galoppe! At no moment of his life had the
young Duke felt existence so intense. Wherever he turned his eye he found
a responding glance of beauty and admiration; wherever he turned his ear
the whispered tones were soft and sweet as summer winds. Each look was an
offering, each word adoration! His soul dilated; the glory of the scene
touched all his passions. He almost determined not again to mingle in
society; but, like a monarch, merely to receive the world which worshipped
him. The idea was sublime: was it even to him impracticable? In the midst
of his splendour he fell into a reverie, and mused on his magnificence. He
could no longer resist the conviction that he was a superior essence, even
to all around him. The world seemed created solely for his enjoyment. Nor
man nor woman could withstand him. From this hour he delivered himself up
to a sublime selfishness. With all his passions and all his profusion, a
callousness crept over his heart. His sympathy for those he believed his
inferiors and his vassals was slight. Where we do not respect we soon
cease to love; when we cease to love, virtue weeps and flies. His soul
wandered in dreams of omnipotence.
</p>
<p>
This picture perhaps excites your dislike; perchance your contempt. Pause!
Pity him! Pity his fatal youth!
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Love at a Bazaar</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Lady Aphrodite at first refused to sit in the Duke’s pavilion. Was
she, then, in the <i>habit</i> of refusing? Let us not forget our Venus of
the Waters. Shall we whisper where the young Duke first dared to hope? No,
you shall guess. <i>Je vous le donne en trois</i>. The Gardens? The opera?
The tea-room? No! no! no! You are conceiving a locality much more
romantic. Already you have created the bower of a Parisina, where the
waterfall is even more musical than the birds, more lulling than the
evening winds; where all is pale, except the stars; all hushed, except
their beating pulses! Will this do? No! What think you, then, of a <i>Bazaar</i>?
</p>
<p>
O thou wonderful nineteenth century! thou that believest in no miracles
and doest so many, hast thou brought this, too, about, that ladies’ hearts
should be won, and gentlemen’s also, not in courts of tourney or halls of
revel, but over a counter and behind a stall? We are, indeed, a nation of
shopkeepers!
</p>
<p>
The king of Otaheite, though a despot, was a reformer. He discovered that
the eating of bread-fruit was a barbarous custom, which would infallibly
prevent his people from being a great nation. He determined to introduce
French rolls. A party rebelled; the despot was energetic; some were
executed; the rest ejected. The vagabonds arrived in England. As they had
been banished in opposition to French rolls, they were declared to be a
British interest. They professed their admiration of civil and religious
liberty, and also of a subscription. When they had drunk a great deal of
punch, and spent all their money, they discovered that they had nothing to
eat, and would infallibly have been starved, had not an Hibernian
Marchioness, who had never been in Ireland, been exceedingly shocked that
men should die of hunger; and so, being one of the bustlers, she got up a
fancy sale and a <i>Sandwich Isle Bazaar</i>.
</p>
<p>
All the world was there and of course our hero. Never was the arrival of a
comet watched by astronomers who had calculated its advent with more
anxiety than was the appearance of the young Duke. Never did man pass
through such dangers. It was the fiery ordeal. St. Anthony himself was not
assailed by more temptations. Now he was saved from the lustre of a blonde
face by the superior richness of a blonde lace. He would infallibly have
been ravished by that ringlet had he not been nearly reduced by that ring
which sparkled on a hand like the white cat’s. He was only preserved from
his unprecedented dangers by their number. No, no! He had a better
talisman: his conceit.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah, Lady Balmont!’ said his Grace to a smiling artist, who offered him
one of her own drawings of a Swiss cottage, ‘for me to be a tenant, it
must be love and a cottage!’
</p>
<p>
‘What! am I to buy this ring, Mrs. Abercroft? <i>Point de jour</i>. Oh!
dreadful phrase! Allow me to present it to you, for you are the only one
whom such words cannot make tremble.’
</p>
<p>
‘This chain, Lady Jemima, for my glass! It will teach me where to direct
it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! Mrs. Fitzroy!’ and he covered his face with affected fear. ‘Can you
forgive me? Your beautiful note has been half an hour unanswered. The box
is yours for Tuesday.’
</p>
<p>
He tried to pass the next stall with a smiling bow, but he could not
escape. It was Lady de Courcy, a dowager, but not old. Once beautiful, her
charms had not yet disappeared. She had a pair of glittering eyes, a
skilfully-carmined cheek, and locks yet raven. Her eloquence made her now
as conspicuous as once did her beauty. The young Duke was her constant
object and her occasional victim. He hated above all things a talking
woman; he dreaded above all others Lady de Courcy.
</p>
<p>
He could not shirk. She summoned him by name so loud that crowds of
barbarians stared, and a man called to a woman, and said, ‘My dear! make
haste; here’s a Duke!’
</p>
<p>
Lady de Courcy was prime confidant of the Irish Marchioness. She affected
enthusiasm about the poor sufferers. She had learnt Otaheitan, she
lectured about the bread-fruit, and she played upon a barbarous
thrum-thrum, the only musical instrument in those savage wastes,
ironically called the Society Islands, because there is no society. She
was dreadful. The Duke in despair took out his purse, poured forth from
the pink and silver delicacy, worked by the slender fingers of Lady
Aphrodite, a shower of sovereigns, and fairly scampered off. At length he
reached the lady of his heart.
</p>
<p>
‘I fear,’ said the young Duke with a smile, and in a soft sweet voice,
‘that you will never speak to me again, for I am a ruined man.’
</p>
<p>
A beam of gentle affection reprimanded him even for badinage on such a
subject.
</p>
<p>
‘I really came here to buy up all your stock, but that gorgon, Lady de
Courcy, captured me, and my ransom has sent me here free, but a beggar. I
do not know a more ill-fated fellow than myself. Now, if you had only
condescended to take me prisoner, I might have saved my money; for I
should have kissed my chain.’
</p>
<p>
‘My chains, I fear, are neither very alluring nor very strong.’ She spoke
with a thoughtful air, and he answered her only with his eye.
</p>
<p>
‘I must bear off something from your stall,’ he resumed in a more rapid
and gayer tone, ‘and, as I cannot purchase you must present. Now for a
gift!’
</p>
<p>
‘Choose!’
</p>
<p>
‘Yourself.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace is really spoiling my sale. See! poor Lord Bagshot. What a
valuable purchaser.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! Bag, my boy!’ said the Duke to a slang young nobleman whom he
abhorred, but of whom he sometimes made a butt, ‘am I in your way? Here!
take this, and this, and this, and give me your purse. I’ll pay Lady
Aphrodite.’ And so the Duke again showered some sovereigns, and returned
the shrunken silk to its defrauded owner, who stared, and would have
remonstrated, but the Duke turned his back upon him.
</p>
<p>
‘There now,’ he continued to Lady Aphrodite; ‘there is two hundred per
cent, profit for you. You are not half a <i>marchande</i>. I will stand
here and be your shopman. Well, Annesley,’ said he, as that dignitary
passed, ‘what will you buy? I advise you to get a place. ‘Pon my soul,
‘tis pleasant! Try Lady de Courcy. You know you are a favourite.’
</p>
<p>
‘I assure your Grace,’ said Mr. Annesley, speaking slowly, ‘that that
story about Lady de Courcy is quite untrue and very rude. I never turn my
back on any woman; only my heel. We are on the best possible terms. She is
never to speak to me, and I am always to bow to her. But I really must
purchase. Where did you get that glass-chain, St. James? Lady Afy, can you
accommodate me?’
</p>
<p>
‘Here is one prettier! But are you near-sighted, too, Mr. Annesley?’
</p>
<p>
‘Very. I look upon a long-sighted man as a brute who, not being able to
see with his mind, is obliged to see with his body. The price of this?’
</p>
<p>
‘A sovereign,’ said the Duke; ‘cheap; but we consider you as a friend.’
</p>
<p>
‘A sovereign! You consider me a young Duke rather. Two shillings, and that
a severe price; a charitable price. Here is half-a-crown; give me
sixpence. I was not a minor. Farewell! I go to the little Pomfret. She is
a sweet flower, and I intend to wear her in my button-hole. Good-bye, Lady
Afy!’
</p>
<p>
The gay morning had worn away, and St. James never left his fascinating
position. Many a sweet and many a soft thing he uttered. Sometimes he was
baffled, but never beaten, and always returned to the charge with spirit.
He was confident, because he was reckless: the lady had less trust in
herself, because she was anxious. Yet she combated well, and repressed the
feelings which she could hardly conceal.
</p>
<p>
Many of her colleagues had already departed. She requested the Duke to
look after her carriage. A bold plan suddenly occurred to him, and he
executed it with rare courage and rarer felicity.
</p>
<p>
‘Lady Aphrodite Grafton’s carriage!’
</p>
<p>
‘Here, your Grace!’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! go home. Your lady will return with Madame de Protocoli.’
</p>
<p>
He rejoined her.
</p>
<p>
‘I am sorry, that, by some blunder, your carriage has gone. What could you
have told them?’
</p>
<p>
‘Impossible! How provoking! How stupid!’
</p>
<p>
‘Perhaps you told them that you would return with the Fitz-pompeys, but
they are gone; or Mrs. Aberleigh, and she is not here; or perhaps—but
they have gone too. Everyone has gone.’
</p>
<p>
‘What shall I do? How distressing! I had better send. Pray send; or I will
ask Lady de Courcy.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! no, no! I really did not like to see you with her. As a favour—as
a favour to me, I pray you not.’
</p>
<p>
‘What can I do? I must send. Let me beg your Grace to send.’
</p>
<p>
‘Certainly, certainly; but, ten to one, there will be some mistake. There
always is some mistake when you send these strangers. And, besides, I
forgot all this time my carriage is here. Let it take you home.’
</p>
<p>
‘No, no!’
</p>
<p>
‘Dearest Lady Aphrodite, do not distress yourself. I can wait here till
the carriage returns, or I can walk; to be sure, I can walk. Pray, pray
take the carriage! As a favour—as a favour to me!’
</p>
<p>
‘But I cannot bear you to walk. I know you dislike walking.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, then, I will wait.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, if it must be so; but I am ashamed to inconvenience you. How
provoking of these men! Pray, then, tell the coachman to drive fast, that
you may not have to wait. I declare there is scarcely a human being in the
room; and those odd people are staring so!’
</p>
<p>
He pressed her arm as he led her to his carriage. She is in; and yet,
before the door shuts, he lingers.
</p>
<p>
‘I shall certainly walk,’ said he. ‘I do not think the easterly wind will
make me very ill. Good-bye! Oh, what a <i>coup-de-vent</i>!’
</p>
<p>
‘Let me get out, then; and pray, pray take the carriage. I would much
sooner do anything than go in it. I would much rather walk. I am sure you
will be ill!’
</p>
<p>
‘Not if I be with you.’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Royal Favour</i>
</pre>
<p>
THERE was a brilliant levee, all stars and garters; and a splendid
drawing-room, all plumes and <i>séduisantes</i>. Many a bright eye, as its
owner fought his way down St. James’s Street, shot a wistful glance at the
enchanted bow-window where the Duke and his usual companions, Sir Lucius,
Charles Annesley, and Lord Squib, lounged and laughed, stretched
themselves and sneered: many a bright eye, that for a moment pierced the
futurity that painted her going in state as Duchess of St. James.
</p>
<p>
His Majesty summoned a dinner party, a rare but magnificent event, and the
chief of the house of Hauteville appeared among the chosen vassals. This
visit did the young Duke good; and a few more might have permanently cured
the conceit which the present one momentarily calmed. His Grace saw the
plate, and was filled with envy; his Grace listened to his Majesty, and
was filled with admiration. O, father of thy people! if thou wouldst but
look a little oftener on thy younger sons, their morals and their manners
might be alike improved.
</p>
<p>
His Majesty, in the course of the evening, with his usual good-nature,
signalled out for his notice the youngest, and not the least
distinguished, of his guests. He complimented the young Duke on the
accession to the ornaments of his court, and said, with a smile, that he
had heard of conquests in foreign ones. The Duke accounted for his slight
successes by reminding his Majesty that he had the honour of being his
godson, and this he said in a slight and easy way, not smart or quick, or
as a repartee to the royal observation; for ‘it is not decorous to bandy
compliments with your Sovereign.’ His Majesty asked some questions about
an Emperor or an Archduchess, and his Grace answered to the purpose, but
short, and not too pointed. He listened rather than spoke, and smiled more
assents than he uttered. The King was pleased with his young subject, and
marked his approbation by conversing with that unrivalled affability which
is gall to a Roundhead and inspiration to a Cavalier. There was a <i>bon
mot</i>, which blazed with all the soft brilliancy of sheet lightning.
What a contrast to the forky flashes of a regular wit! Then there was an
anecdote of Sheridan—the royal Sheridaniana are not thrice-told
tales—recounted with that curious felicity which has long stamped
the illustrious narrator as a consummate <i>raconteur</i>. Then——but
the Duke knew when to withdraw; and he withdrew with renewed loyalty.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Lover’s Trick</i>
</pre>
<p>
ONE day, looking in at his jeweller’s, to see some models of a shield and
vases which were executing for him in gold, the young Duke met Lady
Aphrodite and the Fitz-pompeys. Lady Aphrodite was speaking to the
jeweller about her diamonds, which were to be reset for her approaching
fête. The Duke took the ladies upstairs to look at the models, and while
they were intent upon them and other curiosities, his absence for a moment
was unperceived. He ran downstairs and caught Mr. Garnet.
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Garnet! I think I saw Lady Aphrodite give you her diamonds?’ ‘Yes,
your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘Are they valuable?’ in a careless tone. ‘Hum! pretty stones; very pretty
stones, indeed. Few Baronets’ ladies have a prettier set; worth perhaps a
1000L.; say 1200L. Lady Aphrodite Grafton is not the Duchess of St. James,
you know,’ said Mr. Garnet, as if he anticipated furnishing that future
lady with a very different set of brilliants.
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Garnet, you can do me the greatest favour.’ ‘Your Grace has only to
command me at all times.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, then, in a word, for time presses, can you contrive, without
particularly altering—that is, without altering the general
appearance of these diamonds—can you contrive to change the stones,
and substitute the most valuable that you have; consistent, as I must
impress upon you, with maintaining their general appearance as at
present?’
</p>
<p>
‘The most valuable stones,’ musingly repeated Mr. Garnet; ‘general
appearance as at present? Your Grace is aware that we may run up some
thousands even in this set?’
</p>
<p>
‘I give you no limit.’
</p>
<p>
‘But the time,’ rejoined Mr. Garnet. ‘They must be ready for her
Ladyship’s party. We shall be hard pressed. I am afraid of the time.’
</p>
<p>
‘Cannot the men work all night? Pay them anything.’
</p>
<p>
‘It shall be done, your Grace. Your Grace may command me in anything.’
</p>
<p>
‘This is a secret between us, Garnet. Your partners———’
</p>
<p>
‘Shall know nothing. And as for myself, I am as close as an emerald in a
seal-ring.’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Close of the Season</i>
</pre>
<p>
HUSSEIN PACHA, ‘the favourite,’ not only of the Marquess of Mash, but of
Tattersall’s, unaccountably sickened and died. His noble master, full of
chagrin took to his bed, and followed his steed’s example. The death of
the Marquess caused a vacancy in the stewardship of the approaching
Doncaster. Sir Lucius Grafton was the other steward, and he proposed to
the Duke of St. James, as he was a Yorkshireman, to become his colleague.
His Grace, who wished to pay a compliment to his county, closed with the
proposition. Sir Lucius was a first-rate jockey; his colleague was quite
ignorant of the noble science in all its details; but that was of slight
importance. The Baronet was to be the working partner, and do the
business; the Duke the show member of the concern, and do the
magnificence; as one banker, you may observe, lives always in Portland
Place, reads the Court Journal all the morning, and has an opera-box,
while his partner lodges in Lombard Street, thumbs a price-current, and
only has a box at Clapham.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke, however, was ambitious of making a good book; and, with
all the calm impetuosity which characterises a youthful Hauteville,
determined to have a crack stud at once. So at Ascot, where he spent a few
pleasant hours, dined at the Cottage, was caught in a shower, in return
caught a cold, a slight influenza for a week, and all the world full of
inquiries and anxiety; at Ascot, I say, he bought up all the winning
horses at an average of three thousand guineas for each pair of ears. Sir
Lucius stared, remonstrated, and, as his remonstrances were in vain,
assisted him.
</p>
<p>
As people at the point of death often make a desperate rally, so this, the
most brilliant of seasons, was even more lively as it nearer approached
its end. The <i>déjeûner</i> and the <i>villa fête</i> the water party and
the rambling ride, followed each other with the bright rapidity of the
final scenes in a pantomime. Each <i>dama</i> seemed only inspired with
the ambition of giving the last ball; and so numerous were the parties
that the town really sometimes seemed illuminated. To breakfast at
Twickenham, and to dine in Belgrave Square; to hear,’ or rather to honour,
half an act of an opera; to campaign through half a dozen private balls,
and to finish with a romp at the rooms, as after our wine we take a glass
of liqueur; all this surely required the courage of an Alexander and the
strength of a Hercules, and, indeed, cannot be achieved without the
miraculous powers of a Joshua. So thought the young Duke, as with an
excited mind and a whirling head he threw himself at half-past six o’clock
on a couch which brought him no sleep.
</p>
<p>
Yet he recovered, and with the aid of the bath, the soda, and the coffee,
and all the thousand remedies which a skilful valet has ever at hand, at
three o’clock on the same day he rose and dressed, and in an hour was
again at the illustrious bow-window, sneering with Charles Annesley, or
laughing downright with Lord Squib.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James gave a water party, and the astounded Thames swelled
with pride as his broad breast bore on the ducal barges. St. Maurice, who
was in the Guards, secured his band; and Lord Squib, who, though it was
July, brought a furred great coat, secured himself. Lady Afy looked like
Amphitrite, and Lady Caroline looked in love. They wandered in gardens
like Calypso’s; they rambled over a villa which reminded them of Baise;
they partook of a banquet which should have been described by Ariosto. All
were delighted; they delivered themselves to the charms of an unrestrained
gaiety. Even Charles Annesley laughed and romped.
</p>
<p>
This is the only mode in which public eating is essentially agreeable. A
banqueting-hall is often the scene of exquisite pleasure; but that is not
so much excited by the gratification of a delicate palate as by the
magnificent effect of light and shade; by the beautiful women, the radiant
jewels, the graceful costume, the rainbow glass, the glowing wines, the
glorious plate. For the rest, all is too hot, too crowded, and too noisy,
to catch a flavour; to analyse a combination, to dwell upon a gust. To
eat, <i>really</i> to eat, one must eat alone, with a soft light, with
simple furniture, an easy dress, and a single dish, at a time. Hours of
bliss! Hours of virtue! for what is more virtuous than to be conscious of
the blessings of a bountiful Nature? A good eater must be a good man; for
a good eater must have a good digestion, and a good digestion depends upon
a good conscience.
</p>
<p>
But to our tale. If we be dull, skip: time will fly, and beauty will fade,
and wit grow dull, and even the season, although it seems, for the nonce,
like the existence of Olympus, will nevertheless steal away. It is the
hour when trade grows dull and tradesmen grow duller; it is the hour that
Howell loveth not and Stultz cannot abide; though the first may be
consoled by the ghosts of his departed millions of <i>mouchoirs</i>, and
the second by the vision of coming millions of shooting-jackets. Oh, why
that sigh, my gloomy Mr. Gunter? Oh, why that frown, my gentle Mrs.
Grange?
</p>
<p>
One by one the great houses shut; shoal by shoal the little people sail
away. Yet beauty lingers still. Still the magnet of a straggling ball
attracts the remaining brilliants; still a lagging dinner, like a
sumpter-mule on a march, is a mark for plunder. The Park, too, is not yet
empty, and perhaps is even more fascinating; like a beauty in a
consumption, who each day gets thinner and more fair. The young Duke
remained to the last; for we linger about our first season, as we do about
our first mistress, rather wearied, yet full of delightful reminiscences.
</p>
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<h2>
BOOK II.
</h2>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER I.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>His Grace Meets an Early Love</i>
</pre>
<p>
LADY APHRODITE and the Duke of St. James were for the first time parted;
and with an absolute belief on the lady’s side, and an avowed conviction
on the gentleman’s, that it was impossible to live asunder, they
separated, her Ladyship shedding some temporary tears, and his Grace
vowing eternal fidelity.
</p>
<p>
It was the crafty Lord Fitz-pompey who brought about this catastrophe.
Having secured his nephew as a visitor to Malthorpe, by allowing him to
believe that the Graftons would form part of the summer coterie, his
Lordship took especial care that poor Lady Aphrodite should not be
invited. ‘Once part them, once get him to Malthorpe alone,’ mused the
experienced Peer, ‘and he will be emancipated. I am doing him, too, the
greatest kindness. What would I have given, when a young man, to have had
such an uncle!’
</p>
<p>
The Morning Post announced with a sigh the departure of the Duke of St.
James to the splendid festivities of Malthorpe; and also apprised the
world that Sir Lucius and Lady Aphrodite were entertaining a numerous and
distinguished party at their seat, Cleve Park, Cambridgeshire.
</p>
<p>
There was a constant bustle kept up at Malthorpe, and the young Duke was
hourly permitted to observe that, independent of all private feeling, it
was impossible for the most distinguished nobleman to ally himself with a
more considered family. There was a continual swell of guests dashing down
and dashing away, like the ocean; brilliant as its foam, numerous as its
waves. But there was one permanent inhabitant of this princely mansion far
more interesting to our hero than the evanescent crowds who rose like
bubbles, glittered, broke, and disappeared.
</p>
<p>
Once more wandering in that park of Malthorpe where had passed the
innocent days of his boyhood, his thoughts naturally recurred to the sweet
companion who had made even those hours of happiness more felicitous. Here
they had rambled, here they had first tried their ponies, there they had
nearly fallen, there he had quite saved her; here were the two very elms
where St. Maurice made for them a swing, here was the very keeper’s
cottage of which she had made for him a drawing, and which he still
retained. Dear girl! And had she disappointed the romance of his boyhood;
had the experience the want of which had allowed him then to be pleased so
easily, had it taught him to be ashamed of those days of affection? Was
she not now the most gentle, the most graceful, the most beautiful, the
most kind? Was she not the most wife-like woman whose eyes had ever beamed
with tenderness? Why, why not at once close a career which, though short,
yet already could yield reminiscences which might satisfy the most craving
admirer of excitement? But there was Lady Aphrodite; yet that must end.
Alas! on his part, it had commenced in levity; he feared, on hers, it must
terminate in anguish. Yet, though he loved his cousin; though he could not
recall to his memory the woman who was more worthy of being his wife, he
could not also conceal from himself that the feelings which impelled him
were hardly so romantic as he thought should have inspired a youth of
one-and-twenty when he mused on the woman he loved best. But he knew life,
and he felt convinced that a mistress and a wife must always be different
characters. A combination of passion with present respect and permanent
affection he supposed to be the delusion of romance writers. He thought he
must marry Caroline, partly because he must marry sooner or later; partly
because he had never met a woman whom he had loved so much, and partly
because he felt he should be miserable if her destiny in life were not, in
some way or other, connected with his own. ‘Ah! if she had but been my
sister!’
</p>
<p>
After a little more cogitation, the young Duke felt much inclined to make
his cousin a Duchess; but time did not press. After Doncaster he must
spend a few weeks at Cleve, and then he determined to come to an
explanation with Lady Aphrodite. In the meantime, Lord Fitz-pompey
secretly congratulated himself on his skilful policy, as he perceived his
nephew daily more engrossed with his daughter. Lady Caroline, like all
unaffected and accomplished women, was seen to great effect in the
country.
</p>
<p>
There, while they feed their birds, tend their flowers, and tune their
harp, and perform those more sacred, but not less pleasing, duties which
become the daughter of a great proprietor, they favourably contrast with
those more modish damsels who, the moment they are freed from the Park and
from Willis’s, begin fighting for silver arrows and patronising county
balls.
</p>
<p>
September came, and brought some relief to those who were suffering in the
inferno of provincial ennui; but this is only the purgatory to the
Paradise of <i>battues</i>. Yet September has its days of slaughter; and
the young Duke gained some laurels, with the aid of friend Egg, friend
Purdy, and Manton. And the Premier galloped down sixty miles in one
morning. He sacked his cover, made a light bet with St. James on the
favourite, lunched standing, and was off before night; for he had only
three days’ holiday, and had to visit Lord Protest, Lord Content, and Lord
Proxy. So, having knocked off four of his crack peers, he galloped back to
London to flog up his secretaries.
</p>
<p>
And the young Duke was off too. He had promised to spend a week with
Charles Annesley and Lord Squib, who had taken some Norfolk Baronet’s seat
for the autumn, and while he was at Spa were thinning his preserves. It
was a week! What fantastic dissipation! One day, the brains of three
hundred hares made a <i>pâté</i> for Charles Annesley. Oh, Heliogabalus!
you gained eternal fame for what is now ‘done in a corner!’
</p>
<p>
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER II.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A New Charmer</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Carnival of the North at length arrived. All civilised eyes were on
the most distinguished party of the most distinguished steward, who with
his horse Sanspareil seemed to share universal favour. The French Princes
and the Duke of Burlington; the Protocolis, and the Fitz-pompeys, and the
Bloomerlys; the Duke and Duchess of Shropshire, and the three Ladies
Wrekin, who might have passed for the Graces; Lord and Lady Vatican on a
visit from Rome, his Lordship taking hints for a heat in the Corso, and
her Ladyship, a classical beauty with a face like a cameo; St. Maurice,
and Annesley, and Squib, composed the party. The Premier was expected, and
there was murmur of an Archduke. Seven houses had been prepared, a
party-wall knocked down to make a dining-room, the plate sent down from
London, and venison and wine from Hauteville.
</p>
<p>
The assemblage exceeded in quantity and quality all preceding years, and
the Hauteville arms, the Hauteville liveries, and the Hauteville
outriders, beat all hollow in blazonry, and brilliancy, and number. The
North countrymen were proud of their young Duke and his carriages and six,
and longed for the Castle to be finished. Nothing could exceed the
propriety of the arrangements, for Sir Lucius was an unrivalled hand, and,
though a Newmarket man, gained universal approbation even in Yorkshire.
Lady Aphrodite was all smiles and new liveries, and the Duke of St. James
reined in his charger right often at her splendid equipage.
</p>
<p>
The day’s sport was over, and the evening’s sport begun, to a quiet man,
who has no bet more heavy than a dozen pair of gloves, perhaps not the
least amusing. Now came the numerous dinner-parties, none to be compared
to that of the Duke of St. James. Lady Aphrodite was alone wanting, but
she had to head the <i>ménage</i> of Sir Lucius. Every one has an appetite
after a race: the Duke of Shropshire attacked the venison as Samson the
Philistines; and the French princes, for once in their life, drank real
champagne.
</p>
<p>
Yet all faces were not so serene as those of the party of Hauteville. Many
a one felt that strange mixture of fear and exultation which precedes a
battle. To-morrow was the dreaded St. Leger.
</p>
<p>
‘Tis night, and the banquet is over, and all are hastening to the ball.
</p>
<p>
In spite of the brilliant crowd, the entrance of the Hauteville party made
a sensation. It was the crowning ornament to the scene, the stamp of the
sovereign, the lamp of the Pharos, the flag of the tower. The party
dispersed, and the Duke, after joining a quadrille with Lady Caroline,
wandered away to make himself generally popular.
</p>
<p>
As he was moving along, he turned his head; he started.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah!’ exclaimed his Grace.
</p>
<p>
The cause of this sudden and ungovernable exclamation can be no other than
a woman. You are right. The lady who had excited it was advancing in a
quadrille, some ten yards from her admirer. She was very young; that is to
say, she had, perhaps, added a year or two to sweet seventeen, an addition
which, while it does not deprive the sex of the early grace of girlhood,
adorns them with that indefinable dignity which is necessary to constitute
a perfect woman. She was not tall, but as she moved forward displayed a
figure so exquisitely symmetrical that for a moment the Duke forgot to
look at her face, and then her head was turned away; yet he was consoled a
moment for his disappointment by watching the movements of a neck so
white, and round, and long, and delicate, that it would have become
Psyche, and might have inspired Praxiteles. Her face is again turning
towards him. It stops too soon; yet his eye feeds upon the outline of a
cheek not too full, yet promising of beauty, like hope of Paradise.
</p>
<p>
She turns her head, she throws around a glance, and two streams of liquid
light pour from her hazel eyes on his. It was a rapid, graceful movement,
unstudied as the motion of a fawn, and was in a moment withdrawn, yet was
it long enough to stamp upon his memory a memorable countenance. Her face
was quite oval, her nose delicately aquiline, and her high pure forehead
like a Parian dome. The clear blood coursed under her transparent cheek,
and increased the brilliancy of her dazzling eyes. His never left her.
There was an expression of decision about her small mouth, an air of
almost mockery in her curling lip, which, though in themselves wildly
fascinating, strangely contrasted with all the beaming light and
beneficent lustre of the upper part of her countenance. There was
something, too, in the graceful but rather decided air with which she
moved, that seemed to betoken her self-consciousness of her beauty or her
rank; perhaps it might be her wit; for the Duke observed that while she
scarcely smiled, and conversed with lips hardly parted, her companion,
with whom she was evidently intimate, was almost constantly convulsed with
laughter, although, as he never spoke, it was clearly not at his own
jokes.
</p>
<p>
Was she married? Could it be? Impossible! Yet there was a richness in her
costume which was not usual for unmarried women. A diamond arrow had
pierced her clustering and auburn locks; she wore, indeed, no necklace;
with such a neck it would have been sacrilege; no ear-rings, for her ears
were too small for such a burthen; yet her girdle was of brilliants; and a
diamond cross worthy of Belinda and her immortal bard hung upon her
breast.
</p>
<p>
The Duke seized hold of the first person he knew: it was Lord Bagshot.
</p>
<p>
‘Tell me,’ he said, in the stern, low voice of a despot; ‘tell me who that
creature is.’
</p>
<p>
‘Which creature?’ asked Lord Bagshot.
</p>
<p>
‘Booby! brute! Bag, that creature of light and love!’
</p>
<p>
‘Where?’
</p>
<p>
‘There!
</p>
<p>
‘What, my mother?’
</p>
<p>
‘Your mother! cub! cart-horse! answer me, or I will run you through.’
</p>
<p>
‘Who do you mean?’
</p>
<p>
‘There, there, dancing with that raw-boned youth with red hair.’
</p>
<p>
‘What, Lord St. Jerome! Lor! he is a Catholic. I never speak to them. My
governor would be so savage.’
</p>
<p>
‘But the girl?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! the girl! Lor! she is a Catholic, too.’
</p>
<p>
‘But who is she?’
</p>
<p>
‘Lor! don’t you know?’
</p>
<p>
‘Speak, hound; speak!’
</p>
<p>
‘Lor! that is the beauty of the county; but then she is a Catholic. How
shocking! Blow us all up as soon as look at us.’
</p>
<p>
‘If you do not tell me who she is directly, you shall never get into
White’s. I will black-ball you regularly.’
</p>
<p>
‘Lor! man, don’t be in a passion. I will tell. But then I know you know
all the time. You are joking. Everybody knows the beauty of the county;
everybody knows May Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘May Dacre!’ said the Duke of St. James, as if he were shot.
</p>
<p>
‘Why, what is the matter now?’ asked Lord Bag-shot.
</p>
<p>
‘What, the daughter of Dacre of Castle Dacre?’ pursued his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘The very same; the beauty of the county. Everybody knows May Dacre. I
knew you knew her all the time. You did not take me in. Why, what is the
matter?’
</p>
<p>
‘Nothing; get away!’
</p>
<p>
‘Civil! But you will remember your promise about White’s?’
</p>
<p>
‘Ay! ay! I shall remember you when you are proposed.’
</p>
<p>
‘Here, here is a business!’ soliloquized the young Duke. ‘May Dacre! What
a fool I have been! Shall I shoot myself through the head, or embrace her
on the spot? Lord St. Jerome, too! He seems mightily pleased. And my
family have been voting for two centuries to emancipate this fellow! Curse
his grinning face! I am decidedly anti-Catholic. But then she is a
Catholic! I will turn Papist. Ah! there is Lucy. I want a counsellor.’
</p>
<p>
He turned to his fellow-steward. ‘Oh, Lucy! such a woman! such an
incident!’
</p>
<p>
‘What! the inimitable Miss Dacre, I suppose. Everybody speaking of her;
wherever I go, one subject of conversation. Burlington wanting to waltz
with her, Charles Annesley being introduced, and Lady Bloomerly decidedly
of opinion that she is the finest creature in the county. Well, have you
danced with her?’
</p>
<p>
‘Danced, my dear fellow! Do not speak to me.’
</p>
<p>
‘What is the matter?’
</p>
<p>
‘The most diabolical matter that you ever heard of.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, well?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have not even been introduced.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well! come on at once.’
</p>
<p>
‘I cannot.’
</p>
<p>
‘Are you mad?’
</p>
<p>
‘Worse than mad. Where is her father?’
</p>
<p>
‘Who cares?’
</p>
<p>
‘I do. In a word, my dear Lucy, her father is that guardian whom I have
perhaps mentioned to you, and to whom I have behaved so delicately.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why! I thought your guardian was an old curmudgeon.’
</p>
<p>
‘What does that signify, with such a daughter!’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! here is some mistake. This is the only child of Dacre of Castle
Dacre, a most delightful fellow; one of the first fellows in the county; I
was introduced to him to-day on the course. I thought you knew them. You
were admiring his outriders to-day, the green and silver.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, Bag told me they were old Lord Sunderland’s.’
</p>
<p>
‘Bag! How can you believe a word that booby says? He always has an answer.
To-day, when Afy drove in, I asked Bag who she was, and he said it was his
aunt, Lady de Courcy. I begged to be introduced, and took over the
blushing Bag and presented him.’
</p>
<p>
‘But the father; the father, Lucy! How shall I get out of this scrape?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! put on a bold face. Here! give him this ring, and swear you procured
it for him at Genoa, and then say that, now you are here, you will try his
pheasants.’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear fellow, you always joke. I am in agony. Seriously, what shall I
do?’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, seriously, be introduced to him, and do what you can.’
</p>
<p>
‘Which is he?’
</p>
<p>
‘At the extreme end, next to the very pretty woman, who, by-the-bye, I
recommend to your notice: Mrs. Dallington Vere. She is amusing. I know her
well. She is some sort of relation to your Dacres. I will present you to
both at once.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why! I will think of it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, then! I must away. The two stewards knocking their heads together
is rather out of character. Do you know it is raining hard? I am cursedly
nervous about to-morrow.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! pooh! If I could get through to-night, I should not care for
to-morrow.’
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER III.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Duke Apologises</i>
</pre>
<p>
AS SIR LUCIUS hurried off his colleague advanced towards the upper end of
the room, and, taking up a position, made his observations, through the
shooting figures of the dancers, on the dreaded Mr. Dacre. The late
guardian of the Duke of St. James was in the perfection of manhood;
perhaps five-and-forty by age; but his youth had lingered long. He was
tall, thin, and elegant, with a mild and benevolent expression of
countenance, not unmixed, however, with a little reserve, the ghost of
youthly pride. Listening with polished and courtly bearing to the pretty
Mrs. Dallington Vere, assenting occasionally to her piquant observations
by a slight bow, or expressing his dissent by a still slighter smile,
seldom himself speaking, yet always with that unembarrassed manner which
makes a saying listened to, Mr. Dacre was altogether, in appearance, one
of the most distinguished personages in this distinguished assembly. The
young Duke fell into an attitude worthy of Hamlet: ‘This, then, is <i>old</i>
Dacre! O deceitful Fitz-pompey! O silly St. James! Could I ever forget
that tall, mild man, who now is perfectly fresh in my memory? Ah! that
memory of mine; it has been greatly developed to-night. Would that I had
cultivated that faculty with a little more zeal! But what am I to do? The
case is urgent. What must the Dacres think of me? What must May Dacre
think? On the course the whole day, and I the steward, and not conscious
of the presence of the first family in the Riding! Fool, fool! Why, why
did I accept an office for which I was totally unfitted? Why, why must I
flirt away a whole morning with that silly Sophy Wrekin? An agreeable
predicament, truly, this! What would I give now once more to be in St.
James’s Street! Confound my Yorkshire estates! How they must dislike, how
they must despise me! And now, truly, I am to be <i>introduced</i> to him!
The Duke of St. James, Mr. Dacre! Mr. Dacre, the Duke of St. James! What
an insult to all parties! How supremely ludicrous! What a mode of offering
my gratitude to the man to whom I am under solemn and inconceivable
obligations! A choice way, truly, to salute the bosom-friend of my sire,
the guardian of my interests, the creator of my property, the fosterer of
my orphan infancy! It is useless to conceal it; I am placed in the most
disagreeable, the most inextricable situation. ‘Inextricable! Am I, then,
the Duke of St. James? Am I that being who, two hours ago, thought that
the world was formed alone for my enjoyment, and I quiver and shrink here
like a common hind? Out, out on such craven cowardice! I am no Hauteville!
I am bastard! Never! I will not be crushed. I will struggle with this
emergency; I will conquer it. Now aid me, ye heroes of my house! On the
sands of Palestine, on the plains of France, ye were not in a more
difficult situation than is your descendant in a ball-room in his own
county. My mind elevates itself to the occasion, my courage expands with
the enterprise; I will right myself with these Dacres with honour, and
without humiliation.’
</p>
<p>
The dancing ceased, the dancers disappeared. There was a blank between the
Duke of St. James on one side of the broad room, and Mr. Dacre and those
with whom he was conversing on the other. Many eyes were on his Grace, and
he seized the opportunity to execute his purpose. He advanced across the
chamber with the air of a young monarch greeting a victorious general. It
seemed that, for a moment, his Majesty wished to destroy all difference of
rank between himself and the man that he honoured. So studied and so
inexpressibly graceful were his movements that the gaze of all around
involuntarily fixed upon him. Mrs. Dallington Vere unconsciously refrained
from speaking as he approached; and one or two, without actually knowing
his purpose, made way. They seemed awed by his dignity, and shuffled
behind Mr. Dacre, as if he were the only person who was the Duke’s match.
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Dacre,’ said his Grace, in the softest but still audible tones, and
he extended, at the same time, his hand; ‘Mr. Dacre, our first meeting
should have been neither here nor thus; but you, who have excused so much,
will pardon also this!’
</p>
<p>
Mr. Dacre, though a calm personage, was surprised by this sudden address.
He could not doubt who was the speaker. He had left his ward a mere child.
He saw before him the exact and breathing image of the heart-friend of his
ancient days. He forgot all but the memory of a cherished friendship.
</p>
<p>
He was greatly affected; he pressed the offered hand; he advanced; he
moved aside. The young Duke followed up his advantage, and, with an air of
the greatest affection, placed Mr. Dacre’s arm in his own, and then bore
off his prize in triumph.
</p>
<p>
Right skilfully did our hero avail himself of his advantage. He spoke, and
he spoke with emotion. There is something inexpressibly captivating in the
contrition of a youthful and a generous mind. Mr. Dacre and his late ward
soon understood each other; for it was one of those meetings which
sentiment makes sweet.
</p>
<p>
‘And now,’ said his Grace, ‘I have one more favour to ask, and that is the
greatest: I wish to be recalled to the recollection of my oldest friend.’
</p>
<p>
Mr. Dacre led the Duke to his daughter; and the Earl of St. Jerome, who
was still laughing at her side, rose.
</p>
<p>
‘The Duke of St. James, May, wishes to renew his acquaintance with you.’
</p>
<p>
She bowed in silence. Lord St. Jerome, who was the great oracle of the
Yorkshire School, and who had betted desperately against the favourite,
took Mr. Dacre aside to consult him about the rain, and the Duke of St.
James dropped into his chair. That tongue, however, which had never failed
him, for once was wanting. There was a momentary silence, which the lady
would not break; and at last her companion broke it, and not felicitously.
</p>
<p>
‘I think there is nothing more delightful than meeting with old friends.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes! that is the usual sentiment; but I half suspect that it is a
commonplace, invented to cover our embarrassment under such circumstances;
for, after all, “an old friend” so situated is a person whom we have not
seen for many years, and most probably not cared to see.’
</p>
<p>
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<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
<img src="images/frontis_p79.jpg" alt="Frontis-p79 " width="100%" /><br />
</div>
<p>
‘You are indeed severe.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! no. I think there is nothing more painful than parting with old
friends; but when we have parted with them, I am half afraid they are
lost.’
</p>
<p>
‘Absence, then, with you is fatal?’
</p>
<p>
‘Really, I never did part with any one I greatly loved; but I suppose it
is with me as with most persons.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet you have resided abroad, and for many years?’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes; but I was too young then to have many friends; and, in fact, I
accompanied perhaps all that I possessed.’
</p>
<p>
‘How I regret that it was not in my power to accept your kind invitation
to Dacre in the Spring!’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! My father would have been very glad to see you; but we really are
dull kind of people, not at all in your way, and I really do not think
that you lost much amusement.’
</p>
<p>
‘What better amusement, what more interesting occupation, could I have had
than to visit the place where I passed my earliest and my happiest hours?
‘Tis nearly fifteen years since I was at Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘Except when you visited us at Easter. We regretted our loss.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! yes! except that,’ exclaimed the Duke, remembering his jäger’s call;
‘but that goes for nothing. I of course saw very little.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet, I assure you, you made a great impression. So eminent a personage,
of course, observes less than he himself is observed. We had a graphical
description of you on our return, and a very accurate one, too; for I
recognised your Grace to-night merely from the report of your visit.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke shot a shrewd glance at his companion’s face, but it betrayed no
indication of badinage, and so, rather puzzled, he thought it best to put
up with the parallel between himself and his servant. But Miss Dacre did
not quit this agreeable subject with all that promptitude which he fondly
anticipated.
</p>
<p>
‘Poor Lord St. Jerome,’ said she, ‘who is really the most unaffected
person I know, has been complaining most bitterly of his deficiency in the
<i>air noble</i>. He is mistaken for a groom perpetually; and once, he
says, had a <i>douceur</i> presented to him in his character of an ostler.
Your Grace must be proud of your advantage over him. You would have been
gratified by the universal panegyric of our household. They, of course,
you know, are proud of their young Duke, a real Yorkshire Duke, and they
love to dwell upon your truly imposing appearance. As for myself, who am
true Yorkshire also, I take the most honest pride in hearing them describe
your elegant attitude, leaning back in your britzska, with your feet on
the opposite cushions, your hat arranged aside with that air of
undefinable grace characteristic of the Grand Seigneur, and, which is the
last remnant of the feudal system, your reiterated orders to drive over an
old woman. You did not even condescend to speak English, which made them
quite enthusiastic—’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, Miss Dacre, spare me!’
</p>
<p>
‘Spare you! I have heard of your Grace’s modesty; but this excessive
sensibility, under well-earned praise, surprises me!’
</p>
<p>
‘But, Miss Dacre, you cannot indeed really believe that this vulgar
ruffian, this grim scarecrow, this Guy Faux, was—was—myself.’
</p>
<p>
‘Not yourself! Really, I am a simple personage. I believe in my eyes and
trust to my ears. I am at a loss for your meaning.’
</p>
<p>
‘I mean, then,’ said the Duke, who had gained time to rally, ‘that this
monster was some impostor, who must have stolen my carriage, picked my
pocket, and robbed me of my card, which, next to his reputation, is a
man’s most delicate possession.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then you never called upon us?’
</p>
<p>
‘I blush to confess it, never; but I will call, in future, every day.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your ingenuousness really rivals your modesty.’
</p>
<p>
‘Now, after these confessions and compliments, may I suggest a waltz?’
</p>
<p>
‘No one is waltzing now.’
</p>
<p>
‘When the quadrille, then, is finished?’
</p>
<p>
‘Then I am engaged.’
</p>
<p>
‘After your engagement?’
</p>
<p>
‘That is indeed making a business of pleasure. I have just refused a
similar request of your fellow-steward. We damsels shall soon be obliged
to carry a book to enrol our engagements as well as our bets, if this
system of reversionary dancing be any longer encouraged.’
</p>
<p>
‘But you must dance with me!’ said the Duke, imploringly.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! you will stumble upon me in the course of the evening, and I shall
probably be more fortunate.
</p>
<p>
I suppose you feel nervous about to-morrow?’
</p>
<p>
‘Not at all.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! I forgot. Your Grace’s horse is the favourite. Favourites always
win.’
</p>
<p>
‘Have I a horse?’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, Lord St. Jerome says he doubts whether it be one.’
</p>
<p>
‘Lord St. Jerome seems a vastly amusing personage; and, as he is so often
taken for an ostler, I have no doubt is an exceedingly good judge of
horse-flesh.’
</p>
<p>
Miss Dacre smiled. It was that wild, but rather wicked, gleam which
sometimes accompanies the indulgence of innocent malice. It seemed to
insinuate, ‘I know you are piqued, and I enjoy it’ But here her hand was
claimed for the waltz.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke remained musing.
</p>
<p>
‘There she swims away! By heavens! unrivalled! And there is Lady Afy and
Burlington; grand, too. Yet there is something in this little Dacre which
touches my fancy more. What is it? I think it is her impudence. That
confounded scrape of Carlstein! I will cashier him to-morrow. Confound his
airs! I think I got out of it pretty well. To-night, on the whole, has
been a night of triumph; but if I do not waltz with the little Dacre I
will only vote myself an ovation. But see, here comes Sir Lucius. Well!
how fares my brother consul?’
</p>
<p>
‘I do not like this rain. I have been hedging with Hounslow, having
previously set Bag at his worthy sire with a little information. We shall
have a perfect swamp, and then it will be strength against speed; the old
story. Damn the St. Leger. I am sick of it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! pooh! think of the little Dacre!’
</p>
<p>
‘Think of her, my dear fellow! I think of her too much. I should
absolutely have diddled Hounslow, if it had not been for her confounded
pretty face flitting about my stupid brain. I saw you speaking to Guardy.
You managed that business well.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, as I do all things, I flatter myself, Lucy. Do you know Lord St.
Jerome?’
</p>
<p>
‘Verbally. We have exchanged monosyllables; but he is of the other set.’
</p>
<p>
‘He is cursedly familiar with the little Dacre. As the friend of her
father, I think I shall interfere. Is there anything in it, think you?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! no; she is engaged to another.’
</p>
<p>
‘Engaged!’ said the Duke, absolutely turning pale.
</p>
<p>
‘Do you remember a Dacre at Eton?’
</p>
<p>
‘A Dacre at Eton!’ mused the Duke. At another time it would not have been
in his power to have recalled the stranger to his memory; but this evening
the train of association had been laid, and after struggling a moment with
his mind he had the man. ‘To be sure I do: Arundel Dacre, an odd sort of a
fellow; but he was my senior.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, that is the man; a nephew of Guardy, and cousin, of course, to La
Bellissima. He inherits, you know, all the property. She will not have a
sou; but old Dacre, as you call him, has managed pretty well, and Monsieur
Arundel is to compensate for the entail by presenting him with a
grandson.’
</p>
<p>
‘The deuce!’
</p>
<p>
‘The deuce, indeed! Often have I broken his head. Would that I had to a
little more purpose!’
</p>
<p>
‘Let us do it now!’
</p>
<p>
‘He is not here, otherwise——One dislikes a spooney to be
successful.’
</p>
<p>
‘Where are our friends?’
</p>
<p>
‘Annesley with the Duchess, and Squib with the Duke at écarté.’
</p>
<p>
‘Success attend them both!’
</p>
<p>
‘Amen!’
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER IV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Innocence and Experience</i>
</pre>
<p>
TO FEEL that the possessions of an illustrious ancestry are about to slide
from out your line for ever; that the numerous tenantry, who look up to
you with the confiding eye that the most liberal parvenu cannot attract,
will not count you among their lords; that the proud park, filled with the
ancient and toppling trees that your fathers planted, will yield neither
its glory nor its treasures to your seed, and that the old gallery, whose
walls are hung with pictures more cherished than the collections of kings,
will not breathe with your long posterity; all these are feelings sad and
trying, and are among those daily pangs which moralists have forgotten in
their catalogue of miseries, but which do not the less wear out those
heart-strings at which they are so constantly tugging.
</p>
<p>
This was the situation of Mr. Dacre. The whole of his large property was
entailed, and descended to his nephew, who was a Protestant; and yet, when
he looked upon the blooming face of his enchanting daughter, he blessed
the Providence which, after all his visitations, had doomed him to be the
sire of a thing so lovely. An exile from her country at an early age, the
education of May Dacre had been completed in a foreign land; yet the
mingling bloods of Dacre and of Howard would not in a moment have
permitted her to forget The inviolate island of the sage and free! even if
the unceasing and ever-watchful exertions of her father had been wanting
to make her worthy of so illustrious an ancestry.
</p>
<p>
But this, happily, was not the case; and to aid the development of the
infant mind of his young child, to pour forth to her, as she grew in years
and in reason, all the fruits of his own richly-cultivated intellect, was
the solitary consolation of one over whose conscious head was impending
the most awful of visitations. May Dacre was gifted with a mind which,
even if her tutor had not been her father, would have rendered tuition a
delight. Her lively imagination, which early unfolded itself; her
dangerous yet interesting vivacity; the keen delight, the swift
enthusiasm, with which she drank in knowledge, and then panted for more;
her shrewd acuteness, and her innate passion for the excellent and the
beautiful, filled her father with rapture which he repressed, and made him
feel conscious how much there was to check, to guide, and to form, as well
as to cherish, to admire, and to applaud.
</p>
<p>
As she grew up the bright parts of her character shone with increased
lustre; but, in spite of the exertions of her instructor, some less
admirable qualities had not yet disappeared. She was still too often the
dupe of her imagination, and though perfectly inexperienced, her
confidence in her theoretical knowledge of human nature was unbounded. She
had an idea that she could penetrate the characters of individuals at a
first meeting; and the consequence of this fatal axiom was, that she was
always the slave of first impressions, and constantly the victim of
prejudice. She was ever thinking individuals better or worse than they
really were, and she believed it to be out of the power of anyone to
deceive her. Constant attendance during many years on a dying and beloved
mother, and her deeply religious feelings, had first broken, and then
controlled, a spirit which nature had intended to be arrogant and haughty.
Her father she adored; and she seemed to devote to him all that
consideration which, with more common characters, is generally distributed
among their acquaintance. We hint at her faults. How shall we describe her
virtues? Her unbounded generosity, her dignified simplicity, her graceful
frankness, her true nobility of thought and feeling, her firmness, her
courage and her truth, her kindness to her inferiors, her constant
charity, her devotion to her parents, her sympathy with sorrow, her
detestation of oppression, her pure unsullied thoughts, her delicate
taste, her deep religion. All these combined would have formed a
delightful character, even if unaccompanied with such brilliant talents
and such brilliant beauty. Accustomed from an early age to the converse of
courts and the forms of the most polished circles, her manner became her
blood, her beauty, and her mind. Yet she rather acted in unison with the
spirit of society than obeyed its minutest decree. She violated etiquette
with a wilful grace which made the outrage a precedent, and she mingled
with princes without feeling her inferiority. Nature, and art, and fortune
were the graces which had combined to form this girl. She was a jewel set
in gold, and worn by a king.
</p>
<p>
Her creed had made her, in ancient Christendom, feel less an alien; but
when she returned to that native country which she had never forgotten,
she found that creed her degradation. Her indignant spirit clung with
renewed ardour to the crushed altars of her faith; and not before those
proud shrines where cardinals officiate, and a thousand acolytes fling
their censers, had she bowed with half the abandonment of spirit with
which she invoked the Virgin in her oratory at Dacre.
</p>
<p>
The recent death of her mother rendered Mr. Dacre and herself little
inclined to enter society; and as they were both desirous of residing on
that estate from which they had been so long and so unwillingly absent,
they had not yet visited London. The greater part of their time had been
passed chiefly in communication with those great Catholic families with
whom the Dacres were allied, and to which they belonged. The modern race
of the Howards and the Cliffords, the Talbots, the Arundels, and the
Jerninghams, were not unworthy of their proud progenitors. Miss Dacre
observed with respect, and assuredly with sympathy, the mild dignity, the
noble patience, the proud humility, the calm hope, the uncompromising
courage, with which her father and his friends sustained their oppression
and lived as proscribed in the realm which they had created. Yet her
lively fancy and gay spirit found less to admire in the feelings which
influenced these families in their intercourse with the world, which
induced them to foster but slight intimacies out of the pale of the
proscribed, and which tinged their domestic life with that formal and
gloomy colouring which ever accompanies a monotonous existence. Her
disposition told her that all this affected non-interference with the
business of society might be politic, but assuredly was not pleasant; her
quick sense whispered to her it was unwise, and that it retarded, not
advanced, the great result in which her sanguine temper dared often to
indulge. Under any circumstances, it did not appear to her to be wisdom to
second the efforts of their oppressors for their degradation or their
misery, and to seek no consolation in the amiable feelings of their
fellow-creatures for the stern rigour of their unsocial government. But,
independently of all general principles, Miss Dacre could not but believe
that it was the duty of the Catholic gentry to mix more with that world
which so misconceived their spirit. Proud in her conscious knowledge of
their exalted virtues, she felt that they had only to be known to be
recognised as the worthy leaders of that nation which they had so often
saved and never betrayed.
</p>
<p>
She did not conceal her opinions from the circle in which they had grown
up. All the young members were her disciples, and were decidedly of
opinion that if the House of Lords would but listen to May Dacre,
emancipation would be a settled thing. Her logic would have destroyed Lord
Liverpool’s arguments; her wit extinguished Lord Eldon’s jokes. But the
elder members only shed a solemn smile, and blessed May Dacre’s shining
eyes and sanguine spirit.
</p>
<p>
Her greatest supporter was Mrs. Dallington Vere. This lady was a distant
relation of Mr. Dacre. At seventeen she, herself a Catholic, had married
Mr. Dallington Vere, of Dallington House, a Catholic gentleman of
considerable fortune, whose age resembled his wealth. No sooner had this
incident taken place than did Mrs. Dallington Vere hurry to London, and
soon evinced a most laudable determination to console herself for her
husband’s political disabilities. Mrs. Dallington Vere went to Court; and
Mrs. Dallington Vere gave suppers after the opera, and concerts which, in
number and brilliancy, were only equalled by her balls. The dandies
patronised her, and selected her for their Muse. The Duke of Shropshire
betted on her always at écarté; and, to crown the whole affair, she made
Mr. Dallington Vere lay claim to a dormant peerage. The women were all
pique, the men all patronage. A Protestant minister was alarmed; and Lord
Squib supposed that Mrs. Dallington must be the Scarlet Lady of whom they
had heard so often.
</p>
<p>
Season after season she kept up the ball; and although, of course, she no
longer made an equal sensation, she was not less brilliant, nor her
position less eminent. She had got into the best set, and was more quiet,
like a patriot in place. Never was there a gayer lady than Mrs. Dallington
Vere, but never a more prudent one. Her virtue was only equalled by her
discretion; but, as the odds were equal, Lord Squib betted on the last.
People sometimes indeed did say—they always will—but what is
talk? Mere breath. And reputation is marble, and iron, and sometimes
brass; and so, you see, talk has no chance. They did say that Sir Lucius
Grafton was about to enter into the Romish communion; but then it turned
out that it was only to get a divorce from his wife, on the plea that she
was a heretic.
</p>
<p>
The fact was, Mrs. Dallington Vere was a most successful woman, lucky in
everything, lucky even in her husband; for he died. He did not only die;
he left his whole fortune to his wife. Some said that his relations were
going to set aside the will, on the plea that it was written with a
crow-quill on pink paper; but this was false; it was only a codicil.
</p>
<p>
All eyes were on a very pretty woman, with fifteen thousand a year, and
only twenty-three. The Duke of Shropshire wished he were disembarrassed.
Such a player of écarté might double her income. Lord Raff advanced,
trusting to his beard, and young Amadée de Rouerie mortgaged his
dressing-case, and came post from Paris; but in spite of his sky-blue
nether garments and his Hessians, he followed my Lord’s example, and
re-crossed the water. It is even said that Lord Squib was sentimental; but
this must have been the malice of Charles Annesley.
</p>
<p>
All, however, failed. The truth is, Mrs. Dallington Vere had nothing to
gain by re-entering Paradise, which matrimony, of course, is; and so she
determined to remain mistress of herself. She had gained fashion, and
fortune, and rank; she was young, and she was pretty. She thought it might
be possible for a discreet, experienced little lady to lead a very
pleasant life without being assisted in her expenses or disturbed in her
diversion by a gentleman who called himself her husband, occasionally
asked her how she slept in a bed which he did not share, or munificently
presented her with a necklace purchased with her own money. Discreet Mrs.
Dallington Vere!
</p>
<p>
She had been absent from London during the past season, having taken it
also into her head to travel.
</p>
<p>
She was equally admired and equally plotted for at Rome, at Paris, and at
Vienna, as at London; but the bird had not been caught, and, flying away,
left many a despairing prince and amorous count to muse over their lean
visages and meagre incomes.
</p>
<p>
Dallington House made its fair mistress a neighbour of her relations, the
Dacres. No one could be a more fascinating companion than Mrs. Dallington
Vere. May Dacre read her character at once, and these ladies became great
allies. She was to assist Miss Dacre in her plans for rousing their
Catholic friends, as no one was better qualified to be her adjutant.
Already they had commenced their operations, and balls at Dallington and
Dacre, frequent, splendid, and various, had already made the Catholic
houses the most eminent in the Riding, and their brilliant mistresses the
heroines of all the youth.
</p>
<p>
<a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
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<div style="height: 4em;">
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER V.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Ruined Hopes</i>
</pre>
<p>
IT RAINED all night without ceasing yet the morrow was serene.
Nevertheless the odds had shifted. On the evening, thy had not been more
than two to one against the first favourite, the Duke of St. James’s ch.
c. Sanspareil, by Ne Plus Ultra; while they were five to one against the
second favourite, Mr. Dash’s gr. c. The Dandy, by Banker, and nine and ten
to one against the next in favour. This morning, however, affairs were
altered. Mr. Dash and his Dandy were at the head of the poll; and as the
owner rode his own horse, being a jockey and a fit rival for the Duke of
St. James, his backers were sanguine. Sanspareil, was, however, the second
favourite.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, however, was confident as an universal conqueror, and came on in
his usual state, rode round the course, inspirited Lady Aphrodite, who was
all anxiety, betted with Miss Dacre, and bowed to Mrs. Dallington.
</p>
<p>
There were more than ninety horses, and yet the start was fair. But the
result? Pardon me! The fatal remembrance overpowers my pen. An effort and
some <i>Eau de Portingale</i>, and I shall recover. The first favourite
was never heard of, the second favourite was never seen after the distance
post, all the ten-to-oners were in the rear, and a <i>dark</i> horse,
which had never been thought of, and which the careless St. James had
never even observed in the list, rushed past the grand stand in sweeping
triumph. The spectators were almost too surprised to cheer; but when the
name of the winner was detected there was a deafening shout, particularly
from the Yorkshiremen. The victor was the Earl of St. Jerome’s b. f. May
Dacre, by Howard.
</p>
<p>
Conceive the confusion! Sanspareil was at last discovered, and immediately
shipped off for Newmarket, as young gentlemen who get into scrapes are
sent to travel. The Dukes of Burlington and Shropshire exchanged a few
hundreds; the Duchess and Charles Annesley a few gloves. The consummate
Lord Bloomerly, though a backer of the favourite, in compliment to his
host, contrived to receive from all parties, and particularly from St.
Maurice. The sweet little Wrekins were absolutely ruined. Sir Lucius
looked blue, but he had hedged; and Lord Squib looked yellow, but some
doubted. Lord Hounslow was done, and Lord Bagshot was diddled.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James was perhaps the heaviest sufferer on the field, and
certainly bore his losses the best. Had he seen the five-and-twenty
thousand he was minus counted before him, he probably would have been
staggered; but as it was, another crumb of his half-million was gone. The
loss existed only in idea. It was really too trifling to think of, and he
galloped up to Miss Dacre, and was among the warmest of her
congratulators.
</p>
<p>
‘I would offer your Grace my sympathy for your congratulations,’ said Miss
Dacre, in a rather amiable tone; ‘but’ (and here she resumed her air of
mockery) ‘you are too great a man to be affected by so light a casualty.
And, now that I recollect myself, did you run a horse?’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, no; the fault was, I believe, that he would not run; but Sanspareil
is as great a hero as ever. He has only been conquered by the elements.’
</p>
<p>
The dinner at the Duke of St. James’s was this day more splendid even than
the preceding. He was determined to show that the disappointment had
produced no effect upon the temper of so imperial a personage as himself,
and he invited several of the leading gentry to join his coterie. The
Dacres were among the solicited; but they were, during the races, the
guests of Mrs. Dallington Vere, whose seat was only a mile off, and
therefore were unobtainable.
</p>
<p>
Blazed the plate, sparkled the wine, and the aromatic venison sent forth
its odourous incense to the skies. The favourite cook had done wonders,
though a Sanspareil pâté, on which he had been meditating for a week, was
obliged to be suppressed, and was sent up as a tourte à la Bourbon, in
compliment to his Royal Highness. It was a delightful party: all the
stiffness of metropolitan society disappeared. All talked, and laughed,
and ate, and drank; and the Protocolis and the French princes, who were
most active members of a banquet, ceased sometimes, from want of breath,
to moralize on the English character. The little Wrekins, with their
well-acted lamentations over their losses, were capital; and Sophy nearly
smiled and chattered her head this day into the reversion of the coronet
of Fitz-pompey. May she succeed! For a wilder little partridge never yet
flew. Caroline St. Maurice alone was sad, and would not be comforted;
although St. James, observing her gloom, and guessing at its cause, had in
private assured her that, far from losing, on the whole he was perhaps
even a winner.
</p>
<p>
None, however, talked more agreeable nonsense and made a more elegant
uproar than the Duke of St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘These young men,’ whispered Lord Squib to Annesley, ‘do not know the
value of money. We must teach it them. I know too well; I find it very
dear.’
</p>
<p>
If the old physicians are correct in considering from twenty-five to
thirty-five as the period of lusty youth, Lord Squib was still a lusty
youth, though a very corpulent one indeed. The carnival of his life,
however, was nearly over, and probably the termination of the race-week
might hail him a man. He was the best fellow in the world; short and
sleek, half bald, and looked fifty; with a waist, however, which had not
yet vanished, and where Art successfully controlled rebellious Nature,
like the Austrians the Lombards. If he were not exactly a wit, he was
still, however, full of unaffected fun, and threw out the results of a <i>roué</i>
life with considerable ease and point. He had inherited a fair and
peer-like property, which he had contrived to embarrass in so complicated
and extraordinary a manner that he had been a ruined man for years, and
yet lived well on an income allowed him by his creditors to manage his
estate for their benefit. The joke was, he really managed it well. It was
his hobby, and he prided himself especially upon his character as a man of
business.
</p>
<p>
The banquet is certainly the best preparative for the ball, if its
blessings be not abused, for then you get heavy. Your true votary of
Terpsichore, and of him we only speak, requires, particularly in a land of
easterly winds, which cut into his cab-head at every turn of every street,
some previous process to make his blood set him an example in dancing. It
is strong Burgundy and his sparkling sister champagne that make a
race-ball always so amusing a <i>divertissement</i>. One enters the room
with a gay elation which defies rule without violating etiquette, and in
these county meetings there is a variety of character, and classes, and
manners, which is interesting, and affords an agreeable contrast to those
more brilliant and refined assemblies the members of which, being educated
by exactly the same system and with exactly the same ideas, think, look,
move, talk, dress, and even eat, alike; the only remarkable personage
being a woman somewhat more beautiful than the beauties who surround her,
and a man rather more original in his affectations than the puppies that
surround him. The proof of the general dulness of polite circles is the
great sensation that is always produced by a new face. The season always
commences briskly, because there are so many. Ball, and dinner, and
concert collect then plentiful votaries; but as we move on the dulness
will develop itself, and then come the morning breakfast, and the water
party, and the <i>fête champêtre</i>, all desperate attempts to produce
variety with old materials, and to occasion a second effect by a cause
which is already exhausted.
</p>
<p>
These philosophical remarks precede another introduction to the public
ball-room at Doncaster. Mrs. Dallington Vere and Miss Dacre are walking
arm in arm at the upper end of the room.
</p>
<p>
‘You are disappointed, love, about Arundel?’ said Mrs. Dallington.
</p>
<p>
‘Bitterly; I never counted on any event more certainly than on his return
this summer.’
</p>
<p>
‘And why tarrieth the wanderer? unwillingly of course?’
</p>
<p>
‘Lord Darrell, who was to have gone over as <i>Chargé d’affaires</i>, has
announced to his father the impossibility of his becoming a diplomatist,
so our poor <i>attaché</i> suffers, and is obliged to bear the <i>portefeuille
ad interim</i>.’
</p>
<p>
‘Does your cousin like Vienna?’
</p>
<p>
‘Not at all. He is a regular John Bull; and, if I am to judge from his
correspondence, he will make an excellent ambassador in one sense, for I
think his fidelity and his patriotism may be depended on. We seldom serve
those whom we do not love; and, if I am to believe Arundel, there is
neither a person nor a place on the whole Continent that affords him the
least satisfaction.’
</p>
<p>
‘How singular, then, that he should have fixed on such a <i>métier</i>;
but, I suppose, like other young men, his friends fixed for him?’
</p>
<p>
‘Not at all. No step could be less pleasing to my father than his leaving
England; but Arundel is quite unmanageable, even by papa. He is the oddest
but the dearest person in the world!’
</p>
<p>
‘He is very clever, is he not?’
</p>
<p>
‘I think so. I have no doubt he will distinguish himself, whatever career
he runs; but he is so extremely singular in his manner that I do not think
his general reputation harmonises with my private opinion.’
</p>
<p>
‘And will his visit to England be a long one?’
</p>
<p>
‘I hope that it will be a permanent one. I, you know, am his confidant,
and entrusted with all his plans. If I succeed in arranging something
according to his wishes, I hope that he will not again quit us.’
</p>
<p>
‘I pray you may, sweet! and wish, love, for your sake, that he would enter
the room this moment.’
</p>
<p>
‘This is the most successful meeting, I should think, that ever was known
at Doncaster,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘We are, at least, indebted to the Duke of
St. James for a very agreeable party, to say nothing of all the gloves we
have won.’
</p>
<p>
‘How do you like the Duke of Burlington?’
</p>
<p>
‘Much. There is a calm courtliness about him which I think very imposing.
He is the only man I ever saw who, without being very young, was not an
unfit companion for youth. And there is no affectation of juvenility about
him. He involuntarily reminds you of youth, as an empty orchestra does of
music.’
</p>
<p>
‘I shall tell him this. He is already your devoted; and I have no doubt
that, inspired at the same time by your universal charms and our universal
hints, I shall soon hail you Duchess of Burlington. Don Arundel will
repent his diplomacy.’
</p>
<p>
‘I thought I was to be another Duchess this morning.’
</p>
<p>
‘You deserve to be a triple one. But dream not of the unhappy patron of
Sanspareil. There is something in his eyes which tells me he is not a
marrying man.’
</p>
<p>
There was a momentary pause, and Miss Dacre spoke.
</p>
<p>
‘I like his brother steward, Bertha. Sir Lucius is witty and candid. It is
an agreeable thing to see a man who had been so gay, and who has had so
many temptations to be gay, turn into a regular domestic character,
without losing any of those qualities which made him an ornament to
society. When men of the world terminate their career as prudently as Sir
Lucius, I observe that they are always amusing companions, because they
are perfectly unaffected.’
</p>
<p>
‘No one is more unaffected than Lucius Grafton. I am quite happy to find
you like him; for he is an old friend of mine, and I know that he has a
good heart.’
</p>
<p>
‘I like him especially because he likes you.’
</p>
<p>
‘Dearest!’
</p>
<p>
‘He introduced me to Lady Afy. I perceive that she is very attached to her
husband.’
</p>
<p>
‘Lady Afy is a charming woman. I know no woman so truly elegant as Lady
Afy. The young Duke, you know they say, greatly admires Lady Afy.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! does he? Well now, I should have thought her rather a sentimental and
serious donna; one very unlikely———’
</p>
<p>
‘Hush! here come two cavaliers.’
</p>
<p>
The Dukes of Burlington and St. James advanced.
</p>
<p>
‘We are attracted by observing two nymphs wandering in this desert,’ said
his Grace of Burlington. This was the Burgundy.
</p>
<p>
‘And we wish to know whether there be any dragon to destroy, any ogre to
devour, any magician to massacre, or how, when, and where we can testify
our devotion to the ladies of our love,’ added his Grace of St. James.
This was the champagne.
</p>
<p>
‘The age of chivalry is past,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘Bores have succeeded to
dragons, and I have shivered too many lances in vain ever to hope for
their extirpation; and as for enchantments——’
</p>
<p>
‘They depend only upon yourself,’ gallantly interrupted the Duke of
Burgundy. Psha!—Burlington.
</p>
<p>
‘Our spells are dissolved, our wands are sunk five fathom deep; we had
retired to this solitude, and we were moralising,’ said Mrs. Dallington
Vere.
</p>
<p>
‘Then you were doing an extremely useless and not very magnanimous thing,’
said the Duke of St. James; ‘for to moralise in a desert is no great
exertion of philosophy. You should moralise in a drawing-room; and so let
me propose our return to that world which must long have missed us. Let us
do something to astound these elegant barbarians. Look at that young
gentleman: how stiff he is! A Yorkshire Apollo! Look at that old lady; how
elaborately she simpers! The Venus of the Riding! They absolutely attempt
to flirt. Let us give them a gallop!’
</p>
<p>
He was advancing to salute this provincial couple; but his more mature
companion repressed him.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! I forgot,’ said the young Duke. ‘I am Yorkshire. If I were a western,
like yourself, I might compromise my character. Your Grace monopolises the
fun.’
</p>
<p>
‘I think you may safely attack them,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘I do not think you
will be recognised. People entertain in this barbarous country, such
vulgar, old-fashioned notions of a Duke of St. James, that I have not the
least doubt your Grace might have a good deal of fun without being found
out.’
</p>
<p>
‘There is no necessity,’ said the Duke, ‘to fly from Miss Dacre for
amusement. By-the-bye, you make a good repartee. You must permit me to
introduce you to my friend, Lord Squib. I am sure you would agree so.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have been introduced to Lord Squib.’
</p>
<p>
‘And you found him most amusing? Did he say anything which vindicates my
appointment of him as my court jester?’
</p>
<p>
‘I found him modest. He endeavoured to excuse his errors by being your
companion; and to prove his virtues by being mine.’
</p>
<p>
‘Treacherous Squib! I positively must call him out. Duke, bear him a
cartel.’
</p>
<p>
‘The quarrel is ours, and must be decided here,’ said Mrs. Dallington
Vere. ‘I second Miss Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘We are in the way of some good people here, I think,’ said the Duke of
Burlington, who, though the most dignified, was the most considerate of
men; ‘at least, here are a stray couple or two staring as if they wished
us to understand we prevented a set.’
</p>
<p>
‘Let them stare,’ said the Duke of St. James; ‘we were made to be looked
at. ‘Tis our vocation, Hal, and they are gifted with vision purposely to
behold us.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace,’ said Miss Dacre, ‘reminds me of my old friend, Prince
Rubarini, who told me one day that when he got up late he always gave
orders to have the sun put back a couple of hours.’
</p>
<p>
‘And you, Miss Dacre, remind me of my old friend, the Duchess of Nevers,
who told me one day that in the course of her experience she had only met
one man who was her rival in repartee.’
</p>
<p>
‘And that man,’ asked Mrs. Vere.
</p>
<p>
‘Was your slave, Mrs. Dallington,’ said the young Duke, bowing profoundly,
with his hand on his heart.
</p>
<p>
‘I remember she said the same thing to me,’ said the Duke of Burlington,
‘about ten years before.’
</p>
<p>
‘That was her grandmother, Burley,’ said the Duke of St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘Her grandmother!’ said Mrs. Dallington, exciting the contest.
</p>
<p>
‘Decidedly,’ said the young Duke. ‘I remember my friend always spoke of
the Duke of Burlington as grandpapa.’
</p>
<p>
‘You will profit, I have no doubt, then, by the company of so venerable a
friend,’ said Miss Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘Why,’ said the young Duke, ‘I am not a believer in the perfectibility of
the species; and you know, that when we come to a certain point——’
</p>
<p>
‘We must despair of improvement,’ said the Duke of Burlington.
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace came forward, like a true knight, to my rescue,’ said Miss
Dacre, bowing to the Duke of Burlington.
</p>
<p>
‘Beauty can inspire miracles,’ said the Duke of St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘This young gentleman has been spoiled by travel, Miss Dacre,’ said the
Duke of Burlington. ‘You have much to answer for, for he tells every one
that you were his guardian.’
</p>
<p>
The eyes of Miss Dacre and the Duke of St. James met. He bowed with that
graceful impudence which is, after all, the best explanation for every
possible misunderstanding.
</p>
<p>
‘I always heard that the Duke of St. James was born of age,’ said Miss
Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘The report was rife on the Continent when I travelled,’ said Mrs.
Dallington Vere.
</p>
<p>
‘That was only a poetical allegory, which veiled the precocious results of
my fair tutor’s exertions.’
</p>
<p>
‘How discreet he is!’ said the Duke of Burlington. ‘You may tell
immediately that he is two-and-forty.’
</p>
<p>
‘We are neither of us, though, off the <i>pavé</i> yet, Burlington; so
what say you to inducing these inspiring muses to join the waltz which is
just now commencing?’
</p>
<p>
The young Duke offered his hand to Miss Dacre, and, followed by their
companions, they were in a few minutes lost in the waves of the waltzers.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Complaisant Spouse</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE gaieties of the race-week closed with a ball at Dallington House. As
the pretty mistress of this proud mansion was acquainted with all the
members of the ducal party, our hero and his noble band were among those
who honoured it with their presence.
</p>
<p>
We really have had so many balls both in this and other as immortal works
that, in a literary point of view, we think we must give up dancing; nor
would we have introduced you to Dallington House if there had been no more
serious business on hand than a flirtation with a lady or a lobster salad.
Ah! why is not a little brief communion with the last as innocent as with
the first?
</p>
<p>
Small feet are flitting in the mazy dance and music winds with inspiring
harmony through halls whose lofty mirrors multiply beauty and add fresh
lustre to the blazing lights. May Dacre there is wandering like a peri in
Paradise, and Lady Aphrodite is glancing with her dazzling brow, yet an
Asmodeus might detect an occasional gloom over her radiant face. It is but
for an instant, yet it thrills. She looks like some favoured sultana, who
muses for a moment amid her splendour on her early love.
</p>
<p>
And she, the sparkling mistress of this scene; say, where is she? Not
among the dancers, though a more graceful form you could scarcely look
upon; not even among her guests, though a more accomplished hostess it
would be hard to find. Gaiety pours forth its flood, and all are thinking
of themselves, or of some one sweeter even than self-consciousness, or
else perhaps one absent might be missed.
</p>
<p>
Leaning on the arm of Sir Lucius Grafton, and shrouded in her cashmere,
Mrs. Dallington Vere paces the terrace in earnest conversation.
</p>
<p>
‘If I fail in this,’ said Sir Lucius, ‘I shall be desperate. Fortune seems
to have sent him for the very purpose. Think only of the state of affairs
for a moment. After a thousand plots on my part; after having for the last
two years never ceased my exertions to make her commit herself; when
neither a love of pleasure, nor a love of revenge, nor the thoughtlessness
to which women in her situation generally have recourse, produced the
slightest effect; this stripling starts upon the stage, and in a moment
the iceberg melts. Oh! I never shall forget the rapture of the moment when
the faithful Lachen announced the miracle!’
</p>
<p>
‘But why not let the adventure take the usual course? You have your
evidence, or you can get it. Finish the business. The <i>exposés</i>, to
be sure, are disagreeable enough; but to be the talk of the town for a
week is no great suffering. Go to Baden, drink the waters, and it will be
forgotten. Surely this is an inconvenience not to be weighed for a moment
against the great result.’
</p>
<p>
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<p>
‘Believe me, my dearest friend, Lucy Grafton cares very little about the
babble of the million, provided it do not obstruct him in his objects.
Would to Heaven I could proceed in the summary and effectual mode you
point out; but that I much doubt. There is about Afy, in spite of all her
softness and humility, a strange spirit, a cursed courage or obstinacy,
which sometimes has blazed out, when I have over-galled her, in a way
half-awful. I confess I dread her standing at bay. I am in her power, and
a divorce she could successfully oppose if I appeared to be the person who
hastened the catastrophe and she were piqued to show that she would not
fall an easy victim. No, no! I have a surer, though a more difficult,
game. She is intoxicated with this boy. I will drive her into his arms.’
</p>
<p>
‘A probable result, forsooth! I do not think your genius has particularly
brightened since we last met. I thought your letters were getting dull.
You seem to forget that there is a third person to be consulted in this
adventure. And why in the name of Doctors’ Commons, the Duke is to close
his career by marrying a woman of whom, with your leave, he is already, if
experience be not a dream, half-wearied, is really past my comprehension,
although as Yorkshire, Lucy, I should not, you know, be the least
apprehensive of mortals.’
</p>
<p>
‘I depend upon my unbounded influence over St. James.’
</p>
<p>
‘What! do you mean to recommend the step, then?’
</p>
<p>
‘Hear me! At present I am his confidential counsellor on all subjects——’
</p>
<p>
‘But one.’
</p>
<p>
‘Patience, fair dame; and I have hitherto imperceptibly, but efficiently,
exerted my influence to prevent his getting entangled with any other
nets.’
</p>
<p>
‘Faithful friend!’
</p>
<p>
‘<i>Point de moquerie!</i> Listen. I depend further upon his perfect
inexperience of women; for, in spite of his numerous gallantries, he has
never yet had a grand passion, and is quite ignorant, even at this moment,
how involved his feelings are with his mistress. He has not yet learnt the
bitter lesson that, unless we despise a woman when we cease to love her,
we are still a slave, without the consolement of intoxication. I depend
further upon his strong feelings; for strong I perceive they are, with all
his affectation; and on his weakness of character, which will allow him to
be the dupe of his first great emotion. It is to prevent that explosion
from taking place under any other roof than my own that I now require your
advice and assistance; that advice and assistance which already have done
so much for me. I like not this sudden and uncontemplated visit to Castle
Dacre. I fear these Dacres; I fear the revulsion of his feelings. Above
all, I fear that girl.’
</p>
<p>
‘But her cousin; is he not a talisman? She loves him.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! a cousin! Is not the name an answer? She loves him as she loves her
pony; because he was her companion when she was a child, and kissed her
when they gathered strawberries together. The pallid, moonlight passion of
a cousin, and an absent one, too, has but a sorry chance against the
blazing beams that shoot from the eyes of a new lover. Would to Heaven
that I had not to go down to my boobies at Cleve! I should like nothing
better than to amuse myself an autumn at Dallington with the little Dacre,
and put an end to such an unnatural and irreligious connection. She is a
splendid creature! Bring her to town next season.’
</p>
<p>
‘But to the point. You wish me, I imagine, to act the same part with the
lady as you have done with the gentleman. I am to step in, I suppose, as
the confidential counsellor on all subjects of sweet May. I am to preserve
her from a youth whose passions are so impetuous and whose principles are
so unformed.’
</p>
<p>
‘Admirable Bertha! You read my thoughts.’
</p>
<p>
‘But suppose I endanger, instead of advance, your plans. Suppose, for
instance, I captivate his Grace. As extraordinary things have happened, as
you know. High place must be respected, and the coronet of a Duchess must
not be despised.’
</p>
<p>
‘All considerations must yield to you, as do all men,’ said Sir Lucius,
with ready gallantry, but not free from anxiety.
</p>
<p>
‘No, no; there is no danger of that. I am not going to play traitress to
my system, even for the Duke of St. James; therefore, anything that occurs
between us shall be merely an incident <i>pour passer le temps seulement</i>,
and to preserve our young friend from the little Dacre. I have no doubt he
will behave very well, and that I shall send him safe to Cleve Park in a
fortnight with a good character. I would recommend you, however, not to
encourage any unreasonable delay.’
</p>
<p>
‘Certainly not; but I must, of course, be guided by circumstances.’ Sir
Lucius observed truly. There were other considerations besides getting rid
of his spouse which cemented his friendship with the young Duke. It will
be curious if lending a few thousands to the husband save our hero from
the wife. There is no such thing as unmixed evil. A man who loses his
money gains, at least, experience, and sometimes something better. But
what the Duke of St. James gained is not yet to be told.
</p>
<p>
‘And you like Lachen?’ asked Mrs. Dallington.
</p>
<p>
‘Very much.’
</p>
<p>
‘I formed her with great care, but you must keep her in good humour.’
</p>
<p>
‘That is not difficult. <i>Elle est très jolie</i>; and pretty women, like
yourself, are always good-natured.’
</p>
<p>
‘But has she really worked herself into the confidence of the virtuous
Aphrodite?’
</p>
<p>
‘Entirely. And the humour is, that Lachen has persuaded her that Lachen
herself is on the best possible terms with my confidential valet, and can
make herself at all times mistress of her master’s secrets. So it is
always in my power, apparently without taking the slightest interest in
Afy’s conduct, to regulate it as I will. At present she believes that my
affairs are in a distracted state, and that I intend to reside solely on
the Continent, and to bear her off from her Cupidon. This thought haunts
her rest, and hangs heavy on her waking mind. I think it will do the
business.’
</p>
<p>
‘We have been too long absent. Let us return.’
</p>
<p>
‘I accompany you, my charming friend. What should I do without such an
ally? I only wish that I could assist you in a manner equally friendly. Is
there no obdurate hero who wants a confidential adviser to dilate upon
your charms, or to counsel him to throw himself at your feet; or are that
beautiful in face and lovely form, as they must always be, invincible?’
</p>
<p>
‘I assure you quite disembarrassed of any attentions whatever. But, I
suppose, when I return to Athens, I must get Platonic again.’
</p>
<p>
‘Let me be the philosopher!’
</p>
<p>
‘No, no; we know each other too well. I have been free ever since that
fatal affair of young Darrell, and travel has restored my spirits a
little. They say his brother is just as handsome. He was expected at
Vienna, but I could not meet him, although I suppose, as I made him a
Viscount, I am rather popular than not with him.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! pooh! think not of this. No one blames you. You are still a
universal favourite. But I would recommend you, nevertheless, to take me
as your cavalier.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are too generous, or too bold. No, man! I am tired of flirtation, and
really think, for variety’s sake, I must fall in love. After all, there is
nothing like the delicious dream, though it be but a dream. Spite of my
discretion, I sometimes tremble lest I should end by making myself a fool,
with some grand passion. You look serious. Fear not for the young Duke. He
is a dazzling gentleman, but not a hero exactly to my taste.’
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>At Castle Dacre</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE moment that was to dissolve the spell which had combined and enchanted
so many thousands of human beings arrived. Nobles and nobodies, beauties
and blacklegs, dispersed in all directions. The Duke of Burlington carried
off the French princes and the Protocolis, the Bloomerlys and the
Vaticans, to his Paradise of Marringworth. The Fitz-pompeys cantered off
with the Shropshires; omen of felicity to the enamoured St. Maurice and
the enamouring Sophy. Annesley and Squib returned to their pâtés. Sir
Lucius and Lady Aphrodite, neither of them with tempers like summer skies,
betook their way to Cambridgeshire, like Adam and Eve from the glorious
garden. The Duke of St. James, after a hurried visit to London, found
himself, at the beginning of October, on his way to Dacre.
</p>
<p>
As his carriage rolled on he revelled in delicious fancies. The young Duke
built castles not only at Hauteville, but in less substantial regions.
Reverie, in the flush of our warm youth, generally indulges in the future.
We are always anticipating the next adventure and clothe the coming
heroine with a rosy tint. When we advance a little on our limited journey,
and an act or two of the comedy, the gayest in all probability, are over,
the wizard Memory dethrones the witch Imagination, and ‘tis the past on
which the mind feeds in its musings. ‘Tis then we ponder on each great
result which has stolen on us without the labour of reflection; ‘tis then
we analyse emotions which, at the time, we could not comprehend, and probe
the action which passion inspired, and which prejudice has hitherto
defended. Alas! who can strike these occasional balances in life’s great
ledger without a sigh! Alas! how little do they promise in favour of the
great account! What whisperings of final bankruptcy! what a damnable
consciousness of present insolvency! My friends! what a blunder is youth!
Ah! why does Truth light her torch but to illume the ruined temple of our
existence! Ah! why do we know we are men only to be conscious of our
exhausted energies!
</p>
<p>
And yet there is a pleasure in a deal of judgment which your judicious man
alone can understand. It is agreeable to see some younkers falling into
the same traps which have broken our own shins; and, shipwrecked on the
island of our hopes, one likes to mark a vessel go down full in sight.
‘Tis demonstration that we are not branded as Cains among the favoured
race of man. Then giving advice: that <i>is</i> delicious, and perhaps
repays one all. It is a privilege your grey-haired signors solely can
enjoy; but young men now-a-days may make some claims to it. And, after
all, experience is a thing that all men praise. Bards sing its glories,
and proud Philosophy has long elected it her favourite child. ‘Tis the ‘<i>rò
Kaxà v</i>’, in spite of all its ugliness, and the <i>elixir vitæ</i>,
though we generally gain it with a shattered pulse.
</p>
<p>
No more! no more! it is a bitter cheat, the consolation of blunderers, the
last refuge of expiring hopes, the forlorn battalion that is to capture
the citadel of happiness; yet, yet impregnable! Oh! what is wisdom, and
what is virtue, without youth! Talk not to me of knowledge of mankind;
give, give me back the sunshine of the breast which they o’erclouded! Talk
not to me of proud morality; oh! give me innocence!
</p>
<p>
Amid the ruins of eternal Rome I scribble pages lighter than the wind, and
feed with fancies volumes which will be forgotten ere I can hear that they
are even published. Yet am I not one insensible to the magic of my
memorable abode, and I could pour my passion o’er the land; but I repress
my thoughts, and beat their tide back to their hollow caves!
</p>
<p>
The ocean of my mind is calm, but dim, and ominous of storms that may
arise. A cloud hangs heavy o’er the horizon’s verge, and veils the future.
Even now a star appears, steals into light, and now again ‘tis gone! I
hear the proud swell of the growing waters; I hear the whispering of the
wakening winds; but reason lays her trident on the cresting waves, and all
again is hushed.
</p>
<p>
For I am one, though young, yet old enough to know ambition is a demon;
and I fly from what I fear. And fame has eagle wings, and yet she mounts
not so high as man’s desires. When all is gained, how little then is won!
And yet to gain that little how much is lost! Let us once aspire and
madness follows. Could we but drag the purple from the hero’s heart; could
we but tear the laurel from the poet’s throbbing brain, and read their
doubts, their dangers, their despair, we might learn a greater lesson than
we shall ever acquire by musing over their exploits or their inspiration.
Think of unrecognised Caesar, with his wasting youth, weeping over the
Macedonian’s young career! Could Pharsalia compensate for those withering
pangs? View the obscure Napoleon starving in the streets of Paris! What
was St. Helena to the bitterness of such existence? The visions of past
glory might illumine even that dark-imprisonment; but to be conscious that
his supernatural energies might die away without creating their miracles:
can the wheel or the rack rival the torture of such a suspicion? Lo! Byron
bending o’er his shattered lyre, with inspiration in his very rage. And
the pert taunt could sting even this child of light! To doubt of the truth
of the creed in which you have been nurtured is not so terrific as to
doubt respecting the intellectual vigour on whose strength you have staked
your happiness. Yet these were mighty ones; perhaps the records of the
world will not yield us threescore to be their mates! Then tremble, ye
whose cheek glows too warmly at their names! Who would be more than man
should fear lest he be less.
</p>
<p>
Yet there is hope, there should be happiness, for them, for all. Kind
Nature, ever mild, extends her fond arms to her truant children, and
breathes her words of solace. As we weep on her indulgent and maternal
breast, the exhausted passions, one by one, expire like gladiators in yon
huge pile that has made barbarity sublime. Yes! there is hope and joy; and
it is here!
</p>
<p>
Where the breeze wanders through a perfumed sky, and where the beautiful
sun illumines beauty.
</p>
<p>
On the poet’s farm and on the conqueror’s arch thy beam is lingering! It
lingers on the shattered porticoes that once shrouded from thy
o’erpowering glory the lords of earth; it lingers upon the ruined temples
that even in their desolation are yet sacred! ‘Tis gone, as if in sorrow!
Yet the woody lake still blushes with thy warm kiss; and still thy rosy
light tinges the pine that breaks the farthest heaven!
</p>
<p>
A heaven all light, all beauty, and all love! What marvel men should
worship in these climes? And lo! a small and single cloud is sailing in
the immaculate ether, burnished with twilight, like an Olympian chariot
from above, with the fair vision of some graceful god!
</p>
<p>
It is the hour that poets love; but I crush thoughts that rise from out my
mind, like nymphs from out their caves, when sets the sun. Yes, ‘tis a
blessing here to breathe and muse. And cold his clay, indeed, who does not
yield to thy Ausonian beauty! Clime where the heart softens and the mind
expands! Region of mellowed bliss! O most enchanting land!
</p>
<p>
But we are at the park gates.
</p>
<p>
They whirled along through a park which would have contained half a
hundred of those Patagonian paddocks of modern times which have usurped
the name. At length the young Duke was roused from his reverie by
Carlstein, proud of his previous knowledge, leaning over and announcing—
</p>
<p>
‘Château de Dacre, your Grace!’
</p>
<p>
The Duke looked up. The sun, which had already set, had tinged with a
dying crimson the eastern sky, against which rose a princely edifice.
Castle Dacre was the erection of Vanbrugh, an imaginative artist, whose
critics we wish no bitterer fate than not to live in his splendid
creations. A spacious centre, richly ornamented, though broken, perhaps,
into rather too much detail, was joined to wings of a corresponding
magnificence by fanciful colonnades. A terrace, extending the whole front,
was covered with orange trees, and many a statue, and many an obelisk, and
many a temple, and many a fountain, were tinted with the warm twilight.
The Duke did not view the forgotten scene of youth without emotion. It was
a palace worthy of the heroine on whom he had been musing. The carriage
gained the lofty portal. Luigi and Spiridion, who had preceded their
master, were ready to receive the Duke, who was immediately ushered to the
rooms prepared for his reception. He was later than he had intended, and
no time was to be unnecessarily lost in his preparation for his
appearance.
</p>
<p>
His Grace’s toilet was already prepared: the magical dressing-box had been
unpacked, and the shrine for his devotions was covered with richly-cut
bottles of all sizes, arranged in all the elegant combinations which the
picturesque fancy of his valet could devise, adroitly intermixed with the
golden instruments, the china vases, and the ivory and rosewood brushes,
which were worthy even of Delcroix’s exquisite inventions.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James was master of the art of dress, and consequently
consummated that paramount operation with the decisive rapidity of one
whose principles are settled. He was cognisant of all effects, could
calculate in a second all consequences, and obtained his result with that
promptitude and precision which stamp the great artist. For a moment he
was plunged in profound abstraction, and at the same time stretched his
legs after his drive. He then gave his orders with the decision of
Wellington on the arrival of the Prussians, and the battle began.
</p>
<p>
His Grace had a taste for magnificence in costume; but he was handsome,
young, and a duke. Pardon him. Yet to-day he was, on the whole, simple.
Confident in a complexion whose pellucid lustre had not yielded to a
season of dissipation, his Grace did not dread the want of relief which a
white face, a white cravat, and a white waistcoat would seem to imply.
</p>
<p>
A hair chain set in diamonds, worn in memory of the absent Aphrodite, and
to pique the present Dacre, is annexed to a glass, which reposes in the
waistcoat pocket. This was the only weight that the Duke of St. James ever
carried. It was a bore, but it was indispensable.
</p>
<p>
It is done. He stops one moment before the long pier-glass, and shoots a
glance which would have read the mind of Talleyrand. It will do. He
assumes the look, the air that befit the occasion: cordial, but dignified;
sublime, but sweet. He descends like a deity from Olympus to a banquet of
illustrious mortals.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘Fair Women and Brave Men.’</i>
</pre>
<p>
MR. DACRE received him with affection: his daughter with a cordiality
which he had never yet experienced from her. Though more simply dressed
than when she first met his ardent gaze, her costume again charmed his
practised eye. ‘It must be her shape,’ thought the young Duke; ‘it is
magical!’
</p>
<p>
The rooms were full of various guests, and some of these were presented to
his Grace, who was, of course, an object of universal notice, but
particularly by those persons who pretended not to be aware of his
entrance. The party assembled at Castle Dacre consisted of some thirty or
forty persons, all of great consideration, but of a different character
from any with whom the Duke of St. James had been acquainted during his
short experience of English society. They were not what are called
fashionable people. We have no princes and no ambassadors, no duke who is
a gourmand, no earl who is a jockey, no manoeuvring mothers, no flirting
daughters, no gambling sons, for your entertainment. There is no superfine
gentleman brought down specially from town to gauge the refinement of the
manners of the party, and to prevent them, by his constant supervision and
occasional sneer, from losing any of the beneficial results of their last
campaign. We shall sadly want, too, a Lady Patroness to issue a decree or
quote her code of consolidated etiquette. We are not sure that Almack’s
will ever be mentioned: quite sure that Maradan has never yet been heard
of. The Jockey Club may be quoted, but Crockford will be a dead letter. As
for the rest, Boodle’s is all we can promise; miserable consolation for
the bow-window. As for buffoons and artists, to amuse a vacant hour or
sketch a vacant face, we must frankly tell you at once that there is not
one. Are you frightened? Will you go on? Will you trust yourself with
these savages? Try. They are rude, but they are hospitable.
</p>
<p>
The party, we have said, were all persons of great consideration; some
were noble, most were rich, all had ancestors. There were the Earl and
Countess of Faulconcourt. He looked as if he were fit to reconquer
Palestine, and she as if she were worthy to reward him for his valour.
Misplaced in this superior age, he was <i>sans peur</i> and she <i>sans
reproche</i>. There was Lord Mildmay, an English peer and a French
colonel. Methinks such an incident might have been a better reason for a
late measure than an Irishman being returned a member of our Imperial
Parliament. There was our friend Lord St. Jerome; of course his
stepmother, yet young, and some sisters, pretty as nuns. There were some
cousins from the farthest north, Northumbria’s bleakest bound, who came
down upon Yorkshire like the Goths upon Italy, and were revelling in what
they considered a southern clime.
</p>
<p>
There was an M.P. in whom the Catholics had hopes. He had made a great
speech; not only a great speech, but a great impression. His matter
certainly was not new, but well arranged, and his images not singularly
original, but appositely introduced; in short, a bore, who, speaking on a
subject in which a new hand is indulged, and connected with the families
whose cause he was pleading, was for once courteously listened to by the
very men who determined to avenge themselves for their complaisance by a
cough on the first opportunity. But the orator was prudent; he reserved
himself, and the session closed with his fame yet full-blown.
</p>
<p>
Then there were country neighbours in great store, with wives that were
treasures, and daughters fresh as flowers. Among them we would
particularise two gentlemen. They were great proprietors, and Catholics
and Baronets, and consoled themselves by their active maintenance of the
game-laws for their inability to regulate their neighbours by any other.
One was Sir Chetwode Chetwode of Chetwode; the other was Sir Tichborne
Tichborne of Tichborne. It was not easy to see two men less calculated to
be the slaves of a foreign and despotic power, which we all know Catholics
are. Tall, and robust, and rosy, with hearts even stouter than their massy
frames, they were just the characters to assemble in Runnymede, and
probably, even at the present day, might have imitated their ancestors,
even in their signatures. In disposition they were much the same, though
they were friends. In person there were some differences, but they were
slight. Sir Chetwode’s hair was straight and white; Sir Tichborne’s brown
and curly. Sir Chetwode’s eyes were blue; Sir Tichborne’s grey.
</p>
<p>
Sir Chetwode’s nose was perhaps a snub; Sir Tichborne’s was certainly a
bottle. Sir Chetwode was somewhat garrulous, and was often like a man at a
play, in the wrong box! Sir Tichborne was somewhat taciturn; but when he
spoke, it was always to the purpose, and made an impression, even if it
were not new. Both were kind hearts; but Sir Chetwode was jovial, Sir
Tichborne rather stern. Sir Chetwode often broke into a joke; Sir
Tichborne sometimes backed into a sneer. .
</p>
<p>
A few of these characters were made known by Mr. Dacre to his young
friend, but not many, and in an easy way; those that stood nearest.
Introduction is a formality and a bore, and is never resorted to by your
well-bred host, save in a casual way. When proper people meet at proper
houses, they give each other credit for propriety, and slide into an
acquaintance by degrees. The first day they catch a name; the next, they
ask you whether you are the son of General——. ‘No; he was my
uncle.’ ‘Ah! I knew him well. A worthy soul!’ And then the thing is
settled. You ride together, shoot, or fence, or hunt. A game of billiards
will do no great harm; and when you part, you part with a hope that you
may meet again.
</p>
<p>
Lord Mildmay was glad to meet with the son of an old friend. He knew the
late Duke well, and loved him better. It is pleasant to hear our fathers
praised. We, too, may inherit their virtues with their lands, or cash, or
bonds; and, scapegraces as we are, it is agreeable to find a precedent for
the blood turning out well. And, after all, there is no feeling more
thoroughly delightful than to be conscious that the kind being from whose
loins we spring, and to whom we cling with an innate and overpowering
love, is viewed by others with regard, with reverence, or with admiration.
There is no pride like the pride of ancestry, for it is a blending of all
emotions. How immeasurably superior to the herd is the man whose father
only is famous! Imagine, then, the feelings of one who can trace his line
through a thousand years of heroes and of princes!
</p>
<p>
‘Tis dinner! hour that I have loved as loves the bard the twilight; but no
more those visions rise that once were wont to spring in my quick fancy.
The dream is past, the spell is broken, and even the lore on which I
pondered in my first youth is strange as figures in Egyptian tombs.
</p>
<p>
No more, no more, oh! never more to me, that hour shall bring its rapture
and its bliss! No more, no more, oh! never more for me, shall Flavour sit
upon her thousand thrones, and, like a syren with a sunny smile, win to
renewed excesses, each more sweet! My feasting days are over: me no more
the charms of fish, or flesh, still less of fowl, can make the fool of
that they made before. The fricandeau is like a dream of early love; the
fricassee, with which I have so often flirted, is like the tattle of the
last quadrille; and no longer are my dreams haunted with the dark passion
of the rich ragoût. Ye soups! o’er whose creation I have watched, like
mothers o’er their sleeping child! Ye sauces! to which I have even lent a
name, where are ye now? Tickling, perchance, the palate of some easy
friend, who quite forgets the boon companion whose presence once lent
lustre even to his ruby wine and added perfume to his perfumed hock!
</p>
<p>
Our Duke, however, had not reached the age of retrospection. He pecked as
prettily as any bird. Seated on the right hand of his delightful hostess,
nobody could be better pleased; supervised by his jäger, who stood behind
his chair, no one could be better attended. He smiled, with the calm,
amiable complacency of a man who feels the world is quite right.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IX.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Châtelaine of Castle Dacre</i>
</pre>
<p>
HOW is your Grace’s horse, Sans-pareil?’ asked Sir Chetwode Chetwode of
Chetwode of the Duke of St. James, shooting at the same time a sly glance
at his opposite neighbour, Sir Tichborne Tichborne of Tichborne.
</p>
<p>
‘Quite well, sir,’ said the Duke in his quietest tone, but with an air
which, he flattered himself, might repress further inquiry.
</p>
<p>
‘Has he got over his fatigue?’ pursued the dogged Baronet, with a short,
gritty laugh, that sounded like a loose drag-chain dangling against the
stones. ‘We all thought the Yorkshire air would not agree with him.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet, Sir Chetwode, that could hardly be your opinion of Sanspareil,’ said
Miss Dacre, ‘for I think, if I remember right, I had the pleasure of
making you encourage our glove manufactory.’
</p>
<p>
Sir Chetwode looked a little confused. The Duke of St. James, inspirited
by his fair ally, rallied, and hoped Sir Chetwode did not back his steed
to a fatal extent. ‘If,’ continued he, ‘I had had the slightest idea that
any friend of Miss Dacre was indulging in such an indiscretion, I
certainly would have interfered, and have let him known that the horse was
not to win.’
</p>
<p>
‘Is that a fact?’ asked Sir Tichborne Tichborne of Tichborne, with a
sturdy voice.
</p>
<p>
‘Can a Yorkshireman doubt it?’ rejoined the Duke. ‘Was it possible for
anyone but a mere Newmarket dandy to have entertained for a moment the
supposition that anyone but May Dacre should be the Queen of the St.
Leger?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have heard something of this before,’ said Sir Tichborne, ‘but I did
not believe it. A young friend of mine consulted me upon the subject.
“Would you advise me,” said he, “to settle?” “Why,” said I, “if you can
prove any bubble, my opinion is, don’t; but if you cannot prove anything,
my opinion is, do.”’
</p>
<p>
‘Very just! very true!’ were murmured by many in the neighbourhood of the
oracle; by no one with more personal sincerity than Lady Tichborne
herself.
</p>
<p>
‘I will write to my young friend,’ continued the Baronet.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, no!’ said Miss Dacre. ‘His Grace’s candour must not be abused. I have
no idea of being robbed of my well-earned honours. Sir Tichborne, private
conversation must be respected, and the sanctity of domestic life must not
be profaned. If the tactics of Doncaster are no longer to be fair war,
why, half the families in the Riding will be ruined!’
</p>
<p>
‘Still,’—said Sir Tichborne.
</p>
<p>
But Mr. Dacre, like a deity in a Trojan battle, interposed, and asked his
opinion of a keeper.
</p>
<p>
‘I hope you are a sportsman,’ said Miss Dacre to the Duke, ‘for this is
the palace of Nimrod!’
</p>
<p>
‘I have hunted; it was not very disagreeable. I sometimes shoot; it is not
very stupid.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then, in fact, I perceive that you are a heretic. Lord Faulconcourt, his
Grace is moralising on the barbarity of the chase.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then he has never had the pleasure of hunting in company with Miss
Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘Do you indeed follow the hounds?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Sometimes do worse, ride over them; but Lord Faulconcourt is fast
emancipating me from the trammels of my frippery foreign education, and I
have no doubt that, in another season, I shall fling off quite in style.’
</p>
<p>
‘You remember Mr. Annesley?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘It is difficult to forget him. He always seemed to me to think that the
world was made on purpose for him to have the pleasure of “cutting” it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet he was your admirer!’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, and once paid me a compliment. He told me it was the only one that
he had ever uttered.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, Charley, Charley! this is excellent. We shall have a tale when we
meet. What was the compliment?’
</p>
<p>
‘It would be affectation in me to pretend that I have forgotten it.
Nevertheless, you must excuse me.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pray, pray let me have it!’
</p>
<p>
‘Perhaps you will not like it?’
</p>
<p>
‘Now, I must hear it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well then, he said that talking to me was the only thing that consoled
him for having to dine with you and to dance with Lady Shropshire.’
</p>
<p>
‘Charles is jealous,’ drawled the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Of her Grace?’ asked Miss Dacre, with much anxiety.
</p>
<p>
‘No; but Charles is aged, and once, when he dined with me, was taken for
my uncle.’
</p>
<p>
The ladies retired, and the gentlemen sat barbarously long. Sir Chetwode
Chetwode of Chetwode and Sir Tichborne Tichborne of Tichborne were two men
who drank wine independent of fashion, and exacted, to the last glass, the
identical quantity which their fathers had drunk half a century before,
and to which they had been used almost from their cradle. The only subject
of conversation was sporting. Terrible shots, more terrible runs, neat
barrels, and pretty fencers. The Duke of St. James was not sufficiently
acquainted with the geography of the mansion to make a premature retreat,
an operation which is looked upon with an evil eye, and which, to be
successful, must be prompt and decisive, and executed with supercilious
nonchalance. So he consoled himself by a little chat with Lord Mildmay,
who sat smiling, handsome, and mustachioed, with an empty glass, and who
was as much out of water as he was out of wine. The Duke was not very
learned in Parisian society; but still, with the aid of the Duchess de
Berri and the Duchess de Duras, Léontine Fay, and Lady Stuart de Rothesay,
they got on, and made out the time until Purgatory ceased and Paradise
opened.
</p>
<p>
For Paradise it was, although there were there assembled some thirty or
forty persons not less dull than the majority of our dull race, and in
those little tactics that make society less burdensome perhaps even less
accomplished. But a sunbeam will make even the cloudiest day break into
smiles; a bounding fawn will banish monotony even from a wilderness; and a
glass of claret, or perchance some stronger grape, will convert even the
platitude of a goblet of water into a pleasing beverage, and so May Dacre
moved among her guests, shedding light, life, and pleasure.
</p>
<p>
She was not one who, shrouded in herself, leaves it to chance or fate to
amuse the beings whom she has herself assembled within her halls.
Nonchalance is the <i>métier</i> of your modern hostess; and so long as
the house be not on fire, or the furniture not kicked, you may be even
ignorant who is the priestess of the hospitable fane in which you worship.
</p>
<p>
They are right; men shrink from a fussy woman. And few can aspire to
regulate the destinies of their species, even in so slight a point as an
hour’s amusement, without rare powers. There is no greater sin than to be
<i>trop prononcée</i>. A want of tact is worse than a want of virtue. Some
women, it is said, work on pretty well against the tide without the last:
I never knew one who did not sink who ever dared to sail without the
first.
</p>
<p>
Loud when they should be low, quoting the wrong person, talking on the
wrong subject, teasing with notice, excruciating with attentions,
disturbing a tête-à -tête in order to make up a dance; wasting eloquence in
persuading a man to participate in amusement whose reputation depends on
his social sullenness; exacting homage with a restless eye, and not
permitting the least worthy knot to be untwined without their
divinityships’ interference; patronising the meek, anticipating the slow,
intoxicated with compliment, plastering with praise, that you in return
may gild with flattery; in short, energetic without elegance, active
without grace, and loquacious without wit; mistaking bustle for style,
raillery for badinage, and noise for gaiety, these are the characters who
mar the very career they think they are creating, and who exercise a fatal
influence on the destinies of all those who have the misfortune to be
connected with them.
</p>
<p>
Not one of these was she, the lady of our tale. There was a quiet dignity
lurking even under her easiest words and actions which made you feel her
notice a compliment: there was a fascination in her calm smile and in her
sunlit eye which made her invitation to amusement itself a pleasure. If
you refused, you were not pressed, but left to that isolation which you
appeared to admire; if you assented, you were rewarded with a word which
made you feel how sweet was such society! Her invention never flagged, her
gaiety never ceased; yet both were spontaneous, and often were unobserved.
All felt amused, and all were unconsciously her agents. Her word and her
example seemed, each instant, to call forth from her companions new
accomplishments, new graces, new sources of joy and of delight. All were
surprised that they were so agreeable.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER X.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Love’s Young Dream</i>
</pre>
<p>
MORNING came, and the great majority of the gentlemen rose early as
Aurora. The chase is the favourite pastime of man and boy; yet some
preferred plundering their host’s preserves, by which means their slumbers
were not so brief and their breakfast less disturbed. The <i>battue</i>,
however, in time, called forth its band, and then one by one, or two by
two, or sometimes even three, leaning on each other’s arms and smiling in
each other’s faces, the ladies dropped into the breakfast-room at Castle
Dacre. There, until two o’clock, a lounging meal might always be obtained,
but generally by twelve the coast was clear; for our party were a natural
race of beings, and would have blushed if flaming noon had caught them
napping in their easy couches. Our bright bird, May Dacre, too, rose from
her bower, full of the memory of the sweetest dreams, and fresh as lilies
ere they kiss the sun.
</p>
<p>
She bends before her ivory crucifix, and gazes on her blessed mother’s
face, where the sweet Florentine had tinged with light a countenance
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
Too fair for worship, too divine for love!
</pre>
<p>
And innocence has prayed for fresh support, and young devotion told her
holy beads. She rises with an eye of mellowed light, and her soft cheek is
tinted with the flush that comes from prayer. Guard over her, ye angels!
wheresoe’er and whatsoe’er ye are! For she shall be your meet companion in
an after-day. Then love your gentle friend, this sinless child of clay!
</p>
<p>
The morning passed as mornings ever pass where twenty women, for the most
part pretty, are met together. Some read, some drew, some worked, all
talked. Some wandered in the library, and wondered why such great books
were written. One sketched a favourite hero in the picture gallery, a
Dacre, who had saved the State or Church, had fought at Cressy, or
flourished at Windsor: another picked a flower out of the conservatory,
and painted its powdered petals. Here, a purse, half-made, promised, when
finished quite, to make some hero happy. Then there was chat about the
latest fashions, caps and bonnets, <i>séduisantes</i>, and sleeves. As the
day grew’ old, some rode, some walked, some drove. A pony-chair was Lady
Faulconcourt’s delight, whose arm was roundly turned and graced the whip;
while, on the other hand, Lady St. Jerome rather loved to try the paces of
an ambling nag, because her figure was of the sublime; and she looked not
unlike an Amazonian queen, particularly when Lord Mildmay was her Theseus.
</p>
<p>
He was the most consummate, polished gentleman that ever issued from the
court of France. He did his friend Dacre the justice to suppose that he
was a victim to his barbarous guests; but for the rest of the galloping
crew, who rode and shot all day, and in the evening fell asleep just when
they were wanted, he shrugged his shoulders, and he thanked his stars! In
short, Lord Mildmay was the ladies’ man; and in their morning dearth of
beaux, to adopt their unanimous expression, ‘quite a host!’
</p>
<p>
Then there was archery for those who could draw a bow or point an arrow;
and we are yet to learn the sight that is more dangerous for your bachelor
to witness, or the ceremony which more perfectly develops all that the sex
would wish us to remark, than this ‘old English’ custom.
</p>
<p>
With all these resources, all was, of course, free and easy as the air.
Your appearance was your own act. If you liked, you might have remained,
like a monk or nun, in your cell till dinner-time, but no later. Privacy
and freedom are granted you in the morning, that you may not exhaust your
powers of pleasing before night, and that you may reserve for those
favoured hours all the new ideas that you have collected in the course of
your morning adventures.
</p>
<p>
But where was he, the hero of our tale? Fencing? Craning? Hitting?
Missing? Is he over, or is he under? Has he killed, or is he killed? for
the last is but the chance of war, and pheasants have the pleasure of
sometimes seeing as gay birds as themselves with plumage quite as
shattered. But there is no danger of the noble countenance of the Duke of
St. James bearing to-day any evidence of the exploits of himself or his
companions. His Grace was in one of his sublime fits, and did not rise.
Luigi consoled himself for the bore of this protracted attendance by
diddling the page-in-waiting at dominos.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James was in one of his sublime fits. He had commenced by
thinking of May Dacre, and he ended by thinking of himself. He was under
that delicious and dreamy excitement which we experience when the image of
a lovely and beloved object begins to mix itself up with our own intense
self-love. She was the heroine rather of an indefinite reverie than of
definite romance. Instead of his own image alone playing about his fancy,
her beautiful face and springing figure intruded their exquisite presence.
He no longer mused merely on his own voice and wit: he called up her tones
of thrilling power; he imagined her in all the triumph of her gay
repartee. In his mind’s eye, he clearly watched all the graces of her
existence. She moved, she gazed, she smiled. Now he was alone, and walking
with her in some rich wood, sequestered, warm, solemn, dim, feeding on the
music of her voice, and gazing with intenseness on the wakening passion of
her devoted eye. Now they rode together, scudded over champaign, galloped
down hills, scampered through valleys, all life, and gaiety, and vivacity,
and spirit. Now they were in courts and crowds; and he led her with pride
to the proudest kings. He covered her with jewels; but the world thought
her brighter than his gems. Now they met in the most unexpected and
improbable manner: now they parted with a tenderness which subdued their
souls even more than rapture. Now he saved her life: now she blessed his
existence. Now his reverie was too vague and misty to define its subject.
It was a stream of passion, joy, sweet voices, tender tones, exulting
hopes, beaming faces, chaste embraces, immortal transports!
</p>
<p>
It was three o’clock, and for the twentieth time our hero made an effort
to recall himself to the realities of life. How cold, how tame, how
lifeless, how imperfect, how inconsecutive, did everything appear! This is
the curse of reverie. But they who revel in its pleasures must bear its
pains, and are content. Yet it wears out the brain, and unfits us for
social life. They who indulge in it most are the slaves of solitude. They
wander in a wilderness, and people it with their voices. They sit by the
side of running waters, with an eye more glassy than the stream. The sight
of a human being scares them more than a wild beast does a traveller; the
conduct of life, when thrust upon their notice, seems only a tissue of
adventures without point; and, compared with the creatures of their
imagination, human nature seems to send forth only abortions.
</p>
<p>
‘I must up,’ said the young Duke; ‘and this creature on whom I have lived
for the last eight hours, who has, in herself, been to me the universe,
this constant companion, this cherished friend, whose voice was passion
and whose look was love, will meet me with all the formality of a young
lady, all the coldness of a person who has never even thought of me since
she saw me last. Damnable delusion! To-morrow I will get up and hunt.’
</p>
<p>
He called Luigi, and a shower-bath assisted him in taking a more healthy
view of affairs. Yet his faithful fancy recurred to her again. He must
indulge it a little. He left off dressing and flung himself in a chair.
</p>
<p>
‘And yet,’ he continued, ‘when I think of it again, there surely can be no
reason that this should not turn into a romance of real life. I perceived
that she was a little piqued when we first met at Don-caster. Very
natural! Very flattering! I should have been piqued. Certainly, I behaved
decidedly ill. But how, in the name of Heaven, was I to know that she was
the brightest little being that ever breathed! Well, I am here now! She
has got her wish. And I think an evident alteration has already taken
place. But she must not melt too quickly. She will not; she will do
nothing but what is exquisitely proper. How I do love this child! I dote
upon her very image. It is the very thing that I have always been wanting.
The women call me inconstant. I have never been constant. But they will
not listen to us without we feign feelings, and then they upbraid us for
not being influenced by them. I have sighed, I have sought, I have wept,
for what I now have found. What would she give to know what is passing in
my mind! By Heavens! there is no blood in England that has a better chance
of being a Duchess!’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Le Roi S’Amuse</i>
</pre>
<p>
A CANTER is the cure for every evil, and brings the mind back to itself
sooner than all the lessons of Chrysippus and Crantor. It is the only
process that at the same time calms the feelings and elevates the spirits,
banishes blue devils and raises one to the society of ‘angels ever bright
and fair.’ It clears the mind; it cheers the heart. It is the best
preparation for all enterprises, for it puts a man in good humour both
with the world and himself; and, whether you are going to make a speech or
scribble a scene, whether you are about to conquer the world or yourself,
order your horse. As you bound along, your wit will brighten and your
eloquence blaze, your courage grow more adamantine, and your generous
feelings burn with a livelier flame. And when the exercise is over the
excitement does not cease, as when it grows from music, for your blood is
up, and the brilliancy of your eye is fed by your bubbling pulses. Then,
my young friend, take my advice: rush into the world, and triumph will
grow out of your quick life, like Victory bounding from the palm of Jove!
</p>
<p>
Our Duke ordered his horses, and as he rattled along recovered from the
enervating effects of his soft reverie. On his way home he fell in with
Mr. Dacre and the two Baronets, returning on their hackneys from a hard
fought field.
</p>
<p>
‘Gay sport?’ asked his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘A capital run. I think the last forty minutes the most splitting thing we
have had for a long time!’ answered Sir Chetwode. ‘I only hope Jack Wilson
will take care of poor Fanny. I did not half like leaving her. Your Grace
does not join us?’
</p>
<p>
‘I mean to do so; but I am, unfortunately, a late riser.’
</p>
<p>
‘Hem!’ said Sir Tichborne. The monosyllable meant much.
</p>
<p>
‘I have a horse which I think will suit your Grace,’ said Mr. Dacre, ‘and
to which, in fact, you are entitled, for it bears the name of your house.
You have ridden Hauteville, Sir Tichborne?’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes; fine animal!’
</p>
<p>
‘I shall certainly try his powers,’ said the Duke. ‘When is your next
field-day?’
</p>
<p>
‘Thursday,’ said Sir Tichborne; ‘but we shall be too early for you, I am
afraid,’ with a gruff smile.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, no!’ said the young Duke, who saw his man; ‘I assure you I have been
up to-day nearly two hours. Let us get on.’
</p>
<p>
The first person that his Grace’s eye met, when he entered the room in
which they assembled before dinner, was Mrs. Dallington Vere.
</p>
<p>
Dinner was a favourite moment with the Duke of St. James during this visit
at Castle Dacre, since it was the only time in the day that, thanks to his
rank, which he now doubly valued, he could enjoy a tête-à -tête with its
blooming mistress.
</p>
<p>
‘I am going to hunt,’ said the Duke, ‘and I am to ride Hauteville. I hope
you will set me an example on Thursday, and that I shall establish my
character with Sir Tichborne.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am to lead on that day a bold band of archers. I have already too much
neglected my practising, and I fear that my chance of the silver arrow is
slight.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have betted upon you with everybody,’ said the Duke of St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘Remember Doncaster! I am afraid that May Dacre will again be the occasion
of your losing your money.’
</p>
<p>
‘But now I am on the right side. Together we must conquer.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have a presentiment that our union will not be a fortunate one.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then I am ruined,’ said his Grace with rather a serious tone.
</p>
<p>
‘I hope you have not really staked anything upon such nonsense?’ said Miss
Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘I have staked everything,’ said his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘Talking of stakes,’ said Lord St. Jerome, who pricked up his ears at a
congenial subject, ‘do you know what they are going to do about that
affair of Anderson’s?’
</p>
<p>
‘What does he say for himself?’ asked Sir Chetwode.
</p>
<p>
‘He says that he had no intention of embezzling the money, but that, as he
took it for granted the point could never be decided, he thought it was
against the usury laws to allow money to lie idle.’
</p>
<p>
‘That fellow has always got an answer,’ said Sir Tichborne. ‘I hate men
who have always got an answer. There is no talking common sense with
them.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke made his escape to-day, and, emboldened by his illustrious
example, Charles Faulcon, Lord St. Jerome, and some other heroes followed,
to the great disgust of Sir Chetwode and Sir Tichborne.
</p>
<p>
As the evening glided on conversation naturally fell upon the amusements
of society.
</p>
<p>
‘I am sure we are tired of dancing every night,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘I
wonder if we could introduce any novelty. What think you, Bertha? You can
always suggest.’
</p>
<p>
‘You remember the <i>tableaux vivants</i>?’ said Mrs. Dallington Vere.
</p>
<p>
‘Beautiful! but too elaborate a business, I fear, for us. We want
something more impromptu. The <i>tableaux</i> are nothing without
brilliant and accurate costume, and to obtain that we must work at least
for a week, and then, after all, in all probability, a failure. <i>Ils
sont trop recherchés</i>,’ she said, lowering her voice to Mrs.
Dallington, ‘<i>pour nous ici</i>. They must spring out of a society used
to such exhibitions.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have a costume dress here,’ said the Duke of
</p>
<p>
St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘And I have a uniform,’ said Lord Mildmay.
</p>
<p>
‘And then,’ said Mrs. Dallington, ‘there are cashmeres, and scarfs, and
jewels to be collected. I see, however, you think it impossible.’
</p>
<p>
‘I fear so. However, we will think of it. In the meantime, what shall we
do now? Suppose we act a fairy tale?’
</p>
<p>
‘None of the girls can act,’ said Mrs. Dallington, with a look of kind
pity.
</p>
<p>
‘Let us teach them. That itself will be an amusement. Suppose we act
Cinderella? There is the music of Cendrillon, and you can compose, when
necessary, as you go on. Clara Howard!’ said May Dacre, ‘come here, love!
We want you to be Cinderella in a little play.’
</p>
<p>
‘I act! oh! dear May! How can you laugh at me so! I cannot act.’
</p>
<p>
‘You will not have to speak. Only just move about as I direct you while
Bertha plays music.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! dear May, I cannot, indeed! I never did act. Ask Eugenia!’
</p>
<p>
‘Eugenia! If you are afraid, I am sure she will faint. I asked you because
I thought you were just the person for it.’
</p>
<p>
‘But only think,’ said poor Clara, with an imploring voice, ‘to act, May!
Why, acting is the most difficult thing in the world. Acting is quite a
dreadful thing. I know many ladies who will not act.’
</p>
<p>
‘But it is not acting, Clara. Well! I will be Cinderella, and you shall be
one of the sisters.’
</p>
<p>
‘No, dear May!’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, then, the Fairy?’ ‘No, dear, dear, dear May!’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, Duke of St. James, what am I to do with this rebellious troop?’
</p>
<p>
‘Let me be Cinderella!’
</p>
<p>
‘It is astonishing,’ said Miss Dacre, ‘the difficulty which you encounter
in England, if you try to make people the least amusing or vary the
regular dull routine, which announces dancing as the beautiful of
diversions and cards as the sublime.’
</p>
<p>
‘We are barbarians,’ said the Duke. ‘We were not,’ said May Dacre. ‘What
are <i>tableaux</i>, or acted charades, or romances, to masques, which
were the splendid and various amusement of our ancestors. Last Christmas
we performed “Comus” here with great effect; but then we had Arundel, and
he is an admirable actor.’
</p>
<p>
‘Curse Arundel!’ thought the Duke. ‘I had forgotten him.’
</p>
<p>
‘I do not wonder,’ said Mrs. Dallington Vere, ‘at people objecting to act
regular plays, for, independently of the objections, not that I think
anything of them myself, which are urged against “private theatricals,”
the fact is, to get up a play is a tremendous business, and one or two is
your bound. But masques, where there is so little to learn by rote, a
great consideration, where music and song are so exquisitely introduced,
where there is such an admirable opportunity for brilliant costume, and
where the scene may be beautiful without change—such an important
point—I cannot help wondering that this national diversion is not
revived.’
</p>
<p>
‘Suppose we were to act a romance without the costume?’ said the Duke.
‘Let us consider it a rehearsal. And perhaps the Misses Howard will have
no objection to sing?’
</p>
<p>
‘It is difficult to find a suitable romance,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘All our
modern English ones are too full of fine poetry. We tried once an old
ballad, but it was too long. Last Christmas we got up a good many, and
Arundel, Isabella, and myself used to scribble some nonsense for the
occasion. But I am afraid they are all either burnt or taken away. I will
look in the music-case.’
</p>
<p>
She went to the music-case with the Duke and Mrs. Dallington.
</p>
<p>
‘No,’ she continued; ‘not one, not a single one. But what are these?’ She
looked at some lines written in pencil in a music-book. ‘Oh! here is
something; too slight, but it will do. You see,’ she continued, reading it
to the Duke, ‘by the introduction of the same line in every verse,
describing the same action, a back-scene is, as it were, created, and the
story, if you can call it such, proceeds in front. Really, I think, we
might make something of this.’
</p>
<p>
Mr. Dacre and some others were at whist. The two Baronets were together,
talking over the morning’s sport. Ecarté covered a flirtation between Lord
Mildmay and Lady St. Jerome. Miss Dacre assembled her whole troop; and,
like a manager with a new play, read in the midst of them the ballad, and
gave them directions for their conduct. A japan screen was unfolded at the
end of the room. Two couches indicated the limits of the stage. Then
taking her guitar, she sang with a sweet voice and arch simplicity these
simpler lines:—
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
I.
Childe Dacre stands in his father’s hall,
While all the rest are dancing;
Childe Dacre gazes on the wall,
While brightest eyes are glancing.
Then prythee tell me, gentles gay!
What makes our Childe so dull to-day?
</pre>
<p>
Each verse was repeated.
</p>
<p>
In the background they danced a cotillon.
</p>
<p>
In the front, the Duke of St. James, as Childe Dacre, leant against the
wall, with arms folded and eyes fixed; in short, in an attitude which
commanded great applause.
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
II.
I cannot tell, unless it be,
While all the rest are dancing,
The Lady Alice, on the sea,
With brightest eyes is glancing,
Or muses on the twilight hour
Will bring Childe Dacre to her bower.
</pre>
<p>
Mrs. Dallington Vere advances as the Lady Alice. Her walk is abrupt, her
look anxious and distracted; she seems to be listening for some signal.
She falls into a musing attitude, motionless and graceful as a statue.
Clara Howard alike marvels at her genius and her courage.
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
III.
Childe Dacre hears the curfew chime,
While all the rest are dancing;
Unless I find a fitting rhyme,
Oh! here ends my romancing!
But see! her lover’s at her feet!
Oh! words of joy! oh! meeting sweet!
</pre>
<p>
The Duke advances, chivalric passion in his every gesture. The Lady Alice
rushes to his arms with that look of trembling transport which tells the
tale of stolen love. They fall into a group which would have made the
fortune of an Annual.
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
IV.
Then let us hope, when next I sing,
And all the rest are dancing,
Our Childe a gentle bride may bring,
All other joys enhancing.
Then we will bless the twilight hour
That call’d him to a lady’s bower.
</pre>
<p>
The Duke led Mrs. Dallington to the dancers with courtly grace. There was
great applause, but the spirit of fun and one-and-twenty inspired him, and
he led off a gallop. In fact, it was an elegant romp. The two Baronets
started from their slumbers, and Lord Mildmay called for Mademoiselle
Dacre. The call was echoed. Miss Dacre yielded to the public voice, and
acted to the life the gratified and condescending air of a first-rate
performer. Lord Mildmay called for Madame Dallington. Miss Dacre led on
her companion as Sontag would Malibran. There was no wreath at hand, but
the Duke of St. James robbed his coat of its rose, and offered it on his
knee to Mademoiselle, who presented it with Parisian feeling to her rival.
The scene was as superb as anything at the <i>Académie</i>.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>An Impromptu Excursion</i>
</pre>
<p>
‘WE CERTAINLY must have a masque,’ said the young Duke, as he threw
himself into his chair, satisfied with his performance.
</p>
<p>
‘You must open Hauteville with one,’ said Mrs. Dallington.
</p>
<p>
‘A capital idea; but we will practise at Dacre first.’
</p>
<p>
‘When is Hauteville to be finished?’ asked Mrs. Dallington. ‘I shall
really complain if we are to be kept out of it much longer. I believe I am
the only person in the Riding who has not been there.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have been there,’ said the Duke, ‘and am afraid I must go again; for
Sir Carte has just come down for a few days, and I promised to meet him.
It is a sad bore. I wish it were finished.’
</p>
<p>
‘Take me with you,’ said Mrs. Dallington; ‘take us all, and let us make a
party.’
</p>
<p>
‘An admirable idea,’ exclaimed the young Duke, with a brightening
countenance. ‘What admirable ideas you have, Mrs. Dallington! This is,
indeed, turning business into pleasure! What says our hostess?’
</p>
<p>
‘I will join you.’
</p>
<p>
‘To-morrow, then?’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘To-morrow! You are rapid!’
</p>
<p>
‘Never postpone, never prepare: that is your own rule. To-morrow,
to-morrow, all must go.’
</p>
<p>
‘Papa, will you go to-morrow to Hauteville?’
</p>
<p>
‘Are you serious?’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes,’ said Miss Dacre: ‘we never postpone; we never prepare.’
</p>
<p>
‘But do not you think a day, at least, had better intervene?’ urged Mr.
Dacre; ‘we shall be unexpected.’
</p>
<p>
‘I vote for to-morrow,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘To-morrow!’ was the universal exclamation. Tomorrow was carried.
</p>
<p>
‘I will write to Blanche at once,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Dallington Vere ran for the writing materials, and his Grace indicted
the following pithy note:—
</p>
<p>
‘Half-past Ten, Castle Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘Dear Sir Carte,
</p>
<p>
‘Our party here intend to honour Hauteville with a visit to-morrow, and
anticipate the pleasure of viewing the improvements, with yourself for
their cicerone. Let Rawdon know immediately of this. They tell me here
that the sun rises about six. As we shall not be with you till noon, I
have no doubt your united energies will be able to make all requisite
preparations. We may be thirty or forty. Believe me, dear Sir Carte,
</p>
<p>
‘Your faithful servant,
</p>
<p>
‘St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘Carlstein bears this, which you will receive in an hour. Let me have a
line by return.’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Charms of Hauteville</i>
</pre>
<p>
IT WAS a morning all dew and sunshine, soft yet bright, just fit for a
hawking party, for dames of high degree, feathered cavaliers, ambling
palfreys, and tinkling bells. Our friends rose early, and assembled
punctually. All went, and all went on horseback; but they sent before some
carriages for the return, in case the ladies should be wearied with
excessive pleasure. The cavalcade, for it was no less, broke into parties
which were often out of sight of each other. The Duke and Lord St. Jerome,
Clara Howard and Charles Faulcon, Miss Dacre and Mrs. Dallington, formed
one, and, as they flattered themselves, not the least brilliant. They were
all in high spirits, and his Grace lectured on riding-habits with erudite
enthusiasm.
</p>
<p>
Their road lay through a country wild and woody, where crag and copse
beautifully intermixed with patches of rich cultivation. Halfway, they
passed Rosemount, a fanciful pavilion where the Dukes of St. James
sometimes sought that elegant simplicity which was not afforded by all the
various charms of their magnificent Hauteville. At length they arrived at
the park-gate of the castle, which might itself have passed for a
tolerable mansion. It was ancient and embattled, flanked by a couple of
sturdy towers, and gave a noble promise of the baronial pile which it
announced. The park was a petty principality; and its apparently
illimitable extent, its rich variety of surface, its ancient woods and
numerous deer, attracted the attention and the admiration even of those
who had been born in such magical enclosures.
</p>
<p>
Away they cantered over the turf, each moment with their blood more
sparkling. A turn in the road, and Hauteville, with its donjon keep and
lordly flag, and many-windowed line of long perspective, its towers, and
turrets, and terraces, bathed with the soft autumnal sun, met their glad
sight.
</p>
<p>
‘Your Majesty is welcome to my poor castle!’ said the young Duke, bowing
with head uncovered to Miss Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘Nay, we are at the best but captive princesses about to be immured in
that fearful keep; and this is the way you mock us!’
</p>
<p>
‘I am content that you shall be my prisoner.’
</p>
<p>
‘A struggle for freedom!’ said Miss Dacre, looking back to Mrs.
Dallington, and she galloped towards the castle.
</p>
<p>
Lord Mildmay and Lady St. Jerome cantered up, and the rest soon assembled.
Sir Carte came forward, all smiles, with a clerk of the works bearing a
portfolio of plans. A crowd of servants, for the Duke maintained an
establishment at Hauteville, advanced, and the fair equestrians were
dismounted. They shook their habits and their curls, vowed that riding was
your only exercise, and that dust in the earthly economy was a blunder.
And then they entered the castle.
</p>
<p>
Room after room, gallery after gallery; you know the rest. Shall we
describe the silk hangings and the reverend tapestry, the agate tables and
the tall screens, the china and the armour, the state beds and the curious
cabinets, and the family pictures mixed up so quaintly with Italian and
Flemish art? But we pass from meek Madonnas and seraphic saints, from
gleaming Claudes and Guidos soft as Eve, from Rubens’s satyrs and Albano’s
boys, and even from those gay and natural medleys, paintings that cheer
the heart, where fruit and flower, with their brilliant bloom, call to a
feast the butterfly and bee; we pass from these to square-headed ancestors
by Holbein, all black velvet and gold chains; cavaliers, by Vandyke, all
lace and spurs, with pointed beards, that did more execution even than
their pointed swords; patriots and generals, by Kneller, in Blenheim wigs
and Steen-kirk cravats, all robes and armour; scarlet judges that
supported ship-money, and purple bishops, who had not been sent to the
Tower. Here was a wit who had sipped his coffee at Button’s, and there
some mad Alcibiades duke who had exhausted life ere he had finished youth,
and yet might be consoled for all his flashing follies could he witness
the bright eyes that lingered on his countenance, while they glanced over
all the patriotism and all the piety, all the illustrious courage and all
the historic craft, which, when living, it was daily told him that he had
shamed. Ye dames with dewy eyes that Lely drew! have we forgotten you? No!
by that sleepy loveliness that reminds us that night belongs to beauty, ye
were made for memory! And oh! our grandmothers, that we now look upon as
girls, breathing in Reynolds’s playful canvas, let us also pay our homage
to your grace!
</p>
<p>
The chapel, where you might trace art from the richly Gothic tomb,
designed by some neighbouring abbot, to the last effort of Flaxman; the
riding-house, where, brightly framed, looked down upon you with a courtly
smile the first and gartered duke, who had been Master of the Horse, were
alike visited, and alike admired. They mounted the summit of the round
tower, and looked around upon the broad county, which they were proud to
call their own. Amid innumerable seats, where blazed the hearths of the
best blood of England, they recognised, with delight, the dome of Dacre
and the woods of Dallington. They walked along a terrace not unworthy of
the promenade of a court; they visited the flower gardens, where the
peculiar style of every nation was in turn imitated; they loitered in the
vast conservatories, which were themselves a palace; they wandered in the
wilderness, where the invention of consummate art presented them with the
ideal of nature. In this poetic solitude, where all was green, and still,
and sweet, or where the only sound was falling water or fluttering birds,
the young Duke recurred to the feelings which, during the last momentous
week, had so mastered his nature, and he longed to wind his arm round the
beautiful being without whom this enchanting domain was a dreary waste.
</p>
<p>
They assembled in a green retreat, where the energetic Sir Carte had
erected a marquée, and where a collation greeted the eyes of those who
were well prepared for it. Rawdon had also done his duty, and the guests,
who were aware of the sudden manner in which the whole affair had arisen,
wondered at the magic which had produced a result worthy of a week’s
preparation. But it is a great thing to be a young Duke. The pasties, and
the venison, and the game, the pines, and the peaches, and the grapes, the
cakes, and the confectionery, and the ices, which proved that the
still-room at Hauteville was not an empty name, were all most popular. But
the wines, they were marvellous! And as the finest cellars in the country
had been ransacked for excellence and variety, it is not wonderful that
their produce obtained a panegyric. There was hock of a century old, which
made all stare, though we, for our part, cannot see, or rather taste, the
beauty of this antiquity. Wine, like woman, in our opinion, should not be
too old, so we raise our altar to the infant Bacchus; but this is not the
creed of the million, nor was it the persuasion of Sir Chetwode Chetwode
or of Sir Tichborne Tichborne, good judges both. The Johannisberger quite
converted them. They no longer disliked the young Duke. They thought him a
fool, to be sure, but at the same time a good-natured one. In the
meantime, all were interested, and Carlstein with his key bugle, from out
a neighbouring brake, afforded the only luxury that was wanting.
</p>
<p>
It is six o’clock, carriages are ordered, and horses are harnessed. Back,
back to Dacre! But not at the lively rate at which they had left that
lordly hall this morning. They are all alike inclined to move slowly; they
are silent, yet serene and satisfied; they ponder upon the reminiscences
of a delightful morning, and also of a delightful meal. Perhaps they are a
little weary; perhaps they wish to gaze upon the sunset.
</p>
<p>
It is eight o’clock, and they enter the park gates. Dinner is universally
voted a bore, even by the Baronets. Coffee covers the retreat of many a
wearied bird to her evening bower. The rest lounge on a couch or sofa, or
chew the cud of memory on an ottoman. It was a day of pleasure which had
been pleasant. That was certain: but that was past. Who is to be Duchess
of St. James? Answer this. May Dacre, or Bertha Vere, or Clara Howard?
Lady St. Jerome, is it to be a daughter of thy house? Lady Faulconcourt,
art thou to be hailed as the unrivalled mother?’ Tis mystery all, as must
always be the future of this world. We muse, we plan, we hope, but naught
is certain but that which is naught; for, a question answered, a doubt
satisfied, an end attained; what are they but fit companions for clothes
out of fashion, cracked china, and broken fans?
</p>
<p>
Our hero was neither wearied nor sleepy, for his mind was too full of
exciting fancies to think of the interests of his body. As all were
withdrawing, he threw his cloak about him and walked on the terrace. It
was a night soft as the rhyme that sighs from Rogers’ shell, and brilliant
as a phrase just turned by Moore. The thousand stars smiled from their
blue pavilions, and the moon shed the mild light that makes a lover muse.
Fragrance came in airy waves from trees rich with the golden orange, and
from out the woods there ever and anon arose a sound, deep and yet hushed,
and mystical, and soft. It could not be the wind!
</p>
<p>
His heart was full, his hopes were sweet, his fate pledged on a die. And
in this shrine, where all was like his love, immaculate and beautiful, he
vowed a faith which had not been returned. Such is the madness of love!
Such is the magic of beauty!
</p>
<p>
Music rose upon the air. Some huntsmen were practising their horns. The
triumphant strain elevated his high hopes, the tender tone accorded with
his emotions. He paced up and down the terrace in excited reverie, fed by
the music. In imagination she was with him: she spoke, she smiled, she
loved. He gazed upon her beaming countenance: his soul thrilled with tones
which, only she could utter. He pressed her to his throbbing and
tumultuous breast!
</p>
<p>
The music stopped. He fell from his seventh heaven. He felt all the
exhaustion of his prolonged reverie. All was flat, dull, unpromising. The
moon seemed dim, the stars were surely fading, the perfume of the trees
was faint, the wind of the woods was a howling demon. Exhausted,
dispirited, ay! almost desperate, with a darkened soul and staggering
pace, he regained his chamber.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Pride Has a Fall</i>
</pre>
<p>
THERE is nothing more strange, but nothing more certain, than the
different influence which the seasons of night and day exercise upon the
moods of our minds. Him whom the moon sends to bed with a head full of
misty meaning the sun-will summon in the morning with a brain clear and
lucid as his beam. Twilight makes us pensive; Aurora is the goddess of
activity. Despair curses at midnight; Hope blesses at noon.
</p>
<p>
And the bright beams of Phoebus—why should this good old name be
forgotten?—called up our Duke rather later than a monk at matins, in
a less sublime disposition than that in which he had paced among the
orange-trees of Dacre. His passion remained, but his poetry was gone. He
was all confidence, and gaiety, and love, and panted for the moment when
he could place his mother’s coronet on the only head that was worthy to
share the proud fortunes of the house of Hauteville.
</p>
<p>
‘Luigi, I will rise. What is going on to-day?’ ‘The gentlemen are all out,
your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘And the ladies?’
</p>
<p>
‘Are going to the Archery Ground, your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! she will be there, Luigi?’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘My robe, Luigi.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘I forgot what I was going to say. Luigi!’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, your Grace.’
</p>
<p>
‘Luigi, Luigi, Luigi,’ hummed the Duke, perfectly unconscious, and beating
time with his brush. His valet stared, but more when his lord, with eyes
fixed on the ground, fell into a soliloquy, not a word of which, most
provokingly, was audible, except to my reader.
</p>
<p>
‘How beautiful she looked yesterday upon the keep when she tried to find
Dacre! I never saw such eyes in my life! I must speak to Lawrence
immediately. I think I must have her face painted in four positions, like
that picture of Lady Alice Gordon by Sir Joshua. Her full face is sublime;
and yet there is a piquancy in the profile, which I am not sure—and
yet again, when her countenance is a little bent towards you, and her neck
gently turned, I think that is, after all—but then when her eyes
meet yours, full! oh! yes! yes! yes! That first look at Doncaster! It is
impressed upon my brain like self-consciousness. I never can forget it.
But then her smile! When she sang on Tuesday night! By Heavens!’ he
exclaimed aloud, ‘life with such a creature is immortality!’
</p>
<p>
About one o’clock the Duke descended into empty chambers. Not a soul was
to be seen. The birds had flown. He determined to go to the Archery
Ground. He opened the door of the music-room.
</p>
<p>
He found Miss Dacre alone at a table, writing. She looked up, and his
heart yielded as her eye met his.
</p>
<p>
‘You do not join the nymphs?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘I have lent my bow,’ she said, ‘to an able substitute.’
</p>
<p>
She resumed her task, which he perceived was copying music. He advanced,
he seated himself at the table, and began playing with a pen. He gazed
upon her, his soul thrilled with unwonted sensations, his frame shook with
emotions which, for a moment, deprived him even of speech. At length he
spoke in a low and tremulous tone:—
</p>
<p>
‘I fear I am disturbing you, Miss Dacre?’
</p>
<p>
‘By no means,’ she said, with a courteous air; and then, remembering she
was a hostess, ‘Is there anything that you require?’
</p>
<p>
‘Much; more than I can hope. O Miss Dacre! suffer me to tell you how much
I admire, how much I love you!’
</p>
<p>
She started, she stared at him with distended eyes, and her small mouth
was open like a ring.
</p>
<p>
‘My Lord!’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes!’ he continued in a rapid and impassioned tone. ‘I at length find an
opportunity of giving way to feelings which it has been long difficult for
me to control. O beautiful being! tell me, tell me that I am blessed!’
</p>
<p>
‘My Lord! I—I am most honoured; pardon me if I say, most surprised.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes! from the first moment that your ineffable loveliness rose on my
vision my mind has fed upon your image. Our acquaintance has only
realised, of your character, all that my imagination had preconceived,
Such unrivalled beauty, such unspeakable grace, could only have been the
companions of that exquisite taste and that charming delicacy which, even
to witness, has added great felicity to my existence. Oh! tell me—tell
me that they shall be for me something better than a transient spectacle.
Condescend to share the fortune and the fate of one who only esteems his
lot in life because it enables him to offer you a station not utterly
unworthy of your transcendent excellence!’
</p>
<p>
‘I have permitted your Grace to proceed too far. For your—for my own
sake, I should sooner have interfered, but, in truth, I was so astounded
at your unexpected address that I have but just succeeded in recalling my
scattered senses. Let me again express to you my acknowledgments for an
honour which I feel is great; but permit me to regret that for your offer
of your hand and fortune these acknowledgments are all I can return.’
</p>
<p>
‘Miss Dacre! am I then to wake to the misery of being rejected?’
</p>
<p>
‘A little week ago, Duke of St. James, we were strangers. It would be hard
if it were in the power of either of us now to deliver the other to
misery.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are offended, then, at the presumption which, on so slight an
acquaintance, has aspired to your hand. It is indeed a high possession. I
thought only of you, not of myself. Your perfections require no time for
recognition. Perhaps my imperfections require time for indulgence. Let me
then hope!’
</p>
<p>
‘You have misconceived my meaning, and I regret that a foolish phrase
should occasion you the trouble of fresh solicitude, and me the pain of
renewed refusal. In a word, it is not in my power to accept your hand.’
</p>
<p>
He rose from the table, and stifled the groan which struggled in his
throat. He paced up and down the room with an agitated step and a
convulsed brow, which marked the contest of his passions. But he was not
desperate. His heart was full of high resolves and mighty meanings,
indefinite but great, He felt like some conqueror, who, marking the battle
going against him, proud in his infinite resources and invincible power,
cannot credit the madness of a defeat. And the lady, she leant her head
upon her delicate arm, and screened her countenance from his scrutiny.
</p>
<p>
He advanced.
</p>
<p>
‘Miss Dacre! pardon this prolonged intrusion; forgive this renewed
discourse. But let me only hope that a more favoured rival is the cause of
my despair, and I will thank you——’
</p>
<p>
‘My Lord Duke,’ she said, looking up with a faint blush, but with a
flashing eye, and in an audible and even energetic tone, ‘the question you
ask is neither fair nor manly; but, as you choose to press me, I will say
that it requires no recollection of a third person to make me decline the
honour which you intended me.’
</p>
<p>
‘Miss Dacre! you speak in anger, almost in bitterness. Believe me,’ he
added, rather with an air of pique, ‘had I imagined from your conduct
towards me that I was an object of dislike, I would have spared you this
inconvenience and myself this humiliation.’
</p>
<p>
‘At Castle Dacre, my conduct to all its inmates is the same. The Duke of
St. James, indeed, hath both hereditary and personal claims to be
considered here as something better than a mere inmate; but your Grace has
elected to dissolve all connection with our house, and I am not desirous
of assisting you in again forming any.’
</p>
<p>
‘Harsh words, Miss Dacre!’
</p>
<p>
‘Harsher truth, my Lord Duke,’ said Miss Dacre, rising from her seat, and
twisting a pen with agitated energy. ‘You have prolonged this interview,
not I. Let it end, for I am not skilful in veiling my mind; and I should
regret, here at least, to express what I have hitherto succeeded in
concealing.’
</p>
<p>
‘It cannot end thus,’ said his Grace: ‘let me, at any rate, know the
worst. You have, if not too much kindness, at least too much candour, to
part sol’ ‘I am at a loss to understand,’ said Miss Dacre, ‘what other
object our conversation can have for your Grace than to ascertain my
feelings, which I have already declared more than once, upon a point which
you have already more than once urged. If I have not been sufficiently
explicit or sufficiently clear, let me tell you, sir, that nothing but the
request of a parent whom I adore would have induced me even to speak to
the person who had dared to treat him with contempt.’ ‘Miss Dacre!’
</p>
<p>
‘You are moved, or you affect to be moved. ‘Tis well: if a word from a
stranger can thus affect you, you may be better able to comprehend the
feelings of that person whose affections you have so long outraged; your
equal in blood, Duke of St. James, your superior in all other respects.’
</p>
<p>
‘Beautiful being!’ said his Grace, advancing, falling on his knee, and
seizing her hand. ‘Pardon, pardon, pardon! Like your admirable sire,
forgive; cast into oblivion all remembrance of my fatal youth. Is not your
anger, is not this moment, a bitter, an utter expiation for all my folly,
all my thoughtless, all my inexperienced folly; for it was no worse? On my
knees, and in the face of Heaven, let me pray you to be mine. I have
staked my happiness upon this venture. In your power is my fate. On you it
depends whether I shall discharge my duty to society, to the country to
which I owe so much, or whether I shall move in it without an aim, an
object, or a hope. Think, think only of the sympathy of our dispositions;
the similarity of our tastes. Think, think only of the felicity that might
be ours. Think of the universal good we might achieve! Is there anything
that human reason could require that we could not command? any object
which human mind could imagine that we could not obtain? And, as for
myself, I swear that I will be the creature of your will. Nay, nay! oaths
are mockery, vows are idle! Is it possible to share existence with you,
beloved girl! without watching for your every wish, without—’
</p>
<p>
‘My Lord Duke, this must end. You do not recommend yourself to me by this
rhapsody. What do you know of me, that you should feel all this? I may be
different from what you expected; that is all. Another week, and another
woman may command a similar effusion. I do not believe you to be
insincere. There would be more hope for you if you were. You act from
impulse, and not from principle. This is your best excuse for your conduct
to my father. It is one that I accept, but which will certainly ever
prevent me from becoming your wife. Farewell!’ ‘Nay, nay! let us not part
in enmity!’ ‘Enmity and friendship are strong words; words that are much
abused. There is another, which must describe our feelings towards the
majority of mankind, and mine towards you. Substitute for enmity
indifference.’
</p>
<p>
She quitted the room: he remained there for some minutes, leaning on the
mantelpiece, and then rushed into the park. He hurried for some distance
with the rapid and uncertain step which betokens a tumultuous and
disordered mind. At length he found himself among the ruins of Dacre
Abbey. The silence and solemnity of the scene made him conscious, by the
contrast, of his own agitated existence; the desolation of the beautiful
ruin accorded with his own crushed and beautiful hopes. He sat himself at
the feet of the clustered columns, and, covering his face with his hands,
he wept.
</p>
<p>
They were the first tears that he had shed since childhood, and they were
agony. Men weep but once, but then their tears are blood. We think almost
their hearts must crack a little, so heartless are they ever after. Enough
of this.
</p>
<p>
It is bitter to leave our fathers hearth for the first time; bitter is the
eve of our return, when a thousand fears rise in our haunted souls. Bitter
are hope deferred, and self-reproach, and power unrecognised. Bitter is
poverty; bitterer still is debt. It is bitter to be neglected; it is more
bitter to be misunderstood. It is bitter to lose an only child. It is
bitter to look upon the land which once was ours. Bitter is a sister’s
woe, a brother’s scrape; bitter a mother’s tear, and bitterer still a
father’s curse. Bitter are a briefless bag, a curate’s bread, a diploma
that brings no fee. Bitter is half-pay!
</p>
<p>
It is bitter to muse on vanished youth; it is bitter to lose an election
or a suit. Bitter are rage suppressed, vengeance unwreaked, and
prize-money kept back. Bitter are a failing crop, a glutted market, and a
shattering spec. Bitter are rents in arrear and tithes in kind. Bitter are
salaries reduced and perquisites destroyed. Bitter is a tax, particularly
if misapplied; a rate, particularly if embezzled. Bitter is a trade too
full, and bitterer still a trade that has worn out. Bitter is a bore!
</p>
<p>
It is bitter to lose one’s hair or teeth. It is bitter to find our annual
charge exceed our income. It is bitter to hear of others’ fame when we are
boys. It is bitter to resign the seals we fain would keep. It is bitter to
hear the winds blow when we have ships at sea, or friends. Bitter are a
broken friendship and a dying love. Bitter a woman scorned, a man
betrayed!
</p>
<p>
Bitter is the secret woe which none can share. Bitter are a brutal husband
and a faithless wife, a silly daughter and a sulky son. Bitter are a
losing card, a losing horse. Bitter the public hiss, the private sneer.
Bitter are old age without respect, manhood without wealth, youth without
fame. Bitter is the east wind’s blast; bitter a stepdame’s kiss. It is
bitter to mark the woe which we cannot relieve. It is bitter to die in a
foreign land.
</p>
<p>
But bitterer far than this, than these, than all, is waking from our first
delusion! For then we first feel the nothingness of self; that hell of
sanguine spirits. All is dreary, blank, and cold. The sun of hope sets
without a ray, and the dim night of dark despair shadows only phantoms.
The spirits that guard round us in our pride have gone. Fancy, weeping,
flies. Imagination droops her glittering pinions and sinks into the earth.
Courage has no heart, and love seems a traitor. A busy demon whispers in
our ear that all is vain and worthless, and we among the vainest of a
worthless crew!
</p>
<p>
And so our young friend here now depreciated as much as he had before
exaggerated his powers. There seemed not on the earth’s face a more
forlorn, a more feeble, a less estimable wretch than himself, but just now
a hero. O! what a fool, what a miserable, contemptible fool was he! With
what a light tongue and lighter heart had he spoken of this woman who
despised, who spurned him! His face blushed, ay! burnt, at the remembrance
of his reveries and his fond monologues! the very recollection made him
shudder with disgust. He looked up to see if any demon were jeering him
among the ruins.
</p>
<p>
His heart was so crushed that hope could not find even one desolate
chamber to smile in. His courage was so cowed that, far from indulging in
the distant romance to which, under these circumstances, we sometimes fly,
he only wondered at the absolute insanity which, for a moment, had
permitted him to aspire to her possession. ‘Sympathy of dispositions!
Similarity of tastes, forsooth! Why, we are different existences! Nature
could never have made us for the same world or with the same clay! O
consummate being! why, why did we meet? Why, why are my eyes at length
unsealed? Why, why do I at length feel conscious of my utter
worthlessness? O God! I am miserable!’ He arose and hastened to the house.
He gave orders to Luigi and his people to follow him to Rosemount with all
practicable speed, and having left a note for his host with the usual
excuse, he mounted his horse, and in half an hour’s time, with a
countenance like a stormy sea, was galloping through the park gates of
Dacre.
</p>
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<h2>
BOOK III.
</h2>
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<h2>
CHAPTER I.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘If She Be Not Fair For Me.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE day after the arrival of the Duke of St. James at Cleve Park, his
host, Sir Lucius Grafton, received the following note from Mrs. Dallington
Vere:
</p>
<p>
‘Castle Dacre,———-, 182—.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Baronet,
</p>
<p>
‘Your pigeon has flown, otherwise I should have tied this under his wing,
for I take it for granted he is trained too dexterously to alight anywhere
but at Cleve.
</p>
<p>
‘I confess that in this affair your penetration has exceeded mine. I hope
throughout it will serve you as well. I kept my promise, and arrived here
only a few hours after him. The prejudice which I had long observed in the
little Dacre against your protégé was too marked to render any
interference on my part at once necessary, nor did I anticipate even
beginning to give her good advice for a month to come. Heaven knows what a
month of his conduct might have done! A month achieves such wonders! And,
to do him justice, he was most agreeable; but our young gentleman grew
impetuous, and so the day before yesterday he vanished, and in the most
extraordinary manner! Sudden departure, unexpected business, letter and
servants both left behind; Monsieur grave, and a little astonished; and
the demoiselle thoughtful at the least, but not curious. Very suspicious
this last circumstance! A flash crossed my mind, but I could gain nothing,
even with my most dexterous wiles, from the little Dacre, who is a most
unmanageable heroine. However, with the good assistance of a person who in
a French tragedy would figure as my confidante, and who is the sister of
your Lachen, something was learnt from Monsieur le valet, to say nothing
of the page. All agree; a countenance pale as death, orders given in a low
voice of suppressed passion and sundry oaths. I hear he sulked the night
at Rosemount.
</p>
<p>
‘Now, my good Lucy, listen to me. Lose no time about the great object. If
possible, let this autumn be distinguished. You have an idea that our
friend is a very manageable sort of personage; in phrase less courteous,
is sufficiently weak for all reasonable purposes. I am not quite so clear
about this. He is at present very young, and his character is not formed;
but there is a something about him which makes me half fear that, if you
permit his knowledge of life to increase too much, you may quite fear
having neglected my admonitions. At present his passions are high. Use his
blood while it is hot, and remember that if you count on his rashness you
may, as nearly in the present instance, yourself rue it. In a word,
despatch. The deed that is done, you know—
</p>
<p>
‘My kindest remembrances to dear Lady Afy, and tell her how much I regret
I cannot avail myself of her most friendly invitation. Considering, as I
know, she hates me, I really do feel flattered.
</p>
<p>
‘You cannot conceive what Vandals I am at present among! Nothing but my
sincere regard for you, my much-valued friend, would induce me to stay
here a moment. I have received from the countenance of the Dacres all the
benefit which a marked connection with so respectable and so moral a
family confers, and I am tired to death. But it is a well-devised plan to
have a reserve in the battles of society. You understand me; and I am led
to believe that it has had the best effect, and silenced even the loudest.
“Confound their politics!” as dear little Squib says, from whom I had the
other day the funniest letter, which I have half a mind to send you, only
you figure in it so much!
</p>
<p>
‘Burlington is at Brighton, and all my friends, except yourself. I have a
few barbarians to receive at Dallington, and then I shall be off there.
Join us as quickly as you can. Do you know, I think that it would be an
excellent <i>locale</i> for the <i>scena</i>. We might drive them over to
Dieppe: only do not put off your visit too long, or else there will be no
steamers.
</p>
<p>
‘The Duke of Shropshire has had a fit, but rallied. He vows he was only
picking up a letter, or tying his shoestring, or something of that kind;
but Ruthven says he dined off <i>boudins à la Sefton</i>, and that, after
a certain age, you know—
</p>
<p>
‘Lord Darrell is with Annesley and Co. I understand, most friendly towards
me, which is pleasant; and Charles, who is my firm ally, takes care to
confirm the kind feeling. I am glad about this.
</p>
<p>
‘Felix Crawlegh, or Crawl<i>ey</i>, as some say, has had an affair with
Tommy Seymour, at Grant’s. Felix was grand about porter, or something,
which he never drank, and all that. Tommy, Who knew nothing about the
brewing father, asked him, very innocently, why malt liquors had so
degenerated. Conceive the agony, particularly as Lady Selina is said to
have no violent aversion to quartering her arms with a mash-tub, argent.
</p>
<p>
‘The Macaronis are most hospitable this year; and the Marquess says that
the only reason that they kept in before was because he was determined to
see whether economy was practicable. He finds it is not; so now expense is
no object.
</p>
<p>
‘Augustus Henley is about to become a senator! What do you think of this?
He says he has tried everything for an honest livelihood, and even once
began a novel, but could not get on; which, Squib says, is odd, because
there is a receipt going about for that operation which saves all trouble:
</p>
<p>
‘“Take a pair of pistols and a pack of cards, a cookery-book and a set of
new quadrilles; mix them up with half an intrigue and a whole marriage,
and divide them into three equal portions.” Now, as Augustus has both
fought and gamed, dined and danced, I suppose it was the morality which
posed him, or perhaps the marriage.
</p>
<p>
‘They say there is something about Lady Flutter, but, I should think, all
talk. Most probably a report set about by her Ladyship. Lord Flame has
been blackballed, that is certain. But there is no more news, except that
the Wiltshires are going to the Continent: we know why; and that the
Spankers are making more dash than ever: God knows how! Adieu!
</p>
<p>
‘B. D. V.’
</p>
<p>
The letter ended; all things end at last. A she-correspondent for our
money; provided always that she does not <i>cross</i>.
</p>
<p>
Our Duke—in spite of his disgrace, he still is ours, and yours too,
I hope, gentlest reader—our Duke found himself at Cleve Park again,
in a different circle from the one to which he had been chiefly
accustomed. The sporting world received him with open arms. With some of
these worthies, as owner of Sanspareil, he had become slightly acquainted.
But what is half a morning at Tattersall’s, or half a week at Doncaster,
compared with a meeting at Newmarket? There your congenial spirits
congregate. Freemasons every man of them! No uninitiated wretch there
dares to disturb, with his profane presence, the hallowed mysteries. There
the race is not a peg to hang a few days of dissipation on, but a sacred
ceremony, to the celebration of which all men and all circumstances tend
and bend. No balls, no concerts, no public breakfasts, no bands from
Litolf, no singers from Welsh, no pineapples from Gunter, are there called
for by thoughtless thousands, who have met, not from any affection for the
turfs delights or their neighbour’s cash, but to sport their splendid
liveries and to disport their showy selves.
</p>
<p>
The house was full of men, whose talk was full of bets. The women were not
as bad, but they were not plentiful. Some lords and signors were there
without their dames. Lord Bloomerly, for instance, alone, or rather with
his eldest son, Lord Bloom, just of age, and already a knowing hand. His
father introduced him to all his friends with that smiling air of
self-content which men assume when they introduce a youth who may show the
world what they were at his years; so the Earl presented the young
Viscount as a lover presents his miniature to his mistress. Lady Afy shone
in unapproached perfection. A dull Marchioness, a <i>gauche</i>
Viscountess, and some other dames, who did not look like the chorus of
this Diana, acted as capital foils, and permitted her to meet her cavalier
under what are called the most favourable auspices.
</p>
<p>
They dined, and discussed the agricultural interest in all its exhausted
ramifications. Wheat was sold over again, even at a higher price; poachers
were recalled to life, or from beyond seas, to be re-killed or
re-transported. The poor-laws were a very rich topic, and the poor lands a
very ruinous one. But all this was merely the light conversation, just to
vary, in an agreeable mode, which all could understand, the regular
material of discourse, and that was of stakes and stallions, pedigrees and
plates.
</p>
<p>
Our party rose early, for their pleasure was their business. Here were no
lounging dandies and no exclusive belles, who kept their bowers until
hunger, which also drives down wolves from the Pyrenees, brought them from
their mystical chambers to luncheon and to life. In short, an air of
interest, a serious and a thoughtful look, pervaded every countenance.
Fashion was kicked to the devil, and they were all too much in earnest to
have any time for affectation. Breakfast was over, and it was a regular
meal at which all attended, and they hurried to the course. It seems, when
the party arrive, that they are the only spectators. A party or two come
on to keep them company. A club discharges a crowd of gentlemen, a stable
a crowd of grooms. At length a sprinkling of human beings is collected,
but all is wondrous still and wondrous cold. The only thing that gives
sign of life is Lord Breedall’s movable stand; and the only intimation
that fire is still an element is the sailing breath of a stray cigar.
</p>
<p>
‘This, then, is Newmarket!’ exclaimed the young Duke. ‘If it required
five-and-twenty thousand pounds to make Doncaster amusing, a plum, at
least, will go in rendering Newmarket endurable.’
</p>
<p>
But the young Duke was wrong. There was a fine race, and the connoisseurs
got enthusiastic. Sir Lucius Grafton was the winner. The Duke sympathised
with his friend’s success.
</p>
<p>
He began galloping about the course, and his blood warmed. He paid a visit
to Sanspareil. He heard his steed was still a favourite for a coming race.
He backed his steed, and Sanspareil won. He began to find Newmarket not so
disagreeable. In a word, our friend was in an entirely new scene, which
was exactly the thing he required. He was interested, and forgot, or
rather forcibly expelled from his mind, his late overwhelming adventure.
He grew popular with the set. His courteous manners, his affable address,
his gay humour, and the facility with which he adopted their tone and
temper, joined with his rank and wealth, subdued the most rugged and the
coldest hearts. Even the jockeys were civil to him, and welcomed him with
a sweet smile and gracious nod, instead of the sour grin and malicious
wink with which those characters generally greet a stranger; those
mysterious characters who, in their influence over their superiors, and
their total want of sympathy with their species, are our only match for
the oriental eunuch.
</p>
<p>
He grew, we say, popular with the set. They were glad to see among them a
young nobleman of spirit. He became a member of the Jockey Club, and
talked of taking a place in the neighbourhood. All recommended the step,
and assured him of their readiness to dine with him as often as he
pleased. He was a universal favourite; and even Chuck Farthing, the
gentleman jockey, with a cock-eye and a knowing shake of his head,
squeaked out, in a sporting treble, one of his monstrous fudges about the
Prince in days of yore, and swore that, like his Royal Highness, the young
Duke made the Market all alive.
</p>
<p>
The heart of our hero was never insensible to flattery. He could not
refrain from comparing his present with his recent situation. The constant
consideration of all around him, the affectionate cordiality of Sir
Lucius, and the unobtrusive devotion of Lady Afy, melted his soul. These
agreeable circumstances graciously whispered to him each hour that he
could scarcely be the desolate and despicable personage which lately, in a
moment of madness, he had fancied himself. He began to indulge the
satisfactory idea, that a certain person, however unparalleled in form and
mind, had perhaps acted with a little precipitation. Then his eyes met
those of Lady Aphrodite; and, full of these feelings, he exchanged a look
which reminded him of their first meeting; though now, mellowed by
gratitude, and regard, and esteem, it was perhaps even more delightful. He
was loved, and he was loved by an exquisite being, who was the object of
universal admiration. What could he desire more? Nothing but the
wilfulness of youth could have induced him for a moment to contemplate
breaking chains which had only been formed to secure his felicity. He
determined to bid farewell for ever to the impetuosity of youth. He had
not been three days under the roof of Cleve before he felt that his
happiness depended upon its fairest inmate. You see, then, that absence is
not always fatal to love!
</p>
<p>
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER II.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Fresh Entanglements</i>
</pre>
<p>
HIS Grace completed his stud, and became one of the most distinguished
votaries of the turf. Sir Lucius was the inspiring divinity upon this
occasion. Our hero, like all young men, and particularly young nobles, did
everything in extremes; and extensive arrangements were made by himself
and his friend for the ensuing campaign. Sir Lucius was to reap half the
profit, and to undertake the whole management. The Duke was to produce the
capital and to pocket the whole glory. Thus rolled on some weeks, at the
end of which our hero began to get a little tired. He had long ago
recovered all his self-complacency, and if the form of May Dacre ever
flitted before his vision for an instant, he clouded it over directly by
the apparition of a bet, or thrust it away with that desperate
recklessness with which we expel an ungracious thought. The Duke sighed
for a little novelty. Christmas was at hand. He began to think that a
regular country Christmas must be a sad bore. Lady Afy, too, was rather <i>exigeante</i>.
It destroys one’s nerves to be amiable every day to the same human being.
She was the best creature in the world; but Cambridgeshire was not a
pleasant county. He was most attached; but there was not another agreeable
woman in the house. He would not hurt her feelings for the world; but his
own were suffering desperately. He had no idea that he ever should get so
entangled. Brighton, they say, is a pleasant place.
</p>
<p>
To Brighton he went; and although the Graftons were to follow him in a
fortnight, still even these fourteen days were a holiday. It is
extraordinary how hourly, and how violently, change the feelings of an
inexperienced young man.
</p>
<p>
Sir Lucius, however, was disappointed in his Brighton trip. Ten days after
the departure of the young Duke the county member died. Sir Lucius had
been long maturing his pretensions to the vacant representation. He was
strongly supported; for he was a personal favourite, and his family had
claims; but he was violently opposed; for a <i>novus homo</i> was
ambitious, and the Baronet was poor. Sir Lucius was a man of violent
passions, and all feelings and considerations immediately merged in his
paramount ambition. His wife, too, at this moment, was an important
personage. She was generally popular; she was beautiful, highly connected,
and highly considered. Her canvassing was a great object. She canvassed
with earnestness and with success; for since her consolatory friendship
with the Duke of St. James her character had greatly changed, and she was
now as desirous of conciliating her husband and the opinion of society as
she was before disdainful of the one and fearless of the other. Sir Lucius
and Lady Aphrodite Grafton were indeed on the best possible terms, and the
whole county admired his conjugal attentions and her wifelike affections.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, who had no influence in this part of the world, and who was not
at all desirous of quitting Brighton, compensated for his absence at this
critical moment by a friendly letter and the offer of his purse. By this
good aid, his wife’s attractions, and his own talents, Sir Lucy succeeded,
and by the time Parliament had assembled he was returned member for his
native county.
</p>
<p>
In the meantime, his friend had been spending his time at Brighton in a
far less agitated manner, but, in its way, not less successful; for he was
amused, and therefore gained his object as much as the Baronet. The Duke
liked Brighton much. Without the bore of an establishment, he found
himself among many agreeable friends, living in an unostentatious and
impromptu, though refined and luxurious, style. One day a new face,
another day a new dish, another day a new dance, successively interested
his feelings, particularly if the face rode, which they all do; the dish
was at Sir George Sauceville’s, and the dance at the Duke of Burlington’s.
So time flew on, between a canter to Rottindean, the flavours of a
Perigord, and the blunders of the mazurka.
</p>
<p>
But February arrived, and this agreeable life must end. The philosophy of
society is so practical that it is not allowed, even to a young Duke,
absolutely to trifle away existence. Duties will arise, in spite of our
best endeavours; and his Grace had to roll up to town, to dine with the
Premier, and to move the Address.
</p>
<p>
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER III.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A New Star Rises</i>
</pre>
<p>
ANOTHER season had arrived, another of those magical periods of which one
had already witnessed his unparalleled triumphs, and from which he had
derived such exquisite delight. To his surprise, he viewed its arrival
without emotion; if with any feeling, with disgust.
</p>
<p>
He had quaffed the cup too eagerly. The draught had been delicious; but
time also proved that it had been satiating. Was it possible for his
vanity to be more completely gratified than it had been? Was it possible
for victories to be more numerous and more unquestioned during the coming
campaign than during the last? Had not his life, then, been one long
triumph? Who had not offered their admiration? Who had not paid homage to
his all-acknowledged empire? Yet, even this career, however dazzling, had
not been pursued, even this success, however brilliant, had not been
attained, without some effort and some weariness, also some exhaustion.
Often, as he now remembered, had his head ached; more than once, as now
occurred to him, had his heart faltered. Even his first season had not
passed over without his feeling lone in the crowded saloon, or starting at
the supernatural finger in the banqueting-hall. Yet then he was the
creature of excitement, who pursued an end which was as indefinite as it
seemed to be splendid. All had now happened that could happen. He drooped.
He required the impulse which we derive from an object unattained.
</p>
<p>
Yet, had he exhausted life at two-and-twenty? This must not be. His
feelings must be more philosophically accounted for. He began to suspect
that he had lived too much for the world and too little for himself; that
he had sacrificed his ease to the applause of thousands, and mistaken
excitement for enjoyment. His memory dwelt with satisfaction on the hours
which had so agreeably glided away at Brighton, in the choice society of a
few intimates. He determined entirely to remodel the system of his life;
and with the sanguine impetuosity which characterised him, he, at the same
moment, felt that he had at length discovered the road to happiness, and
determined to pursue it without the loss of a precious moment.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James was seen less in the world, and he appeared but
seldom at the various entertainments which he had once so adorned. Yet he
did not resign his exalted position in the world of fashion; but, on the
contrary, adopted a course of conduct which even increased his
consideration. He received the world not less frequently or less
splendidly than heretofore; and his magnificent mansion, early in the
season, was opened to the favoured crowd. Yet in that mansion, which had
been acquired with such energy and at such cost, its lord was almost as
strange, and certainly not as pleased, an inmate as the guests, who felt
their presence in his chambers a confirmation, or a creation, of their
claims to the world’s homage. The Alhambra was finished, and there the
Duke of St. James entirely resided; but its regal splendour was concealed
from the prying eye of public curiosity with a proud reserve, a studied
secrecy, and stately haughtiness becoming a caliph. A small band of
initiated friends alone had the occasional entrée, and the mysterious air
which they provokingly assumed whenever they were cross-examined on the
internal arrangements of this mystical structure, only increased the
number and the wildness of the incidents which daily were afloat
respecting the fantastic profusion and scientific dissipation of the
youthful sultan and his envied viziers.
</p>
<p>
The town, ever since the season commenced, had been in feverish
expectation of the arrival of a new singer, whose fame had heralded her
presence in all the courts of Christendom. Whether she were an Italian or
a German, a Gaul or a Greek, was equally unknown. An air of mystery
environed the most celebrated creature in Europe. There were odd whispers
of her parentage. Every potentate was in turn entitled to the gratitude of
mankind for the creation of this marvel. Now it was an emperor, now a
king. A grand duke then put in his claim, and then an archduke. To-day she
was married, tomorrow she was single. To-day her husband was a prince
incog., to-morrow a drum-major well known. Even her name was a mystery;
and she was known and worshipped throughout the whole civilised world by
the mere title of ‘<i>The Bird of Paradise!</i>’
</p>
<p>
About a month before Easter telegraphs announced her arrival. The
Admiralty yacht was too late. She determined to make her first appearance
at the opera: and not only the young Duke, but even a far more exalted
personage, was disappointed in the sublime idea of anticipating the public
opinion by a private concert. She was to appear for the first time on
Tuesday; the House of Commons adjourned.
</p>
<p>
The curtain is drawn up, and the house is crowded. Everybody is there who
is anybody. Protocoli, looking as full of fate as if the French were again
on the Danube; Macaroni, as full of himself as if no other being were
engrossing universal attention. The Premier appears far more anxious than
he does at Council, and the Duke of Burlington arranges his fanlike screen
with an agitation which, for a moment, makes him forget his unrivalled
nonchalance. Even Lady Bloomerly is in suspense, and even Charles
Annesley’s heart beats. But ah! (or rather, bah!) the enthusiasm of Lady
de Courcy! Even the young Guardsman, who paid her Ladyship for her ivory
franks by his idle presence, even he must have felt, callous as those
young Guardsmen are.
</p>
<p>
Will that bore of a tenor ever finish that provoking aria, that we have
heard so often? How drawlingly he drags on his dull, deafening—
</p>
<p>
<i>Êccola!</i>
</p>
<p>
Have you seen the primal dew ere the sun has lipped the pearl? Have you
seen a summer fly, with tinted wings of shifting light, glance in the
liquid noontide air? Have you marked a shooting star, or watched a young
gazelle at play? Then you have seen nothing fresher, nothing brighter,
nothing wilder, nothing lighter, than the girl who stands before you! She
was infinitely small, fair, and bright. Her black hair was braided in
Madonnas over a brow like ivory; a deep pure pink spot gave lustre to each
cheek. Her features were delicate beyond a dream! her nose quite straight,
with a nostril which would have made you crazy, if you had not already
been struck with idiocy by gazing on her mouth. She a singer! Impossible!
She cannot speak. And, now we look again, she must sing with her eyes,
they are so large and lustrous!
</p>
<p>
The Bird of Paradise curtsied as if she shrunk under the overwhelming
greeting, and crossed her breast with arms that gleamed like moonbeams and
hands that glittered like stars. This gave time to the <i>cognoscenti</i>
to remark her costume, which was ravishing, and to try to see her feet;
but they were too small. At last Lord Squib announced that he had
discovered them by a new glass, and described them as a couple of
diamond-claws most exquisitely finished.
</p>
<p>
She moved her head with a faint smile, as if she distrusted her powers and
feared the assembly would be disappointed, and then she shot forth a note
which thrilled through every heart and nearly cracked the chandelier. Even
Lady Fitz-pompey said ‘Brava!’ As she proceeded the audience grew quite
frantic. It was agreed on all hands that miracles had recommenced. Each
air was sung only to call forth fresh exclamations of ‘Miracolo!’ and
encores were as unmerciful as an usurper.
</p>
<p>
Amid all this rapture the young Duke was not silent. His box was on the
stage; and ever and anon the syren shot a glance which seemed to tell him
that he was marked out amid this brilliant multitude. Each round of
applause, each roar of ravished senses, only added a more fearful action
to the wild purposes which began to flit about his Grace’s mind. His
imagination was touched. His old passion to be distinguished returned in
full force. This creature was strange, mysterious, celebrated. Her beauty,
her accomplishments, were as singular and as rare as her destiny and her
fame. His reverie absolutely raged; it was only disturbed by her repeated
notice and his returned acknowledgments. He arose in a state of mad
excitation, once more the slave or the victim of his intoxicated vanity.
He hurried behind the scenes. He congratulated her on her success, her
genius, and her beauty; and, to be brief, within a week of her arrival in
our metropolis, the Bird of Paradise was fairly caged in the Alhambra.
</p>
<p>
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER IV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Bird is Caged</i>
</pre>
<p>
HITHERTO the Duke of St. James had been a celebrated personage, but his
fame had been confined to the two thousand Brahmins who constitute the
world. His patronage of the Signora extended his celebrity in a manner
which he had not anticipated; and he became also the hero of the ten, or
twelve, or fifteen millions of pariahs for whose existence philosophers
have hitherto failed to adduce a satisfactory cause.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James was now, in the comprehensive sense of the phrase, a
public character. Some choice spirits took the hint from the public
feeling, and determined to dine on the public curiosity. A Sunday journal
was immediately established. Of this epic our Duke was the hero. His
manners, his sayings, his adventures, regularly regaled, on each holy day,
the Protestant population of this Protestant empire, who in France or
Italy, or even Germany, faint at the sight of a peasantry testifying their
gratitude for a day of rest by a dance or a tune. ‘Sketches of the
Alhambra,’ ‘<i>Soupers</i> in the Regent’s Park,’ ‘The Court of the
Caliph,’ ‘The Bird Cage,’ &c, &c, &c, were duly announced and
duly devoured. This journal, being solely devoted to the illustration of
the life of a single and a private individual, was appropriately entitled
‘The Universe.’ Its contributors were eminently successful. Their pure
inventions and impure details were accepted as delicate truth; and their
ferocious familiarity with persons with whom they were totally
unacquainted demonstrated at the same time their knowledge both of the
forms and the personages of polite society.
</p>
<p>
At the first announcement of this hebdomadal his Grace was a little
annoyed, and ‘Noctes Hautevillienses’ made him fear treason; but when he
had read a number, he entirely acquitted any person of a breach of
confidence. On the whole he was amused. A variety of ladies in time were
introduced, with many of whom the Duke had scarcely interchanged a bow;
but the respectable editor was not up to Lady Afy.
</p>
<p>
If his Grace, however, were soon reconciled to this not very agreeable
notoriety, and consoled himself under the activity of his libellers by the
conviction that their prolusions did not even amount to a caricature, he
was less easily satisfied with another performance which speedily advanced
its claims to public notice.
</p>
<p>
There is an unavoidable reaction in all human affairs. The Duke of St.
James had been so successfully attacked that it became worth while
successfully to defend him, and another Sunday paper appeared, the object
of which was to maintain the silver side of the shield. Here everything
was <i>couleur de rose</i>. One week the Duke saved a poor man from the
Serpentine; another a poor woman from starvation; now an orphan was
grateful; and now Miss Zouch, impelled by her necessity and his
reputation, addressed him a column and a half, quite heart-rending.
Parents with nine children; nine children without parents; clergymen most
improperly unbeneficed; officers most wickedly reduced; widows of younger
sons of quality sacrificed to the Colonies; sisters of literary men
sacrificed to national works, which required his patronage to appear;
daughters who had known better days, but somehow or other had not been so
well acquainted with their parents; all advanced with multiplied
petitions, and that hackneyed, heartless air of misery which denotes the
mumper. His Grace was infinitely annoyed, and scarcely compensated for the
inconvenience by the prettiest little creature in the world, who one day
forced herself into his presence to solicit the honour of dedicating to
him her poems.
</p>
<p>
He had enough on his hands, so he wrote her a cheque and, with a courtesy
which must have made Sappho quite desperate, put her out of the room.
</p>
<p>
We forgot to say that the name of the new journal was ‘The New World.’ The
new world is not quite so big as the universe, but then it is as large as
all the other quarters of the globe together. The worst of this business
was, ‘The Universe’ protested that the Duke of St. James, like a second
Canning, had called this ‘New World’ into existence, which was too bad,
because, in truth, he deprecated its discovery scarcely less than the
Venetians.
</p>
<p>
Having thus managed, in the course of a few weeks, to achieve the
reputation of an unrivalled roué, our hero one night betook himself to
Almack’s, a place where his visits, this season, were both shorter and
less frequent.
</p>
<p>
Many an anxious mother gazed upon him, as he passed, with an eye which
longed to pierce futurity; many an agitated maiden looked exquisitely
unembarrassed, while her fluttering memory feasted on the sweet thought
that, at any rate, another had not captured this unrivalled prize. Perhaps
she might be the Anson to fall upon this galleon. It was worth a long
cruise, and even a chance of shipwreck.
</p>
<p>
He danced with Lady Aphrodite, because, since the affair of the Signora,
he was most punctilious in his attentions to her, particularly in public.
That affair, of course, she passed over in silence, though it was bitter.
She, however, had had sufficient experience of man to feel that
remonstrance is a last resource, and usually an ineffectual one. It was
something that her rival—not that her ladyship dignified the Bird by
that title—it was something that she was not her equal, that she was
not one with whom she could be put in painful and constant collision. She
tried to consider it a freak, to believe only half she heard, and to
indulge the fancy that it was a toy which would soon tire. As for Sir
Lucius, he saw nothing in this adventure, or indeed in the Alhambra system
at all, which militated against his ulterior views. No one more constantly
officiated at the ducal orgies than himself, both because he was devoted
to self-gratification, and because he liked ever to have his protégé in
sight. He studiously prevented any other individual from becoming the
Petronius of the circle. His deep experience also taught him that, with a
person of the young Duke’s temper, the mode of life which he was now
leading was exactly the one which not only would insure, but even hurry,
the catastrophe his faithful friend so eagerly desired. His pleasures, as
Sir Lucius knew, would soon pall; for he easily perceived that the Duke
was not heartless enough for a roué. When thorough satiety is felt, young
men are in the cue for desperate deeds. Looking upon happiness as a dream,
or a prize which, in life’s lottery, they have missed; worn, hipped,
dissatisfied, and desperate, they often hurry on a result which they
disapprove, merely to close a miserable career, or to brave the society
with which they cannot sympathise.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, however, was not yet sated. As after a feast, when we have
despatched a quantity of wine, there sometimes, as it were, arises a
second appetite, unnatural to be sure, but very keen; so, in a career of
dissipation, when our passion for pleasure appears to be exhausted, the
fatal fancy of man, like a wearied hare, will take a new turn, throw off
the hell-hounds of ennui, and course again with renewed vigour.
</p>
<p>
And to-night the Duke of St. James was, as he had been for some weeks, all
life, and fire, and excitement; and his eye was even now wandering round
the room in quest of some consummate spirit whom he might summon to his
Saracenic Paradise.
</p>
<p>
A consummate spirit his eye lighted on. There stood May Dacre. He gasped
for breath. He turned pale. It was only for a moment, and his emotion was
unperceived. There she stood, beautiful as when she first glanced before
him; there she stood, with all her imperial graces; and all surrounding
splendour seemed to fade away before her dazzling presence, like mournful
spirits of a lower world before a radiant creature of the sky.
</p>
<p>
She was speaking with her sunlight smile to a young man whose appearance
attracted his notice. He was dressed entirely in black, rather short, but
slenderly made; sallow, but clear, with long black curls and a Murillo
face, and looked altogether like a young Jesuit or a Venetian official by
Giorgone or Titian. His countenance was reserved and his manner not easy:
yet, on the whole, his face indicated intellect and his figure blood. The
features haunted the Duke’s memory. He had met this person before. There
are some countenances which when once seen can never be forgotten, and the
young man owned one of these. The Duke recalled him to his memory with a
pang.
</p>
<p>
Our hero—let him still be ours, for he is rather desolate, and he
requires the backing of his friends—our hero behaved pretty well. He
seized the first favourable opportunity to catch Miss Dacre’s eye, and was
grateful for her bow. Emboldened, he accosted her, and asked after Mr.
Dacre. She was courteous, but unembarrassed. Her calmness, however, piqued
him sufficiently to allow him to rally. He was tolerably easy, and talked
of calling. Their conversation lasted only for a few minutes, and was
fortunately terminated without his withdrawal, which would have been
awkward. The young man whom we have noticed came up to claim her hand.
</p>
<p>
‘Arundel Dacre, or my eyes deceive me?’ said the young Duke. ‘I always
consider an old Etonian a friend, and therefore I address you without
ceremony.’
</p>
<p>
The young man accepted, but not with readiness, the offered hand. He
blushed and spoke, but in a hesitating and husky voice. Then he cleared
his throat, and spoke again, but not much more to the purpose. Then he
looked to his partner, whose eyes were on the ground, and rose as he
endeavoured to catch them. For a moment he was silent again; then he bowed
slightly to Miss Dacre and solemnly to the Duke, and then he carried off
his cousin.
</p>
<p>
‘Poor Dacre!’ said the Duke; ‘he always had the worst manner in the world.
Not in the least changed.’
</p>
<p>
His Grace wandered into the tea-room. A knot of dandies were in deep
converse. He heard his own name and that of the Duke of Burlington; then
came ‘Doncaster beauty.’ ‘Don’t you know?’ ‘Oh! yes.’ ‘All quite mad,’
&c, &c, &c. As he passed he was invited in different ways to
join the coterie of his admirers, but he declined the honour, and passed
them with that icy hauteur which he could assume, and which, judiciously
used, contributed not a little to his popularity.
</p>
<p>
He could not conquer his depression; and, although it was scarcely past
midnight, he determined to disappear. Fortunately his carriage was
waiting. He was at a loss what to do with himself. He dreaded even to be
alone. The Signora was at a private concert, and she was the last person
whom, at this moment, he cared to see. His low spirits rapidly increased.
He got terribly nervous, and felt miserable. At last he drove to White’s.
</p>
<p>
The House had just broken up, and the political members had just entered,
and in clusters, some standing and some yawning, some stretching their
arms and some stretching their legs, presented symptoms of an escape from
boredom. Among others, round the fire, was a young man dressed in a rough
great coat all cords and sables, with his hat bent aside, a shawl tied
round his neck with boldness, and a huge oaken staff clenched in his left
hand. With the other he held the ‘Courier,’ and reviewed with a critical
eye the report of the speech which he had made that afternoon. This was
Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
We have always considered the talents of younger brothers as an
unanswerable argument in favour of a Providence. Lord Darrell was the
younger son of the Earl of Darleyford, and had been educated for a
diplomatist. A report some two years ago had been very current that his
elder brother, then Lord Darrell, was, against the consent of his family,
about to be favoured with the hand of Mrs. Dallington Vere. Certain it is
he was a devoted admirer of that lady. Of that lady, however, a less
favoured rival chose one day to say that which staggered the romance of
the impassioned youth. In a moment of rashness, impelled by sacred
feelings, it is reported, at least, for the whole is a mystery, he
communicated what he had heard with horror to the mistress of his
destinies. Whatever took place, certain it is Lord Darrell challenged the
indecorous speaker, and was shot through the heart. The affair made a
great sensation, and the Darleyfords and their connections said bitter
things of Mrs. Dallington, and talked much of rash youth and subtle women
of discreeter years, and passions shamefully inflamed and purposes
wickedly egged on. We say nothing of all this; nor will we dwell upon it.
Mrs. Dallington Vere assuredly was no slight sufferer. But she conquered
the cabal that was formed against her, for the dandies were her friends,
and gallantly supported her through a trial under which some women would
have sunk. As it was, at the end of the season she did travel, but all is
now forgotten; and Hill Street, Berkeley Square, again contains, at the
moment of our story, its brightest ornament.
</p>
<p>
The present Lord Darrell gave up all idea of being an ambassador, but he
was clever; and though he hurried to gratify a taste for pleasure which
before had been too much mortified, he could not relinquish the ambitious
prospects with which he had, during the greater part of his life, consoled
himself for his cadetship. He piqued himself upon being at the same time a
dandy and a statesman. He spoke in the House, and not without effect. He
was one of those who make themselves masters of great questions; that is
to say, who read a great many reviews and newspapers, and are full of
others’ thoughts without ever having thought themselves. He particularly
prided himself upon having made his way into the Alhambra set. He was the
only man of business among them. The Duke liked him, for it is agreeable
to be courted by those who are themselves considered.
</p>
<p>
Lord Darrell was a favourite with women. They like a little intellect. He
talked fluently on all subjects. He was what is called ‘a talented young
man.’ Then he had mind, and soul, and all that. The miracles of creation
have long agreed that body without soul will not do; and even a coxcomb in
these days must be original, or he is a bore. No longer is such a
character the mere creation of his tailor and his perfumer. Lord Darrell
was an avowed admirer of Lady Caroline St. Maurice, and a great favourite
with her parents, who both considered him an oracle on the subjects which
respectively interested them. You might dine at Fitz-pompey House and hear
his name quoted at both ends of the table; by the host upon the state of
Europe, and by the hostess upon the state of the season. Had it not been
for the young Duke, nothing would have given Lady Fitz-pompey greater
pleasure than to have received him as a son-in-law; but, as it was, he was
only kept in store for the second string to Cupid’s bow.
</p>
<p>
Lord Darrell had just quitted the House in a costume which, though rough,
was not less studied than the finished and elaborate toilet which, in the
course of an hour, he will exhibit in the enchanted halls of Almack’s.
There he will figure to the last, the most active and the most remarked;
and though after these continued exertions he will not gain his couch
perhaps till seven, our Lord of the Treasury, for he is one, will resume
his official duties at an earlier hour than any functionary in the
kingdom.
</p>
<p>
Yet our friend is a little annoyed now. What is the matter? He dilates to
his uncle, Lord Seymour Temple, a greyheaded placeman, on the profligacy
of the press. What is this? The Virgilian line our orator introduced so
felicitously is omitted. He panegyrizes the ‘Mirror of Parliament,’ where,
he has no doubt, the missing verse will appear. The quotation was new,
‘Timeo Danaos.’
</p>
<p>
Lord Seymour Temple begins a long story about Fox and General Fitzpatrick.
This is a signal for a general retreat; and the bore, as Sir Boyle Roche
would say, like the last rose of summer, remains talking to himself.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER V.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>His Grace’s Rival</i>
</pre>
<p>
ARUNDEL DACRE was the only child of Mr. Dacre’s only and deceased brother,
and the heir to the whole of the Dacre property. His father, a man of
violent passions, had married early in life, against the approbation of
his family, and had revolted from the Catholic communion. The elder
brother, however mortified by this great deed, which passion had prompted,
and not conscience, had exerted his best offices to mollify their
exasperated father, and to reconcile the sire to the son. But he had
exerted them ineffectually; and, as is not unusual, found, after much
harrowing anxiety and deep suffering, that he was not even recompensed for
his exertions and his sympathy by the gratitude of his brother. The
younger Dacre was not one of those minds whose rashness and impetuosity
are counterbalanced, or rather compensated, by a generous candour and an
amiable remorse. He was headstrong, but he was obstinate: he was ardent,
but he was sullen: he was unwary, but he was suspicious. Everyone who
opposed him was his enemy: all who combined for his preservation were
conspirators. His father, whose feelings he had outraged and never
attempted to soothe, was a tyrant; his brother, who was devoted to his
interests, was a traitor.
</p>
<p>
These were his living and his dying thoughts. While he existed, he was one
of those men who, because they have been imprudent, think themselves
unfortunate, and mistake their diseased mind for an implacable destiny.
When he died, his deathbed was consoled by the reflection that his
persecutors might at last feel some compunction; and he quitted the world
without a pang, because he flattered himself that his departure would cost
them one.
</p>
<p>
His father, who died before him, had left him no fortune, and even had not
provided for his wife or child. His brother made another ineffectual
attempt to accomplish a reconciliation; but his proffers of love and
fortune were alike scorned and himself insulted, and Arundel Dacre seemed
to gloat on the idea that he was an outcast and a beggar.
</p>
<p>
Yet even this strange being had his warm feelings. He adored his wife,
particularly because his father had disowned her. He had a friend whom he
idolised, and who, treating his occasional conduct as a species of
insanity, had never deserted him. This friend had been his college
companion, and, in the odd chapter of circumstances, had become a powerful
political character. Dacre was a man of talent, and his friend took care
that he should have an opportunity of displaying it. He was brought into
Parliament, and animated by the desire, as he thought, of triumphing over
his family, he exerted himself with success. But his infernal temper
spoiled all. His active quarrels and his noisy brawls were even more
endurable than his sullen suspicions, his dark hints, and his silent hate.
He was always offended and always offending. Such a man could never
succeed as a politician, a character who, of all others, must learn to
endure, to forget, and to forgive. He was soon universally shunned; but
his first friend was faithful, though bitterly tried, and Dacre retired
from public life on a pension.
</p>
<p>
His wife had died, and during the latter years of his life almost his only
companion was his son. He concentrated on this being all that ardent
affection which, had he diffused among his fellow-creatures, might have
ensured his happiness and his prosperity. Yet even sometimes he would look
in his child’s face with an anxious air, as if he read incubating treason,
and then press him to his bosom with unusual fervour, as if he would
stifle the idea, which alone was madness.
</p>
<p>
This child was educated in an hereditary hate of the Dacre family. His
uncle was daily painted as a tyrant, whom he classed in his young mind
with Phalaris or Dionysius. There was nothing that he felt keener than his
father’s wrongs, and nothing which he believed more certain than his
uncle’s wickedness. He arrived at his thirteenth year when his father
died, and he was to be consigned to the care of that uncle.
</p>
<p>
Arundel Dacre had left his son as a legacy to his friend; but that friend
was a man of the world; and when the elder brother not only expressed his
willingness to maintain the orphan, but even his desire to educate and
adopt him as his son, he cheerfully resigned all his claims to the forlorn
boy, and felt that, by consigning him to his uncle, he had most
religiously discharged the trust of his confiding friend.
</p>
<p>
The nephew arrived at Castle Dacre with a heart equally divided between
misery and hatred. It seemed to him that a fate more forlorn than his had
seldom been awarded to mortal. Although he found his uncle diametrically
opposite to all that his misled imagination had painted him, although he
was treated with a kindness and indulgence which tried to compensate for
their too long estranged affections, Arundel Dacre could never conquer the
impressions of his boyhood; and had it not been for his cousin, May, a
creature of whom he had not heard, and of whom no distorted image had
therefore haunted his disturbed imagination; had it not been for this
beautiful girl, who greeted him with affection which warmed and won his
heart, so morbid were his feelings, that he would in all probability have
pined away under the roof which he should have looked upon as his own.
</p>
<p>
His departure for Eton was a relief. As he grew up, although his knowledge
of life and man had long taught him the fallacy of his early feelings, and
although he now yielded a tear of pity, rather than of indignation, to the
adored manes of his father, his peculiar temper and his first education
never allowed him entirely to emancipate himself from his hereditary
feelings. His character was combined of many and even of contrary
qualities.
</p>
<p>
His talents were great, but his want of confidence made them more doubtful
to himself than to the world; yet, at times, in his solitary musings, he
perhaps even exaggerated his powers. He was proud, and yet worldly. He
never forgot that he was a Dacre; but he desired to be the architect of
his own fortune; and his very love of independence made him, at an early
period, meditate on the means of managing mankind. He was reserved and
cold, for his imagination required much; yet he panted for a confidant and
was one of those youths with whom friendship is a passion. To conclude, he
was a Protestant among Catholics; and although this circumstance, inasmuch
as it assisted him in the views which he had early indulged, was not an
ungracious one, he felt that, till he was distinguished, it had lessened
his consideration, since he could not count upon the sympathy of
hereditary connections and ancient party. Altogether, he was one who, with
the consciousness of ancient blood, the certainty of future fortune, fine
talents, great accomplishments, and not slight personal advantages, was
unhappy. Yet, although not of a sanguine temper, and occasionally
delivered to the darkest spleen, his intense ambition sustained him, and
he lived on the hope, and sometimes on the conviction, that a bright era
would, some day, console him for the bitterness of his past and present
life.
</p>
<p>
At school and at college he equally distinguished himself, and was
everywhere respected and often regarded; yet he had never found that
friend on whom his fancy had often busied itself, and which one whose
alternations of feeling were so violent peremptorily required. His uncle
and himself viewed each other with mutual respect and regard, but
confidence did not exist between them. Mr. Dacre, in spite of his long and
constant efforts, despaired of raising in the breast of his nephew the
flame of filial love; and had it not been for his daughter, who was the
only person in the world to whom Arundel ever opened his mind, and who
could, consequently, throw some light upon his wants and wishes, it would
not have been in his power to evince to his nephew that this
disappointment had not affected his uncle’s feelings in his favour.
</p>
<p>
When his education was completed, Mr. Dacre had wished him to take up his
residence in Yorkshire, and, in every sense, to act as his son, as he was
his successor. But Arundel declined this proposition. He obtained from his
father’s old political connection the appointment of <i>attaché</i> to a
foreign embassy, and he remained on the Continent, with the exception of a
yearly visit to Yorkshire, three or four years. But his views were not in
the diplomatic line, and this appointment only served as a political
school until he could enter Parliament. May Dacre had wormed from him his
secret, and worked with energy in his cause. An opportunity appeared to
offer itself, and, under the patronage of a Catholic nobleman, he was to
appear as a candidate for an open borough. It was on this business that he
had returned to England.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Birds of a Feather</i>
</pre>
<p>
WE WILL go and make a morning call. The garish light of day, that never
suits a chamber, was broken by a muslin veil, which sent its softened
twilight through a room of moderate dimensions but of princely decoration,
and which opened into a conservatory. The choice saloon was hung with
rose-coloured silk, which diffused a delicate tint over the inlaid and
costly cabinets. It was crowded with tables covered with <i>bijouterie</i>.
Apparently, however, a road had been cut through the furniture, by which
you might wind your way up to the divinity of the temple. A ravishing
perfume, which was ever changing, wandered through the apartment. Now a
violet breeze made you poetical; now a rosy gale called you to love. And
ever and anon the strange but thrilling breath of some rare exotic
summoned you, like an angel, to opening Eden. All was still and sweet,
save that a fountain made you, as it were, more conscious of silence; save
that the song of birds made you, as it were, more sensible of sweetness.
</p>
<p>
Upon a couch, her small head resting upon an arm covered with bracelets,
which blazed like a Sol-dan’s treasure, reclined Mrs. Dallington Vere.
</p>
<p>
She is in thought. Is her abstracted eye fixed in admiration upon that
twinkling foot which, clothed in its Russian slipper, looks like a
serpent’s tongue, small, red, and pointed; or does a more serious feeling
than self-admiration inspire this musing? Ah! a cloud courses over that
pellucid brow. Tis gone, but it frowned like the harbinger of a storm.
Again! A small but blood-red blush rises into that clear cheek. It was
momentary, but its deep colour indicated that it came from the heart. Her
eye lights up with a wild and glittering fire, but the flash vanishes into
darkness, and gloom follows the unnatural light. She clasps her hands; she
rises from an uneasy seat, though supported by a thousand pillows, and she
paces the conservatory.
</p>
<p>
A guest is announced. It is Sir Lucius Grafton.
</p>
<p>
He salutes her with that studied courtesy which shows they are only
friends, but which, when maintained between intimate acquaintance,
sometimes makes wicked people suspect that they once perhaps were more.
She resumes her seat, and he throws himself into an easy chair which is
opposite.
</p>
<p>
‘Your note I this moment received, Bertha, and I am here. You perceive
that my fidelity is as remarkable as ever.’
</p>
<p>
‘We had a gay meeting last night.’
</p>
<p>
‘Very much so. So Lady Araminta has at last shown mercy.’
</p>
<p>
‘I cannot believe it.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have just had a note from Challoner, preliminary, I suppose, to my
trusteeship. You are not the only person who holds my talents for business
in high esteem.’
</p>
<p>
‘But Ballingford; what will he say?’
</p>
<p>
‘That is his affair; and as he never, to my knowledge, spoke to the
purpose, his remarks now, I suppose, are not fated to be much more
apropos.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet he can say things. We all know——’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, yes, we all know; but nobody believes. That is the motto of the
present day; and the only way to neutralise scandal, and to counteract
publicity.’
</p>
<p>
Mrs. Dallington was silent, and looked uneasy; and her friend perceiving
that, although she had sent to him so urgent a billet, she did not
communicate, expressed a little surprise.
</p>
<p>
‘But you wish to see me, Bertha?’
</p>
<p>
‘I do very much, and to speak to you. For these many days I have intended
it; but I do not know how it is, I have postponed and postponed our
interview. I begin to believe,’ she added, looking up with a faint smile,
‘I am half afraid to speak.’
</p>
<p>
‘Good God!’ said the Baronet, really alarmed, ‘you are in no trouble?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, no! make yourself easy. Trouble, trouble! No, no! I am not exactly in
trouble. I am not in debt; I am not in a scrape; but—but—but I
am in something—something worse, perhaps: I am in love.’
</p>
<p>
The Baronet looked puzzled. He did not for a moment suspect himself to be
the hero; yet, although their mutual confidence was illimitable, he did
not exactly see why, in the present instance, there had been such urgency
to impart an event not altogether either unnatural or miraculous.
</p>
<p>
‘In love!’ said Sir Lucius; ‘a very proper situation for the prettiest
woman in London. Everybody is in love with you; and I heartily rejoice
that some one of our favoured sex is about to avenge our sufferings.’
</p>
<p>
‘<i>Point de moquerie</i>, Lucy! I am miserable.’
</p>
<p>
‘Dear little pigeon, what is the matter?’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah, me!’
</p>
<p>
‘Speak,-speak,’ said he, in a gay tone; ‘you were not made for sighs, but
smiles. Begin——’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, then, the young Duke——’
</p>
<p>
‘The deuce!’ said Sir Lucius, alarmed.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! no! make yourself easy,’ said Mrs. Dallington, smiling; ‘no
counterplot, I assure you, although really you do not deserve to succeed.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then who is it?’ eagerly asked Sir Lucius.
</p>
<p>
‘You will not let me speak. The young Duke——’
</p>
<p>
‘Damn the Duke!’
</p>
<p>
‘How impatient you are, Lucy! I must begin with the beginning. Well, the
young Duke has something to do with it.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pray be explicit.’
</p>
<p>
‘In a word, then,’ said Mrs. Dallington, in a low voice, but with an
expression of earnestness which Sir Lucius had never before remarked, ‘I
am in love, desperately in love, with one whom hitherto, in accordance
with your wishes, I have been driving into the arms of another. Our views,
our interests are opposite; but I wish to act fairly, if possible; I wish
to reconcile them; and it is for this purpose that I have summoned you
this morning.’
</p>
<p>
‘Arundel Dacre!’ said Sir Lucius, quietly, and he rapped his cane on his
boot. The blood-red spot again rose in his companion’s cheek.
</p>
<p>
There was silence for a moment. Sir Lucius would not disturb it, and Mrs.
Dallington again spoke.
</p>
<p>
‘St. James and the little Dacre have again met. You have my secret. I do
not ask your good services with Arundel, which I might at another time;
but you cannot expect me to work against myself. Depend, then, no longer
on my influence with May Dacre; for to be explicit, as we have always
been, most heartily should I rejoice to see her a duchess.’
</p>
<p>
‘The point, Bertha,’ said Sir Lucius, very quietly, ‘is not that I can no
longer count upon you as an ally; but I must, I perceive, reckon you an
opponent.’
</p>
<p>
‘Cannot we prevent this?’ asked Mrs. Dallington with energy.
</p>
<p>
‘I see no alternative,’ said Sir Lucius, shaking his head with great
unconcern. ‘Time will prove who will have to congratulate the other.’
</p>
<p>
‘My friend,’ said Mrs. Dallington, with briskness and decision, ‘no
affectation between us. Drop this assumed unconcern. You know, you know
well, that no incident could occur to you at this moment more mortifying
than the one I have communicated, which deranges your plans, and probably
may destroy your views. You cannot misconceive my motives in making this
not very agreeable communication. I might have pursued my object without
your knowledge and permission. In a word, I might have betrayed you. But
with me every consideration has yielded to friendship. I cannot forget how
often, and how successfully, we have combined. I should grieve to see our
ancient and glorious alliance annulled. I am yet in hopes that we may both
obtain our objects through its medium.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am not aware,’ said Sir Lucius, with more feeling, ‘that I have given
you any cause to complain of my want of candour. We are in a difficult
position. I have nothing to suggest, but I am ready to listen. You know
how ready I am to adopt all your suggestions; and I know how seldom you
have wanted an expedient.’
</p>
<p>
‘The little Dacre, then, must not marry her cousin; but we cannot flatter
ourselves that such a girl will not want to marry some one; I have a
conviction that this is her decisive season. She must be occupied. In a
word, Lucy, some one must be found.’
</p>
<p>
The Baronet started from his chair, and nearly knocked down a table.
</p>
<p>
‘Confound your tables, Bertha,’ said he, in a pettish tone; ‘I can never
consult in a room full of tables.’ He walked into the conservatory, and
she followed him. He seemed plunged in thought. They were again silent.
Suddenly he seized her hand and led her back to the sofa, on which they
both sat down.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear friend,’ he said, in a tone of agitated solemnity. ‘I will
conceal no longer from you what I have sometimes endeavoured to conceal
from myself: I love that girl to distraction.’ ‘You!’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes; to distraction. Ever since we first met her image has haunted me. I
endeavoured to crush a feeling which promised only to plunge me into
anxiety, and to distract my attention from my important objects; but in
vain, in vain. Her unexpected appearance yesterday has revived my passion
with triple fervour. I have passed a sleepless night, and rise with the
determination to obtain her.’
</p>
<p>
‘You know your own power, Lucius, better perhaps than I do, or the world.
We rank it high; none higher; yet, nevertheless, I look upon this
declaration as insanity.’
</p>
<p>
He raised her hand to his lips, and pressed it with delicate warmth, and
summoned his most insinuating tone. ‘With your aid, Bertha, I should not
despair!’
</p>
<p>
‘Lucy, I am your friend; perhaps your best friend: but these Dacres! Would
it were anyone but a Dacre! No, no, this cannot be.’
</p>
<p>
‘Bertha, you know me better than the world: I am a roué, and you are my
friend; but, believe me, I am not quite so vain as to indulge for a moment
in the idea that May Dacre should be aught to me but what all might
approve and all might honour. Yes, I intend her for my wife.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your wife! You are, indeed, premature.’
</p>
<p>
‘Not quite so premature as you perhaps imagine. Know, then, that the great
point is on the eve of achievement. Urged by the information which Afy
thinks she unconsciously obtains from Lachen, and harrowed by the idea
that I am about to tear her from England, she has appealed to the Duke in
a manner to which they were both unused. Hitherto her docile temper has
not permitted her to abuse her empire. Now she exerts her power with an
energy to which he believed her a stranger. He is staggered by his
situation. He at the same time repents having so rashly engaged the
feelings of a woman, and is flattered that he is so loved. They have more
than once consulted upon the expediency of an elopement.’
</p>
<p>
‘This is good news.’
</p>
<p>
‘O! Bertha, you must feel like me before you can estimate it. Yes!’ he
clenched his fist with horrible energy, ‘there is no hell like a detested
wife!’
</p>
<p>
They were again silent; but when she thought that his emotion had
subsided, she again recalled their consideration to the object of their
interview.
</p>
<p>
‘You play a bold game, indeed; but it shall not fail from any deficiency
on my part. But how are we to proceed at present? Who is to interest the
feelings of the little Dacre at once?’
</p>
<p>
‘Who but her future husband? What I want you to do is this: we shall call;
but prepare the house to receive us not only as acquaintances, but as
desirable intimates. You know what to say. I have an idea that the divine
creature entertains no very unfavourable opinion of your obedient slave;
and with her temper I care not for what she will not probably hear, the
passing opinion of a third person. I stand at present, thanks to Afy, very
high with the public; and you know, although my life has not the least
altered, that my indiscretions have now a dash of discretion in them; and
a reformed rake, as all agree, is the personification of morality. Prepare
my way with the Dacres, and all will go right. And as for this Arundel, I
know him not; but you have told me enough to make me consider him the most
fortunate of men. As for love between cousins, I laugh at it. A glance
from you will extinguish the feeble flame, as a sunbeam does a fire: and
for the rest, the world does me the honour to believe that, if Lucius
Grafton be remarkable for one thing more than another, it is for the
influence he attains over young minds. I will get acquainted with this
boy; and, for once, let love be unattended by doubt.’
</p>
<p>
Long was their counsel. The plans we have hinted at were analysed,
canvassed, weighed, and finally matured. They parted, after a long
morning, well aware of the difficulties which awaited their fulfilment,
but also full of hope.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Dangerous Guide</i>
</pre>
<p>
SUCH able and congenial spirits as Mrs. Dallington Vere and Sir Lucius
Grafton prosecuted their plans with the success which they had a right to
anticipate. Lady Aphrodite, who was proud of her previous acquaintance,
however slight, with the most distinguished girl in London, and eager to
improve it, unconsciously assisted their operations. Society is so
constituted that it requires no little talent and no slight energy to
repel the intimacy even of those whose acquaintance is evidently not
desirable; and there are many people in this world mixing, apparently,
with great spirit and self-esteem in its concerns, who really owe their
constant appearance and occasional influence in circles of consideration
to no other qualities than their own callous impudence, and the indolence
and the irresolution of their victims. They, who at the same time have no
delicacy and no shame, count fearful odds; and, much as is murmured about
the false estimation of riches, there is little doubt that the parvenus as
often owe their advancement in society to their perseverance as to their
pelf.
</p>
<p>
When, therefore, your intimacy is courted by those whose intimacy is an
honour, and that, too, with an art, which conceals its purpose, you often
find that you have, and are a devoted friend, really before you have felt
sufficient gratitude for the opera-box which has been so often lent, the
carriage which has been ever at hand, the brother who has received such
civilities, or the father who has been requested to accept some of the
unattainable tokay which he has charmed you by admiring at your own table.
</p>
<p>
The manoeuvres and tactics of society are infinitely more numerous and
infinitely finer than those of strategy. Woe betide the rash knight who
dashes into the thick of the polished melée without some slight experience
of his barb and his lance! Let him look to his arms! He will do well not
to appear before his helm be plumed with some reputation, however slight.
He may be very rich, or even very poor. We have seen that answer with a
Belisarius-like air; and more than one hero without an obolus has stumbled
upon a fortune merely from his contempt of riches. If to fight, or write,
or dress be above you, why, then, you can ride, or dance, or even skate;
but do not think, as many young gentlemen are apt to believe, that <i>talking</i>
will serve your purpose. That is the quicksand of your young beginners.
All can talk in a public assembly; that is to say, all can give us
exhortations which do not move, and arguments which do not convince; but
to converse in a private assembly is a different affair, and rare are the
characters who can be endured if they exceed a whisper to their
neighbours. But though mild and silent, be ever ready with the rapier of
repartee, and be ever armed with the breastplate of good temper. You will
infallibly gather laurels if you add to these the spear of sarcasm and the
shield of nonchalance.
</p>
<p>
The high style of conversation where eloquence and philosophy emulate each
other, where principles are profoundly expounded and felicitously
illustrated, all this has ceased. It ceased in this country with Johnson
and Burke, and it requires a Johnson and a Burke for its maintenance.
There is no mediocrity in such discourse, no intermediate character
between the sage and the bore. The second style, where men, not things,
are the staple, but where wit, and refinement, and sensibility invest even
personal details with intellectual interest, does flourish at present, as
it always must in a highly civilised society. S. is, or rather was, a fine
specimen of this school, and M. and L. are his worthy rivals. This style
is indeed, for the moment, very interesting. Then comes your conversation
man, who, we confess, is our aversion. His talk is a thing apart, got up
before he enters the company from whose conduct it should grow out. He
sits in the middle of a large table, and, with a brazen voice, bawls out
his anecdotes about Sir Thomas or Sir Humphry, Lord Blank, or my Lady
Blue. He is incessant, yet not interesting; ever varying, yet always
monotonous. Even if we were amused, we are no more grateful for the
entertainment than we are to the lamp over the table for the light which
it universally sheds, and to yield which it was obtained on purpose. We
are more gratified by the slight conversation of one who is often silent,
but who speaks from his momentary feelings, than by all this hullaballoo.
Yet this machine is generally a favourite piece of furniture with the
hostess. You may catch her eye as he recounts some adventure of the
morning, which proves that he not only belongs to every club, but goes to
them, light up with approbation; and then, when the ladies withdraw, and
the female senate deliver their criticism upon the late actors, she will
observe, with a gratified smile, to her confidante, that the dinner went
off well, and that Mr. Bellow was very strong to-day.
</p>
<p>
All this is horrid, and the whole affair is a delusion. A variety of
people are brought together, who all come as late as possible, and retire
as soon, merely to show they have other engagements. A dinner is prepared
for them, which is hurried over, in order that a certain number of dishes
should be, not tasted, but seen: and provided that there is no moment that
an absolute silence reigns; provided that, besides the bustling of the
servants, the clattering of the plates and knives, a stray anecdote is
told, which, if good, has been heard before, and which, if new, is
generally flat; provided a certain number of certain names of people of
consideration are introduced, by which some stranger, for whom the party
is often secretly given, may learn the scale of civilisation of which he
this moment forms a part; provided the senators do not steal out too soon
to the House, and their wives to another party, the hostess is
congratulated on the success of her entertainment.
</p>
<p>
And this glare, and heat, and noise, these <i>congeries</i> of individuals
without sympathy and dishes without flavour; this is society! What an
effect without a cause! A man must be green indeed to stand this for two
seasons. One cannot help thinking that one consequence of the increased
intelligence of the present day will be a great change in the habits of
our intercourse.
</p>
<p>
To our tale; we linger. Few who did not know too much of Sir Lucius
Grafton could refrain from yielding him their regard when he chose to
challenge it, and with the Dacres he was soon an acknowledged favourite.
As a new M.P., and hitherto doubtful supporter of the Catholic cause, it
was grateful to Mr. Dacre’s feelings to find in him an ally, and
flattering to Mr. Dacre’s judgment when that ally ventured to consult him
on his friendly operations. With Miss Dacre he was a mild, amiable man,
who knew the world; thoroughly good, but void of cant, and owner of a
virtue not less to be depended on because his passions had once been
strong, and he had once indulged them. His experience of life made him
value domestic felicity; because he knew that there was no other source of
happiness which was at once so pure and so permanent. But he was not one
of those men who consider marriage as an extinguisher of all those
feelings and accomplishments which throw a lustre on existence; and he did
not consider himself bound, because he had plighted his faith to a
beautiful woman, immediately to terminate the very conduct which had
induced her to join him in the sacred and eternal pledge. His gaiety still
sparkled, his wit still flashed; still he hastened to be foremost among
the courteous; and still his high and ready gallantry indicated that he
was not prepared to yield the fitting ornament of his still blooming
youth. A thousand unobtrusive and delicate attentions which the innocent
now received from him without a thought, save of Lady Aphrodite’s good
fortune; a thousand gay and sentimental axioms, which proved not only how
agreeable he was, but how enchanting he must have been; a thousand little
deeds which struggled to shun the light, and which palpably demonstrated
that the gaiety of his wit, the splendour of his accomplishments, and the
tenderness of his soul were only equalled by his unbounded generosity and
unparalleled good temper; all these combined had made Sir Lucius Grafton,
to many, always a delightful, often a dangerous, and sometimes a fatal,
companion. He was one of those whose candour is deadly. It was when he
least endeavoured to conceal his character that its hideousness least
appeared. He confessed sometimes so much, that you yielded that pity
which, ere the shrived culprit could receive, by some fatal alchemy was
changed into passion. His smile was a lure, his speech was a spell; but it
was when he was silent, and almost gloomy, when you caught his serious
eye, charged, as it were, with emotion, gazing on yours, that if you had a
guardian sylph you should have invoked its aid; and we pray, if ever you
meet the man of whom we write, your invocation may not be forgotten, or
be, what is more likely, too late.
</p>
<p>
The Dacres, this season, were the subject of general conversation. She was
the distinguished beauty, and the dandies all agreed that his dinner was
worthy of his daughter. Lady Fitz-pompey was not behind the welcoming
crowd. She was too politic a leader not to feel anxious to enlist under
her colours a recruit who was so calculated to maintain the reputation of
her forces. Fitz-pompey House must not lose its character for assembling
the most distinguished, the most agreeable, and the most refined, and May
Dacre was a divinity who would summon many a crowd to her niche in this
Pantheon of fashion.
</p>
<p>
If any difficulty were for a moment anticipated in bringing about this
arrangement, a fortunate circumstance seemed sufficient to remove it. Lord
St. Maurice and Arundel Dacre had been acquainted at Vienna, and, though
the intimacy was slight, it was sweet. St. Maurice had received many
favours from the <i>attaché</i>, and, as he was a man of family and
reputation, had been happy to greet him on his arrival in London. Before
the Dacres made their appearance in town for the season Arundel had been
initiated in the mysteries of Fitz-pompey House, and therefore a desire
from that mansion to cultivate the good graces of his Yorkshire relation
seemed not only not forced, but natural. So, the families met, and, to the
surprise of each other, became even intimate, for May Dacre and Lady
Caroline soon evinced a mutual regard for each other. Female friendships
are of rapid growth, and in the present instance, when there was nothing
on either side which was not lovable, it was quite miraculous, and the
friendship, particularly on the part of Lady Caroline, shot up in one
night, like a blooming aloe.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps there is nothing more lovely than the love of two beautiful women,
who are not envious of each other’s charms. How delightfully they impart
to each other the pattern of a cap, or flounce, or frill! how charmingly
they entrust some slight, slender secret about tinting a flower or netting
a purse! Now one leans over the other, and guides her inexperienced hand,
as it moves in the mysteries of some novel work, and then the other looks
up with an eye beaming with devotion; and then again the first leans down
a little lower, and gently presses her aromatic lips upon her friend’s
polished forehead.
</p>
<p>
These are sights which we quiet men, who, like ‘little Jack Horner,’ know
where to take up a safe position, occasionally enjoy, but which your noisy
fellows, who think that women never want to be alone—a sad mistake—and
consequently must be always breaking or stringing a guitar, or cutting a
pencil, or splitting a crowquill, or overturning the gold ink, or
scribbling over a pattern, or doing any other of the thousand acts of
mischief, are debarred from.
</p>
<p>
Not that these bright flowers often bloomed alone; a blossom not less
brilliant generally shared with them the same parterre. Mrs. Dallington
completed the bouquet, and Arundel Dacre was the butterfly, who, she was
glad to perceive, was seldom absent when her presence added beauty to the
beautiful. Indeed, she had good reason to feel confidence in her
attractions. Independently of her charms, which assuredly were great, her
fortune, which was even greater, possessed, she was well aware, no slight
allurement to one who ever trembled when he thought of his dependence, and
often glowed when he mused over his ambition. His slight but increasing
notice was duly estimated by one who was perfectly acquainted with his
peculiar temper, and daily perceived how disregardful he was of all
others, except her and his cousin. But a cousin! She felt confidence in
the theory of Sir Lucius Grafton.
</p>
<p>
And the young Duke; have we forgotten him? Sooth to say, he was seldom
with our heroine or heroines. He had called on Mr. Dacre, and had greeted
him with marked cordiality, and he had sometimes met him and his daughter
in society. But although invited, he had hitherto avoided being their
visitor; and the comparatively secluded life which he now led prevented
him from seeing them often at other houses. Mr. Dacre, who was unaware of
what had passed between him and his daughter, thought his conduct
inexplicable; but his former guardian remembered that it was not the first
time that his behaviour had been unusual, and it was never the disposition
of Mr. Dacre to promote explanations.
</p>
<p>
Our hero felt annoyed at his own weakness. It would have been infinitely
more worthy of so celebrated, so unrivalled a personage as the Duke of St.
James not to have given the woman who had rejected him this evidence of
her power. According to etiquette, he should have called there daily and
have dined there weekly, and yet never have given the former object of his
adoration the slightest idea that he cared a breath for her presence.
According to etiquette, he should never have addressed her but in a vein
of persiflage, and with a smile which indicated his perfect heartease and
her bad taste. According to etiquette, he should have flirted with every
woman in her company, rode with her in the Park, walked with her in the
Gardens, chatted with her at the opera, and drunk wine with her at a water
party; and finally, to prove how sincere he was in his former estimation
of her judgment, have consulted her on the presents which he should make
to some intimate friend of hers, whom he announces as his future bride.
This is the way to manage a woman; and the result may be conceived. She
stares, she starts, she sighs, she weeps; feels highly offended at her
friend daring to accept him; writes a letter of rejection herself to the
affianced damsel, which she makes him sign, and then presents him with the
hand which she always meant to be his.
</p>
<p>
But this was above our hero. The truth is, whenever he thought of May
Dacre his spirit sank. She had cowed him; and her arrival in London had
made him as dissatisfied with his present mode of life as he had been with
his former career. They had met again, and under circumstances apparently,
to him, the most unfavourable. Although he was hopeless, yet he dreaded to
think what she might hear of him. Her contempt was bitter; her dislike
would even be worse. Yet it seemed impossible to retrieve. He was plunged
deeper than he imagined. Embarrassed, entangled, involved, he flew to Lady
Afy, half in pique and half in misery. Passion had ceased to throw a
glittering veil around this idol; but she was kind, and pure, and gentle,
and devoted. It was consoling to be loved to one who was so wretched. It
seemed to him that life must ever be a blank without the woman who, a few
months ago, he had left an encumbrance. The recollection of past happiness
was balm to one who was so forlorn. He shuddered at the thought of losing
his only precious possession, and he was never more attached to his
mistress than when the soul of friendship rose from the body of expired
love.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>An Epicurean Feast</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Duke of St. James dines to-day with Mr. Annesley. Men and things
should be our study; and it is universally acknowledged that a dinner is
the most important of affairs, and a dandy the most important of
individuals. If we liked, we could give you a description of the fête
which should make all your mouths water; but everyone cooks now, and ekes
out his page by robbing Jarrin and by rifling Ude.
</p>
<p>
Charles Annesley was never seen to more advantage than when a host. Then
his superciliousness would, if not vanish, at least subside. He was not
less calm, but somewhat less cold, like a summer lake. Therefore we will
have an eye upon his party; because, to dine with dandies should be a
prominent feature in your career, and must not be omitted in this sketch
of the ‘Life and Times’ of our young hero. The party was of that number
which at once secures a variety of conversation and the impossibility of
two persons speaking at the same time. The guests were his Grace, Lord
Squib, and Lord Darrell. The repast, like everything connected with Mr.
Annesley, was refined and exquisite, rather slight than solid, and more
novel than various. There was no affectation of <i>gourmandise</i>, the
vice of male dinners. Your imagination and your sight were not at the same
time dazzled and confused by an agglomeration of the peculiar luxuries of
every clime and every season. As you mused over a warm and sunny flavour
of a brown soup, your host did not dilate upon the milder and moonlight
beauties of a white one. A gentle dallying with a whiting, that chicken of
the ocean, was not a signal for a panegyric of the darker attraction of a
<i>matelotte à la royale</i>. The disappearance of the first course did
not herald a catalogue of discordant dainties. You were not recommended to
neglect the <i>croquettes</i> because the <i>boudins</i> might claim
attention; and while you were crowning your important labours with a quail
you were not reminded that the <i>pâté de Troyes</i>, unlike the less
reasonable human race, would feel offended if it were not cut. Then the
wines were few. Some sherry, with a pedigree like an Arabian, heightened
the flavour of the dish, not interfered with it; as a toady keeps up the
conversation which he does not distract. A goblet of Graffenburg, with a
bouquet like woman’s breath, made you, as you remembered some liquid which
it had been your fate to fall upon, suppose that German wines, like German
barons, required some discrimination, and that hock, like other titles,
was not always the sign of the high nobility of its owner. A glass of
claret was the third grace. But, if we had been there, we should have
devoted ourselves to one of the sparkling sisters; for one wine, like one
woman, is sufficient to interest one’s feelings for four-and-twenty hours.
Fickleness we abhor.
</p>
<p>
‘I observed you riding to-day with the gentle Leonora, St. James,’ said
Mr. Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘No! her sister.’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed! Those girls are uncommonly alike. The fact is, now, that neither
face nor figure depends upon nature.’
</p>
<p>
‘No,’ said Lord Squib; ‘all that the artists of the present day want is a
model. Let a family provide one handsome sister, and the hideousness of
the others will not prevent them, under good management, from being
mistaken, by the best judges, for the beauty, six times in the same hour.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are trying, I suppose, to account for your unfortunate error at
Cleverley’s, on Monday, Squib?’ said Lord Darrell, laughing.
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! all nonsense.’
</p>
<p>
‘What was it?’ said Mr. Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘Not a word true,’ said Lord Squib, stifling curiosity.
</p>
<p>
‘I believe it,’ said the Duke, without having heard a syllable. ‘Come,
Darrell, out with it!’
</p>
<p>
‘It really is nothing very particular, only it is whispered that Squib
said something to Lady Clever-ley which made her ring the bell, and that
he excused himself to his Lordship by protesting that, from their
similarity of dress and manner and strong family likeness, he had mistaken
the Countess for her sister.’
</p>
<p>
<i>Omnes</i>. ‘Well done, Squib! And were you introduced to the right
person?’
</p>
<p>
‘Why,’ said his Lordship, ‘fortunately I contrived to fall out about the
settlements, and so I escaped.’
</p>
<p>
‘So the chaste Diana is to be the new patroness?’ said Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘So I understand,’ rejoined Mr. Annesley. ‘This is the age of unexpected
appointments.’
</p>
<p>
‘<i>On dit</i> that when it was notified to the party most interested,
there was a rider to the bill, excluding my Lord’s relations.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ha, ha, ha,’ faintly laughed Mr. Annesley. ‘What have they been doing so
remarkable?’
</p>
<p>
‘Nothing,’ said Lord Squib. ‘That is just their fault. They have every
recommendation; but when any member of that family is in a room, everybody
feels so exceedingly sleepy that they all sink to the ground. That is the
reason that there are so many ottomans at Heavyside House.’
</p>
<p>
‘Is it true,’ asked the Duke, ‘that his Grace really has a flapper?’
</p>
<p>
‘Unquestionably,’ said Lord Squib. ‘The other day I was announced, and his
attendant was absent. He had left his instrument on a sofa. I immediately
took it up, and touched my Lord upon his hump. I never knew him more
entertaining. He really was quite lively.’
</p>
<p>
‘But Diana is a favourite goddess of mine,’ said Annesley; ‘taste that
hock.’
</p>
<p>
‘Superb! Where did you get it?’
</p>
<p>
‘A present from poor Raffenburg.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! where is he now?’
</p>
<p>
‘At Paris, I believe.’
</p>
<p>
‘Paris! and where is she?’
</p>
<p>
‘I liked Raffenburg,’ said Lord Squib; ‘he always reminded me of a country
innkeeper who supplies you with pipes and tobacco gratis, provided that
you will dine with him.’
</p>
<p>
‘He had unrivalled meerschaums,’ said Mr. Annesley, ‘and he was most
liberal. There are two. You know I never use them, but they are handsome
furniture.’
</p>
<p>
‘Those Dalmaines are fine girls,’ said the Duke of St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘Very pretty creatures! Do you know, Duke,’ said Annesley, ‘I think the
youngest one something like Miss Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed! I cannot say the resemblance struck me.’
</p>
<p>
‘I see old mother Dalmaine dresses her as much like the Doncaster belle as
she possibly can.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, and spoils her,’ said Lord Squib; ‘but old mother Dalmaine, with all
her fuss, was ever a bad cook, and overdid everything.’
</p>
<p>
‘Young Dalmaine, they say,’ observed Lord Darrell, ‘is in a sort of a
scrape.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! what?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! some confusion at head-quarters. A great tallow-chandler’s son got
into the regiment, and committed some heresy at mess.’
</p>
<p>
‘I do not know the brother,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘You are fortunate, then. He is unendurable. To give you an idea of him,
suppose you met him here (which you never will), he would write to you the
next day, “My dear St. James.”’
</p>
<p>
‘My tailor presented me his best compliments, the other morning,’ said the
Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘The world is growing familiar,’ said Mr. Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘There must be some remedy,’ said Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘Yes!’ said Lord Squib, with indignation. ‘Tradesmen now-a-days console
themselves for not getting their bills paid by asking their customers to
dinner.’
</p>
<p>
‘It is shocking,’ said Mr. Annesley, with a forlorn air. ‘Do you know, I
never enter society now without taking as many preliminary precautions as
if the plague raged in all our chambers. In vain have I hitherto prided
myself on my existence being unknown to the million. I never now stand
still in a street, lest my portrait be caught for a lithograph; I never
venture to a strange dinner, lest I should stumble upon a fashionable
novelist; and even with all this vigilance, and all this denial, I have an
intimate friend whom I cannot cut, and who, they say, writes for the Court
Journal.’
</p>
<p>
‘But why cannot you cut him?’ asked Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘He is my brother; and, you know, I pride myself upon my domestic
feelings.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes!’ said Lord Squib, ‘to judge from what the world says, one would
think, Annesley, you were a Brummel!’
</p>
<p>
‘Squib, not even in jest couple my name with one whom I will not call a
savage, merely because he is unfortunate.’
</p>
<p>
‘What did you think of little Eugenie, Annesley, last night?’ asked the
Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, very well, indeed; something like Brocard’s worst.’
</p>
<p>
‘I was a little disappointed in her début, and much interested in her
success. She was rather a favourite of mine in Paris, so I invited her to
the Alhambra yesterday, with Claudius Piggott and some more. I had half a
mind to pull you in, but I know you do not much admire Piggott.’
</p>
<p>
‘On the contrary, I have been in Piggott’s company without being much
offended.’
</p>
<p>
‘I think Piggott improves,’ said Lord Darrell. ‘It was those waistcoats
which excited such a prejudice against him when he first came over.’
</p>
<p>
‘What! a prejudice against Peacock Piggott!’ said Lord Squib; ‘pretty
Peacock Piggott! Tell it not in Gath, whisper it not in Ascalon; and,
above all, insinuate it not to Lady de Courcy.’
</p>
<p>
‘There is not much danger of my insinuating anything to her,’ said Mr.
Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘Your compact, I hope, is religiously observed,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, very well. There was a slight infraction once, but I sent Charles
Fitzroy as an ambassador, and war was not declared.’
</p>
<p>
‘Do you mean,’ asked Lord Squib, ‘when your cabriolet broke down before
her door, and she sent out to request that you would make yourself quite
at home?’
</p>
<p>
‘I mean that fatal day,’ replied Mr. Annesley. ‘I afterwards discovered
she had bribed my tiger.’
</p>
<p>
‘Do you know Eugenie’s sister, St. James?’ asked Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘Yes: she is very clever; very popular at Paris. But I like Eugenie,
because she is so good-natured. Her laugh is so hearty.’
</p>
<p>
‘So it is,’ said Lord Squib. ‘Do you remember that girl at Madrid,
Annesley, who used to laugh so?’
</p>
<p>
‘What, Isidora? She is coming over.’
</p>
<p>
‘But I thought it was high treason to plunder the grandees’ dovecotes?’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, all our regular official negotiations have failed. She is not
permitted to treat with a foreign manager; but the new ambassador has a
secretary, and that secretary has some diplomatic ability, and so Isidora
is to be smuggled over.’
</p>
<p>
‘In a red box, I suppose,’ said Lord Squib.
</p>
<p>
‘I rather admire our Adèle,’ said the Duke of St. James. ‘I really think
she dances with more <i>aplomb</i> than any of them.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! certainly; she is a favourite of mine.’
</p>
<p>
‘But I like that wild little Ducis,’ said Lord Squib. ‘She puts me in mind
of a wild cat.’
</p>
<p>
‘And Marunia of a Bengal tiger,’ said his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘She is a fine woman, though,’ said Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘I think your cousin, St. James,’ said Lord Squib, ‘will get into a scrape
with Marunia. I remember Chetwynd telling me, and he was not apt to
complain on that score, that he never should have broken up if it had not
been for her.’
</p>
<p>
‘But he was an extravagant fellow,’ said Mr. Annesley: ‘he called me in at
his <i>bouleversement</i> for advice, as I have the reputation of a good
economist. I do not know how it is, though I see these things perpetually
happen; but why men, and men of small fortunes, should commit such
follies, really exceeds my comprehension. Ten thousand pounds for
trinkets, and nearly as much for old furniture!’
</p>
<p>
‘Chetwynd kept it up a good many years, though, I think,’ said Lord
Darrell. ‘I remember going to see his rooms when I first came over. You
recollect his pearl fountain of Cologne water?’
</p>
<p>
‘Millecolonnes fitted up his place, I think?’ asked the young Duke; ‘but
it was before my time.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! yes; little Bijou,’ said Annesley. ‘He has done you justice, Duke. I
think the Alhambra much the prettiest thing in town.’
</p>
<p>
‘I was attacked the other day most vigorously by Mrs. Dallington to obtain
a sight,’ said Lord Squib. ‘I referred her to Lucy Grafton. Do you know,
St. James, I have half a strange idea that there is a renewal in that
quarter?’
</p>
<p>
‘So they say,’ said the Duke; ‘if so, I confess I am surprised.’ But they
remembered Lord Darrell, and the conversation turned.
</p>
<p>
‘Those are clever horses of Lincoln Graves,’ said Mr. Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘Neat cattle, as Bagshot says,’ observed Lord Squib.
</p>
<p>
‘Is it true that Bag is going to marry one of the Wrekins?’ asked the
Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Which?’ asked Lord Squib; ‘not Sophy, surely I thought she was to be your
cousin. I dare say,’ he added, ‘a false report. I suppose, to use a
Bagshotism, his governor wants it; but I should think Lord Cub would not
yet be taken in. By-the-bye, he says you have promised to propose him at
White’s, St. James.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oppose him, I said,’ rejoined the Duke. ‘Bag really never understands
English. However, I think it as probable that he will lounge there as on
the Treasury bench. That was his “governor’s” last shrewd plan.’
</p>
<p>
‘Darrell,’ said Lord Squib, ‘is there any chance of my being a
commissioner for anything? It struck me last night that I had never been
in office.’
</p>
<p>
‘I do not think, Squib, that you ever will be in office, if even you be
appointed.’
</p>
<p>
‘On the contrary, my good fellow, my punctuality should surprise you. I
should like very much to be a lay lord, because I cannot afford to keep a
yacht, and theirs, they say, are not sufficiently used, for the Admirals
think it spooney, and the landlubbers are always sick.’
</p>
<p>
‘I think myself of having a yacht this summer,’ said the Duke of St.
James. ‘Be my captain, Squib.’
</p>
<p>
‘If you be serious I will commence my duties tomorrow.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am serious. I think it will be amusing. I give you full authority to do
exactly what you like, provided, in two months’ time, I have the crack
vessel in the club.’
</p>
<p>
‘I begin to press. Annesley, your dinner is so good that you shall be
purser; and Darrell, you are a man of business, you shall be his clerk.
For the rest, I think St. Maurice may claim a place, and——’
</p>
<p>
‘Peacock Piggott, by all means,’ said the Duke. ‘A gay sailor is quite the
thing.’
</p>
<p>
‘And Charles Fitzroy,’ said Annesley, ‘because I am under obligations to
him, and promised to have him in my eye.’
</p>
<p>
‘And Bagshot for a butt,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘And Backbite for a buffoon,’ said Mr. Annesley.
</p>
<p>
‘And for the rest,’ said the young Duke, ‘the rest of the crew, I vote,
shall be women. The Dalmaines will just do.’
</p>
<p>
‘And the little Trevors,’ said Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘And Long Harrington,’ said Lord Squib. ‘She is my beauty.’
</p>
<p>
‘And the young Ducie,’ said Annesley. ‘And Mrs. Dallington of course, and
Caroline St. Maurice, and Charlotte Bloomerly; really, she was dressed
most prettily last night; and, above all, the queen bee of the hive, May
Dacre, eh! St. James? And I have another proposition,’ said Annesley, with
unusual animation. ‘May Dacre won the St. Leger, and ruled the course; and
May Dacre shall win the cup, and rule the waves. Our yacht shall be
christened by the Lady Bird of Yorkshire.’
</p>
<p>
‘What a delightful thing it would be,’ said the Duke of St. James, ‘if,
throughout life, we might always choose our crew; cull the beauties, and
banish the bores.’
</p>
<p>
‘But that is impossible,’ said Lord Darrell. ‘Every ornament of society is
counterbalanced by some accompanying blur. I have invariably observed that
the ugliness of a chaperon is exactly in proportion to the charms of her
charge; and that if a man be distinguished for his wit, his appearance,
his style, or any other good quality, he is sure to be saddled with some
family or connection, who require all his popularity to gain them a
passport into the crowd.’
</p>
<p>
‘One might collect an unexceptionable coterie from our present crowd,’
said Mr. Annesley. ‘It would be curious to assemble all the pet lambs of
the flock.’
</p>
<p>
‘Is it impossible?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Burlington is the only man who dare try,’ said Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘I doubt whether any individual would have sufficient pluck,’ said Lord
Squib.
</p>
<p>
‘Yes,’ said the Duke, ‘it must, I think, be a joint-stock company to share
the glory and the odium. Let us do it!’
</p>
<p>
There was a start, and a silence, broken by Annesley in a low voice:
</p>
<p>
‘By Heavens it would be sublime, if practicable; but the difficulty does
indeed seem insurmountable.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, we would not do it,’ said the young Duke, ‘if it were not difficult.
The first thing is to get a frame for our picture, to hit upon some happy
pretence for assembling in an impromptu style the young and gay. Our
purpose must not be too obvious. It must be something to which all expect
to be asked, and where the presence of all is impossible; so that, in
fixing upon a particular member of a family, we may seem influenced by the
wish that no circle should be neglected. Then, too, it should be something
like a water-party or a fête champêtre, where colds abound and fits are
always caught, so that a consideration for the old and the infirm may
authorise us not to invite them; then, too——’
</p>
<p>
<i>Omnes</i>. ‘Bravo! bravo! St. James. It shall be! it shall be!’
</p>
<p>
‘It must be a fête champêtre,’ said Annesley, decidedly, ‘and as far from
town as possible.’
</p>
<p>
‘Twickenham is at your service,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Just the place, and just the distance. The only objection is, that, by
being yours, it will saddle the enterprise too much upon you. We must all
bear our share in the uproar, for, trust me, there will be one; but there
are a thousand ways by which our responsibility may be insisted upon. For
instance, let us make a list of all our guests, and then let one of us act
as secretary, and sign the invitations, which shall be like tickets. No
other name need appear, and the hosts will indicate themselves at the
place of rendezvous.’
</p>
<p>
‘My Lords,’ said Lord Squib, ‘I rise to propose the health of Mr.
Secretary Annesley, and I think if anyone carry the business through, it
will be he.’
</p>
<p>
‘I accept the trust. At present be silent as night; for we have much to
mature, and our success depends upon our secrecy.’
</p>
<p>
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<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER IX.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Fête of Youth and Beauty</i>
</pre>
<p>
ARUNDEL DACRE, though little apt to cultivate an acquaintance with anyone,
called on the young Duke the morning after their meeting. The truth is,
his imagination was touched by our hero’s appearance. His Grace possessed
all that accomplished manner of which Arundel painfully felt the want, and
to which he eagerly yielded his admiration. He earnestly desired the
Duke’s friendship, but, with his usual <i>mauvaise honte</i>, their
meeting did not advance his wishes. He was as shy and constrained as
usual, and being really desirous of appearing to advantage, and leaving an
impression in his favour, his manner was even divested of that somewhat
imposing coldness which was not altogether ineffective. In short, he was
rather disagreeable. The Duke was courteous, as he usually was, and ever
to the Da-cres, but he was not cordial. He disliked Arundel Dacre; in a
word, he looked upon him as his favoured rival. The two young men
occasionally met, but did not grow more intimate. Studiously polite the
young Duke ever was both to him and to his lovely cousin, for his pride
concealed his pique, and he was always afraid lest his manner should
betray his mind.
</p>
<p>
In the meantime Sir Lucius Grafton apparently was running his usual course
of triumph. It is fortunate that those who will watch and wonder about
everything are easily satisfied with a reason, and are ever quick in
detecting a cause; so Mrs. Dallington Vere was the fact that duly
accounted for the Baronet’s intimacy with the Dacres. All was right again
between them. It was unusual, to be sure, these <i>rifacimentos</i>; still
she was a charming woman; and it was well known that Lucius had spent
twenty thousand on the county. Where was that to come from, they should
like to know, but from old Dallington Vere’s Yorkshire estates, which he
had so wisely left to his pretty wife by the pink paper codicil?
</p>
<p>
And this lady of so many loves, how felt she? Most agreeably, as all dames
do who dote upon a passion which they feel convinced will be returned, but
which still waits for a response. Arundel Dacre would yield her a smile
from a face more worn by thought than joy; and Arundel Dacre, who was wont
to muse alone, was now ever ready to join his cousin and her friends in
the ride or the promenade. Miss Dacre, too, had noticed to her a kindly
change in her cousin’s conduct to her father. He was more cordial to his
uncle, sought to pay him deference, and seemed more desirous of gaining
his good-will. The experienced eye, too, of this pretty woman allowed her
often to observe that her hero’s presence was not particularly occasioned,
or particularly inspired, by his cousin. In a word, it was to herself that
his remarks were addressed, his attentions devoted, and often she caught
his dark and liquid eye fixed upon her beaming and refulgent brow.
</p>
<p>
Sir Lucius Grafton proceeded with that strange mixture of craft and
passion which characterised him. Each day his heart yearned more for the
being on whom his thoughts should never have pondered. Now exulting in her
increased confidence, she seemed already his victim; now awed by her
majestic spirit, he despaired even of her being his bride. Now melted by
her unsophisticated innocence, he cursed even the least unhallowed of his
purposes; and now enchanted by her consummate loveliness, he forgot all
but her beauty and his own passion.
</p>
<p>
Often had he dilated to her, with the skill of an arch deceiver, on the
blessings of domestic joy; often, in her presence, had his eye sparkled,
when he watched the infantile graces of some playful children. Then he
would embrace them with a soft care and gushing fondness, enough to melt
the heart of any mother whom he was desirous to seduce, and then, with a
half-murmured sigh, he regretted, in broken accents, that he, too, was not
a father.
</p>
<p>
In due time he proceeded even further. Dark hints of domestic infelicity
broke unintentionally from his ungoverned lips. Miss Dacre stared. He
quelled the tumult of his thoughts, struggled with his outbreaking
feelings, and triumphed; yet not without a tear, which forced its way down
a face not formed for grief, and quivered upon his fair and downy cheek.
Sir Lucius Grafton was well aware of the magic of his beauty, and used his
charms to betray, as if he were a woman.
</p>
<p>
Miss Dacre, whose soul was sympathy, felt in silence for this excellent,
this injured, this unhappy, this agreeable man. Ill could even her
practised manner check the current of her mind, or conceal from Lady
Aphrodite that she possessed her dislike. As for the young Duke, he fell
into the lowest abyss of her opinions, and was looked upon as alike
frivolous, heartless, and irreclaimable.
</p>
<p>
But how are the friends with whom we dined yesterday? Frequent were the
meetings, deep the consultations, infinite the suggestions, innumerable
the expedients. In the morning they met and breakfasted with Annesley; in
the afternoon they met and lunched with Lord Squib; in the evening they
met and dined with Lord Darrell; and at night they met and supped at the
Alhambra. Each council only the more convinced them that the scheme was
feasible, and must be glorious. At last their ideas were matured, and
Annesley took steps to break a great event to the world, who were on the
eve of being astonished.
</p>
<p>
He repaired to Lady Bloomerly. The world sometimes talked of her Ladyship
and Mr. Annesley; the world were quite wrong, as they often are on this
subject. Mr. Annesley knew the value of a female friend. By Lady
Bloomerly’s advice, the plan was entrusted in confidence to about a dozen
dames equally influential. Then a few of the most considered male friends
heard a strange report. Lord Darrell dropped a rumour at the Treasury; but
with his finger on the mouth, and leaving himself out of the list,
proceeded to give his favourable opinion of the project, merely as a
disinterested and expected guest. Then the Duke promised Peacock Piggott
one night at the Alhambra, but swore him to solemn secrecy over a vase of
sherbet. Then Squib told his tailor, in consideration that his bill should
not be sent in; and finally, the Bird of Paradise betrayed the whole
affair to the musical world, who were, of course, all agog. Then, when
rumour began to wag its hundred tongues, the twelve peeresses found
themselves bound in honour to step into the breach, yielded the plan their
decided approbation, and their avowed patronage puzzled the grumblers,
silenced the weak, and sneered down the obstinate.
</p>
<p>
The invitations began to issue, and the outcry against them burst forth. A
<i>fronde</i> was formed, but they wanted a De Retz; and many kept back,
with the hope of being bribed from joining it. The four cavaliers soon
found themselves at the head of a strong party, and then, like a faction
who have successfully struggled for toleration, they now openly maintained
their supremacy. It was too late to cabal. The uninvited could only
console themselves by a passive sulk or an active sneer; but this would
not do, and their bilious countenances betrayed their chagrin.
</p>
<p>
The difficulty now was, not to keep the bores away, but to obtain a few of
the beauties, who hesitated. A chaperon must be found for one; another
must be added on to a party, like a star to the cluster of a
constellation. Among those whose presence was most ardently desired, but
seemed most doubtful, was Miss Dacre. An invitation had been sent to her
father; but he was out of town, and she did not like to join so peculiar a
party without him: but it was unanimously agreed that, without her, the
affair would be a failure; and Charles Annesley was sent, envoy
extraordinary, to arrange. With the good aid of his friend Mrs. Dallington
all was at length settled; and fervid prayers that the important day might
be ushered in by a smiling sun were offered up during the next fortnight,
at half-past six every morning, by all civilised society, who then hurried
to their night’s rest.
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER X.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Sir Lucius Drops the Mask</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE fête at ‘the Pavilion,’ such was the title of the Twickenham Villa,
though the subject of universal interest, was anticipated by no one with
more eager anxiety than by Sir Lucius Grafton; for that day, he
determined, should decide the fate of the Duke of St. James. He was
sanguine as to the result, nor without reason. For the last month he had,
by his dark machinery, played desperately upon the feelings of Lady
Aphrodite; and more than once had she despatched rapid notes to her
admirer for counsel and for consolation. The Duke was more skilful in
soothing her griefs than in devising expedients for their removal. He
treated the threatened as a distant evil! and wiped away her tears in a
manner which is almost an encouragement to weep.
</p>
<p>
At last the eventful morn arrived, and a scorching sun made those exult to
whom the barge and the awning promised a progress equally calm and cool.
Woe to the dusty britzska! woe to the molten furnace of the crimson
cabriolet!
</p>
<p>
They came, as the stars come out from the heavens, what time the sun is in
his first repose: now a single hero, brilliant as a planet; now a splendid
party, clustering like a constellation. Music is on the waters and perfume
on the land; each moment a barque glides up with its cymbals, each moment
a cavalcade bright with bouquets!
</p>
<p>
Ah, gathering of brightness! ah, meeting of lustre! why, why are you to be
celebrated by one so obscure and dull as I am? Ye Lady Carolines and ye
Lady Franceses, ye Lady Barbaras and ye Lady Blanches, is it my fault?
</p>
<p>
O, graceful Lord Francis, why, why have you left us; why, why have you
exchanged your Ionian lyre for an Irish harp? You were not made for
politics; leave them to clerks. Fly, fly back to pleasure, to frolic, and
fun! Confess, now, that you sometimes do feel a little queer. We say
nothing of the difference between May Fair and Donnybrook.
</p>
<p>
And thou, too, Luttrell, gayest bard that ever threw off a triplet amid
the clattering of cabs and the chattering of clubs, art thou, too, mute?
Where, where dost thou linger? Is our Druid among the oaks of Ampthill;
or, like a truant Etonian, is he lurking among the beeches of Burnham?
What! has the immortal letter, unlike all other good advice, absolutely
not been thrown away? or is the jade incorrigible? Whichever be the case,
you need not be silent. There is yet enough to do, and yet enough to
instruct. Teach us that wealth is not elegance; that profusion is not
magnificence; and that splendour is not beauty. Teach us that taste is a
talisman which can do greater wonders than the millions of the loanmonger.
Teach us that to vie is not to rival, and to imitate not to invent. Teach
us that pretension is a bore. Teach us that wit is excessively
good-natured, and, like champagne, not only sparkles, but is sweet. Teach
us the vulgarity of malignity. Teach us that envy spoils our complexions,
and that anxiety destroys our figure. Catch the fleeting colours of that
sly chameleon, Cant, and show what excessive trouble we are ever taking to
make ourselves miserable and silly. Teach us all this, and Aglaia shall
stop a crow in its course and present you with a pen, Thalia hold the
golden fluid in a Sèvres vase, and Euphrosyne support the violet-coloured
scroll.
</p>
<p>
The four hosts greeted the arrivals and assisted the disembarkations, like
the famous four sons of Aymon.
</p>
<p>
They were all dressed alike, and their costume excited great attention. At
first it was to have been very plain, black and white and a single rose;
but it was settled that simplicity had been overdone, and, like a country
girl after her first season, had turned into a most affected baggage, so
they agreed to be regal; and fancy uniforms, worthy of the court of
Oberon, were the order of the day. We shall not describe them, for the
description of costume is the most inventive province of our historical
novelists, and we never like to be unfair, or trench upon our neighbour’s
lands or rights; but the Alhambra button indicated a mystical confederacy,
and made the women quite frantic with curiosity.
</p>
<p>
The guests wandered through the gardens, always various, and now a
paradise of novelty. There were four brothers, fresh from the wildest
recesses of the Carpathian Mount, who threw out such woodnotes wild that
all the artists stared; and it was universally agreed that, had they not
been French chorus-singers, they would have been quite a miracle. But the
Lapland sisters were the true prodigy, who danced the Mazurka in the
national style. There was also a fire-eater; but some said he would never
set the river in flames, though he had an antidote against all poisons!
But then our Mithridates always tried its virtues on a stuffed poodle,
whose bark evinced its vitality. There also was a giant in the wildest
part of the shrubbery, and a dwarf, on whom the ladies showered their
sugarplums, and who, in return, offered them tobacco. But it was not true
that the giant sported stilts, or that the dwarf was a sucking-babe. Some
people are so suspicious. Then a bell rang, and assembled them in the
concert-room; and the Bird of Paradise who to-day was consigned to the
cavaliership of Peacock Piggott, condescended to favour them with a new
song, which no one had ever heard, and which, consequently, made them feel
more intensely all the sublimity of exclusiveness. Shall we forget the
panniers of shoes which Melnotte had placed in every quarter of the
gardens? We will say nothing of Maradan’s cases of caps, because, for this
incident, Lord Bagshot is our authority.
</p>
<p>
On a sudden, it seemed that a thousand bugles broke the blue air, and they
were summoned to a déjeûner in four crimson tents worthy of Sardanapalus.
</p>
<p>
Over each waved the scutcheon of the president. Glittering were the
glories of the hundred quarterings of the house of Darrell. ‘<i>Si non è
vero è ben trovato</i>,’ was the motto. Lord Darrell’s grandfather had
been a successful lawyer. Lord Squib’s emblazonry was a satire on its
owner. ‘<i>Holdfast</i>’ was the motto of a man who had let loose.
Annesley’s simple shield spoke of the Conquest; but all paled before the
banner of the house of Hauteville, for it indicated an alliance with
royalty. The attendants of each pavilion wore the livery of its lord.
</p>
<p>
Shall we attempt to describe the delicacy of this banquet, where
imagination had been racked for novel luxury? Through the centre of each
table ran a rivulet of rose-water, and gold and silver fish glanced in its
unrivalled course. The bouquets were exchanged every half-hour, and music
soft and subdued, but constant and thrilling, wound them up by exquisite
gradations to that pitch of refined excitement which is so strange a union
of delicacy and voluptuousness, when the soul, as it were, becomes
sensual, and the body, as it were, dissolves into spirit. And in this
choice assembly, where all was youth, and elegance, and beauty, was it not
right that every sound should be melody, every sight a sight of
loveliness, and every thought a thought of pleasure?
</p>
<p>
They arose and re-assembled on the lawn, where they found, to their
surprise, had arisen in their absence a Dutch Fair. Numerous were the
booths, innumerable were the contents. The first artists had arranged the
picture and the costumes; the first artists had made the trinkets and the
toys. And what a very agreeable fair, where all might suit their fancy
without the permission of that sulky tyrant, a purse! All were in
excellent humour, and no false shame prevented them from plundering the
stalls. The noble proprietors set the example. Annesley offered a bouquet
of precious stones to Charlotte Bloomerly, and it was accepted, and the
Duke of St. James showered a sack of whimsical breloques among a
scrambling crowd of laughing beauties. Among them was Miss Dacre. He had
not observed her. Their eyes met, and she smiled. It seemed that he had
never felt happiness before.
</p>
<p>
Ere the humours of the fair could be exhausted they were summoned to the
margin of the river, where four painted and gilded galleys, which might
have sailed down the Cydmus, and each owning its peculiar chief, prepared
to struggle for pre-eminence in speed. All betted; and the Duke,
encouraged by the smile, hastened to Miss Dacre to try to win back some of
his Doncaster losses, but Arundel Dacre had her arm in his, and she was
evidently delighted with his discourse. His Grace’s blood turned, and he
walked away.
</p>
<p>
It was sunset when they returned to the lawn, and then the ball-room
presented itself; but the twilight was long, and the night was warm; there
were no hateful dews, no odious mists, and therefore a great number danced
on the lawn. The fair was illuminated, and all the little <i>marchandes</i>
and their lusty porters walked about in their costume.
</p>
<p>
The Duke again rallied his courage, and seeing Arundel Dacre with Mrs.
Dallington Vere, he absolutely asked Miss Dacre to dance. She was engaged.
He doubted, and walked into the house disconsolate; yet, if he had waited
one moment, he would have seen Sir Lucius Grafton rejoin her, and lead her
to the cotillon that was forming on the turf. The Duke sauntered to Lady
Aphrodite, but she would not dance; yet she did not yield his arm, and
proposed a stroll. They wandered away to the extremity of the grounds.
Fainter and fainter grew the bursts of the revellers, yet neither of them
spoke much, for both were dull.
</p>
<p>
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<p>
Yet at length her Ladyship did speak, and amply made up for her previous
silence. All former scenes, to this, were but as the preface to the book.
All she knew and all she dreaded, all her suspicions, all her certainties,
all her fears, were poured forth in painful profusion. This night was to
decide her fate. She threw herself on his mercy, if he had forgotten his
love. Out dashed all those arguments, all those appeals, all those
assertions, which they say are usual under these circumstances. She was a
woman; he was a man. She had staked her happiness on this venture; he had
a thousand cards to play. Love, and first love, with her, as with all
women, was everything; he and all men, at the worst, had a thousand
resources. He might plunge into politics, he might game, he might fight,
he might ruin himself in innumerable ways, but she could only ruin herself
in one. Miserable woman! Miserable sex! She had given him her all. She
knew it was little: would she had more! She knew she was unworthy of him:
would she were not! She did not ask him to sacrifice himself to her: she
could not expect it; she did not even desire it. Only, she thought he
ought to know exactly the state of affairs and of consequences, and that
certainly if they were parted, which assuredly they would be, most
decidedly she would droop, and fade, and die. She wept, she sobbed; his
entreaties alone seemed to prevent hysterics.
</p>
<p>
These scenes are painful at all times, and even the callous, they say,
have a twinge; but when the actress is really beautiful and pure, as this
lady was, and the actor young and inexperienced and amiable, as this actor
was, the consequences are more serious than is usual. The Duke of St.
James was unhappy, he was discontented, he was dissatisfied with himself.
He did not love this lady, if love were the passion which he entertained
for Miss Dacre, but she loved him. He knew that she was beautiful, and he
was convinced that she was excellent. The world is malicious, but the
world had agreed that Lady Aphrodite was an unblemished pearl: yet this
jewel was reserved for him! Intense gratitude almost amounted to love. In
short, he had no idea at this moment that feelings are not in our power.
His were captive, even if entrapped. It was a great responsibility to
desert this creature, the only one from whom he had experienced devotion.
To conclude: a season of extraordinary dissipation, to use no harsher
phrase, had somewhat exhausted the nervous powers of our hero; his
energies were deserting him; he had not heart or heartlessness enough to
extricate himself from this dilemma. It seemed that if this being to whom
he was indebted for so much joy were miserable, he must be unhappy; that
if she died, life ought to have, could have, no charms for him. He kissed
away her tears, he pledged his faith, and Lady Aphrodite Grafton was his
betrothed!
</p>
<p>
She wonderfully recovered. Her deep but silent joy seemed to repay him
even for this bitter sacrifice. Compared with the late racking of his
feelings, the present calm, which was merely the result of suspense being
destroyed, seemed happiness. His conscience whispered approbation, and he
felt that, for once, he had sacrificed himself to another.
</p>
<p>
They re-entered the villa, and he took the first opportunity of wandering
alone to the least frequented parts of the grounds: his mind demanded
solitude, and his soul required soliloquy.
</p>
<p>
‘So the game is up! truly a most lame and impotent conclusion! And this,
then, is the result of all my high fancies and indefinite aspirations!
Verily, I am a very distinguished hero, and have not abused my unrivalled
advantages in the least. What! am I bitter on myself? There will be enough
to sing my praises without myself joining in this chorus of
congratulation. O! fool! fool! Now I know what folly is. But barely
fifteen months since I stepped upon these shores, full of hope and full of
pride; and now I leave them; how? O! my dishonoured fathers! Even my
posterity, which God grant I may not have, will look on my memory with
hatred, and on hers with scorn!
</p>
<p>
‘Well, I suppose we must live for ourselves. We both of us know the world;
and Heaven can bear witness that we should not be haunted by any uneasy
hankering after what has brought us such a heartache. If it were for love,
if it were for—but away! I will not profane her name; if it were for
her that I was thus sacrificing myself. I could bear it, I could welcome
it. I can imagine perfect and everlasting bliss in the sole society of one
single being, but she is not that being. Let me not conceal it; let me
wrestle with this bitter conviction!
</p>
<p>
‘And am I, indeed, bound to close my career thus; to throw away all hope,
all chance of felicity, at my age, for a point of honour? No, no; it is
not that. After all, I have experienced that with her, and from her, which
I have with no other woman; and she is so good, so gentle, and, all agree,
so lovely! How infinitely worse would her situation be if deserted, than
mine is as her perpetual companion! The very thought makes my heart bleed.
Yes! amiable, devoted, dearest Afy, I throw aside these morbid feelings;
you shall never repent having placed your trust in me. I will be proud and
happy of such a friend, and you shall be mine for ever!’
</p>
<p>
A shriek broke on the air: he started. It was near: he hastened after the
sound. He entered into a small green glade surrounded by shrubs, where had
been erected a fanciful hermitage. There he found Sir Lucius Grafton on
his knees, grasping the hand of the indignant but terrified Miss Dacre.
The Duke rushed forward; Miss Dacre ran to meet him; Sir Lucius rose.
</p>
<p>
‘This lady, Sir Lucius Grafton, is under my protection,’ said the young
Duke, with a flashing eye but a calm voice. She clung to his arm; he bore
her away. The whole was the affair of an instant.
</p>
<p>
The Duke and his companion proceeded in silence. She tried to hasten, but
he felt her limbs shake upon his arm. He stopped: no one, not even a
servant, was near. He could not leave her for an instant. There she stood
trembling, her head bent down, and one hand clasping the other, which
rested on his arm. Terrible was her struggle, but she would not faint, and
at length succeeded in repressing her emotions. They were yet a
considerable way from the house. She motioned with her left hand to
advance; but still she did not speak. On they walked, though more slowly,
for she was exhausted, and occasionally stopped for breath or strength.
</p>
<p>
At length she said, in a faint voice, ‘I cannot join the party. I must go
home directly. How can it be done?’
</p>
<p>
‘Your companions?’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Are of course engaged, or not to be found; but surely somebody I know is
departing. Manage it: say I am ill.’
</p>
<p>
‘O, Miss Dacre! if you knew the agony of my mind!’
</p>
<p>
‘Do not speak; for Heaven’s sake, do not speak!’
</p>
<p>
He turned off from the lawn, and approached by a small circuit the gate of
the ground. Suddenly he perceived a carriage on the point of going off. It
was the Duchess of Shropshire’s.
</p>
<p>
‘There is the Duchess of Shropshire! You know her; but not a minute is to
be lost. There is such a noise, they will not hear. Are you afraid to stop
here one instant by yourself? I shall not be out of sight, and not away a
second. I run very quick.’
</p>
<p>
‘No, no, I am not afraid. Go, go!’
</p>
<p>
Away rushed the Duke of St. James as if his life were on his speed. He
stopped the carriage, spoke, and was back in an instant.
</p>
<p>
‘Lean, lean on me with all your strength. I have told everything necessary
to Lady Shropshire. Nobody will speak a word, because they believe you
have a terrible headache. I will say everything necessary to Mrs.
Dallington and your cousin. Do not give yourself a moment’s uneasiness.
And, oh! Miss Dacre! if I might say one word!’
</p>
<p>
She did not stop him.
</p>
<p>
‘If,’ continued he, ‘it be your wish that the outrage of to-night should
be known only to myself and him, I pledge my word it shall be so; though
willingly, if I were authorised, I would act a different part in this
affair.’
</p>
<p>
‘It is my wish.’ She spoke in a low voice, with her eyes still upon the
ground. ‘And I thank you for this, and for all.’
</p>
<p>
They had now joined the Shropshires; but it was now discovered Miss Dacre
had no shawl: and sundry other articles were wanting, to the evident
dismay of the Ladies Wrekin. They offered theirs, but their visitor
refused, and would not allow the Duke to fetch her own. Off they drove;
but when they had proceeded above half a mile, a continued shout on the
road, which the fat coachman for a long time would not hear, stopped them,
and up came the Duke of St. James, covered with dust, and panting like a
racer, with Miss Dacre’s shawl.
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER XI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Grim Preparations</i>
</pre>
<p>
SO MUCH time was occupied by this adventure of the shawl, and by making
requisite explanations to Mrs. Dallington Vere, that almost the whole of
the guests had retired, when the Duke found himself again in the saloon.
His brother-hosts, too, were off with various parties, to which they had
attached themselves. He found the Fitz-pompeys and a few still lingering
for their carriages, and Arundel Dacre and his fair admirer. His Grace had
promised to return with Lady Afy, and was devising some scheme by which he
might free himself from this, now not very suitable, engagement, when she
claimed his arm. She was leaning on it, and talking to Lady Fitz-pompey,
when Sir Lucius approached, and, with his usual tone, put a note into the
Duke’s hand, saying at the same time, ‘This appears to belong to you. I
shall go to town with Piggott;’ and then he walked away.
</p>
<p>
With the wife leaning on his arm, the young Duke had the pleasure of
reading the following lines, written with the pencil of the husband:—
</p>
<p>
‘After what has just occurred, only one more meeting can take place
between us, and the sooner that takes place the better for all parties.
This is no time for etiquette. I shall be in Kensington Gardens, in the
grove on the right side of the summer-house, at half-past six to-morrow
morning, and shall doubtless find you there.’
</p>
<p>
Sir Lucius was not out of sight when the Duke had finished reading his
cartel. Making some confused excuse to Lady Afy, which was not expected,
he ran after the Baronet, and soon reached him.
</p>
<p>
‘Grafton, I shall be punctual: but there is one point on which I wish to
speak to you at once. The cause of this meeting may be kept, I hope, a
secret?’
</p>
<p>
‘So far as I am concerned, an inviolable one,’ bowed the Baronet, stiffly;
and they parted.
</p>
<p>
The Duke returned satisfied, for Sir Lucius Grafton ever observed his
word, to say nothing of the great interest which he surely had this time
in maintaining his pledge.
</p>
<p>
Our hero thought that he never should reach London. The journey seemed a
day; and the effort to amuse Lady Afy, and to prevent her from suspecting,
by his conduct, that anything had occurred, was most painful. Silent,
however, he at last became; but her mind, too, was engaged, and she
supposed that her admirer was quiet only because, like herself, he was
happy. At length they reached her house, but he excused himself from
entering, and drove on immediately to Annesley. He was at Lady
Bloomerly’s. Lord Darrell had not returned, and his servant did not expect
him. Lord Squib was never to be found.
</p>
<p>
The Duke put on a great coat over his uniform and drove to White’s; it was
really a wilderness. Never had he seen fewer men there in his life, and
there were none of his set. The only young-looking man was old Colonel
Carlisle, who, with his skilfully enamelled cheek, flowing auburn locks,
shining teeth, and tinted whiskers, might have been mistaken for gay
twenty-seven, instead of grey seventy-two; but the Colonel had the gout,
to say nothing of any other objections.
</p>
<p>
The Duke took up the ‘Courier’ and read three or four advertisements of
quack medicines, but nobody entered. It was nearly midnight: he got
nervous. Somebody came in; Lord Hounslow for his rubber. Even his favoured
child, Bagshot, would be better than nobody. The Duke protested that the
next acquaintance who entered should be his second, old or young. His vow
had scarcely been registered when Arundel Dacre came in alone. He was the
last man to whom the Duke wished to address himself, but Fate seemed to
have decided it, and the Duke walked up to him.
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Dacre, I am about to ask of you a favour to which I have no claim.’
</p>
<p>
Mr. Dacre looked a little confused, and murmured his willingness to do
anything.
</p>
<p>
‘To be explicit, I am engaged in an affair of honour of an urgent nature.
Will you be my friend?’
</p>
<p>
‘Willingly.’ He spoke with more ease. ‘May I ask the name of the other
party, the—the cause of the meeting?’
</p>
<p>
‘The other party is Sir Lucius Grafton.’
</p>
<p>
‘Hum!’ said Arundel Dacre, as if he were no longer curious about the
cause. ‘When do you meet?’
</p>
<p>
‘At half-past six, in Kensington Gardens, to-morrow; I believe I should
say this morning.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace must be wearied,’ said Arundel, with unusual ease and
animation. ‘Now, follow my advice. Go home at once and get some rest. Give
yourself no trouble about preparations; leave everything to me. I will
call upon you at half-past five precisely, with a chaise and post-horses,
which will divert suspicion. Now, good night!’
</p>
<p>
‘But really, your rest must be considered; and then all this trouble!’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! I have been in the habit of sitting up all night. Do not think of me;
nor am I quite inexperienced in these matters, in too many of which I have
unfortunately been engaged in Germany.’
</p>
<p>
The young men shook hands, and the Duke hastened home. Fortunately the
Bird of Paradise was at her own establishment in Baker Street, a bureau
where her secretary, in her behalf, transacted business with the various
courts of Europe and the numerous cities of Great Britain. Here many a
negotiation was carried on for opera engagements at Vienna, or Paris, or
Berlin, or St. Petersburg. Here many a diplomatic correspondence conducted
the fate of the musical festivals of York, or Norwich, or Exeter.
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER XII.
</h2>
<h3>
An Affair of Honour.
</h3>
<p>
LET us return to Sir Lucius Grafton. He is as mad as any man must be who
feels that the imprudence of a moment has dashed the ground all the plans,
and all the hopes, and all the great results, over which he had so often
pondered. The great day from which he had expected so much had passed, nor
was it possible for four-and-twenty hours more completely to have reversed
all his feelings and all his prospects. Miss Dacre had shared the innocent
but unusual and excessive gaiety which had properly become a scene of
festivity at once so agreeable, so various, and so novel. Sir Lucius
Grafton had not been insensible to the excitement. On the contrary his
impetuous passions seemed to recall the former and more fervent days of
his career, and his voluptuous mind dangerously sympathised with the
beautiful and luxurious scene. He was elated, too, with the thought that
his freedom would perhaps be sealed this evening, and still more by his
almost constant attendance on his fascinating companion. As the particular
friend of the Dacre family, and as the secret ally of Mrs. Dallington
Vere, he in some manner contrived always to be at Miss Dacre’s side. With
the laughing but insidious pretence that he was now almost too grave and
staid a personage for such scenes, he conversed with few others, and
humourously maintaining that his ‘dancing days were over,’ danced with
none but her. Even when her attention was engaged by a third person, he
lingered about, and with his consummate knowledge of the world, easy wit,
and constant resources, generally succeeded in not only sliding into the
conversation, but engrossing it. Arundel Dacre, too, although that young
gentleman had not departed from his usual coldness in favour of Sir Lucius
Grafton, the Baronet would most provokingly consider as his particular
friend; never seemed to be conscious that his reserved companion was most
punctilious in his address to him; but on the contrary, called him in
return ‘Dacre,’ and sometimes ‘Arundel.’ In vain young Dacre struggled to
maintain his position. His manner was no match for that of Sir Lucius
Grafton. Annoyed with himself, he felt confused, and often quitted his
cousin that he might be free of his friend. Thus Sir Lucius Grafton
contrived never to permit Miss Dacre to be alone with Arundel, and to her
he was so courteous, so agreeable, and so useful, that his absence seemed
always a blank, or a period in which something ever went wrong.
</p>
<p>
The triumphant day rolled on, and each moment Sir Lucius felt more
sanguine and more excited. We will not dwell upon the advancing confidence
of his desperate mind. Hope expanded into certainty, certainty burst into
impatience. In a desperate moment he breathed his passion.
</p>
<p>
May Dacre was the last girl to feel at a loss in such a situation. No one
would have rung him out of a saloon with an air of more contemptuous
majesty. But the shock, the solitary strangeness of the scene, the fear,
for the first time, that none were near, and perhaps, also, her exhausted
energy, frightened her, and she shrieked. One only had heard that shriek,
yet that one was legion. Sooner might the whole world know the worst than
this person suspect the least. Sir Lucius was left silent with rage, mad
with passion, desperate with hate.
</p>
<p>
He gasped for breath. Now his brow burnt, now the cold dew ran off his
countenance in streams. He clenched his fist, he stamped with agony, he
found at length his voice, and he blasphemed to the unconscious woods.
</p>
<p>
His quick brain flew to the results like lightning. The Duke had escaped
from his mesh; his madness had done more to win this boy Miss Dacre’s
heart than an age of courtship. He had lost the idol of his passion; he
was fixed for ever with the creature of his hate. He loathed the idea. He
tottered into the hermitage, and buried his face in his hands.
</p>
<p>
Something must be done. Some monstrous act of energy must repair this
fatal blunder. He appealed to the mind which had never deserted him. The
oracle was mute. Yet vengeance might even slightly redeem the bitterness
of despair. This fellow should die; and his girl, for already he hated
Miss Dacre, should not triumph in her minion. He tore a leaf from his
tablets, and wrote the lines we have already read.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke reached home. You expect, of course, that he sat up all
night making his will and answering letters. By no means. The first object
that caught his eye was an enormous ottoman. He threw himself upon it
without undressing, and without speaking a word to Luigi, and in a moment
was fast asleep. He was fairly exhausted. Luigi stared, and called
Spiridion to consult. They agreed that they dare not go to bed, and must
not leave their lord; so they played écarté, till at last they quarrelled
and fought with the candles over the table. But even this did not wake
their unreasonable master; so Spiridion threw down a few chairs by
accident; but all in vain. At half-past five there was a knocking at the
gate, and they hurried away.
</p>
<p>
Arundel Dacre entered with them, woke the Duke, and praised him for his
punctuality. His Grace thought that he had only dozed a few minutes; but
time pressed; five minutes arranged his toilet, and they were first on the
field.
</p>
<p>
In a moment Sir Lucius and Mr. Piggott appeared. Arundel Dacre, on the
way, had anxiously enquired as to the probability of reconciliation, but
was told at once it was impossible, so now he measured the ground and
loaded the pistols with a calmness which was admirable. They fired at
once; the Duke in the air, and the Baronet in his friend’s side. When Sir
Lucius saw his Grace fall his hate vanished. He ran up with real anxiety
and unfeigned anguish.
</p>
<p>
‘Have I hit you? by h-ll!’
</p>
<p>
His Grace was magnanimous, but the case was urgent. A surgeon gave a
favourable report, and extracted the ball on the spot. The Duke was
carried back to his chaise, and in an hour was in the state bed, not of
the Alhambra, but of his neglected mansion.
</p>
<p>
Arundel Dacre retired when he had seen his friend home, but gave urgent
commands that he should be kept quiet. No sooner was the second out of
sight than the principal ordered the room to be cleared, with the
exception of Spiridion, and then, rising in his bed, wrote this note,
which the page was secretly to deliver.
</p>
<p>
‘——House, ——, 182-.
</p>
<p>
‘Dear Miss Dacre,
</p>
<p>
‘A very unimportant but somewhat disagreeable incident has occurred. I
have been obliged to meet Sir Lucius Grafton, and our meeting has
fortunately terminated without any serious consequences. Yet I wish that
you should hear of this first from me, lest you might imagine that I had
not redeemed my pledge of last night, and that I had placed for a moment
my own feelings in competition with yours. This is not the case, and never
shall be, dear Miss Dacre, with one whose greatest pride is to subscribe
himself
</p>
<p>
‘Your most obedient and faithful servant,
</p>
<p>
‘St. James.’
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER XIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Mind Distraught</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE world talked of nothing but the duel between the Duke of St. James and
Sir Lucius Grafton.
</p>
<p>
It was a thunderbolt; and the phenomenon was accounted for by every cause
but the right one. Yet even those who most confidently solved the riddle
were the most eagerly employed in investigating its true meaning. The
seconds were of course applied to. Arundel Dacre was proverbially
unpumpable; but Peacock Piggott, whose communicative temper was an adage,
how came he on a sudden so diplomatic? Not a syllable oozed from a mouth
which was ever open; not a hint from a countenance which never could
conceal its mind. He was not even mysterious, but really looked just as
astonished and was just as curious as themselves. Fine times these for
‘The Universe’ and ‘The New World!’ All came out about Lady Afy; and they
made up for their long and previous ignorance, or, as they now boldly
blustered, their long and considerate forbearance. Sheets given away
gratis, edition on Saturday night for the country, and woodcuts of the
Pavilion fête: the when, the how, and the wherefore. A. The summer-house,
and Lady Aphrodite meeting the young Duke. B. The hedge behind which Sir
Lucius Grafton was concealed. C. Kensington Gardens, and a cloudy morning;
and so on. Cruikshank did wonders.
</p>
<p>
But let us endeavour to ascertain the feelings of the principal agents in
this odd affair. Sir Lucius now was cool, and, the mischief being done,
took a calm review of the late mad hours. As was his custom, he began to
enquire whether any good could be elicited from all this evil. He owed his
late adversary sundry moneys, which he had never contemplated the
possibility of repaying to the person who had eloped with his wife. Had he
shot his creditor the account would equally have been cleared; and this
consideration, although it did not prompt, had not dissuaded, the late
desperate deed. As it was, he now appeared still to enjoy the possession
both of his wife and his debts, and had lost his friend. Bad generalship,
Sir Lucy! Reconciliation was out of the question. The Duke’s position was
a good one. Strongly entrenched with a flesh wound, he had all the
sympathy of society on his side; and, after having been confined for a few
weeks, he could go to Paris for a few months, and then return, as if the
Graftons had never crossed his eye, rid of a troublesome mistress and a
troublesome friend. His position was certainly a good one; but Sir Lucius
was astute, and he determined to turn this Shumla of his Grace. The
quarrel must have been about her Ladyship. Who could assign any other
cause for it? And the Duke must now be weak with loss of blood and
anxiety, and totally unable to resist any appeal, particularly a personal
one, to his feelings. He determined, therefore, to drive Lady Afy into his
Grace’s arms. If he could only get her into the house for an hour, the
business would be settled.
</p>
<p>
These cunning plans were, however, nearly being crossed by a very simple
incident. Annoyed at finding that her feelings could be consulted only by
sacrificing those of another woman, Miss Dacre, quite confident that, as
Lady Aphrodite was innocent in the present instance, she must be
immaculate, told everything to her father, and, stifling her tears, begged
him to make all public; but Mr. Dacre, after due consideration, enjoined
silence.
</p>
<p>
In the meantime the young Duke was not in so calm a mood as Sir Lucius.
Rapidly the late extraordinary events dashed through his mind, and already
those feelings which had prompted his soliloquy in the garden were no
longer his. All forms, all images, all ideas, all memory, melted into Miss
Dacre. He felt that he loved her with a perfect love: that she was to him
what no other woman had been, even in the factitious delirium of early
passion. A thought of her seemed to bring an entirely novel train of
feelings, impressions, wishes, hopes. The world with her must be a totally
different system, and his existence in her society a new and another life.
Her very purity refined the passion which raged even in his exhausted
mind. Gleams of virtue, morning streaks of duty, broke upon the horizon of
his hitherto clouded soul; an obscure suspicion of the utter worthlessness
of his life whispered in his hollow ear; he darkly felt that happiness was
too philosophical a system to be the result or the reward of impulse,
however unbounded, and that principle alone could create and could support
that bliss which is our being’s end and aim.
</p>
<p>
But when he turned to himself, he viewed his situation with horror, and
yielded almost to despair. What, what could she think of the impure
libertine who dared to adore her? If ever time could bleach his own soul
and conciliate hers, what, what was to become of Aphrodite? Was his new
career to commence by a new crime? Was he to desert this creature of his
affections, and break a heart which beat only for him? It seemed that the
only compensation he could offer for a life which had achieved no good
would be to establish the felicity of the only being whose happiness
seemed in his power. Yet what a prospect! If before he had trembled, now——
</p>
<p>
But his harrowed mind and exhausted body no longer allowed him even
anxiety. Weak, yet excited, his senses fled; and when Arundel Dacre
returned in the evening he found his friend delirious. He sat by his bed
for hours. Suddenly the Duke speaks. Arundel Dacre rises: he leans over
the sufferer’s couch.
</p>
<p>
Ah! why turns the face of the listener so pale, and why gleam those eyes
with terrible fire? The perspiration courses down his clear but sallow
cheek: he throws his dark and clustering curls aside, and passes his hand
over his damp brow, as if to ask whether he, too, had lost his senses from
this fray.
</p>
<p>
The Duke is agitated. He waves his arm in the air, and calls out in a tone
of defiance and of hate. His voice sinks: it seems that he breathes a
milder language, and speaks to some softer being. There is no sound, save
the long-drawn breath of one on whose countenance is stamped infinite
amazement. Arundel Dacre walks the room disturbed; often he pauses,
plunged in deep thought. ‘Tis an hour past midnight, and he quits the
bedside of the young Duke.
</p>
<p>
He pauses at the threshold, and seems to respire even the noisome air of
the metropolis as if it were Eden. As he proceeds down Hill Street he
stops, and gazes for a moment on the opposite house. What passes in his
mind we know not. Perhaps he is reminded that in that mansion dwell
beauty, wealth, and influence, and that all might be his. Perhaps love
prompts that gaze, perhaps ambition. Is it passion, or is it power? or
does one struggle with the other?
</p>
<p>
As he gazes the door opens, but without servants; and a man, deeply
shrouded in his cloak, comes out. It was night, and the individual was
disguised; but there are eyes which can pierce at all seasons and through
all concealments, and Arundel Dacre marked with astonishment Sir Lucius
Grafton.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Reconciliation</i>
</pre>
<p>
WHEN it was understood that the Duke of St. James had been delirious,
public feeling reached what is called its height; that is to say, the
curiosity and the ignorance of the world were about equal. Everybody was
indignant, not so much because the young Duke had been shot, but because
they did not know why. If the sympathy of the women could have consoled
him, our hero might have been reconciled to his fate. Among these, no one
appeared more anxious as to the result, and more ignorant as to the cause,
than Mrs. Dallington Vere. Arundel Dacre called on her the morning ensuing
his midnight observation, but understood that she had not seen Sir Lucius
Grafton, who, they said, had quitted London, which she thought probable.
Nevertheless Arundel thought proper to walk down Hill Street at the same
hour, and, if not at the same minute, yet in due course of time, he
discovered the absent man.
</p>
<p>
In two or three days the young Duke was declared out of immediate danger,
though his attendants must say he remained exceedingly restless, and by no
means in a satisfactory state; yet, with their aid, they had a right to
hope the best. At any rate, if he were to go off, his friends would have
the satisfaction of remembering that all had been done that could be; so
saying, Dr. X. took his fee, and Surgeons Y. and Z. prevented his conduct
from being singular.
</p>
<p>
Now began the operations on the Grafton side. A letter from Lady Aphrodite
full of distraction. She was fairly mystified. What could have induced
Lucy suddenly to act so, puzzled her, as well it might. Her despair, and
yet her confidence in his Grace, seemed equally great. Some talk there was
of going off to Cleve at once. Her husband, on the whole, maintained a
rigid silence and studied coolness. Yet he had talked of Vienna and
Florence, and even murmured something about public disgrace and public
ridicule. In short, the poor lady was fairly worn out, and wished to
terminate her harassing career at once by cutting the Gordian knot. In a
word, she proposed coming on to her admirer and, as she supposed, her
victim, and having the satisfaction of giving him his cooling draughts and
arranging his bandages.
</p>
<p>
If the meeting between the young Duke and Sir Lucius Grafton had been
occasioned by any other cause than the real one, it is difficult to say
what might have been the fate of this proposition. Our own opinion is,
that this work would have been only in one volume; for the requisite
morality would have made out the present one; but, as it was, the image of
Miss Dacre hovered above our hero as his guardian genius. He despaired of
ever obtaining her; but yet he determined not wilfully to crush all hope.
Some great effort must be made to right his position. Lady Aphrodite must
not be deserted: the very thought increased his fever. He wrote, to gain
time; but another billet, in immediate answer, only painted increased
terrors, and described the growing urgency of her persecuted situation. He
was driven into a corner, but even a stag at bay is awful: what, then,
must be a young Duke, the most noble animal in existence?
</p>
<p>
Ill as he was, he wrote these lines, not to Lady Aphrodite, but to her
husband:—
</p>
<p>
‘My Dear Grafton,
</p>
<p>
‘You will be surprised at hearing from me. Is it necessary for me to
assure you that my interference on a late occasion was accidental? And can
you, for a moment, maintain that, under the circumstances, I could have
acted in a different manner? I regret the whole business; but most I
regret that we were placed in collision.
</p>
<p>
‘I am ready to cast all memory of it into oblivion; and, as I
unintentionally offended, I indulge the hope that, in this conduct, you
will bear me company.
</p>
<p>
‘Surely, men like us are not to be dissuaded from following our
inclinations by any fear of the opinion of the world. The whole affair is,
at present, a mystery; and I think, with our united fancies, some
explanation may be hit upon which will render the mystery quite
impenetrable, while it professes to offer a satisfactory solution.
</p>
<p>
‘I do not know whether this letter expresses my meaning, for my mind is
somewhat agitated and my head not very clear; but, if you be inclined to
understand it in the right spirit, it is sufficiently lucid. At any rate,
my dear Grafton, I have once more the pleasure of subscribing myself,
faithfully yours,
</p>
<p>
‘St. James.’
</p>
<p>
This letter was marked ‘Immediate,’ consigned to the custody of Luigi,
with positive orders to deliver it personally to Sir Lucius; and, if not
at home, to follow till he found him.
</p>
<p>
He was not at home, and he was found at——‘s Clubhouse. Sullen,
dissatisfied with himself, doubtful as to the result of his fresh
manouvres, and brooding over his infernal debts, Sir Lucius had stepped
into——, and passed the whole morning playing desperately with
Lord Hounslow and Baron de Berghem. Never had he experienced such a
smashing morning. He had long far exceeded his resources, and was
proceeding with a vague idea that he should find money somehow or other,
when this note was put into his hand, as it seemed to him by Providence.
The signature of Semiramis could not have imparted more exquisite delight
to a collector of autographs. Were his long views, his complicated
objects, and doubtful results to be put in competition a moment with so
decided, so simple, and so certain a benefit? certainly not, by a
gamester. He rose from the table, and with strange elation wrote these
lines:—
</p>
<p>
‘My Dearest Friend,
</p>
<p>
‘You forgive me, but can I forgive myself? I am plunged in overwhelming
grief. Shall I come on? Your mad but devoted friend,
</p>
<p>
‘Lucius Grafton.
</p>
<p>
‘The Duke of St. James.’
</p>
<p>
They met the same day. After a long consultation, it was settled that
Peacock Piggott should be entrusted, in confidence, with the secret of the
affair: merely a drunken squabble, ‘growing out’ of the Bird of Paradise.
Wine, jealousy, an artful woman, and headstrong youth will account for
anything; they accounted for the present affair. The story was believed,
because the world were always puzzled at Lady Aphrodite being the cause.
The Baronet proceeded with promptitude to make the version pass current:
he indicted ‘The Universe’ and ‘The New World;’ he prosecuted the
caricaturists; and was seen everywhere with his wife. ‘The Universe’ and
‘The New World’ revenged themselves on the Signora; and then she indicted
them. They could not now even libel an opera singer with impunity; where
was the boasted liberty of the press?
</p>
<p>
In the meantime the young Duke, once more easy in his mind, wonderfully
recovered; and on the eighth day after the Ball of Beauty he returned to
the Pavilion, which had now resumed its usual calm character, for fresh
air and soothing quiet.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Arundel’s Warning</i>
</pre>
<p>
IN THE morning of the young Duke’s departure for Twickenham, as Miss Dacre
and Lady Caroline St. Maurice were sitting together at the house of the
former, and moralising over the last night’s ball, Mr. Arundel Dacre was
announced.
</p>
<p>
‘You have just arrived in time to offer your congratulations, Arundel, on
an agreeable event,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘Lord St. Maurice is about to lead
to the hymeneal altar——’
</p>
<p>
‘Lady Sophy Wrekin; I know it.’
</p>
<p>
‘How extremely diplomatic! The <i>attaché</i> in your very air. I thought,
of course, I was to surprise you; but future ambassadors have such
extraordinary sources of information.’
</p>
<p>
‘Mine is a simple one. The Duchess, imagining, I suppose, that my
attentions were directed to the wrong lady, warned me some weeks past.
However, my congratulations shall be duly paid. Lady Caroline St. Maurice,
allow me to express——’
</p>
<p>
‘All that you ought to feel,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘But men at the present day
pride themselves on insensibility.’
</p>
<p>
‘Do you think I am insensible, Lady Caroline?’ asked Arundel.
</p>
<p>
‘I must protest against unfair questions,’ said her Ladyship.
</p>
<p>
‘But it is not unfair. You are a person who have now seen me more than
once, and therefore, according to May, you ought to have a perfect
knowledge of my character. Moreover, you do not share the prejudices of my
family. I ask you, then, do you think I am so heartless as May would
insinuate?’
</p>
<p>
‘Does she insinuate so much?’
</p>
<p>
‘Does she not call me insensible, because I am not in raptures that your
brother is about to marry a young lady, who, for aught she knows, may be
the object of my secret adoration?’
</p>
<p>
‘Arundel, you are perverse,’ said Miss Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘No, May; I am logical.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have always heard that logic is much worse than wilfulness,’ said Lady
Caroline.
</p>
<p>
‘But Arundel always was both,’ said Miss Dacre. ‘He is not only
unreasonable, but he will always prove that he is right. Here is your
purse, sir!’ she added with a smile, presenting him with the result of her
week’s labour.
</p>
<p>
‘This is the way she always bribes me, Lady Caroline. Do you approve of
this corruption?’
</p>
<p>
‘I must confess, I have a slight though secret kindness for a little
bribery. Mamma is now on her way to Mortimer’s, on a corrupt embassy. The
<i>nouvelle mariée</i>, you know, must be reconciled to her change of lot
by quite a new set of playthings. I can give you no idea of the necklace
that our magnificent cousin, in spite of his wound, has sent Sophy.’
</p>
<p>
‘But then, such a cousin!’ said Miss Dacre. ‘A young Duke, like the young
lady in the fairy tale, should scarcely ever speak without producing
brilliants.’
</p>
<p>
‘Sophy is highly sensible of the attention. As she amusingly observed,
except himself marrying her, he could scarcely do more. I hear the
carriage. Adieu, love! Good morning, Mr. Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
‘Allow me to see you to your carriage. I am to dine at Fitz-pompey House
to-day, I believe.’
</p>
<p>
Arundel Dacre returned to his cousin, and, seating himself at the table,
took up a book, and began reading it the wrong side upwards; then he threw
down a ball of silk, then he cracked a knitting-needle, and then with a
husky sort of voice and a half blush, and altogether an air of infinite
confusion, he said, ‘This has been an odd affair, May, of the Duke of St.
James and Sir Lucius Grafton?’
</p>
<p>
‘A very distressing affair, Arundel.’
</p>
<p>
‘How singular that I should have been his second, May?’
</p>
<p>
‘Could he have found anyone more fit for that office, Arundel?’
</p>
<p>
‘I think he might. I must say this: that, had I known at the time the
cause of the fray, I should have refused to accompany him.’
</p>
<p>
She was silent, and he resumed:
</p>
<p>
‘An opera singer, at the best! Sir Lucius Grafton showed more
discrimination. Peacock Piggott was just the character for his place, and
I think my principal, too, might have found a more congenial spirit. What
do you think, May?’
</p>
<p>
‘Really, Arundel, this is a subject of which I know nothing.’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed! Well, it is odd, May; but do you know I have a queer suspicion
that you know more about it than anybody else.’
</p>
<p>
‘I! Arundel?’ she exclaimed, with marked confusion.
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, you, May,’ he repeated with firmness, and looked her in the face
with a glance which would read her soul. ‘Ay! I am sure you do.’
</p>
<p>
‘Who says so?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! do not fear that you have been betrayed. No one says it; but I know
it. We future ambassadors, you know, have such extraordinary sources of
information.’
</p>
<p>
‘You jest, Arundel, on a grave subject.’
</p>
<p>
‘Grave! yes, it is grave, May Dacre. It is grave that there should be
secrets between us; it is grave that our house should have been insulted;
it is grave that you, of all others, should have been outraged; but oh! it
is much more grave, it is bitter, that any other arm than this should have
avenged the wrong.’ He rose from his chair, he paced the room in
agitation, and gnashed his teeth with a vindictive expression that he
tried not to suppress.
</p>
<p>
‘O! my cousin, my dear, dear cousin! spare me!’ She hid her face in her
hands, yet she continued speaking in a broken voice: ‘I did it for the
best. It was to suppress strife, to prevent bloodshed. I knew your temper,
and I feared for your life; yet I told my father; I told him all: and it
was by his advice that I have maintained throughout the silence which I,
perhaps too hastily, at first adopted.’
</p>
<p>
‘My own dear May! spare me! I cannot mark a tear from you without a pang.
How I came to know this you wonder. It was the delirium of that person who
should not have played so proud a part in this affair, and who is yet our
friend; it was his delirium that betrayed all. In the madness of his
excited brain he reacted the frightful scene, declared the outrage, and
again avenged it. Yet, believe me, I am not tempted by any petty feeling
of showing I am not ignorant of what is considered a secret to declare all
this. I know, I feel your silence was for the best; that it was prompted
by sweet and holy feelings for my sake. Believe me, my dear cousin, if
anything could increase the infinite affection with which I love you, it
would be the consciousness that at all times, whenever my image crosses
your mind, it is to muse for my benefit, or to extenuate my errors.
</p>
<p>
‘Dear May, you, who know me better than the world, know well my heart is
not a mass of ice; and you, who are ever so ready to find a good reason
even for my most wilful conduct, and an excuse for my most irrational,
will easily credit that, in interfering in an affair in which you are
concerned, I am not influenced by an unworthy, an officious, or a meddling
spirit. No, dear May! it is because I think it better for you that we
should speak upon this subject that I have ventured to treat upon it.
Perhaps I broke it in a crude, but, credit me, not in an unkind, spirit. I
am well conscious I have a somewhat ungracious manner; but you, who have
pardoned it so often, will excuse it now. To be brief, it is of your
companion to that accursed fête that I would speak.’
</p>
<p>
‘Mrs. Dallington?’
</p>
<p>
‘Surely she. Avoid her, May. I do not like that woman. You know I seldom
speak at hazard; if I do not speak more distinctly now, it is because I
will never magnify suspicions into certainties, which we must do even if
we mention them. But I suspect, greatly suspect. An open rupture would be
disagreeable, would be unwarrantable, would be impolitic. The season draws
to a close. Quit town somewhat earlier than usual, and, in the meantime,
receive her, if necessary; but, if possible, never alone. You have many
friends; and, if no other, Lady Caroline St. Maurice is worthy of your
society.’
</p>
<p>
He bent down his head and kissed her forehead: she pressed his faithful
hand.
</p>
<p>
‘And now, dear May, let me speak of a less important object, of myself. I
find this borough a mere delusion. Every day new difficulties arise; and
every day my chance seems weaker. I am wasting precious time for one who
should be in action. I think, then, of returning to Vienna, and at once. I
have some chance of being appointed Secretary of Embassy, and I then shall
have achieved what was the great object of my life, independence.’
</p>
<p>
‘This is always a sorrowful subject to me, Arundel. You have cherished
such strange, do not be offended if I say such erroneous, ideas on the
subject of what you call independence, that I feel that upon it we can
consult neither with profit to you nor satisfaction to myself.
Independence! Who is independent, if the heir of Dacre bow to anyone?
Independence! Who can be independent, if the future head of one of the
first families in this great country, will condescend to be the secretary
even of a king?’
</p>
<p>
‘We have often talked of this, May, and perhaps I have carried a morbid
feeling to some excess; but my paternal blood flows in these veins, and it
is too late to change. I know not how it is, but I seem misplaced in life.
My existence is a long blunder.’
</p>
<p>
‘Too late to change, dearest Arundel! Oh! thank you for those words. Can
it, can it ever be too late to acknowledge error? Particularly if, by that
very acknowledgment, we not only secure our own happiness, but that of
those we love and those who love us?’
</p>
<p>
‘Dear May! when I talk with you, I talk with my good genius; but I am in
closer and more constant converse with another mind, and of that I am the
slave. It is my own. I will not conceal from you, from whom I have
concealed nothing, that doubts and dark misgivings of the truth and wisdom
of my past feelings and my past career will ever and anon flit across my
fancy, and obtrude themselves upon my consciousness. Your father—yes!
I feel that I have not been to him what nature intended, and what he
deserved.’
</p>
<p>
‘O Arundel!’ she said, with streaming eyes, ‘he loves you like a son. Yet,
yet be one!’
</p>
<p>
He seated himself on the sofa by her side, and took her small hand and
bathed it with his kisses.
</p>
<p>
‘My sweet and faithful friend, my very sister! I am overpowered with
feelings to which I have hitherto been a stranger. There is a cause for
all this contest of my passions. It must out. My being has changed. The
scales have fallen from my sealed eyes, and the fountain of my heart
o’erflows. Life seems to have a new purpose, and existence a new cause.
Listen to me, listen; and if you can, May, comfort me!’
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XVI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Three Graces</i>
</pre>
<p>
AT TWICKENHAM the young Duke recovered rapidly. Not altogether displeased
with his recent conduct, his self-complacency assisted his convalescence.
Sir Lucius Grafton visited him daily. Regularly, about four or five
o’clock, he galloped down to the Pavilion with the last <i>on dit</i>:
some gay message from White’s, a <i>mot</i> of Lord Squib, or a trait of
Charles Annesley. But while he studied to amuse the wearisome hours of his
imprisoned friend, in the midst of all his gaiety an interesting
contrition was ever breaking forth, not so much by words as looks. It was
evident that Sir Lucius, although he dissembled his affliction, was
seriously affected by the consequence of his rash passion; and his amiable
victim, whose magnanimous mind was incapable of harbouring an inimical
feeling, and ever respondent to a soft and generous sentiment, felt
actually more aggrieved for his unhappy friend than for himself. Of
Arundel Dacre the Duke had not seen much. That gentleman never
particularly sympathised with Sir Lucius Grafton, and now he scarcely
endeavoured to conceal the little pleasure which he received from the
Baronet’s society. Sir Lucius was the last man not to detect this mood;
but, as he was confident that the Duke had not betrayed him, he could only
suppose that Miss Dacre had confided the affair to her family, and
therefore, under all circumstances, he thought it best to be unconscious
of any alteration in Arundel Dacre’s intercourse with him. Civil,
therefore, they were when they met; the Baronet was even courteous; but
they both mutually avoided each other.
</p>
<p>
At the end of three weeks the Duke of St. James returned to town in
perfect condition, and received the congratulations of his friends. Mr.
Dacre had been of the few who had been permitted to visit him at
Twickenham. Nothing had then passed between them on the cause of his
illness; but his Grace could not but observe that the manner of his valued
friend was more than commonly cordial. And Miss Dacre, with her father,
was among the first to hail his return to health and the metropolis.
</p>
<p>
The Bird of Paradise, who, since the incident, had been several times in
hysterics, and had written various notes, of three or four lines each, of
enquiries and entreaties to join her noble friend, had been kept off from
Twickenham by the masterly tactics of Lord Squib. She, however, would
drive to the Duke’s house the day after his arrival in town, and was with
him when sundry loud knocks, in quick succession, announced an approaching
levée. He locked her up in his private room, and hastened to receive the
compliments of his visitors. In the same apartment, among many others, he
had the pleasure of meeting, for the first time, Lady Aphrodite Grafton,
Lady Caroline St. Maurice, and Miss Dacre, all women whom he had either
promised, intended, or offered to marry. A curious situation this! And
really, when our hero looked upon them once more, and viewed them, in
delightful rivalry, advancing with their congratulations, he was not
surprised at the feelings with which they had inspired him. Far, far
exceeding the <i>bonhomie</i> of Macheath, the Duke could not resist
remembering that, had it been his fortune to have lived in the land in
which his historiographer will soon be wandering; in short, to have been a
pacha instead of a peer, he might have married all three.
</p>
<p>
A prettier fellow and three prettier women had never met since the
immortal incident of Ida.
</p>
<p>
It required the thorough breeding of Lady Afy to conceal the anxiety of
her passion; Miss Dacre’s eyes showered triple sunshine, as she extended a
hand not too often offered; but Lady Caroline was a cousin, and
consanguinity, therefore, authorised as well as accounted for the warmth
of her greeting.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XVII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Second Refusal</i>
</pre>
<p>
A VERY few days after his return the Duke of St. James dined with Mr.
Dacre. It was the first time that he had dined with him during the season.
The Fitz-pompeys were there; and, among others, his Grace had the pleasure
of again meeting a few of his Yorkshire friends.
</p>
<p>
Once more he found himself at the right hand of Miss Dacre. All his
career, since his arrival in England, flitted across his mind. Doncaster,
dear Don-caster, where he had first seen her, teemed only with delightful
reminiscences to a man whose favourite had bolted. Such is the magic of
love! Then came Castle Dacre and the orange terrace, and their airy romps,
and the delightful party to Hauteville; and then Dacre Abbey. An
involuntary shudder seemed to damp all the ardour of his soul; but when he
turned and looked upon her beaming face, he could not feel miserable.
</p>
<p>
He thought that he had never been at so agreeable a party in his life: yet
it was chiefly composed of the very beings whom he daily execrated for
their powers of boredom. And he himself was not very entertaining. He was
certainly more silent than loquacious, and found himself often gazing with
mute admiration on the little mouth, every word breathed forth from which
seemed inspiration. Yet he was happy. Oh! what happiness is his who dotes
upon a woman! Few could observe from his conduct what was passing in his
mind; yet the quivering of his softened tones and the mild lustre of his
mellowed gaze; his subdued and quiet manner; his un-perceived yet infinite
attentions; his memory of little incidents that all but lovers would have
forgotten; the total absence of all compliment, and gallantry, and
repartee; all these, to a fine observer, might have been gentle
indications of a strong passion; and to her to whom they were addressed
sufficiently intimated that no change had taken place in his feelings
since the warm hour in which he first whispered his o’erpowering love.
</p>
<p>
The ladies retired, and the Duke of St. James fell into a reverie. A
political discourse of elaborate genius now arose. Lord Fitz-pompey got
parliamentary. Young Faulcon made his escape, having previously whispered
to another youth, not unheard by the Duke of St. James, that his mother
was about to depart, and he was convoy. His Grace, too, had heard Lady
Fitz-pompey say that she was going early to the opera. Shortly afterwards
parties evidently retired. But the debate still raged. Lord Fitz-pompey
had caught a stout Yorkshire squire, and was delightedly astounding with
official graces his stern opponent. A sudden thought occurred to the Duke;
he stole out of the room, and gained the saloon.
</p>
<p>
He found it almost empty. With sincere pleasure he bid Lady Balmont, who
was on the point of departure, farewell, and promised to look in at her
box. He seated himself by Lady Greville Nugent, and dexterously made her
follow Lady Balmont’s example. She withdrew with the conviction that his
Grace would not be a moment behind her. There were only old Mrs.
Hungerford and her rich daughter remaining. They were in such raptures
with Miss Dacre’s singing that his Grace was quite in despair; but chance
favoured him. Even old Mrs. Hungerford this night broke through her rule
of not going to more than one house, and she drove off to Lady de
Courcy’s.
</p>
<p>
They were alone. It is sometimes an awful thing to be alone with those we
love.
</p>
<p>
‘Sing that again!’ asked the Duke, imploringly. ‘It is my favourite air;
it always reminds me of Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
She sang, she ceased; she sang with beauty, and she ceased with grace; but
all unnoticed by the tumultuous soul of her adoring guest. His thoughts
were intent upon a greater object. The opportunity was sweet; and yet
those boisterous wassailers, they might spoil all.
</p>
<p>
‘Do you know that this is the first time that I have seen your rooms lit
up?’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Is it possible! I hope they gain the approbation of so distinguished a
judge.’
</p>
<p>
‘I admire them exceedingly. By-the-bye, I see a new cabinet in the next
room. Swaby told me, the other day, that you were one of his
lady-patronesses. I wish you would show it me. I am very curious in
cabinets.’
</p>
<p>
She rose, and they advanced to the end of another and a longer room.
</p>
<p>
‘This is a beautiful saloon,’ said the Duke. ‘How long is it?’
</p>
<p>
‘I really do not know; but I think between forty and fifty feet.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! you must be mistaken. Forty or fifty feet! I am an excellent judge of
distances. I will try. Forty or fifty feet! Ah! the next room included.
Let us walk to the end of the next room. Each of my paces shall be one
foot and a half.’
</p>
<p>
They had now arrived at the end of the third room.
</p>
<p>
‘Let me see,’ resumed the Duke; ‘you have a small room to the right. Oh!
did I not hear that you had made a conservatory? I see, I see it; lit up,
too! Let us go in. I want to gain some hints about London conservatories.’
</p>
<p>
It was not exactly a conservatory; but a balcony of large dimensions had
been fitted up on each side with coloured glass, and was open to the
gardens. It was a rich night of fragrant June. The moon and stars were as
bright as if they had shone over the terrace of Dacre, and the perfume of
the flowers reminded him of his favourite orange-trees. The mild, cool
scene was such a contrast to the hot and noisy chamber they had recently
quitted, that for a moment they were silent.
</p>
<p>
‘You are not afraid of this delicious air?’ asked his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘Midsummer air,’ said Miss Dacre, ‘must surely be harmless.’
</p>
<p>
Again there was silence; and Miss Dacre, after having plucked a flower and
tended a plant, seemed to express an intention of withdrawing. Suddenly he
spoke, and in a gushing voice of heartfelt words:
</p>
<p>
‘Miss Dacre, you are too kind, too excellent to be offended, if I dare to
ask whether anything could induce you to view with more indulgence one who
sensibly feels how utterly he is unworthy of you.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are the last person whose feelings I should wish to hurt. Let us not
revive a conversation to which, I can assure you, neither of us looks back
with satisfaction.’
</p>
<p>
‘Is there, then, no hope? Must I ever live with the consciousness of being
the object of your scorn?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh, no, no! As you will speak, let us understand each other. However I
may approve of my decision, I have lived quite long enough to repent the
manner in which it was conveyed. I cannot, without the most unfeigned
regret, I cannot for a moment remember that I have addressed a bitter word
to one to whom I am under the greatest obligations. If my apologies——’
</p>
<p>
‘Pray, pray be silent!’
</p>
<p>
‘I must speak. If my apologies, my complete, my most humble apologies, can
be any compensation for treating with such lightness feelings which I now
respect, and offers by which I now consider myself honoured, accept them!’
</p>
<p>
‘O, Miss Dacre! that fatal word, respect!’
</p>
<p>
‘We have warmer words in this house for you. You are now our friend.’
</p>
<p>
‘I dare not urge a suit which may offend you; yet, if you could read my
heart, I sometimes think that we might be happy. Let me hope!’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Duke of St. James, I am sure you will not ever offend me, because
I am sure you will not ever wish to do it. There are few people in this
world for whom I entertain a more sincere regard than yourself. I am
convinced, I am conscious, that when we met I did sufficient justice
neither to your virtues nor your talents. It is impossible for me to
express with what satisfaction I now feel that you have resumed that place
in the affections of this family to which you have an hereditary right. I
am grateful, truly, sincerely grateful, for all that you feel with regard
to me individually; and believe me, in again expressing my regret that it
is not in my power to view you in any other light than as a valued friend,
I feel that I am pursuing that conduct which will conduce as much to your
happiness as my own.’
</p>
<p>
‘My happiness, Miss Dacre!’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed, such is my opinion. I will not again endeavour to depreciate the
feelings which you entertain for me, and by which, ever remember, I feel
honoured; but these very feelings prevent you from viewing their object so
dispassionately as I do.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am at a loss for your meaning; at least, favour me by speaking
explicitly: you see I respect your sentiments, and do not presume to urge
that on which my very happiness depends.’
</p>
<p>
‘To be brief, then, I will not affect to conceal that marriage is a state
which has often been the object of my meditations. I think it the duty of
all women that so important a change in their destiny should be well
considered. If I know anything of myself, I am convinced that I should
never survive an unhappy marriage.’
</p>
<p>
‘But why dream of anything so utterly impossible?’
</p>
<p>
‘So very probable, so very certain, you mean. Ay! I repeat my words, for
they are truth. If I ever marry, it is to devote every feeling and every
thought, each hour, each instant of existence, to a single being for whom
I alone live. Such devotion I expect in return; without it I should die,
or wish to die; but such devotion can never be returned by you.’
</p>
<p>
‘You amaze me! I! who live only on your image.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your education, the habits in which you are brought up, the maxims which
have been instilled into you from your infancy, the system which each year
of your life has more matured, the worldly levity with which everything
connected with woman is viewed by you and your companions; whatever may be
your natural dispositions, all this would prevent you, all this would
render it a perfect impossibility, all this will ever make you utterly
unconscious of the importance of the subject on which we are now
conversing. Pardon me for saying it, you know not of what you speak. Yes!
however sincere may be the expression of your feelings to me this moment,
I shudder to think on whom your memory dwelt even this hour but yesterday.
I never will peril my happiness on such a chance; but there are others who
do not think as I do.’
</p>
<p>
‘Miss Dacre! save me! If you knew all, you would not doubt. This moment is
my destiny.’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Duke of St. James, save yourself. There is yet time. You have my
prayers.’
</p>
<p>
‘Let me then hope——’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed, indeed, it cannot be. Here our conversation on this subject ends
for ever.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yet we part friends!’ He spoke in a broken voice.
</p>
<p>
‘The best and truest!’ She extended her arm; he pressed her hand to his
impassioned lips, and quitted the house, mad with love and misery.
</p>
<p>
<a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046">
<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER XVIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Joys of the Alhambra</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Duke threw himself into his carriage in that mood which fits us for
desperate deeds. What he intended to do, indeed, was doubtful, but
something very vigorous, very decided, perhaps very terrible. An
indefinite great effort danced, in misty magnificence, before the vision
of his mind. His whole being was to be changed, his life was to be
revolutionised. Such an alteration was to take place that even she could
not doubt the immense yet incredible result. Then despair whispered its
cold-blooded taunts, and her last hopeless words echoed in his ear. But he
was too agitated to be calmly miserable, and, in the poignancy of his
feelings, he even meditated death. One thing, however, he could obtain;
one instant relief was yet in his power, solitude. He panted for the
loneliness of his own chamber, broken only by his agitated musings.
</p>
<p>
The carriage stopped; the lights and noise called him to life. This,
surely, could not be home? Whirled open the door, down dashed the steps,
with all that prompt precision which denotes the practised hand of an
aristocratic retainer. (284)
</p>
<p>
‘What is all this, Symmons? Why did you not drive home?’
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace forgets that Mr. Annesley and some gentlemen sup with your
Grace to-night at the Alhambra.’
</p>
<p>
‘Impossible! Drive home.’
</p>
<p>
‘Your Grace perhaps forgets that your Grace is expected?’ said the
experienced servant, who knew when to urge a master, who, to-morrow, might
blame him for permitting his caprice.
</p>
<p>
‘What am I to do? Stay here. I will run upstairs, and put them off.’
</p>
<p>
He ran up into the crush-room. The opera was just over, and some parties
who were not staying the ballet, had already assembled there. As he passed
along he was stopped by Lady Fitz-pompey, who would not let such a capital
opportunity escape of exhibiting Caroline and the young Duke together.
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Bulkley,’ said her Ladyship, ‘there must be something wrong about the
carriage.’ An experienced, middle-aged gentleman, who jobbed on in society
by being always ready and knowing his cue, resigned the arm of Lady
Caroline St. Maurice and disappeared.
</p>
<p>
‘George,’ said Lady Fitz-pompey, ‘give your arm to Carry just for one
moment.’
</p>
<p>
If it had been anybody but his cousin, the Duke would easily have escaped;
but Caroline he invariably treated with marked regard; perhaps because his
conscience occasionally reproached him that he had not treated her with a
stronger feeling. At this moment, too, she was the only being in the
world, save one, whom he could remember with satisfaction: he felt that he
loved her most affectionately, but somehow she did not inspire him with
those peculiar feelings which thrilled his heart at the recollection of
May Dacre.
</p>
<p>
In this mood he offered an arm, which was accepted; but he could not in a
moment assume the tone of mind befitting his situation and the scene. He
was silent; for him a remarkable circumstance.
</p>
<p>
‘Do not stay here,’ said Lady Caroline is a soft voice, which her mother
could not overhear. ‘I know you want to be away. Steal off.’
</p>
<p>
‘Where can I be better than with you, Carry?’ said the young Duke,
determined not to leave her, and loving her still more for her modest
kindness; and thereon he turned round, and, to show that he was sincere,
began talking with his usual spirit. Mr. Bulkley of course never returned,
and Lady Fitz-pompey felt as satisfied with her diplomatic talents as a
plenipotentiary who has just arranged an advantageous treaty.
</p>
<p>
Arundel Dacre came up and spoke to Lady Fitz-pompey. Never did two persons
converse together who were more dissimilar in their manner and their
feelings; and yet Arundel Dacre did contrive to talk; a result which he
could not always accomplish, even with those who could sympathise with
him. Lady Fitz-pompey listened to him with attention; for Arundel Dacre,
in spite of his odd manner, or perhaps in some degree in consequence of
it, had obtained a distinguished reputation both among men and women; and
it was the great principle of Lady Fitz-pompey to attach to her the
distinguished youth of both sexes. She was pleased with this public homage
of Arundel Dacre; because he was one who, with the reputation of talents,
family, and fashion, seldom spoke to anyone, and his attentions elevated
their object. Thus she maintained her empire.
</p>
<p>
St. Maurice now came up to excuse himself to the young Duke for not
attending at the Alhambra to-night. ‘Sophy could not bear it,’ he
whispered: ‘she had got her head full of the most ridiculous fancies, and
it was in vain to speak: so he had promised to give up that, as well as
Crockford’s.’
</p>
<p>
This reminded our hero of his party, and the purpose of his entering the
opera. He determined not to leave Caroline till her carriage was called;
and he began to think that he really must go to the Alhambra, after all.
He resolved to send them off at an early hour.
</p>
<p>
‘Anything new to-night, Henry?’ asked his Grace, of Lord St. Maurice. ‘I
have just come in.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! then you have seen them?’
</p>
<p>
‘Seen whom?’
</p>
<p>
‘The most knowing <i>forestieri</i> we ever had. We have been speaking of
nothing else the whole evening. Has not Caroline told you? Arundel Dacre
introduced me to them.’
</p>
<p>
‘Who are they?’
</p>
<p>
‘I forget their names. Dacre, how do you call the heroes of the night?
Dacre never answers. Did you ever observe that? But, see! there they
come.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke turned, and observed Lord Darrell advancing with two gentlemen
with whom his Grace was well acquainted. These were Prince Charles de
Whiskerburg and Count Frill.
</p>
<p>
M. de Whiskerburg was the eldest son of a prince, who, besides being the
premier noble of the empire, possessed, in his own country, a very pretty
park of two or three hundred miles in circumference, in the boundaries of
which the imperial mandate was not current, but hid its diminished head
before the supremacy of a subject worshipped under the title of John the
Twenty-fourth. M. de Whiskerburg was a young man, tall, with a fine
figure, and fine features. In short, a sort of Hungarian Apollo; only his
beard, his mustachios, his whiskers, his <i>favoris</i>, his <i>padishas</i>,
his sultanas, his mignonettas, his dulcibellas, did not certainly entitle
him to the epithet of <i>imberbis</i>, and made him rather an apter
representative of the Hungarian Hercules.
</p>
<p>
Count Frill was a different sort of personage. He was all rings and
ringlets, ruffles, and a little rouge. Much older than his companion,
short in stature, plump in figure, but with a most defined waist, fair,
blooming, with a multiplicity of long light curls, and a perpetual smile
playing upon his round countenance, he looked like the Cupid of an opera
Olympus.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had been intimate with these distinguished gentlemen
in their own country, and had received from them many and distinguished
attentions. Often had he expressed to them his sincere desire to greet
them in his native land. Their mutual anxiety of never again meeting was
now removed. If his heart, instead of being bruised, had been absolutely
broken, still honour, conscience, the glory of his house, his individual
reputation, alike urged him not to be cold or backward at such a moment.
He advanced, therefore, with a due mixture of grace and warmth, and
congratulated them on their arrival. At this moment, Lady Fitz-pompey’s
carriage was announced. Promising to return to them in an instant, he
hastened to his cousin; but Mr. Arundel Dacre had already offered his arm,
which, for Arundel Dacre, was really pretty well.
</p>
<p>
The Duke was now glad that he had a small reunion this evening, as he
could at once pay a courtesy to his foreign friends. He ran into the
Signora’s dressing-room, to assure her of his presence. He stumbled upon
Peacock Piggott as he came out, and summoned him to fill the vacant place
of St. Maurice, and then sent him with a message to some friends who yet
lingered in their box, and whose presence, he thought, might be an
agreeable addition to the party.
</p>
<p>
You entered the Alhambra by a Saracenic cloister, from the ceiling of
which an occasional lamp threw a gleam upon some Eastern arms hung up
against the wall. This passage led to the armoury, a room of moderate
dimensions, but hung with rich contents. Many an inlaid breastplate, many
a Mameluke scimitar and Damascus blade, many a gemmed pistol and
pearl-embroidered saddle, might there be seen, though viewed in a subdued
and quiet light. All seemed hushed, and still, and shrouded in what had
the reputation of being a palace of pleasure.
</p>
<p>
In this chamber assembled the expected guests. And having all arrived,
they proceeded down a small gallery to the banqueting-room. The room was
large and lofty. It was fitted up as an Eastern tent. The walls were hung
with scarlet cloth, tied up with ropes of gold. Round the room crouched
recumbent lions richly gilt, who grasped in their paws a lance, the top of
which was a coloured lamp. The ceiling was emblazoned with the Hauteville
arms, and was radiant with burnished gold. A cresset lamp was suspended
from the centre of the shield, and not only emitted an equable flow of
soft though brilliant light, but also, as the aromatic oil wasted away,
distilled an exquisite perfume.
</p>
<p>
The table blazed with golden plate, for the Bird of Paradise loved
splendour. At the end of the room, under a canopy and upon a throne, the
shield and vases lately executed for his Grace now appeared. Everything
was gorgeous, costly, and imposing; but there was no pretence, save in the
original outline, at maintaining the Oriental character. The furniture was
French; and opposite the throne Canova’s Hebe, bounded with a golden cup
from a pedestal of ormolu.
</p>
<p>
The guests are seated; but after a few minutes the servants withdraw.
Small tables of ebony and silver, and dumb waiters of ivory and gold,
conveniently stored, are at hand, and Spiridion never leaves the room. The
repast was refined, exquisite, various. It was one of those meetings where
all eat. When a few persons, easy and unconstrained, unencumbered with
cares, and of dispositions addicted to enjoyment, get together at past
midnight, it is extraordinary what an appetite they evince. Singers also
are proverbially prone to gourmandise; and though the Bird of Paradise
unfortunately possessed the smallest mouth in all Singingland, it is
astonishing how she pecked! But they talked as well as feasted, and were
really gay.
</p>
<p>
‘Prince,’ said the Duke, ‘I hope Madame de Harestein approves of your trip
to England?’
</p>
<p>
The Prince only smiled, for he was of a silent disposition, and therefore
wonderfully well suited his travelling companion.
</p>
<p>
‘Poor Madame de Harestein!’ exclaimed Count Frill. ‘What despair she was
in, when you left Vienna, my dear Duke. I did what I could to amuse her. I
used to take my guitar, and sing to her morning and night, but without
effect. She certainly would have died of a broken heart, if it had not
been for the dancing-dogs.’
</p>
<p>
‘Did they bite her?’ asked a lady who affected the wit of Lord Squib, ‘and
so inoculate her with gaiety.’
</p>
<p>
‘Everybody was mad about the dancing-dogs. They came from Peru, and danced
the mazurka in green jackets with a <i>jabot</i>. Oh! what a <i>jabot!</i>’
</p>
<p>
‘I dislike animals excessively,’ remarked another lady, who was as refined
as Mr. Annesley, her model.
</p>
<p>
‘Dislike the dancing-dogs!’ said Count Frill. ‘Ah! my good lady, you would
have been enchanted. Even the Kaiser fed them with pistachio nuts. Oh! so
pretty! Delicate leetle things, soft shining little legs, and pretty
little faces! so sensible, and with such <i>jabots!</i>’
</p>
<p>
‘I assure you they were excessively amusing,’ said the Prince, in a soft,
confidential undertone to his neighbour, Mrs. Montfort, who was as
dignified as she was beautiful, and who, admiring his silence, which she
took for state, smiled and bowed with fascinating condescension.
</p>
<p>
‘And what else has happened very remarkable, Count, since I left you?’
asked Lord Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘Nothing, nothing, my dear Darrell. This <i>bêtise</i> of a war has made
us all serious. If old Clamstandt had not married that gipsy, little
Dugiria, I really think I should have taken a turn to Belgrade.’
</p>
<p>
‘You should not eat so much, Poppet!’ drawled Charles Annesley to a
Spanish danseuse, tall, dusky and lithe, glancing like a lynx and graceful
as a jennet. She was very silent, but no doubt indicated the possession of
Cervantic humour by the sly calmness with which she exhausted her own
waiter, and pillaged her neighbours.
</p>
<p>
‘Why not?’ said a little French actress, highly finished like a miniature,
who scarcely ate anything, but drank champagne and chatted with equal
rapidity and composure, and who was always ready to fight anybody’s
battle, provided she could get an opportunity to talk. ‘Why not, Mr.
Annesley? You never will let anybody eat. I never eat myself, because
every night, having to talk so much, I am dry, dry, dry; so I drink,
drink, drink. It is an extraordinary thing that there is no language which
makes you so thirsty as French.’
</p>
<p>
‘What can be the reason?’ asked a sister of Mrs. Montfort, a tall fair
girl, who looked sentimental, but was only silly.
</p>
<p>
‘Because there is so much salt in it,’ said Lord Squib.
</p>
<p>
‘Delia,’ drawled Mr. Annesley, ‘you look very pretty to-night!’
</p>
<p>
‘I am charmed to charm you, Mr. Annesley. Shall I tell you what Lord Bon
Mot said of you?’
</p>
<p>
‘No, <i>ma mignonne!</i> I never wish to hear my own good things.’
</p>
<p>
‘Spoiled, you should add,’ said the fair rival of Lord Squib, ‘if Bon Mot
be in the case.’
</p>
<p>
‘Lord Bon Mot is a most gentlemanlike man,’ said Delia, indignant at an
admirer being attacked. ‘He always wants to be amusing. Whenever he dines
out, he comes and sits with me for half an hour to catch the air of the
Parisian badinage.’
</p>
<p>
‘And you tell him a variety of little things?’ asked Lord Squib,
insidiously drawing out the secret tactics of Bon Mot.
</p>
<p>
‘<i>Beaucoup, beaucoup</i>,’ said Delia, extending two little white hands
sparkling with gems. ‘If he come in ever so, how do you call it? heavy,
not that: in the domps. Ah! it is that. If ever he come in the domps, he
goes out always like a <i>soufflée</i>.’
</p>
<p>
‘As empty, I have no doubt,’ said the witty lady.
</p>
<p>
‘And as sweet, I have no doubt,’ said Lord Squib; ‘for Delcroix complains
sadly of your excesses, Delia.’
</p>
<p>
‘Mr. Delcroix complain of me! That, indeed, is too bad. Just because I
recommend Montmorency de Versailles to him for an excellent customer, ever
since he abuses me, merely because Montmorency has forgot, in the hurry of
going off, to pay his little account.’
</p>
<p>
‘But he says you have got all the things,’ said Lord Squib, whose great
amusement was to put Delia in a passion.
</p>
<p>
‘What of that?’ screamed the little lady. ‘Montmorency gave them me.’
</p>
<p>
‘Don’t make such a noise,’ said the Bird of Paradise. ‘I never can eat
when there is a noise. Duke,’ continued she in a fretful tone, ‘they make
such a noise!’
</p>
<p>
‘Annesley, keep Squib quiet.’
</p>
<p>
‘Delia, leave that young man alone. If Isidora would talk a little more,
and you eat a little more, I think you would be the most agreeable little
ladies I know. Poppet! put those bonbons in your pocket. You should never
eat sugarplums in company.’
</p>
<p>
Thus, talking agreeable nonsense, tasting agreeable dishes, and sipping
agreeable wines, an hour ran on. Sweetest music from an unseen source ever
and anon sounded, and Spiridion swung a censer full of perfumes round the
chamber. At length the Duke requested Count Frill to give them a song. The
Bird of Paradise would never sing for pleasure, only for fame and a slight
cheque. The Count begged to decline, and at the same time asked for a
guitar. The Signora sent for hers; and his Excellency, preluding with a
beautiful simper, gave them some slight thing to this effect.
</p>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
I.
Charming Bignetta! charming Bignetta!
What a gay little girl is charming Bignetta!
She dances, she prattles,
She rides and she rattles;
But she always is charming, that charming Bignetta!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
II
Charming Bignetta! charming Bignetta!
What a wild little witch is charming Bignetta!
When she smiles, I’m all madness;
When she frowns, I’m all sadness;
But she always is smiling, that charming Bignetta!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
III.
Charming Bignetta! charming Bignetta!
What a wicked young rogue is charming Bignetta!
She laughs at my shyness,
And flirts with his Highness;
Yet still she is charming, that charming Bignetta!
</pre>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
IV.
Charming Bignetta! charming Bignetta!
What a dear little girl is charming Bignetta!
‘Think me only a sister,’
Said she trembling: I kissed her.
What a charming young sister is charming Bignetta!
</pre>
<p>
To choicer music chimed his gay guitar ‘In Este’s Halls,’ yet still his
song served its purpose, for it raised a smile.
</p>
<p>
‘I wrote that for Madame Sapiepha, at the Congress of Verona,’ said Count
Frill. ‘It has been thought amusing.’
</p>
<p>
‘Madame Sapiepha!’ exclaimed the Bird of Paradise. ‘What! that pretty
little woman, who has such pretty caps?’
</p>
<p>
‘The same! Ah! what caps! what taste!’
</p>
<p>
‘You like caps, then?’ asked the Bird of Paradise, with a sparkling eye.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! if there be anything more than another that I know most, it is the
cap. Here,’ said he, rather oddly unbuttoning his waistcoat, ‘you see what
lace I have got.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah me! what lace!’ exclaimed the Bird, in rapture. ‘Duke, look at his
lace. Come here, sit next to me. Let me look at that lace.’ She examined
it with great attention, then turned up her beautiful eyes with a
fascinating smile. ‘<i>Ah! c’est jolie, n’est-ce pas?</i> But you like
caps. I tell you what, you shall see my caps. Spiridion, go, <i>mon cher</i>,
and tell Ma’amselle to bring my caps, all my caps, one of each set.’
</p>
<p>
In due time entered the Swiss, with the caps, all the caps, one of each
set. As she handed them in turn to her mistress, the Bird chirped a
panegyric upon each.
</p>
<p>
‘That is pretty, is it not, and this also? but this is my favourite. What
do you think of this border? <i>c’est belle cette garniture? et ce jabot,
c’est très-séduisant, n’est-ce pas? Mais voici</i>, the cap of Princess
Lichtenstein. <i>C’est superb, c’est mon favori</i>. But I also love very
much this of the Duchess de Berri. She gave me the pattern herself. And,
after, all, this <i>cornette à petite santé</i> of Lady Blaze is a dear
little thing; then, again, this <i>coiffe à dentelle</i> of Lady Macaroni
is quite a pet.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pass them down,’ said Lord Squib; ‘we want to look at them.’ Accordingly
they were passed down. Lord Squib put one on.
</p>
<p>
‘Do I look superb, sentimental, or only pretty?’ asked his Lordship. The
example was contagious, and most of the caps were appropriated. No one
laughed more than their mistress, who, not having the slightest idea of
the value of money, would have given them all away on the spot; not from
any good-natured feeling, but from the remembrance that tomorrow she might
amuse half an hour in buying others.
</p>
<p>
Whilst some were stealing, and she remonstrating, the Duke clapped his
hands like a caliph. The curtain at the end of the apartment was
immediately withdrawn, and the ball-room stood revealed.
</p>
<p>
It was the same size as the banqueting-hall. Its walls exhibited a long
perspective of golden pilasters, the frequent piers of which were of
looking-glass, save where, occasionally, a picture had been, as it were,
inlaid in its rich frame. Here was the Titian Venus of the Tribune,
deliciously copied by a French artist: there, the Roman Fornarina, with
her delicate grace, beamed like the personification of Raf-faelle’s
genius. Here, Zuleikha, living in the light and shade of that magician
Guercino, in vain summoned the passions of the blooming Hebrew: and there,
Cleopatra, preparing for her last immortal hour, proved by what we saw
that Guido had been a lover.
</p>
<p>
The ceiling of this apartment was richly painted, and richly gilt: from it
were suspended three lustres by golden cords, which threw a softened light
upon the floor of polished and curiously inlaid woods. At the end of the
apartment was an orchestra.
</p>
<p>
Round the room waltzed the elegant revellers. Softly and slowly, led by
their host, they glided along like spirits of air; but each time that the
Duke passed the musicians, the music became livelier, and the motion more
brisk, till at length you might have mistaken them for a college of
spinning dervishes. One by one, an exhausted couple retreated from the
lists. Some threw themselves on a sofa, some monopolised an easy chair;
but in twenty minutes the whirl had ceased. At length Peacock Piggott gave
a groan, which denoted returning energy, and raised a stretching leg in
air, bringing up, though most unwittingly, upon his foot, one of the
Bird’s sublime and beautiful caps.
</p>
<p>
‘Halloa! Piggott, armed <i>cap-au-pied</i>, I see,’ said Lord Squib. This
joke was a signal for general resuscitation.
</p>
<p>
The Alhambra formed a quadrangle: all the chambers were on the basement
story. In the middle of the court of the quadrangle was a beautiful
fountain; and the court was formed by a conservatory, which was built
along each side of the interior square, and served, like a cloister or
covered way, for a communication between the different parts of the
building. To this conservatory they now repaired. It was broad, full of
rare and delicious plants and flowers, and brilliantly illuminated. Busts
and statues were intermingled with the fairy grove; and a rich, warm hue,
by a skilful arrangement of coloured lights, was thrown over many a nymph
and fair divinity, many a blooming hero and beardless god. Here they
lounged in different parties, talking on such subjects as idlers ever fall
upon; now and then plucking a flower, now and then listening to the
fountain, now and then lingering over the distant music, and now and then
strolling through a small apartment which opened to their walks, and which
bore the title of the Temple of Gnidus. Here, Canova’s Venus breathed an
atmosphere of perfume and of light; that wonderful statue, whose
full-charged eye is not very classical, to be sure; but then, how true!
</p>
<p>
While they were thus whiling away their time, Lord Squib proposed a visit
to the theatre, which he had ordered to be lit up. To the theatre they
repaired. They rambled over every part of the house, amused themselves
with a visit to the gallery, and then collected behind the scenes. They
were excessively amused with the properties; and Lord Squib proposed they
should dress themselves. In a few minutes they were all in costume. A
crowd of queens and chambermaids, Jews and chimney-sweeps, lawyers and
Charleys, Spanish Dons, and Irish officers, rushed upon the stage. The
little Spaniard was Almaviva, and fell into magnificent attitudes, with
her sword and plume. Lord Squib was the old woman of Brentford, and very
funny. Sir Lucius Grafton, Harlequin; and Darrell, Grimaldi. The Prince,
and the Count without knowing it, figured as watchmen. Squib whispered
Annesley, that Sir Lucius O’Trigger might appear in character, but was
prudent enough to suppress the joke.
</p>
<p>
The band was summoned, and they danced quadrilles with infinite spirit,
and finished the night, at the suggestion of Lord Squib, by breakfasting
on the stage. By the time this meal was despatched the purple light of
morn had broken into the building, and the ladies proposed an immediate
departure.
</p>
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<h2>
BOOK IV.
</h2>
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<h2>
CHAPTER I.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Pen Bronnock Palace</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE arrival of the two distinguished foreigners reanimated the dying
season. All vied in testifying their consideration, and the Duke of St.
James exceeded all. He took them to see the alterations at Hauteville
House, which no one had yet witnessed; and he asked their opinion of his
furniture, which no one had yet decided on. Two fêtes in the same week
established, as well as maintained, his character as the Archduke of
fashion. Remembering, however, the agreeable month which he had spent in
the kingdom of John the Twenty-fourth, he was reminded, with annoyance,
that his confusion at Hauteville prevented him from receiving his friends
<i>en grand seigneur</i> in his hereditary castle. Metropolitan
magnificence, which, if the parvenu could not equal, he at least could
imitate, seemed a poor return for the feudal splendour and impartial
festivity of an Hungarian magnate. While he was brooding over these
reminiscences, it suddenly occurred to him that he had never made a
progress into his western territories. Pen Bronnock Palace was the boast
of Cornwall, though its lord had never paid it a visit. The Duke of St.
James sent for Sir Carte Blanche.
</p>
<p>
Besides entertaining the foreign nobles, the young Duke could no longer
keep off the constantly-recurring idea that something must be done to
entertain himself. He shuddered to think where and what he should have
been been, had not these gentlemen so providentially arrived. As for again
repeating the farce of last year, he felt that it would no longer raise a
smile. Yorkshire he shunned. Doncaster made him tremble. A week with the
Duke of Burlington at Marringworth; a fortnight with the Fitz-pompeys at
Malthorpe; a month with the Graftons at Cleve; and so on: he shuddered at
the very idea. Who can see a pantomime more than once? Who could survive a
pantomime the twentieth time? All the shifting scenes, and flitting
splendour; all the motley crowds of sparkling characters; all the quick
changes, and full variety, are, once, enchantment. But when the splendour
is discovered to be monotony; the change, order, and the caprice a system;
when the characters play ever the same part, and the variety never varies;
how dull, how weary, how infinitely flat, is such a world to that man who
requires from its converse, not occasional relaxation, but constant
excitement!
</p>
<p>
Pen Bronnock was a new object. At this moment in his life, novelty was
indeed a treasure. If he could cater for a month, no expense should be
grudged; as for the future, he thrust it from his mind. By taking up his
residence, too, at Pen Bronnock, he escaped from all invitations; and so,
in a word, the worthy Knight received orders to make all preparations at
the palace for the reception of a large party in the course of three
weeks.
</p>
<p>
Sir Carte, as usual, did wonders. There was, fortunately for his employer,
no time to build or paint, but some dingy rooms were hung with scarlet
cloth; cart-loads of new furniture were sent down; the theatre was
re-burnished; the stables put in order; and, what was of infinitely more
importance in the estimation of all Englishmen, the neglected pile was
‘well aired.’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER II.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Dandy From Vienna</i>
</pre>
<p>
WE ARE in the country, and such a country, that even in Italy we think of
thee, native Hesperia! Here, myrtles grow, and fear no blasting north, or
blighting east. Here, the south wind blows with that soft breath which
brings the bloom to flesh. Here, the land breaks in gentle undulations;
and here, blue waters kiss a verdant shore. Hail! to thy thousand bays,
and deep-red earth, thy marble quarries, and thy silver veins! Hail! to
thy far-extending landscape, whose sparkling villages and streaky fields
no clime can match!
</p>
<p>
Some gales we owe to thee of balmy breath, some gentle hours when life had
fewest charms. And we are grateful for all this, to say nothing of your
cider and your junkets.
</p>
<p>
The Duke arrived just as the setting sun crowned the proud palace with his
gleamy rays. It was a pile which the immortal Inigo had raised in sympathy
with the taste of a noble employer, who had passed his earliest years in
Lombardy. Of stone, and sometimes even of marble, with pediments and
balustrades, and ornamental windows, and richly-chased keystones, and
flights of steps, and here and there a statue, the structure was quite
Palladian, though a little dingy, and, on the whole, very imposing.
</p>
<p>
There were suites of rooms which had no end, and staircases which had no
beginning. In this vast pile, nothing was more natural than to lose your
way, an agreeable amusement on a rainy morning. There was a collection of
pictures, very various, by which phrase we understand not select. Yet they
were amusing; and the Canalettis were unrivalled. There was a regular
ball-room, and a theatre; so resources were at hand. The scenes, though
dusty, were numerous; and the Duke had provided new dresses. The park was
not a park; by which we mean, that it was rather a chase than the
highly-finished enclosure which we associate with the first title. In
fact, Pen Bronnock Chase was the right name of the settlement; but some
monarch travelling, having been seized with a spasm, recruited his
strength under the roof of his loyal subject, then the chief seat of the
House of Hauteville, and having in his urgency been obliged to hold a
privy council there, the supreme title of palace was assumed by right.
</p>
<p>
The domain was bounded on one side by the sea; and here a yacht and some
slight craft rode at anchor in a small green bay, and offered an
opportunity for the adventurous, and a refuge for the wearied. When you
have been bored for an hour or two on earth, it sometimes is a change to
be bored for an hour or two on water.
</p>
<p>
The house was soon full, and soon gay. The guests, and the means of
amusing them, were equally numerous. But this was no common <i>villeggiatura</i>,
no visit to a family with their regular pursuits and matured avocations.
The host was as much a guest as any other. The young Duke appointed Lord
Squib master of the ceremonies, and gave orders for nothing but constant
excitement. Constant excitement his Lordship managed to maintain, for he
was experienced, clever, careless and gay, and, for once in his life, had
the command of unbounded resources. He ordered, he invented, he prepared,
and he expended. They acted, they danced, they sported, they sailed, they
feasted, they masqueraded; and when they began to get a little wearied of
themselves, and their own powers of diversion gradually vanished, then a
public ball was given twice a week at the palace, and all the West of
England invited. New faces brought new ideas; new figures brought new
fancies. All were delighted with the young Duke, and flattery from novel
quarters will for a moment whet even the appetite of the satiated.
Simplicity, too, can interest. There were some Misses Gay-weather who got
unearthed, who never had been in London, though nature had given them
sparkling eyes and springing persons. This tyranny was too bad. Papa was
quizzed, mamma flattered, and the daughters’ simplicity amused these young
lordlings. Rebellion was whispered in the small ears of the Gay weathers.
The little heads, too, of the Gay-weathers were turned. They were the
constant butt, and the constant resource, of every lounging dandy.
</p>
<p>
The Bird of Paradise also arranged her professional engagements so as to
account with all possible propriety for her professional visit at Pen
Bronnock. The musical meeting at Exeter over, she made her appearance, and
some concerts were given, which electrified all Cornwall. Count Frill was
very strong here; though, to be sure, he also danced, and acted, in all
varieties. He was the soul, too, of a masqued ball; but when complimented
on his accomplishments, and thanked for his exertions, he modestly
depreciated his worth, and panegyrised the dancing-dogs.
</p>
<p>
As for the Prince, on the whole, he maintained his silence; but it was at
length discovered by the fair sex that he was not stupid, but sentimental.
When this was made known he rather lost ground with the dark sex, who,
before thinking him thick, had vowed that he was a devilish good fellow;
but now, being really envious, had their tale and hint, their sneer and
sly joke. M. de Whiskerburg had one active accomplishment; this was his
dancing. His gallopade was declared to be divine: he absolutely sailed in
air. His waltz, at his will, either melted his partner into a dream, or
whirled her into a frenzy! Dangerous M. de Whiskerburg!
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER III.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘A Little Rift.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
IT IS said that the conduct of refined society, in a literary point of
view, is, on the whole, productive but of slight interest; that all we can
aspire to is, to trace a brilliant picture of brilliant manners; and that
when the dance and the festival have been duly inspired by the repartee
and the sarcasm, and the gem, the robe, and the plume adroitly lighted up
by the lamp and the lustre, our cunning is exhausted. And so your novelist
generally twists this golden thread with some substantial silken cord, for
use, and works up, with the light dance, and with the heavy dinner, some
secret marriage, and some shrouded murder. And thus, by English plots and
German mysteries, the page trots on, or jolts, till, in the end, Justice
will have her way, and the three volumes are completed.
</p>
<p>
A plan both good and antique, and also popular, but not our way. We prefer
trusting to the slender incidents which spring from out our common
intercourse. There is no doubt that that great pumice-stone, Society,
smooths down the edges of your thoughts and manners. Bodies of men who
pursue the same object must ever resemble each other: the life of the
majority must ever be imitation. Thought is a labour to which few are
competent; and truth requires for its development as much courage as
acuteness. So conduct becomes conventional, and opinion is a legend; and
thus all men act and think alike.
</p>
<p>
But this is not peculiar to what is called fashionable life, it is
peculiar to civilisation, which gives the passions less to work upon.
Mankind are not more heartless because they are clothed in ermine; it is
that their costume attracts us to their characters, and we stare because
we find the prince or the peeress neither a conqueror nor a heroine. The
great majority of human beings in a country like England glides through
existence in perfect ignorance of their natures, so complicated and so
controlling is the machinery of our social life! Few can break the bonds
that tie them down, and struggle for self-knowledge; fewer, when the
talisman is gained, can direct their illuminated energies to the purposes
with which they sympathise.
</p>
<p>
A mode of life which encloses in its circle all the dark and deep results
of unbounded indulgence, however it may appear to some who glance over the
sparkling surface, does not exactly seem to us one either insipid or
uninteresting to the moral speculator; and, indeed, we have long been
induced to suspect that the seeds of true sublimity lurk in a life which,
like this book, is half fashion and half passion.
</p>
<p>
We know not how it was, but about this time an unaccountable, almost an
imperceptible, coolness seemed to spring up between our hero and the Lady
Aphrodite. If we were to puzzle our brains for ever, we could not give you
the reason. Nothing happened, nothing had been said or done, which could
indicate its origin. Perhaps this <i>was</i> the origin; perhaps the
Duke’s conduct had become, though unexceptionable, too negative. But here
we only throw up a straw. Perhaps, if we must go on suggesting, anxiety
ends in callousness.
</p>
<p>
His Grace had thought so much of her feelings, that he had quite forgotten
his own, or worn them out. Her Ladyship, too, was perhaps a little
disappointed at the unexpected reconciliation. When we have screwed our
courage up to the sticking point, we like not to be baulked. Both, too,
perhaps—we go on <i>perhapsing</i>—both, too, we repeat,
perhaps, could not help mutually viewing each other as the cause of much
mutual care and mutual anxiousness. Both, too, perhaps, were a little
tired, but without knowing it. The most curious thing, and which would
have augured worst to a calm judge, was, that they silently seemed to
agree not to understand that any alteration had really taken place between
them, which, we think, was a bad sign: because a lover’s quarrel, we all
know, like a storm in summer, portends a renewal of warm weather or ardent
feelings; and a lady is never so well seated in her admirer’s heart as
when those betters are interchanged which express so much, and those
explanations entered upon which explain so little.
</p>
<p>
And here we would dilate on greater things than some imagine; but,
unfortunately, we are engaged. For Newmarket calls Sir Lucius and his
friends. We will not join them, having lost enough. His Grace half
promised to be one of the party; but when the day came, just remembered
the Shropshires were expected, and so was very sorry, and the rest. Lady
Aphrodite and himself parted with warmth which remarkably contrasted with
their late intercourse, and which neither of them could decide whether it
were reviving affection or factitious effort. M. de Whiskerburg and Count
Frill departed with Sir Lucius, being extremely desirous to be initiated
in the mysteries of the turf, and, above all, to see a real English
jockey.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Satiety.</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE newspapers continued to announce the departures of new visitors to the
Duke of St. James, and to dilate upon the protracted and princely
festivity of Pen Bron-nock. But while thousands were envying his lot, and
hundreds aspiring to share it, what indeed was the condition of our hero?
</p>
<p>
A month or two had rolled on and if he had not absolutely tasted
enjoyment, at least he had thrown off reflection; but as the autumn wore
away, and as each day he derived less diversion or distraction from the
repetition of the same routine, carried on by different actors, he could
no longer control feelings which would be predominant, and those feelings
were not such as perhaps might have been expected from one who was
receiving the homage of an admiring world. In a word, the Duke of St.
James was the most miserable wretch that ever lived.
</p>
<p>
‘Where is this to end?’ he asked himself. ‘Is this year to close, to bring
only a repetition of the past? Well, I have had it all, and what is it? My
restless feelings are at last laid, my indefinite appetites are at length
exhausted. I have known this mighty world, and where am I? Once, all
prospects, all reflections merged in the agitating, the tremulous and
panting lust with which I sighed for it. Have I been deceived? Have I been
disappointed? Is it different from what I expected? Has it fallen short of
my fancy? Has the dexterity of my musings deserted me? Have I under-acted
the hero of my reveries? Have I, in short, mismanaged my début? Have I
blundered? No, no, no! Far, far has it gone beyond even my imagination,
and <i>my</i> life has, if no other, realised its ideas!
</p>
<p>
‘Who laughs at me? Who does not burn incense before my shrine? What
appetite have I not gratified? What gratification has proved bitter? My
vanity! Has it been, for an instant, mortified? Am I not acknowledged the
most brilliant hero of the most brilliant society in Europe? Intense as is
my self-love, has it not been gorged? Luxury and splendour were my
youthful dreams, and have I not realised the very romance of indulgence
and magnificence? My career has been one long triumph. My palaces, and my
gardens, and my jewels, my dress, my furniture, my equipages, my horses,
and my festivals, these used to occupy my meditations, when I could only
meditate; and have my determinations proved a delusion? Ask the admiring
world.
</p>
<p>
‘And now for the great point to which all this was to tend, which all this
was to fascinate and subdue, to adorn, to embellish, to delight, to
honour. Woman! Oh! when I first dared, among the fields of Eton, to dwell
upon the soft yet agitating fancy, that some day my existence might
perhaps be rendered more intense, by the admiration of these maddening but
then mysterious creatures; could, could I have dreamt of what has
happened? Is not this the very point in which my career has most
out-topped my lofty hopes?
</p>
<p>
‘I have read, and sometimes heard, of <i>satiety</i>. It must then be
satiety that I feel; for I do feel more like a doomed man, than a young
noble full of blood and youth. And yet, satiety; it is a word. What then?
A word is breath, and am I wiser? Satiety! Satiety! Satiety! Oh! give me
happiness! Oh! give me love!
</p>
<p>
‘Ay! there it is, I feel it now. Too well I feel that happiness must
spring from purer fountains than self-love. We are not born merely for
ourselves, and they who, full of pride, make the trial, as I have done,
and think that the world is made for them, and not for mankind, must come
to as bitter results, perhaps as bitter a fate; for, by Heavens! I am half
tempted at this moment to fling myself from off this cliff, and so end
all.
</p>
<p>
‘Why should I live? For virtue, and for duty; to compensate for all my
folly, and to achieve some slight good end with my abused and unparalleled
means. Ay! it is all vastly rational, and vastly sublime, but it is too
late. I feel the exertion above me. I am a lost man.
</p>
<p>
‘We cannot work without a purpose and an aim. I had mine, although it was
a false one, and I succeeded. Had I one now I might succeed again, but my
heart is a dull void. And Caroline, that gentle girl, will not give me
what I want; and to offer her but half a heart may break hers, and I would
not bruise that delicate bosom to save my dukedom. Those sad, silly
parents of hers have already done mischief enough; but I will see Darrell,
and will at least arrange that. I like him, and will make him my friend
for her sake. God! God! why am I not loved! A word from her, and all would
change. I feel a something in me which could put all right. I have the
will, and she could give the power.
</p>
<p>
‘Now see what a farce life is! I shall go on, Heaven knows how! I cannot
live long. Men like me soon bloom and fade. What I may come to, I dread to
think. There is a dangerous facility in my temper; I know it well, for I
know more of myself than people think; there is a dangerous facility
which, with May Dacre, might be the best guaranty of virtue; but with all
others, for all others are at the best weak things, will as certainly
render me despicable, perhaps degraded. I hear the busy devil whispering
even now. It is my demon. Now, I say, see what a farce life is! I shall
die like a dog, as I have lived like a fool; and then my epitaph will be
in everybody’s mouth. Here are the consequences of self-indulgence: here
is a fellow, forsooth, who thought only of the gratification of his vile
appetites; and by the living Heaven, am I not standing here among my
hereditary rocks, and sighing to the ocean, to be virtuous!
</p>
<p>
‘She knew me well, she read me in a minute, and spoke more truth at that
last meeting than is in a thousand sermons. It is out of our power to
redeem ourselves. Our whole existence is a false, foul state, totally
inimical to love and purity, and domestic gentleness, and calm delight.
Yet are we envied! Oh! could these fools see us at any other time except
surrounded by our glitter, and hear of us at any other moment save in the
first bloom of youth, which is, even then, often wasted; could they but
mark our manhood, and view our hollow marriages, and disappointed
passions; could they but see the traitors that we have for sons, the
daughters that own no duty; could they but watch us even to our grave,
tottering after some fresh bauble, some vain delusion, which, to the last,
we hope may prove a substitute for what we have never found through life,
a contented mind, they would do something else but envy us.
</p>
<p>
‘But I stand prating when I am wanted. I must home. Home! O sacred word!
and then comes night! Horrible night! Horrible day! It seems to me I am
upon the eve of some monstrous folly, too ridiculous to be a crime, and
yet as fatal. I have half a mind to go and marry the Bird of Paradise, out
of pure pique with myself, and with the world.’
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER V.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Startling Letter</i>
</pre>
<p>
SOUTHEY, that virtuous man, whom Wisdom calls her own, somewhere thanks
God that he was not born to a great estate. We quite agree with the seer
of Keswick; it is a bore. Provided a man can enjoy every personal luxury,
what profits it that your flag waves on castles you never visit, and that
you count rents which you never receive? And yet there are some things
which your miserable, moderate incomes cannot command, and which one might
like to have; for instance, a band.
</p>
<p>
A complete, a consummate band, in uniforms of uncut white velvet, with a
highly-wrought gold button, just tipped with a single pink topaz, appears
to me [Greek phrase]. When we die, ‘Band’ will be found impressed upon our
heart, like ‘Frigate’ on the core of Nelson. The negroes should have their
noses bored, as well as their ears, and hung with rings of rubies. The
kettle-drums should be of silver. And with regard to a great estate, no
doubt it brings great cares; or, to get free of them, the estate must be
neglected, and then it is even worse.
</p>
<p>
Elections come on, and all your members are thrown out; so much for
neglected influence. Agricultural distress prevails, and all your farms
are thrown up; so much for neglected tenants. Harassed by leases,
renewals, railroads, fines, and mines, you are determined that life shall
not be worn out by these continual and petty cares. Thinking it somewhat
hard, that, because you have two hundred thousand a-year, you have neither
ease nor enjoyment, you find a remarkably clever man, who manages
everything for you. Enchanted with his energy, his acuteness, and his
foresight, fascinated by your increasing rent-roll, and the total
disappearance of arrears, you dub him your right hand, introduce him to
all your friends, and put him into Parliament; and then, fired by the
ambition of rivalling his patron, he disburses, embezzles, and decamps.
</p>
<p>
But where is our hero? Is he forgotten? Never! But in the dumps, blue
devils, and so on. A little bilious, it may be, and dull. He scarcely
would amuse you at this moment. So we come forward with a graceful bow;
the Jack Pudding of our doctor, who is behind.
</p>
<p>
In short, that is to say, in long—for what is true use of this
affected brevity? When this tale is done, what have you got? So let us
make it last. We quite repent of having intimated so much: in future, it
is our intention to develop more, and to describe, and to delineate, and
to define, and, in short, to bore. You know the model of this kind of
writing, Richardson, whom we shall revive. In future, we shall, as a
novelist, take Clarendon’s Rebellion for our guide, and write our hero’s
notes, or heroine’s letters, like a state paper, or a broken treaty.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, and the young Duke—oh! to be a Duke, and to be young, it
is too much—was seldom seen by the gay crowd who feasted in his
hall. His mornings now were lonely, and if, at night, his eye still
sparkled, and his step still sprang, why, between us, wine gave him
beauty, and wine gave him grace.
</p>
<p>
It was the dreary end of dull November, and the last company were breaking
off. The Bird of Paradise, according to her desire, had gone to Brighton,
where his Grace had presented her with a tenement, neat, light, and
finished; and though situated amid the wilds of Kemp Town, not more than
one hyæna on a night ventured to come down from the adjacent heights. He
had half promised to join her, because he thought he might as well be
there as here, and consequently he had not invited a fresh supply of
visitors from town, or rather from the country. As he was hesitating about
what he should do, he received a letter from his bankers, which made him
stare. He sent for the groom of the chambers, and was informed the house
was clear, save that some single men still lingered, as is their wont.
They never take a hint. His Grace ordered his carriage; and, more alive
than he had been for the last two months, dashed off to town.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Cost of Pleasure</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE letter from his bankers informed the Duke of St. James that not only
was the half-million exhausted, but, in pursuance of their powers, they
had sold out all his stock, and, in reliance on his credit, had advanced
even beyond it. They were ready to accommodate him in every possible way,
and to advance as much more as he could desire, at five per cent.! Sweet
five per cent.! Oh! magical five per cent.! Lucky the rogue now who gets
three. Nevertheless, they thought it but proper to call his Grace’s
attention to the circumstance, and to put him in possession of the facts.
Something unpleasant is coming when men are anxious to tell the truth.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had never affected to be a man of business; still,
he had taken it for granted that pecuniary embarrassment was not ever to
be counted among his annoyances. He wanted something to do, and determined
to look into his affairs, merely to amuse himself.
</p>
<p>
The bankers were most polite. They brought their books, also several
packets of papers neatly tied up, and were ready to give every
information. The Duke asked for results. He found that the turf, the
Alhambra, the expenses of his outfit in purchasing the lease and furniture
of his mansion, and the rest, had, with his expenditure, exhausted his
first year’s income; but he reconciled himself to this, because he chose
to consider them extraordinary expenses. Then the festivities of Pen
Bronnock counterbalanced the economy of his more scrambling life the
preceding year; yet he had not exceeded his income much. Then he came to
Sir Carte’s account. He began to get a little frightened. Two hundred and
fifty thousand had been swallowed by Hauteville Castle: one hundred and
twenty thousand by Hauteville House. Ninety-six thousand had been paid for
furniture. There were also some awkward miscellanies which, in addition,
exceeded the half-million.
</p>
<p>
This was smashing work; but castles and palaces, particularly of the
correctest style of architecture, are not to be had for nothing. The Duke
had always devoted the half-million to this object; but he had intended
that sum to be sufficient. What puzzled and what annoyed him was a queer
suspicion that his resources had been exhausted without his result being
obtained. He sent for Sir Carte, who gave every information, and assured
him that, had he had the least idea that a limit was an object, he would
have made his arrangements accordingly. As it was, he assured the young
Duke that he would be the Lord of the most sumptuous and accurate castle,
and of the most gorgeous and tasteful palace, in Europe. He was proceeding
with a cloud of words, when his employer cut him short by a peremptory
demand of the exact sum requisite for the completion of his plans. Sir
Carte was confused, and requested time. The estimates should be sent in as
quickly as possible. The clerks should sit up all night, and even his own
rest should not be an object, any more than the Duke’s purse. So they
parted.
</p>
<p>
The Duke determined to run down to Brighton for change of scene. He
promised his bankers to examine everything on his return; in the meantime,
they were to make all necessary advances, and honour his drafts to any
amount.
</p>
<p>
He found the city of chalk and shingles not quite so agreeable as last
year. He discovered that it had no trees. There was there, also, just
everybody that he did not wish to see. It was one great St. James’ Street,
and seemed only an anticipation of that very season which he dreaded. He
was half inclined to go somewhere else, but could not fix upon any spot.
London might be agreeable, as it was empty; but then those confounded
accounts awaited him. The Bird of Paradise was a sad bore. He really began
to suspect that she was little better than an idiot: then, she ate so
much, and he hated your eating women. He gladly shuffled her off on that
fool Count Frill, who daily brought his guitar to Kemp Town. They just
suited each other. What a madman he had been, to have embarrassed himself
with this creature! It would cost him a pretty ransom now before he could
obtain his freedom. How we change! Already the Duke of St. James began to
think of pounds, shillings, and pence. A year ago, so long as he could
extricate himself from a scrape by force of cash, he thought himself a
lucky fellow.
</p>
<p>
The Graftons had not arrived, but were daily expected. He really could not
stand them. As for Lady Afy, he execrated the greenhornism which had made
him feign a passion, and then get caught where he meant to capture. As for
Sir Lucius, he wished to Heaven he would just take it into his head to
repay him the fifteen thousand he had lent him at that confounded
election, to say nothing of anything else.
</p>
<p>
Then there was Burlington, with his old loves and his new dances. He
wondered how the deuce that fellow could be amused with such frivolity,
and always look so serene and calm. Then there was Squib: that man never
knew when to leave off joking; and Annesley, with his false refinement;
and Darrell, with his petty ambition. He felt quite sick, and took a
solitary ride: but he flew from Scylla to Charybdis. Mrs. Montfort could
not forget their many delightful canters last season to Rottingdean, and,
lo! she was at his side. He wished her down the cliff.
</p>
<p>
In this fit of the spleen he went to the theatre: there were eleven people
in the boxes. He listened to the ‘School for Scandal.’ Never was slander
more harmless. He sat it all out, and was sorry when it was over, but was
consoled by the devils of ‘Der Freischutz.’ How sincerely, how ardently
did he long to sell himself to the demon! It was eleven o’clock, and he
dreaded the play to be over as if he were a child. What to do with
himself, or where to go, he was equally at a loss. The door of the box
opened, and entered Lord Bagshot. If it must be an acquaintance, this cub
was better than any of his refined and lately cherished companions.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, Bag, what are you doing with yourself?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! I don’t know; just looking in for a lark. Any game?’
</p>
<p>
‘On my honour, I can’t say.’
</p>
<p>
‘What’s that girl? Oh! I see; that’s little Wilkins. There’s Moll Otway.
Nothing new. I shall go and rattle the bones a little; eh! my boy?’
</p>
<p>
‘Rattle the bones? what is that?’
</p>
<p>
‘Don’t you know?’ and here this promising young peer manually explained
his meaning.
</p>
<p>
‘What do you play at?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Hazard, for my money; but what you like.’
</p>
<p>
‘Where?’
</p>
<p>
‘We meet at De Berghem’s. There is a jolly set of us. All crack men. When
my governor is here, I never go. He is so jealous. I suppose there must be
only one gamester in the family; eh! my covey?’ Lord Bagshot, excited by
the unusual affability of the young Duke, grew quite familiar.
</p>
<p>
‘I have half a mind to look in with you,’ said his Grace with a careless
air.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! come along, by all means. They’ll be devilish glad to see you. De
Berghem was saying the other day what a nice fellow you were, and how he
should like to know you. You don’t know De Berghem, do you?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have seen him. I know enough of him.’
</p>
<p>
They quitted the theatre together, and under the guidance of Lord Bagshot,
stopped at a door in Brunswick Terrace. There they found collected a
numerous party, but all persons of consideration. The Baron, who had once
been a member of the diplomatic corps, and now lived in England, by
choice, on his pension and private fortune, received them with marked
courtesy. Proud of his companion, Lord Bagshot’s hoarse, coarse, idiot
voice seemed ever braying. His frequent introductions of the Duke of St.
James were excruciating, and it required all the freezing of a finished
manner to pass through this fiery ordeal. His Grace was acquainted with
most of the guests by sight, and to some he even bowed. They were chiefly
men of a certain age, with the exception of two or three young peers like
himself.
</p>
<p>
There was the Earl of Castlefort, plump and luxurious, with a youthful
wig, who, though a sexagenarian, liked no companion better than a minor.
His Lordship was the most amiable man in the world, and the most lucky;
but the first was his merit, and the second was not his fault. There was
the juvenile Lord Dice, who boasted of having done his brothers out of
their miserable 5,000L. patrimony, and all in one night. But the wrinkle
that had already ruffled his once clear brow, his sunken eye, and his
convulsive lip, had been thrown, we suppose, into the bargain, and, in our
opinion, made it a dear one. There was Temple Grace, who had run through
four fortunes, and ruined four sisters. Withered, though only thirty, one
thing alone remained to be lost, what he called his honour, which was
already on the scent to play booty. There was Cogit, who, when he was
drunk, swore that he had had a father; but this was deemed the only
exception to <i>in vino Veritas</i>. Who he was, the Goddess of Chance
alone could decide; and we have often thought that he might bear the same
relation to her as Æneas to the Goddess of Beauty. His age was as great a
mystery as anything else. He dressed still like a boy, yet some vowed he
was eighty. He must have been Salathiel. Property he never had, and yet he
contrived to live; connection he was not born with, yet he was upheld by a
set. He never played, yet he was the most skilful dealer going. He did the
honours of a <i>rouge et noir</i> table to a miracle; and looking, as he
thought, most genteel in a crimson waistcoat and a gold chain, raked up
the spoils, or complacently announced après. Lord Castlefort had few
secrets from him: he was the jackal to these prowling beasts of prey;
looked out for pigeons, got up little parties to Richmond or Brighton,
sang a song when the rest were too anxious to make a noise, and yet
desired a little life, and perhaps could cog a die, arrange a
looking-glass, or mix a tumbler.
</p>
<p>
Unless the loss of an occasional napoleon at a German watering-place is to
be so stigmatised, gaming had never formed one of the numerous follies of
the Duke of St. James. Rich, and gifted with a generous, sanguine, and
luxurious disposition, he had never been tempted by the desire of gain, or
as some may perhaps maintain, by the desire of excitement, to seek
assistance or enjoyment in a mode of life which stultifies all our fine
fancies, deadens all our noble emotions, and mortifies all our beautiful
aspirations.
</p>
<p>
We know that we are broaching a doctrine which many will start at, and
which some will protest against, when we declare our belief that no
person, whatever his apparent wealth, ever yet gamed except from the
prospect of immediate gain. We hear much of want of excitement, of ennui,
of satiety; and then the gaming-table is announced as a sort of substitute
for opium, wine, or any other mode of obtaining a more intense vitality at
the cost of reason. Gaming is too active, too anxious, too complicated,
too troublesome; in a word, <i>too sensible</i> an affair for such
spirits, who fly only to a sort of dreamy and indefinite distraction.
</p>
<p>
The fact is, gaming is a matter of business. Its object is tangible,
clear, and evident. There is nothing high, or inflammatory, or exciting;
no false magnificence, no visionary elevation, in the affair at all. It is
the very antipodes to enthusiasm of any kind. It pre-supposes in its
votary a mind essentially mercantile. All the feelings that are in its
train are the most mean, the most commonplace, and the most annoying of
daily life, and nothing would tempt the gamester to experience them except
the great object which, as a matter of calculation, he is willing to aim
at on such terms. No man flies to the gaming-table in a paroxysm. The
first visit requires the courage of a forlorn hope. The first stake will
make the lightest mind anxious, the firmest hand tremble, and the stoutest
heart falter. After the first stake, it is all a matter of calculation and
management, even in games of chance. Night after night will men play at <i>rouge
et noir</i>, upon what they call a system, and for hours their attention
never ceases, any more than it would if they were in the shop or oh the
wharf. No manual labour is more fatiguing, and more degrading to the
labourer, than gaming. Every gamester feels ashamed. And this vice, this
worst vice, from whose embrace, moralists daily inform us, man can never
escape, is just the one from which the majority of men most completely,
and most often, free themselves. Infinite is the number of men who have
lost thousands in their youth, and never dream of chance again. It is this
pursuit which, oftener than any other, leads man to self-knowledge.
Appalled by the absolute destruction on the verge of which he finds his
early youth just stepping; aghast at the shadowy crimes which, under the
influence of this life, seem, as it were, to rise upon his soul; often he
hurries to emancipate himself from this fatal thraldom, and with a ruined
fortune, and marred prospects, yet thanks his Creator that his soul is
still white, his conscience clear, and that, once more, he breathes the
sweet air of heaven.
</p>
<p>
And our young Duke, we must confess, gamed, as all other men have gamed,
for money. His satiety had fled the moment that his affairs were
embarrassed. The thought suddenly came into his head while Bag-shot was
speaking. He determined to make an effort to recover; and so completely
was it a matter of business with him, that he reasoned that, in the
present state of his affairs, a few thousands more would not signify; that
these few thousands might lead to vast results, and that, if they did, he
would bid adieu to the gaming-table with the same coolness with which he
had saluted it.
</p>
<p>
Yet he felt a little odd when he first ‘rattled the bones;’ and his
affected nonchalance made him constrained. He fancied every one was
watching him; while, on the contrary, all were too much interested in
their own different parties. This feeling, however, wore off.
</p>
<p>
According to every novelist, and the moralists ‘our betters,’ the Duke of
St. James should have been fortunate at least to-night. You always win at
first, you know. If so, we advise said children of fancy and of fact to
pocket their gains, and not play again. The young Duke had not the
opportunity of thus acting. He lost fifteen hundred pounds, and at
half-past five he quitted the Baron’s.
</p>
<p>
Hot, bilious, with a confounded twang in his mouth, and a cracking pain in
his head, he stood one moment and sniffed in the salt sea breeze. The moon
was unfortunately on the waters, and her cool, beneficent light reminded
him, with disgust, of the hot, burning glare of the Baron’s saloon. He
thought of May Dacre, but clenched his fist, and drove her image from his
mind.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Dangerous Friends</i>
</pre>
<p>
HE ROSE late, and as he was lounging over his breakfast, entered Lord
Bagshot and the Baron. Already the young Duke began to experience one of
the gamester’s curses, the intrusive society of those of whom you are
ashamed. Eight-and-forty hours ago, Lord Bagshot would no more have dared
to call on the Duke of St. James than to call at the Pavilion; and now,
with that reckless want of tact which marks the innately vulgar, he seemed
to triumph in their unhallowed intimacy, and lounging into his Grace’s
apartment with that half-shuffling, hair-swaggering air indicative of the
‘cove,’ hat cocked, and thumbs in his great-coat pockets, cast his
complacent eye around, and praised his Grace’s ‘rooms.’ Lord Bagshot, who
for the occasional notice of the Duke of St. James had been so long a
ready and patient butt, now appeared to assume a higher character, and
addressed his friend in a tone and manner which were authorised by the
equality of their rank and the sympathy of their tastes. If this change
had taken place in the conduct of the Viscount, it was not a singular one.
The Duke also, to his surprise, found himself addressing his former butt
in a very different style from that which he had assumed in the ballroom
of Doncaster. In vain he tried to rally, in vain he tried to snub. It was
indeed in vain. He no longer possessed any right to express his contempt
of his companion. That contempt, indeed, he still felt. He despised Lord
Bagshot still, but he also despised himself.
</p>
<p>
The soft and silky Baron was a different sort of personage; but there was
something sinister in all his elaborate courtesy and highly artificial
manner, which did not touch the feelings of the Duke, whose courtesy was
but the expression of his noble feelings, and whose grace was only the
impulse of his rich and costly blood. Baron de Berghem was too attentive,
and too deferential. He smiled and bowed too much. He made no allusion to
the last night’s scene, nor did his tutored companion, but spoke of
different and lighter subjects, in a manner which at once proved his
experience of society, the liveliness of his talents, and the cultivation
of his taste. He told many stories, all short and poignant, and always
about princes and princesses. Whatever was broached, he always had his <i>apropos</i>
of Vienna, and altogether seemed an experienced, mild, tolerant man of the
world, not bigoted to any particular opinions upon any subject, but of a
truly liberal and philosophic mind.
</p>
<p>
When they had sat chatting for half-an-hour, the Baron developed the
object of his visit, which was to endeavour to obtain the pleasure of his
Grace’s company at dinner, to taste some wild boar and try some tokay. The
Duke, who longed again for action, accepted the invitation; and then they
parted.
</p>
<p>
Our hero was quite surprised at the feverish anxiety with which he awaited
the hour of union. He thought that seven o’clock would never come. He had
no appetite at breakfast, and after that he rode, but luncheon was a
blank. In the midst of the operation, he found himself in a brown study,
calculating chances. All day long his imagination had been playing hazard,
or <i>rouge et noir</i>. Once he thought that he had discovered an
infallible way of winning at the latter. On the long run, he was convinced
it must answer, and he panted to prove it.
</p>
<p>
Seven o’clock at last arrived, and he departed to Brunswick Terrace. There
was a brilliant party to meet him: the same set as last night, but select.
He was faint, and did justice to the <i>cuisine</i> of his host, which was
indeed remarkable. When we are drinking a man’s good wine, it is difficult
to dislike him. Prejudice decreases with every draught. His Grace began to
think the Baron as good-hearted as agreeable. He was grateful for the
continued attentions of old Castlefort, who, he now found out, had been
very well acquainted with his father, and once even made a trip to Spa
with him. Lord Dice he could not manage to endure, though that worthy was,
for him, remarkably courteous, and grinned with his parchment face, like a
good-humoured ghoul. Temple Grace and the Duke became almost intimate.
There was an amiable candour in that gentleman’s address, a softness in
his tones, and an unstudied and extremely interesting delicacy in his
manner, which in this society was remarkable. Tom Cogit never presumed to
come near the young Duke, but paid him constant attention. He sat at the
bottom of the table, and was ever sending a servant with some choice wine,
or recommending him, through some third person, some choice dish. It is
pleasant to be ‘made much of,’ as Shakspeare says, even by scoundrels. To
be king of your company is a poor ambition, yet homage is homage, and
smoke is smoke, whether it come out of the chimney of a palace or of a
workhouse.
</p>
<p>
The banquet was not hurried. Though all wished it finished, no one liked
to appear urgent. It was over at last, and they walked up-stairs, where
the tables were arranged for all parties, and all play. Tom Cogit went up
a few minutes before them, like the lady of the mansion, to review the
lights, and arrange the cards. Feminine Tom Cogit!
</p>
<p>
The events of to-night were much the same as of the preceding one. The
Duke was a loser, but his losses were not considerable. He retired about
the same hour, with a head not so hot, or heavy: and he never looked at
the moon, or thought of May Dacre. The only wish that reigned in his soul
was a longing for another opportunity, and he had agreed to dine with the
Baron, before he left Brunswick Terrace.
</p>
<p>
Thus passed a week, one night the Duke of St. James redeeming himself,
another falling back to his old position, now pushing on to Madrid, now
re-crossing the Tagus. On the whole, he had lost four or five thousand
pounds, a mere trifle to what, as he had heard, had been lost and gained
by many of his companions during only the present season. On the whole, he
was one of the most moderate of these speculators, generally played at the
large table, and never joined any of those private coteries, some of which
he had observed, and of some of which he had heard. Yet this was from no
prudential resolve or temperate resolution. The young Duke was heartily
tired of the slight results of all his anxiety, hopes, and plans, and
ardently wished for some opportunity of coming to closer and more decided
action. The Baron also had resolved that an end should be put to this
skirmishing; but he was a calm head, and never hurried anything.
</p>
<p>
‘I hope your Grace has been lucky to-night!’ said the Baron one evening,
strolling up to the Duke: ‘as for myself, really, if Dice goes on playing,
I shall give up banking. That fellow must have a talisman. I think he has
broken more banks than any man living. The best thing he did of that kind
was the roulette story at Paris. You have heard of that?’
</p>
<p>
‘Was that Lord Dice?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh yes! he does everything. He must have cleared his hundred thousand
last year. I have suffered a good deal since I have been in England.
Castlefort has pulled in a great deal of my money. I wonder to whom he
will leave his property?’
</p>
<p>
‘You think him rich?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! he will cut up large!’ said the Baron, elevating his eyebrows. ‘A
pleasant man too! I do not know any man that I would sooner play with than
Castlefort; no one who loses his money with better temper.’
</p>
<p>
‘Or wins it,’ said his Grace.
</p>
<p>
‘That we all do,’ said the Baron, faintly laughing. ‘Your Grace has lost,
and you do not seem particularly dull. You will have your revenge. Those
who lose at first are always the children of fortune. I always dread a man
who loses at first. All I beg is, that you will not break my bank.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why! you see I am not playing now.’ ‘I am not surprised. There is too
much heat and noise here,’ said he. ‘We will have a quiet dinner some day,
and play at our ease. Come to-morrow, and I will ask Castlefort and Dice.
I should uncommonly like, <i>entre nous</i>, to win some of their money. I
will take care that nobody shall be here whom you would not like to meet.
By-the-bye, whom were you riding with this morning? Fine woman!’
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Birds of Prey</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE young Duke had accepted the invitation of the Baron de Berg-hem for
to-morrow, and accordingly, himself, Lords Castlefort and Dice, and Temple
Grace assembled in Brunswick Terrace at the usual hour. The dinner was
studiously plain, and very little wine was drunk; yet everything was
perfect. Tom Cogit stepped in to carve in his usual silent manner. He
always came in and went out of a room without anyone observing him. He
winked familiarly to Temple Grace, but scarcely presumed to bow to the
Duke. He was very busy about the wine, and dressed the wild fowl in a
manner quite unparalleled. Tom Cogit was the man for a sauce for a brown
bird. What a mystery he made of it! Cayenne and Burgundy and limes were
ingredients, but there was a magic in the incantation with which he alone
was acquainted. He took particular care to send a most perfect portion to
the young Duke, and he did this, as he paid all attentions to influential
strangers, with the most marked consciousness of the sufferance which
permitted his presence: never addressing his Grace, but audibly whispering
to the servant, ‘Take this to the Duke;’ or asking the attendant, ‘whether
his Grace would try the Hermitage?’
</p>
<p>
After dinner, with the exception of Cogit, who was busied in compounding
some wonderful liquid for the future refreshment, they sat down to <i>écarté</i>.
Without having exchanged a word upon the subject, there seemed a general
understanding among all the parties that to-night was to be a pitched
battle, and they began at once, briskly. Yet, in spite of their universal
determination, midnight arrived without anything decisive. Another hour
passed over, and then Tom Cogit kept touching the Baron’s elbow and
whispering in a voice which everybody could understand. All this meant
that supper was ready. It was brought into the room.
</p>
<p>
Gaming has one advantage, it gives you an appetite; that is to say, so
long as you have a chance remaining. The Duke had thousands; for at
present his resources were unimpaired, and he was exhausted by the
constant attention and anxiety of five hours. He passed over the
delicacies and went to the side-table, and began cutting himself some cold
roast beef. Tom Cogit ran up, not to his Grace, but to the Baron, to
announce the shocking fact that the Duke of St. James was enduring great
trouble; and then the Baron asked his Grace to permit Mr. Cogit to serve
him. Our hero devoured—we use the word advisedly, as fools say in
the House of Commons—he devoured the roast beef, and rejecting the
Hermitage with disgust, asked for porter.
</p>
<p>
They set to again fresh as eagles. At six o’clock accounts were so
complicated that they stopped to make up their books. Each played with his
memoranda and pencil at his side. Nothing fatal had yet happened. The Duke
owed Lord Dice about five thousand pounds, and Temple Grace owed him as
many hundreds. Lord Castlefort also was his debtor to the tune of seven
hundred and fifty, and the Baron was in his books, but slightly. Every
half-hour they had a new pack of cards, and threw the used one on the
floor. All this time Tom Cogit did nothing but snuff the candles, stir the
fire, bring them a new pack, and occasionally make a tumbler for them. At
eight o’clock the Duke’s situation was worsened. The run was greatly
against him, and perhaps his losses were doubled. He pulled up again the
next hour or two; but nevertheless, at ten o’clock, owed everyone
something. No one offered to give over; and everyone, perhaps, felt that
his object was not obtained. They made their toilets and went down-stairs
to breakfast. In the meantime the shutters were opened, the room aired,
and in less than an hour they were at it again.
</p>
<p>
They played till dinner-time without intermission; and though the Duke
made some desperate efforts, and some successful ones, his losses were,
nevertheless, trebled. Yet he ate an excellent dinner and was not at all
depressed; because the more he lost, the more his courage and his
resources seemed to expand. At first he had limited himself to ten
thousand; after breakfast it was to have been twenty thousand; then thirty
thousand was the ultimatum; and now he dismissed all thoughts of limits
from his mind, and was determined to risk or gain everything.
</p>
<p>
At midnight, he had lost forty-eight thousand pounds. Affairs now began to
be serious. His supper was not so hearty. While the rest were eating, he
walked about the room, and began to limit his ambition to recovery, and
not to gain. When you play to win back, the fun is over: there is nothing
to recompense you for your bodily tortures and your degraded feelings; and
the very best result that can happen, while it has no charms, seems to
your cowed mind impossible.
</p>
<p>
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<p>
On they played, and the Duke lost more. His mind was jaded. He floundered,
he made desperate efforts, but plunged deeper in the slough. Feeling that,
to regain his ground, each card must tell, he acted on each as if it must
win, and the consequences of this insanity (for a gamester at such a
crisis is really insane) were, that his losses were prodigious.
</p>
<p>
Another morning came, and there they sat, ankle-deep in cards. No attempt
at breakfast now, no affectation of making a toilet or airing the room.
The atmosphere was hot, to be sure, but it well became such a Hell. There
they sat, in total, in positive forgetfulness of everything but the hot
game they were hunting down. There was not a man in the room, except Tom
Cogit, who could have told you the name of the town in which they were
living. There they sat, almost breathless, watching every turn with the
fell look in their cannibal eyes which showed their total inability to
sympathise with their fellow-beings. All forms of society had been long
forgotten. There was no snuff-box handed about now, for courtesy,
admiration, or a pinch; no affectation of occasionally making a remark
upon any other topic but the all-engrossing one. Lord Castlefort rested
with his arms on the table: a false tooth had got unhinged. His Lordship,
who, at any other time, would have been most annoyed, coolly put it in his
pocket. His cheeks had fallen, and he looked twenty years older. Lord Dice
had torn off his cravat, and his hair hung down over his callous,
bloodless cheeks, straight as silk. Temple Grace looked as if he were
blighted by lightning; and his deep blue eyes gleamed like a hyaena’s. The
Baron was least changed. Tom Cogit, who smelt that the crisis was at hand,
was as quiet as a bribed rat.
</p>
<p>
On they played till six o’clock in the evening, and then they agreed to
desist till after dinner. Lord Dice threw himself on a sofa. Lord
Castlefort breathed with difficulty. The rest walked about. While they
were resting on their oars, the young Duke roughly made up his accounts.
He found that he was minus about one hundred thousand pounds.
</p>
<p>
Immense as this loss was, he was more struck, more appalled, let us say,
at the strangeness of the surrounding scene, than even by his own ruin. As
he looked upon his fellow gamesters, he seemed, for the first time in his
life, to gaze upon some of those hideous demons of whom he had read. He
looked in the mirror at himself. A blight seemed to have fallen over his
beauty, and his presence seemed accursed. He had pursued a dissipated,
even more than a dissipated career. Many were the nights that had been
spent by him not on his couch; great had been the exhaustion that he had
often experienced; haggard had sometimes even been the lustre of his
youth. But when had been marked upon his brow this harrowing care? when
had his features before been stamped with this anxiety, this anguish, this
baffled desire, this strange unearthly scowl, which made him even tremble?
What! was it possible? it could not be, that in time he was to be like
those awful, those unearthly, those unhallowed things that were around
him. He felt as if he had fallen from his state, as if he had dishonoured
his ancestry, as if he had betrayed his trust. He felt a criminal. In the
darkness of his meditations a flash burst from his lurid mind, a celestial
light appeared to dissipate this thickening gloom, and his soul felt as if
it were bathed with the softening radiancy. He thought of May Dacre, he
thought of everything that was pure, and holy, and beautiful, and
luminous, and calm. It was the innate virtue of the man that made this
appeal to his corrupted nature. His losses seemed nothing; his dukedom
would be too slight a ransom for freedom from these ghouls, and for the
breath of the sweet air.
</p>
<p>
He advanced to the Baron, and expressed his desire to play no more. There
was an immediate stir. All jumped up, and now the deed was done. Cant, in
spite of their exhaustion, assumed her reign. They begged him to have his
revenge, were quite annoyed at the result, had no doubt he would recover
if he proceeded. Without noticing their remarks, he seated himself at the
table, and wrote cheques for their respective amounts, Tom Cogit jumping
up and bringing him the inkstand. Lord Castlefort, in the most
affectionate manner, pocketed the draft; at the same time recommending the
Duke not to be in a hurry, but to send it when he was cool. Lord Dice
received his with a bow, Temple Grace with a sigh, the Baron with an
avowal of his readiness always to give him his revenge.
</p>
<p>
The Duke, though sick at heart, would not leave the room with any evidence
of a broken spirit; and when Lord Castlefort again repeated, ‘Pay us when
we meet again,’ he said, ‘I think it very improbable that we shall meet
again, my Lord. I wished to know what gaming was. I had heard a great deal
about it. It is not so very disgusting; but I am a young man, and cannot
play tricks with my complexion.’
</p>
<p>
He reached his house. The Bird was out. He gave orders for himself not to
be disturbed, and he went to bed; but in vain he tried to sleep. What rack
exceeds the torture of an excited brain and an exhausted body? His hands
and feet were like ice, his brow like fire; his ears rung with
supernatural roaring; a nausea had seized upon him, and death he would
have welcomed. In vain, in vain he courted repose; in vain, in vain he had
recourse to every expedient to wile himself to slumber. Each minute he
started from his pillow with some phrase which reminded him of his late
fearful society. Hour after hour moved on with its leaden pace; each hour
he heard strike, and each hour seemed an age. Each hour was only a signal
to cast off some covering, or shift his position. It was, at length,
morning. With a feeling that he should go mad if he remained any longer in
bed, he rose, and paced his chamber. The air refreshed him. He threw
himself on the floor; the cold crept over his senses, and he slept.
</p>
<p>
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</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER IX.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Duke Without A Friend</i>
</pre>
<p>
O YE immortal Gods! ye are still immortal, although no longer ye hover
o’er Olympus. The Crescent glitters on your mountain’s base, and Crosses
spring from out its toppling crags. But in vain the Mufti, and the
Patriarch, and the Pope flout at your past traditions. They are married to
man’s memory by the sweetest chain that ever Fancy wove for Love. The poet
is a priest, who does not doubt the inspiration of his oracles; and your
shrines are still served by a faithful band, who love the beautiful and
adore the glorious! In vain, in vain they tell us your divinity is a
dream. From the cradle to the grave, our thoughts and feelings take their
colour from you! O! Ægiochus, the birch has often proved thou art still a
thunderer; and, although thy twanging bow murmur no longer through the
avenging air, many an apple twig still vindicates thy outraged dignity, <i>pulcher</i>
Apollo.
</p>
<p>
O, ye immortal Gods! nothing so difficult as to begin a chapter, and
therefore have we flown to you. In literature, as in life, it is the first
step; you know the rest. After a paragraph or so our blood Is up, and even
our jaded hackneys scud along, and warm up into friskiness.
</p>
<p>
The Duke awoke: another day of his eventful life is now to run its course.
He found that the Bird of Paradise had not returned from an excursion to a
neighbouring park: he left a note for her, apprising her of his departure
to London, and he despatched an affectionate letter to Lady Aphrodite,
which was the least that he could do, considering that he perhaps quitted
Brighton the day of her arrival. And having done all this, he ordered his
horses, and before noon was on his first stage.
</p>
<p>
It was his birthday. He had completed his twenty-third year. This was
sufficient, even if he had no other inducement, to make him indulge in
some slight reflection. These annual summings up are awkward things, even
to the prosperous and the happy, but to those who are the reverse, who are
discontented with themselves, and find that youth melting away which they
believe can alone achieve anything, I think a birthday is about the most
gloomy four-and-twenty hours that ever flap their damp dull wings over
melancholy man.
</p>
<p>
Yet the Duke of St. James was rather thoughtful than melancholy. His life
had been too active of late to allow him to indulge much in that passive
mood. ‘I may never know what happiness is,’ thought his Grace, as he
leaned back in his whirling britzska, ‘but I think I know what happiness
is not. It is not the career which I have hitherto pursued. All this
excitement which they talk of so much wears out the mind, and, I begin to
believe, even the body, for certainly my energies seem deserting me. But
two years, two miserable years, four-and-twenty months, eight-and-forty
times the hours, the few hours, that I have been worse than wasting here,
and I am shipwrecked, fairly bulged. Yet I have done everything, tried
everything, and my career has been an eminent career. Woe to the wretch
who trusts to his pampered senses for felicity! Woe to the wretch who
flies from the bright goddess Sympathy, to sacrifice before the dark idol
Self-love! Ah! I see too late, we were made for each other. Too late, I
discover the beautiful results of this great principle of creation. Oh!
the blunders of an unformed character! Oh! the torture of an ill-regulated
mind!
</p>
<p>
‘Give me a life with no fierce alternations of rapture and anguish, no
impossible hopes, no mad depression. Free me from the delusions which
succeed each other like scentless roses, that are ever blooming. Save me
from the excitement which brings exhaustion, and from the passion that
procreates remorse. Give me the luminous mind, where recognised and
paramount duty dispels the harassing, ascertains the doubtful, confirms
the wavering, sweetens the bitter. Give me content. Oh! give me love!
</p>
<p>
‘How is it to end? What is to become of me? Can nothing rescue me? Is
there no mode of relief, no place of succour, no quarter of refuge, no
hope of salvation? I cannot right myself, and there is an end of it.
Society, society, society! I owe thee much; and perhaps in working in thy
service, those feelings might be developed which I am now convinced are
the only source of happiness; but I am plunged too deep in the quag. I
have no impulse, no call. I know not how it is, but my energies, good and
evil, seem alike vanishing. There stares that fellow at my carriage! God!
willingly would I break the stones upon the road for a year, to clear my
mind of all the past!’
</p>
<p>
A carriage dashed by, and a lady bowed. It was Mrs. Dallington Vere.
</p>
<p>
The Duke had appointed his banker to dine with him, as not a moment must
be lost in preparing for the reception of his Brighton drafts. He was also
to receive, this evening, a complete report of all his affairs. The first
thing that struck his eye on his table was a packet from Sir Carte
Blanche. He opened it eagerly, stared, started, nearly shrieked. It fell
from his hands. He was fortunately alone. The estimates for the completion
of his works, and the purchase of the rest of the furniture, exactly
equalled the sum already expended. Sir Carte added, that the works might
of course be stopped, but that there was no possible way of reducing them,
with any deference to the original design, scale, and style; that he had
already given instructions not to proceed with the furniture until further
notice, but regretted to observe that the orders were so advanced that he
feared it was too late to make any sensible reduction. It might in some
degree reconcile his Grace to this report when he concluded by observing
that the advanced state of the works could permit him to guarantee that
the present estimates would not be exceeded.
</p>
<p>
The Duke had sufficiently recovered before the arrival of his confidential
agent not to appear agitated, only serious. The awful catastrophe at
Brighton was announced, and his report of affairs was received. It was a
very gloomy one. Great agricultural distress prevailed, and the rents
could not be got in. Five-and-twenty per cent, was the least that must be
taken off his income, and with no prospect of being speedily added on.
There was a projected railroad which would entirely knock up his canal,
and even if crushed must be expensively opposed. Coals were falling also,
and the duties in town increasing. There was sad confusion in the Irish
estates. The missionaries, who were patronised on the neighbouring lands
of one of the City Companies, had been exciting fatal confusion. Chapels
were burnt, crops destroyed, stock butchered, and rents all in arrear. Mr.
Dacre had contrived with great prudence to repress the efforts of the new
reformation, and had succeeded in preventing any great mischief. His plans
for the pursual of his ideas and feelings upon this subject had been
communicated to his late ward in an urgent and important paper, which his
Grace had never seen, but one day, unread, pushed into a certain black
cabinet, which perhaps the reader may remember. His Grace’s miscellaneous
debts had also been called in, and amounted to a greater sum than they had
anticipated, which debts always do. One hundred and forty thousand pounds
had crumbled away in the most imperceptible manner. A great slice of this
was the portion of the jeweller. His shield and his vases would at least
be evidence to his posterity of the splendour and the taste of their
imprudent ancestor; but he observed the other items with less
satisfaction. He discovered that in the course of two years he had given
away one hundred and thirty-seven necklaces and bracelets; and as for
rings, they must be counted by the bushel. The result of this gloomy
interview was, that the Duke had not only managed to get rid of the
immortal half-million, but had incurred debts or engagements to the amount
of nearly eight hundred thousand pounds, incumbrances which were to be
borne by a decreased and perhaps decreasing income. His Grace was once
more alone. ‘Well! my brain is not turned; and yet I think it has been
pretty well worked these last few days. It cannot be true: it must all be
a dream. He never could have dined here, and said all this. Have I,
indeed, been at Brighton? No, no, no; I have been sleeping after dinner. I
have a good mind to ring and ask whether he really was here. It must be
one great delusion. But no! there are those cursed accounts. Well! what
does it signify? I was miserable before, and now I am only contemptible in
addition. How the world will laugh! They were made forsooth for my
diversion. O, idiot! you will be the butt of everyone! Talk of Bagshot,
indeed! Why, he will scarcely speak to me!
</p>
<p>
‘Away with this! Let me turn these things in my mind. Take it at one
hundred and fifty thousand. It is more, it must be more, but we will take
it at that. Now, suppose one hundred thousand is allotted every year to
meet my debts; I suppose, in nine or ten years I shall be free. Not that
freedom will be worth much then; but still I am thinking of the glory of
the House I have betrayed. Well, then, there is fifty thousand a-year
left. Let me see; twenty thousand have always been spent in Ireland, and
ten at Pen Bronnock, and they must not be cut down. The only thing I can
do now is, not to spare myself. I am the cause, and let me meet the
consequences. Well, then, perhaps twenty thousand a-year remain to keep
Hauteville Castle and Hauteville House; to maintain the splendour of the
Duke of St. James. Why, my hereditary charities alone amount to a quarter
of my income, to say nothing of incidental charges: I too, who should and
who would wish to rebuild, at my own cost, every bridge that is swept
away, and every steeple that is burnt, in my county.
</p>
<p>
‘And now for the great point. Shall I proceed with my buildings? My own
personal convenience whispers no! But I have a strong conviction that the
advice is treasonable. What! the young Duke’s folly for every gazer in
town and country to sneer at! Oh! my fathers, am I indeed your child, or
am I bastard? Never, never shall your shield be sullied while I bear it!
Never shall your proud banner veil while I am chieftain! They shall be
finished; certainly, they shall be finished, if I die an exile! There can
be no doubt about this; I feel the deep propriety.
</p>
<p>
‘This girl, too, something must be done for her. I must get Squib to run
down to Brighton for me: and Afy, poor dear Afy, I think she will be sorry
when she hears it all!
</p>
<p>
‘My head is weak: I want a counsellor. This man cannot enter into my
feelings. Then there is my family lawyer; if I ask him for advice, he will
ask me for instructions. Besides, this is not a matter of pounds,
shillings, and pence; it is an affair as much of sentiment as economy; it
involves the honour of my family, and I want one to unburden myself to,
who can sympathise with the tortured feelings of a noble, of a Duke
without a dukedom, for it has come to that. But I will leave sneers to the
world.
</p>
<p>
‘There is Annesley. He is clever, but so coldblooded. He has no heart.
There is Squib; he is a good fellow, and has heart enough; and I suppose,
if I wanted to pension off a mistress, or compound with a few rascally
tradesmen, he would manage the affair to a miracle. There is Darrell; but
he will be so fussy, and confidential, and official. Every meeting will be
a cabinet council, every discussion a debate, every memorandum a state
paper. There is Burlington; he is experienced, and clever, and
kind-hearted, and, I really think, likes me; but, no, no, it is too
ridiculous. We who have only met for enjoyment, whose countenance was a
smile, and whose conversation was badinage; we to meet, and meditate on my
broken fortunes! Impossible! Besides, what right have I to compel a man,
the study of whose life is to banish care, to take all my anxieties on his
back, or refuse the duty at the cost of my acquaintance and the trouble of
his conscience. Ah! I once had a friend, the best, the wisest; but no more
of that. What is even the loss of fortune and of consideration to the loss
of his—his daughter’s love?’
</p>
<p>
His voice faltered, yet it was long before he retired; and he rose on the
morrow only to meditate over his harassing embarrassments. As if the cup
of his misery were not o’erflowing, a new incident occurred about this
time, which rendered his sense of them even keener. But this is important
enough to commence a new chapter.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER X.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A New Star Rises</i>
</pre>
<p>
WILLIAM HENRY, MARQUESS OF MARYLEBONE, completed his twenty-first year: an
event which created a greater sensation among the aristocracy of England,
even, than the majority of George Augustus Frederick, Duke of St. James.
The rent-roll of his Grace was great: but that of his Lordship was
incalculable. He had not indeed so many castles as our hero; but then, in
the metropolis, a whole parish owned him as Lord, and it was whispered
that, when a few miles of leases fell in, the very Civil List must give
him the wall. Even in the duration of his minority, he had the superiority
over the young Duke, for the Marquess was a posthumous son.
</p>
<p>
Lord Marylebone was a short, thick, swarthy young gentleman, with wiry
black hair, a nose somewhat flat, sharp eyes, and tusky mouth; altogether
not very unlike a terrier. His tastes were unknown: he had not travelled,
nor done anything very particular, except, with a few congenial spirits,
beat the Guards in a rowing-match, a pretty diversion, and almost as
conducive to a small white hand as almond-paste.
</p>
<p>
But his Lordship was now of age, and might be seen every day at a certain
hour rattling up Bond Street in a red drag, in which he drove four or five
particular friends who lived at Stevens’ Hotel, and therefore, we suppose,
were the partners of his glory in his victory over his Majesty’s household
troops. Lord Marylebone was the universal subject of conversation.
Pursuits which would have devoted a shabby Earl of twelve or fifteen
thousand a year to universal reprobation, or, what is much worse, to
universal sneers, assumed quite a different character when they
constituted the course of life of this fortunate youth. He was a
delightful young man. So unaffected! No super-refinement, no false
delicacy. Everyone, each sex, everything, extended his, her, or its hand
to this cub, who, quite puzzled, but too brutal to be confused, kept
driving on the red van, and each day perpetrating some new act of
profligacy, some new instance of coarse profusion, tasteless extravagance,
and inelegant eccentricity.
</p>
<p>
But, nevertheless, he was the hero of the town. He was the great point of
interest in ‘The Universe,’ and ‘The New World’ favoured the old one with
weekly articles on his character and conduct. The young Duke was quite
forgotten, if really young he could be longer called. Lord Marylebone was
in the mouth of every tradesman, who authenticated his own vile inventions
by foisting them on his Lordship. The most grotesque fashions suddenly
inundated the metropolis; and when the Duke of St. James ventured to
express his disapprobation, he found his empire was over. ‘They were sorry
that it did not meet his Grace’s taste, but really what his Grace had
suggested was quite gone by. This was the only hat, or cane, or coat which
any civilised being could be seen with. Lord Marylebone wore, or bore, no
other.’
</p>
<p>
In higher circles, it was much the same. Although the dandies would not
bate an inch, and certainly would not elect the young Marquess for their
leader, they found, to their dismay, that the empire which they were
meditating to defend, had already slipped away from their grasp. A new
race of adventurous youths appeared upon the stage. Beards, and greatcoats
even rougher, bull-dogs instead of poodles, clubs instead of canes, cigars
instead of perfumes, were the order of the day. There was no end to
boat-racing; Crockford’s sneered at White’s; and there was even a talk of
reviving the ring. Even the women patronised the young Marquess, and those
who could not be blind to his real character, were sure, that, if well
managed, he would not turn out ill.
</p>
<p>
Assuredly our hero, though shelved, did not envy his successful rival. Had
he been, instead of one for whom he felt a sovereign contempt, a being
even more accomplished than himself, pity and not envy would have been the
sentiment he would have yielded to his ascendant star. But, nevertheless,
he could not be insensible to the results of this incident; and the advent
of the young Marquess seemed like the sting in the epigram of his life.
After all his ruinous magnificence, after all the profuse indulgence of
his fantastic tastes, he had sometimes consoled himself, even in the
bitterness of satiety, by reminding himself, that he at least commanded
the admiration of his fellow-creatures, although it had been purchased at
a costly price. Not insensible to the power of his wealth, the magic of
his station, he had, however, ventured to indulge in the sweet belief that
these qualities were less concerned in the triumphs of his career than his
splendid person, his accomplished mind, his amiable disposition, and his
finished manner; his beauty, his wit, his goodness, and his grace. Even
from this delusion, too, was he to waken, and, for the first time in his
life, he gauged the depth and strength of that popularity which had been
so dear to him, and which he now found to be so shallow and so weak.
</p>
<p>
‘What will they think of me when they know all? What they will: I care
not. I would sooner live in a cottage with May Dacre, and work for our
daily bread, than be worshipped by all the beauty of this Babylon.’
</p>
<p>
Gloomy, yet sedate, he returned home. His letters announced two
extraordinary events. M. de Whiskerburg had galloped off with Lady
Aphrodite, and Count Frill had flown away with the Bird of Paradise.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘Lovely Woman Stoops to Folly.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE last piece of information was a relief; but the announcement of the
elopement cost him a pang. Both surprised, and the first shocked him. We
are unreasonable in love, and do not like to be anticipated even in
neglect. An hour ago Lady Aphrodite Grafton was to him only an object of
anxiety and a cause of embarrassment. She was now a being to whom he was
indebted for some of the most pleasing hours of his existence, and who
could no longer contribute to his felicity. Everybody appeared deserting
him.
</p>
<p>
He had neglected her, to be sure; and they must have parted, it was
certain. Yet, although the present event saved him from the most harrowing
of scenes, he could not refrain shedding a tear. So good! and so
beautiful! and was this her end? He who knew all knew how bitter had been
the lot of her life.
</p>
<p>
It is certain that when one of your very virtuous women ventures to be a
little indiscreet, we say it is certain, though we regret it, that sooner
or later there is an explosion. And the reason is this, that they are
always in a hurry to make up for lost time, and so love with them becomes
a business instead of being a pleasure. Nature had intended Lady Aphrodite
Grafton for a Psyche, so spiritual was her soul, so pure her blood! Art—that
is, education, which at least should be an art, though it is not—art
had exquisitely sculptured the precious gem that Nature had developed, and
all that was wanting was love to stamp an impression. Lady Aphrodite
Grafton might have been as perfect a character as was ever the heroine of
a novel. And to whose account shall we place her blighted fame and sullied
lustre? To that animal who seems formed only to betray woman. Her husband
was a traitor in disguise. She found herself betrayed; but like a noble
chieftain, when her capital was lost, maintained herself among the ruins
of her happiness, in the citadel of her virtue. She surrendered, she
thought, on terms; and in yielding her heart to the young Duke, though
never for a moment blind to her conduct, yet memory whispered extenuation,
and love added all that was necessary.
</p>
<p>
Our hero (we are for none of your perfect heroes) did not behave much
better than her husband. The difference between them was, Sir Lucius
Grafton’s character was formed, and formed for evil; while the Duke of St.
James, when he became acquainted with Lady Aphrodite, possessed none.
Gallantry was a habit, in which he had been brought up. To protest to
woman what he did not believe, and to feign what he did not feel, were, as
he supposed, parts in the character of an accomplished gentleman; and as
hitherto he had not found his career productive of any misery, we may
perhaps view his conduct with less severity. But at length he approaches,
not a mere woman of the world, who tries to delude him into the idea that
he is the first hero of a romance that has been a hundred times repeated.
He trembles at the responsibility which he has incurred by engaging the
feelings of another. In the conflict of his emotions, some rays of moral
light break upon his darkened soul. Profligacy brings its own punishment,
and he feels keenly that man is the subject of sympathy, and not the slave
of self-love.
</p>
<p>
This remorse protracts a connection which each day is productive of more
painful feelings; but the heart cannot be overstrung, and anxiety ends in
callousness. Then come neglect, remonstrance, explanations, protestations,
and, sooner or later, a catastrophe.
</p>
<p>
But love is a dangerous habit, and when once indulged, is not easily
thrown off, unless you become devout, which is, in a manner, giving the
passion a new direction. In Catholic countries, it is surprising how many
adventures end in a convent. A dame, in her desperation, flies to the
grate, which never reopens; but in Protestant regions she has time to
cool, and that’s the deuce; so, instead of taking the veil, she takes a
new lover.
</p>
<p>
Lady Aphrodite had worked up her mind and the young Duke to a step the
very mention of which a year before would have made him shudder. What an
enchanter is Passion! No wonder Ovid, who was a judge, made love so much
connected with his Metamorphoses. With infinite difficulty she had dared
to admit the idea of flying with his Grace; but when the idea was once
admitted, when she really had, once or twice, constantly dwelt on the idea
of at length being free from her tyrant, and perhaps about to indulge in
those beautiful affections for which she was formed, and of which she had
been rifled; when, I say, all this occurred, and her hero diplomatised,
and, in short, kept back; why, she had advanced one step, without knowing
it, to running away with another man.
</p>
<p>
It was unlucky that De Whiskerburg stepped in. An Englishman would not
have done. She knew them well, and despised them all; but he was new
(dangerous novelty), with a cast of feelings which, because they were
strange, she believed to be unhackneyed; and he was impassioned. We need
not go on.
</p>
<p>
So this star has dropped from out the heaven; so this precious pearl no
longer gleams among the jewels of society, and there she breathes in a
foreign land, among strange faces and stranger customs, and, when she
thinks of what is past, laughs at some present emptiness, and tries to
persuade her withering heart that the mind is independent of country, and
blood, and opinion. And her father’s face no longer shines with its proud
love, and her mother’s voice no longer whispers to her with sweet anxiety.
Clouded is the brow of her bold brother, and dimmed is the radiancy of her
budding sister’s bloom.
</p>
<p>
Poor creature! that is to say, wicked woman! for we are not of those who
set themselves against the verdict of society, or ever omit to expedite,
by a gentle kick, a falling friend. And yet, when we just remember beauty
is beauty, and grace is grace, and kindness is kindness, although the
beautiful, the graceful, and the amiable do get in a scrape, we don’t know
how it is, we confess it is a weakness, but, under these circumstances, we
do not feel quite inclined to sneer.
</p>
<p>
But this is wrong. We should not pity or pardon those who have yielded to
great temptation, or perchance great provocation. Besides, it is right
that our sympathy should be kept for the injured.
</p>
<p>
To stand amid the cold ashes of your desolate hearth, with all your
Penates shivered at your feet; to find no smiling face meet your return,
no brow look gloomy when you leave your door; to eat and sleep alone; to
be bored with grumbling servants and with weekly bills; to have your
children asking after mamma; and no one to nurse your gout, or cure the
influenza that rages in your household: all this is doubtless hard to
digest, and would tell in a novel, particularly if written by my friends
Mr. Ward or Mr. Bulwer.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Kindly Words</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Duke had passed a stormy morning with his solicitor, who wished him to
sell the Pen Bronnock property, which, being parliamentary, would command
a price infinitely greater than might be expected from its relative
income. The very idea of stripping his coronet of this brightest jewel,
and thus sacrificing for wealth the ends of riches, greatly disordered
him, and he more and more felt the want of a counsellor who could
sympathise with his feelings as well as arrange his fortunes. In this mood
he suddenly seized a pen, and wrote the following letter:—
</p>
<p>
‘——House, Feb. 5, 182—.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Mr. Dacre,
</p>
<p>
‘I keenly feel that you are the last person to whom I should apply for the
counsels or the consolation of friendship. I have long ago forfeited all
claims to your regard, and your esteem I never possessed. Yet, if only
because my career ought to end by my being an unsuccessful suppliant to
the individual whom both virtue and nature pointed out to me as my best
friend, and whose proffered and parental support I have so wantonly,
however thoughtlessly, rejected, I do not regret that this is written. No
feeling of false delicacy can prevent me from applying to one to whom I
have long ago incurred incalculable obligations, and no feeling of false
delicacy will, I hope, for a moment, prevent you from refusing the
application of one who has acknowledged those obligations only by
incalculable ingratitude.
</p>
<p>
‘In a word, my affairs, are, I fear, inextricably involved. I will not
dwell upon the madness of my life; suffice that its consequences appall
me. I have really endeavoured to examine into all details, and am prepared
to meet the evil as becomes me; but, indeed, my head turns with the
complicated interests which solicit my consideration, and I tremble lest,
in the distraction of my mind, I may adopt measures which may baffle the
very results I would attain. For myself, I am ready to pay the penalty of
my silly profligacy; and if exile, or any other personal infliction, can
redeem the fortunes of the House that I have betrayed, I shall cheerfully
submit to my destiny. My career has been productive of too little
happiness to make me regret its termination.
</p>
<p>
‘But I want advice: I want the counsel of one who can sympathise with my
distracted feelings, who will look as much, or rather more, to the honour
of my family than to the convenience of myself. I cannot obtain this from
what are called men of business, and, with a blush I confess, I have no
friend. In this situation my thoughts recur to one on whom, believe me,
they have often dwelt; and although I have no right to appeal to your
heart, for my father’s sake you will perhaps pardon this address. Whatever
you may resolve, my dearest sir, rest assured that you and your family
will always command the liveliest gratitude of one who regrets he may not
subscribe himself
</p>
<p>
‘Your obliged and devoted friend,
</p>
<p>
‘St. James.
</p>
<p>
‘I beg that you will not answer this, if your determination be what I
anticipate and what I deserve. ‘Dacre Dacre, Esq., &c, &c, &c.’
</p>
<p>
It was signed, sealed, and sent. He repented its transmission when it was
gone. He almost resolved to send a courier to stop the post. He continued
walking up and down his room for the rest of the day; he could not eat, or
read, or talk. He was plunged in a nervous reverie. He passed the next day
in the same state. Unable to leave his house, and unseen by visitors, he
retired to his bed feverish and dispirited. The morning came, and he woke
from his hot and broken sleep at an early hour; yet he had not energy to
rise. At last the post arrived, and his letters were brought up to him.
With a trembling hand and sinking breath he read these lines:—
</p>
<p>
‘Castle Dacre, February 6, 182—.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear young Friend,
</p>
<p>
‘Not only for your father’s sake, but your own, are my services ever at
your command. I have long been sensible of your amiable disposition, and
there are circumstances which will ever make me your debtor.
</p>
<p>
‘The announcement of the embarrassed state of your affairs fills me with
sorrow and anxiety, yet I will hope the best. Young men, unconsciously,
exaggerate adversity as well as prosperity. If you are not an habitual
gamester, and I hope you have not been even an occasional one, unbounded
extravagance could scarcely in two years have permanently injured your
resources. However, bring down with you all papers, and be careful to make
no arrangement, even of the slightest nature, until we meet.
</p>
<p>
‘We expect you hourly. May desires her kindest regards, and begs me to
express the great pleasure which she will feel at again finding you our
guest. It is unnecessary for me to repeat how very sincerely
</p>
<p>
‘I am your friend,
</p>
<p>
‘Dacre Dacre.’
</p>
<p>
He read the letter three times to be sure he did not mistake the
delightful import. Then he rang the bell with a vivacity which had not
characterised him for many a month.
</p>
<p>
‘Luigi! prepare to leave town to-morrow morning for an indefinite period.
I shall only take you. I must dress immediately, and order breakfast and
my horses.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had communicated the state of his affairs to Lord
Fitz-pompey, who was very shocked, offered his best services, and also
asked him to dinner, to meet the Marquess of Marylebone. The young Duke
had also announced to his relatives, and to some of his particular
friends, that he intended to travel for some time, and he well knew that
their charitable experience would understand the rest. They understood
everything. The Marquess’s party daily increased, and ‘The Universe’ and
‘The New World’ announced that the young Duke was ‘done up.’
</p>
<p>
There was one person to whom our hero would pay a farewell visit before he
left London. This was Lady Caroline St. Maurice. He had called at
Fitz-pompey House one or two mornings in the hope of finding her alone,
and to-day he determined to be more successful. As he stopped his horse
for the last time before his uncle’s mansion, he could not help calling to
mind the first visit which he had paid after his arrival. But the door
opens, he enters, he is announced, and finds Lady Caroline alone.
</p>
<p>
Ten minutes passed away, as if the morning ride or evening ball were again
to bring them together. The young Duke was still gay and still amusing. At
last he said with a smile,
</p>
<p>
‘Do you know, Caroline, this is a farewell visit, and to you?’
</p>
<p>
She did not speak, but bent her head as if she were intent upon some work,
and so seated herself that her countenance was almost hid.
</p>
<p>
‘You have heard from my uncle,’ continued he, laughing; ‘and if you have
not heard from him, you have heard from somebody else, of my little
scrape. A fool and his money, you know, Caroline, and a short reign and a
merry one. When we get prudent we are wondrous fond of proverbs. My reign
has certainly been brief enough; with regard to the merriment, that is not
quite so certain. I have little to regret except your society, sweet coz!’
</p>
<p>
‘Dear George, how can you talk so of such serious affairs! If you knew how
unhappy, how miserable I am, when I hear the cold, callous world speak of
such things with indifference, you would at least not imitate their
heartlessness.’
</p>
<p>
‘Dear Caroline!’ said he, seating himself at her side.
</p>
<p>
‘I cannot help thinking,’ she continued, ‘that you have not sufficiently
exerted yourself about these embarrassments. You are, of course, too
harassed, too much annoyed, too little accustomed to the energy and the
detail of business, to interfere with any effect; but surely a friend
might. You will not speak to my father, and perhaps you have your reasons;
but is there no one else? St. Maurice, I know, has no head. Ah! George, I
often feel that if your relations had been different people, your fate
might have been different. We are the fault.’
</p>
<p>
He kissed her hand.
</p>
<p>
‘Among all your intimates,’ she continued, ‘is there no one fit to be your
counsellor, no one worthy of your confidence?’
</p>
<p>
‘None,’ said the Duke, bitterly, ‘none, none. I have no friend among those
intimates: there is not a man of them who cares to serve or is capable of
serving me.’
</p>
<p>
‘You have well considered?’ asked Lady Caroline.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, dear, well. I know them all by rote, head and heart. Ah! my dear,
dear Carry, if you were a man, what a nice little friend you would be!’
</p>
<p>
‘You will always laugh, George. But I—I have no heart to laugh. This
breaking up of your affairs, this exile, this losing you whom we all love,
love so dearly, makes me quite miserable.’
</p>
<p>
He kissed her hand again.
</p>
<p>
‘I dare say,’ she continued, ‘you have thought me as heartless as the
rest, because I never spoke. But I knew; that is, I feared; or, rather,
hoped that a great part of what I heard was false; and so I thought notice
was unnecessary, and might be painful. Yet, heaven knows, there are few
subjects that have been oftener in my thoughts, or cost me more anxiety.
Are you sure you have no friend?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have you, Caroline. I did not say I had no friends: I said I had none
among those intimates you talked of; that there was no man among them
capable of the necessary interference, even if he were willing to
undertake it. But I am not friendless, not quite forlorn, dear! My fate
has given me a friend that I but little deserve: one whom, if I had prized
better, I should not perhaps have been obliged to put his friendship to so
severe a trial. To-morrow, Caroline, I depart for Castle Dacre; there is
my friend. Alas! how little have I deserved such a boon!’
</p>
<p>
‘Dacre!’ exclaimed Lady Caroline, ‘Mr. Dacre! Oh! you have made me so
happy, George! Mr. Dacre is the very, very person; that is, the very best
person you could possibly have applied to.’
</p>
<p>
‘Good-bye, Caroline,’ said his Grace, rising.
</p>
<p>
She burst into tears.
</p>
<p>
Never, never had she looked so lovely: never, never had he loved her so
entirely! Tears! tears shed for him! Oh! what, what is grief when a lovely
woman remains to weep over our misfortunes! Could he be miserable, could
his career indeed be unfortunate, when this was reserved for him? He was
on the point of pledging his affection, but to leave her under such
circumstances was impossible: to neglect Mr. Dacre was equally so. He
determined to arrange his affairs with all possible promptitude, and then
to hasten up, and entreat her to share his diminished fortunes. But he
would not go without whispering hope, without leaving some soft thought to
lighten her lonely hours. He caught her in his arms; he covered her sweet
small mouth with kisses, and whispered, in the midst of their pure
embrace,
</p>
<p>
‘Dearest Carry! I shall soon return, and we will yet be happy.’
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
BOOK V.
</h2>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER I.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Once More at Dacre</i>
</pre>
<p>
MISS DACRE, although she was prepared to greet the Duke of St. James with
cordiality, did not anticipate with equal pleasure the arrival of the page
and the jäger. Infinite had been the disturbances they had occasioned
during their first visit, and endless the complaints of the steward and
the housekeeper. The men-servants were initiated in the mysteries of
dominoes, and the maid-servants in the tactics of flirtation. Karlstein
was the hero of the under-butlers, and even the trusty guardian of the
cellar himself was too often on the point of obtaining the German’s
opinion of his master’s German wines. Gaming, and drunkenness, and love,
the most productive of all the teeming causes of human sorrow, had in a
week sadly disordered the well-regulated household of Castle Dacre, and
nothing but the impetuosity of our hero would have saved his host’s
establishment from utter perdition. Miss Dacre was, therefore, not less
pleased than surprised when the britzska of the Duke of St. James
discharged on a fine afternoon, its noble master, attended only by the
faithful Luigi, at the terrace of the Castle.
</p>
<p>
A few country cousins, fresh from Cumberland, who knew nothing of the Duke
of St. James except from a stray number of ‘The Universe,’ which
occasionally stole down to corrupt the pure waters of their lakes, were
the only guests. Mr. Dacre grasped our hero’s hand with a warmth and
expression which were unusual with him, but which conveyed, better than
words, the depth of his friendship; and his daughter, who looked more
beautiful than ever, advanced with a beaming face and joyous tone, which
quite reconciled the Duke of St. James to being a ruined man.
</p>
<p>
The presence of strangers limited their conversation to subjects of
general interest. At dinner, the Duke took care to be agreeable: he talked
in an unaffected manner, and particularly to the cousins, who were all
delighted with him, and found him ‘quite a different person from what they
had fancied.’ The evening passed over, and even lightly, without the aid
of <i>écarté</i>, romances, or gallops. Mr. Dacre chatted with old Mr.
Montingford, and old Mrs. Montingford sat still admiring her ‘girls,’ who
stood still admiring May Dacre singing or talking, and occasionally
reconciled us to their occasional silence by a frequent and extremely
hearty laugh; that Cumberland laugh which never outlives a single season
in London.
</p>
<p>
And the Duke of St. James, what did he do? It must be confessed that in
some points he greatly resembled the Misses Montingford, for he was both
silent and admiring; but he never laughed. Yet he was not dull, and was
careful not to show that he had cares, which is vulgar. If a man be
gloomy, let him keep to himself. No one has a right to go croaking about
society, or, what is worse, looking as if he stifled grief. These fellows
should be put in the pound. We like a good broken heart or so now and
then; but then one should retire to the Sierra Morena mountains, and live
upon locusts and wild honey, not ‘dine out’ with our cracked cores, and,
while we are meditating suicide, the Gazette, or the Chiltern Hundreds,
damn a vintage or eulogise an <i>entrée</i>.
</p>
<p>
And as for cares, what are cares when a man is in love? Once more they had
met; once more he gazed upon that sunny and sparkling face; once more he
listened to that sweet and thrilling voice, which sounded like a bird-like
burst of music upon a summer morning. She moved, and each attitude was
fascination. She was still, and he regretted that she moved. Now her neck,
now her hair, now her round arm, now her tapering waist, ravished his
attention; now he is in ecstasies with her twinkling foot; now he is
dazzled with her glancing hand.
</p>
<p>
Once more he was at Dacre! How different was this meeting to their first!
Then, she was cold, almost cutting; then she was disregardful, almost
contemptuous; but then he had hoped; ah! madman, he had more than hoped.
Now she was warm, almost affectionate; now she listened to him with
readiness, ay! almost courted his conversation. And now he could only
despair. As he stood alone before the fire, chewing this bitter cud, she
approached him.
</p>
<p>
‘How good you were to come directly!’ she said with a smile, which melted
his heart. ‘I fear, however, you will not find us so merry as before. But
you can make anything amusing. Come, then, and sing to these damsels. Do
you know they are half afraid of you? and I cannot persuade them that a
terrible magician has not assumed, for the nonce, the air and appearance
of a young gentleman of distinction.’
</p>
<p>
He smiled, but could not speak. Repartee sadly deserts the lover; yet
smiles, under those circumstances, are eloquent; and the eye, after all,
speaks much more to the purpose than the tongue. Forgetting everything
except the person who addressed him, he offered her his hand, and advanced
to the group which surrounded the piano.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER II.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Moth and the Flame</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE next morning was passed by the Duke of St. James in giving Mr. Dacre
his report of the state of his affairs. His banker’s accounts, his
architect’s estimates, his solicitor’s statements, were all brought
forward and discussed. A ride, generally with Miss Dacre and one of her
young friends, dinner, and a short evening, and eleven o’clock, sent them
all to repose. Thus glided on a fortnight. The mornings continued to be
passed in business. Affairs were more complicated than his Grace had
imagined, who had no idea of detail. He gave all the information that he
could, and made his friend master of his particular feelings. For the
rest, Mr. Dacre was soon involved in much correspondence; and although the
young Duke could no longer assist him, he recommended and earnestly begged
that he would remain at Dacre; for he could perceive, better than his
Grace, that our hero was labouring under a great deal of excitement, and
that his health was impaired. A regular course of life was therefore as
necessary for his constitution as it was desirable for all other reasons.
</p>
<p>
Behold, then, our hero domesticated at Dacre; rising at nine, joining a
family breakfast, taking a quiet ride, or moderate stroll, sometimes
looking into a book, but he was no great reader; sometimes fortunate
enough in achieving a stray game at billiards, usually with a Miss
Montingford, and retiring to rest about the time that in London his most
active existence generally began. Was he dull? was he wearied? He was
never lighter-hearted or more contented in his life. Happy he could not
allow himself to be styled, because the very cause which breathed this
calm over his existence seemed to portend a storm which could not be
avoided. It was the thought, the presence, the smile, the voice of May
Dacre that imparted this new interest to existence: that being who never
could be his. He shuddered to think that all this must end; but although
he never indulged again in the great hope, his sanguine temper allowed him
to thrust away the future, and to participate in all the joys of the
flowing hour.
</p>
<p>
At the end of February the Montingfords departed, and now the Duke was the
only guest at Dacre; nor did he hear that any others were expected. He was
alone with her again; often was he alone with her, and never without a
strange feeling coming over his frame, which made him tremble. Mr. Dacre,
a man of active habits, always found occupation in his public duties and
in the various interests of a large estate, and usually requested, or
rather required, the Duke of St. James to be his companion. He was
desirous that the Duke should not be alone, and ponder too much over the
past; nor did he conceal his wishes from his daughter, who on all
occasions, as the Duke observed with gratification, seconded the
benevolent intentions of her parent. Nor did our hero indeed wish to be
alone, or to ponder over the past. He was quite contented with the
present; but he did not want to ride with papa, and took every opportunity
to shirk; all of which Mr. Dacre set down to the indolence of exhaustion,
and the inertness of a mind without an object.
</p>
<p>
‘I am going to ride over to Doncaster, George,’ said Mr. Dacre one morning
at breakfast. ‘I think that you had better order your horse too. A good
ride will rouse you, and you should show yourself there.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! very well, sir; but, but I think that——’
</p>
<p>
‘But what?’ asked Mr. Dacre, smiling.
</p>
<p>
The Duke looked to Miss Dacre, who seemed to take pity on his idleness.
</p>
<p>
‘You make him ride too much, papa. Leave him at home with me. I have a
long round to-day, and want an escort. I will take him instead of my
friend Tom Carter. You must carry a basket though,’ said she, turning to
the Duke, ‘and run for the doctor if he be wanted, and, in short, do any
odd message that turns up.’
</p>
<p>
So Mr. Dacre departed alone, and shortly after his daughter and the Duke
of St. James set out on their morning ramble. Many were the cottages at
which they called; many the old dames after whose rheumatisms, and many
the young damsels after whose fortunes they enquired. Old Dame Rawdon was
worse or better; worse last night, but better this morning. She was always
better when Miss called. Miss’s face always did her good. And Fanny was
very comfortable at Squire Wentworth’s, and the housekeeper was very kind
to her, thanks to Miss saying a word to the great Lady. And old John Selby
was quite about again. Miss’s stuff had done him a world of good, to say
nothing of Mr. Dacre’s generous old wine.
</p>
<p>
‘And is this your second son, Dame Rishworth?’ ‘No; that bees our fourth,’
said the old woman, maternally arranging the urchin’s thin, white, flat,
straight, unmanageable hair. ‘We are thinking what to do with him, Miss.
He wants to go out to service. Since Jem Eustace got on so, I don’t know
what the matter is with the lads; but I think we shall have none of them
in the fields soon. He can clean knives and shoes very well, Miss. Mr.
Bradford, at the Castle, was saying t’other day that perhaps he might want
a young hand. You haven’t heard anything, I suppose, Miss?’
</p>
<p>
‘And what is your name, sir?’ asked Miss Dacre. ‘Bobby Rishworth, Miss!’
‘Well, Bobby, I must consult Mr. Bradford.’ ‘We be in great trouble,
Miss,’ said the next cottager. ‘We be in great trouble. Tom, poor Tom, was
out last night, and the keepers will give him up. The good man has done
all he can, we have all done all we can, Miss, and you see how it ends. He
is the first of the family that ever went out. I hope that will be
considered, Miss. Seventy years, our fathers before us, have we been on
the ‘state, and nothing ever sworn agin us. I hope that will be
considered, Miss. I am sure if Tom had been an underkeeper, as Mr. Roberts
once talked of, this would never have happened. I hope that will be
considered, Miss. We are in great trouble surely. Tom, you see, was our
first, Miss.’
</p>
<p>
‘I never interfere about poaching, you know, Mrs. Jones. Mr. Dacre is the
best judge of such matters. But you can go to him, and say that I sent
you. I am afraid, however, that he has heard of Tom before.’
</p>
<p>
‘Only that night at Milwood, Miss; and then you see he had been drinking
with Squire Ridge’s people. I hope that will be considered, Miss.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, well, go up to the Castle.’
</p>
<p>
‘Pray be seated, Miss,’ said a neat-looking mistress of a neat little
farmhouse. ‘Pray be seated, sir. Let me dust it first. Dust will get
everywhere, do what we can. And how’s Pa, Miss? He has not given me a
look-in for many a day, not since he was a-hunting: bless me, if it ayn’t
a fortnight. This day fortnight he tasted our ale, sure enough. Will you
take a glass, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘You are very good. No, I thank you; not today.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yes, give him a glass, nurse. He is unwell, and it will do him good.’
</p>
<p>
She brought the sparkling amber fluid, and the Duke did justice by his
draught.
</p>
<p>
‘I shall have fine honey for you, Miss, this year,’ said the old nurse.
‘Are you fond of honey, sir? Our honey is well known about. I don’t know
how it is, but we do always contrive to manage the bees. How fond some
people are of honey, good Lord! Now, when you were a little girl (I knew
this young lady, sir, before you did), you always used to be fond of
honey. I remember one day: let me see, it must be, ay! truly, that it is,
eighteen years ago next Martinmas: I was a-going down the nursery stairs,
just to my poor mistress’s room, and I had you in my arms (for I knew this
young lady, sir, before you did). Well! I was a-going down the stairs, as
I just said, to my poor dear mistress’s room with you, who was then a
little-un indeed (bless your smiling face! you cost me many a weary hour
when you were weaned, Miss. That you did! Some thought you would never get
through it; but I always said, while there is life there is hope; and so,
you see I were right); but, as I was saying, I was a-going down the stairs
to my poor dear mistress, and I had a gallipot in my hand, a covered
gallipot, with some leeches. And just as I had got to the bottom of the
stairs, and was a-going into my poor dear mistress’s room, said you (I
never shall forget it), said you, “Honey, honey, nurse.” She thought it
were honey, sir. So you see she were always very fond of honey (for I knew
this young lady long before you did, sir).’
</p>
<p>
‘Are you quite sure of that, nurse?’ said Miss Dacre; ‘I think this is an
older friend than you imagine. You remember the little Duke; do not you?
This is the little Duke. Do you think he has grown?’
</p>
<p>
‘Now! bless my life! is it so indeed? Well, be sure, he has grown. I
always thought he would turn out well, Miss, though Dr. Pretyman were
always a-preaching, and talking his prophecycations. I always thought he
would turn out well at last. Bless me! how he has grown, indeed! Perhaps
he grows too fast, and that makes him weak. Nothing better than a glass of
ale for weak people. I remember when Dr. Pretyman ordered it for my poor
dear mistress. “Give her ale,” said the Doctor, “as strong as it can be
brewed;” and sure enough, my poor dear master had it brewed! Have you done
growing, sir? You was ever a troublesome child. Often and often have I
called George, George, Georgy, Georgy Porgy, and he never would come near
me, though he heard all the time as plainly as he does now. Bless me! he
has grown indeed!’
</p>
<p>
‘But I have turned out well at last, nurse, eh?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Ay! sure enough; I always said so. Often and often have I said, he will
turn out well at last. You be going, Miss? I thank you for looking in. My
duty to my master. I was thinking of bringing up one of those cheeses he
likes so.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ay! do, nurse. He can eat no cheese but yours.’
</p>
<p>
As they wandered home, they talked of Lady Caroline, to whom the Duke
mentioned that he must write. He had once intended distinctly to have
explained his feelings to her in a letter from Dacre; but each day he
postponed the close of his destiny, although without hope. He lingered and
he lingered round May Dacre, as a bird flutters round the fruit which is
already grasped by a boy. Circumstances, which we shall relate, had
already occurred, which confirmed the suspicion he had long entertained
that Arundel Dacre was his favoured rival. Impressed with the folly of
again encouraging hope, yet unable to harden his heart against her
continual fascination, the softness of his manner indicated his passion,
and his calm and somewhat languid carriage also told her it was hopeless.
Perhaps, after all, there is no demeanour more calculated to melt obdurate
woman. The gratification he received from her society was evident, yet he
never indulged in that gallantry of which he was once so proud. When she
approached him, a mild smile lit up his pensive countenance; he adopted
her suggestions, but made none; he listened to her remarks with interest,
but no longer bandied repartee. Delicately he impressed her with the
absolute power which she might exercise over his mind.
</p>
<p>
‘I write myself to Caroline to-morrow,’ said Miss Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! Then I need not write. I talked of going up sooner. Have the kindness
to explain why I do not: peremptory orders from Mr. Dacre; fresh air, and——’
</p>
<p>
‘Arithmetic. I understand you get on admirably.’
</p>
<p>
‘My follies,’ said the Duke with a serious air, ‘have at least been
productive of one good end, they have amused you.’
</p>
<p>
‘Nay! I have done too many foolish things myself any more to laugh at my
neighbours. As for yourself, you have only committed those which were
inseparable from your situation; and few, like the Duke of St. James,
would so soon have opened their eyes to the truth of their conduct.’
</p>
<p>
‘A compliment from you repays me for all.’
</p>
<p>
‘Self-approbation does, which is much better than compliments from anyone.
See! there is papa, and Arundel too: let us run up!’
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER III.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Again the Rival</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE Duke of St. James had, on his arrival at Dacre, soon observed that a
constant correspondence was maintained between Miss Dacre and her cousin.
There was no attempt to conceal the fact from any of the guests, and, as
that young gentleman was now engaged in an affair interesting to all his
friends, every letter generally contained some paragraph almost as
interesting to the Montingfords as to herself, which was accordingly read
aloud. Mr. Arundel Dacre was candidate for the vacant representation of a
town in a distant county. He had been disappointed in his views on the
borough, about which he had returned to England, but had been nevertheless
persuaded by his cousin to remain in his native country. During this
period, he had been a great deal at Castle Dacre, and had become much more
intimate and unreserved with his uncle, who observed with great
satisfaction this change in his character, and lost no opportunity of
deserving and increasing the confidence for which he had so long
unavailingly yearned, and which was now so unexpectedly proffered.
</p>
<p>
The borough for which Arundel Dacre was about to stand was in Sussex, a
county in which his family had no property, and very slight connection.
Yet at the place, the Catholic interest was strong, and on that, and the
usual Whig influence, he ventured. His desire to be a member of the
Legislature, at all and from early times extreme, was now greatly
heightened by the prospect of being present at the impending Catholic
debate. After an absence of three weeks, he had hurried to Yorkshire for
four-and-twenty hours, to give a report of the state of his canvass, and
the probability of his success. In that success all were greatly
interested, but none more so than Miss Dacre, whose thoughts indeed seemed
to dwell on no other subject, and who expressed herself with a warmth
which betrayed her secret feelings. Had the place only been in Yorkshire,
she was sure he must have succeeded. She was the best canvasser in the
world, and everybody agreed that Harry Grey-stoke owed his election merely
to her insinuating tongue and unrivalled powers of scampering, by which
she had completely baffled the tactics of Lady Amarantha.
</p>
<p>
Germain, who thought that a canvass was only a long morning call, and
might be achieved in a cashmere and a britzska.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke, who had seen little of his second since the eventful day,
greeted him with warmth, and was welcomed with a frankness which he had
never before experienced from his friend. Excited by rapid travel and his
present course of life, and not damped by the unexpected presence of any
strangers, Arundel Dacre seemed quite a changed man, and talked immensely.
</p>
<p>
‘Come, May, I must have a kiss! I have been kissing as pretty girls as
you. There now! You all said I never should be a popular candidate. I get
regularly huzzaed every day, so they have been obliged to hire a band of
butchers’ boys to pelt me. Whereupon I compare myself to Cæsar set upon in
the Senate House, and get immense cheering in “The County Chronicle,”
which I have bribed. If you knew the butts of wine, the Heidelberg tuns of
ale, that I have drank during the last fortnight, you would stare indeed.
As much as the lake: but then I have to talk so much, that the ardour of
my eloquence, like the hot flannels of the Humane Society, save me from
the injurious effects of all this liquid.’
</p>
<p>
‘But will you get in; but will you get in?’ exclaimed his cousin.
</p>
<p>
‘’Tis not in mortals to command success; but—-’
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! pooh! you must command it!’ ‘Well, then, I have an excellent
chance; and the only thing against me is, that my committee are quite
sure. But really I think that if the Protestant overseers, whom,
by-the-bye, May, I cannot persuade that I am a heretic (it is very hard
that a man is not believed when he says he shall be damned), if they do
not empty the workhouse, we shall do. But let us go in, for I have
travelled all night, and must be off to-morrow morning.’
</p>
<p>
They entered the house, and the Duke quitted the family group. About an
hour afterwards, he sauntered to the music-room. As he opened the door,
his eyes lighted upon May Dacre and her cousin. They were standing before
the fire, with their backs to the door. His arm was wound carelessly round
her waist, and with his other hand he supported, with her, a miniature, at
which she was looking.
</p>
<p>
The Duke could not catch her countenance, which was completely hid; but
her companion was not gazing on the picture: his head, a little turned,
indicated that there was a living countenance more interesting to him than
all the skill of the most cunning artist. Part of his cheek was alone
perceptible, and that was burning red.
</p>
<p>
All this was the work of a moment. The Duke stared, turned pale, closed
the door without a sound, and retired unperceived. When he was sure that
he could no longer be observed, he gasped for breath, a cold dew covered
his frame, his joints loosened, and his sinking heart gave him that
sickening sensation when life appears utterly worthless, and ourselves
utterly contemptible. Yet what had he witnessed? A confirmation of what he
had never doubted. What was this woman to him? Alas! how supreme was the
power with which she ruled his spirit! And this Dacre, this Arundel Dacre,
how he hated him! Oh! that they were hand to hand, and sword to sword, in
some fair field, and there decide it! He must conquer; he felt that.
Already his weapon pierced that craven heart, and ripped open that breast
which was to be the pillow of—-. Hell! hell! He rushed to his room,
and began a letter to Caroline St. Maurice; but he could not write; and
after scribbling over a quire of paper, he threw the sheets to the flames,
and determined to ride up to town to-morrow.
</p>
<p>
The dinner bell sounded. Could he meet them? Ay! meet them! Defy them!
Insult them! He descended to the dining-room. He heard her musical and
liquid voice; the scowl upon his brow melted away; but, gloomy and silent,
he took his seat, and gloomy and silent he remained. Little he spoke, and
that little was scarcely courteous. But Arundel had enough to say. He was
the hero of the party. Well he might be. Story after story of old maids
and young widows, sturdy butchers and corrupt coal merchants, sparkled
away; but a faint smile was all the tribute of the Duke, and a tribute
that was seldom paid.
</p>
<p>
‘You are not well!’ said Miss Dacre to him, in a low voice.
</p>
<p>
‘I believe I am,’ answered he shortly.
</p>
<p>
‘You do not seem quite so,’ she replied, with an air of surprise.
</p>
<p>
‘I believe I have got a headache,’ he retorted with little more
cordiality. She did not again speak, but she was evidently annoyed.
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER IV.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Bitter is Jealousy</i>
</pre>
<p>
THERE certainly is a dark delight in being miserable, a sort of strange
satisfaction in being savage, which is uncommonly fascinating. One of the
greatest pests of philosophy is, that one can no longer be sullen, and
most sincerely do I regret it. To brood over misery, to flatter yourself
that there is not a single being who cares for your existence, and not a
single circumstance to make that existence desirable: there is wild
witchery in it, which we doubt whether opium can reach, and are sure that
wine cannot.
</p>
<p>
And the Duke! He soon left the uncle and nephew to their miserable
speculations about the state of the poll, and took his sullen way, with
the air of Ajax, to the terrace. Here he stalked along in a fierce
reverie; asked why he had been born; why he did not die; why he should
live, and so on. His wounded pride, which had borne so much, fairly got
the mastery, and revenged itself for all insults on Love, whom it ejected
most scurvily. He blushed to think how he had humiliated himself before
her. She was the cause of that humiliation, and of every disagreeable
sensation that he was experiencing. He began, therefore, to imprecate
vengeance, walked himself into a fair, cold-hearted, malicious passion,
and avowed most distinctly that he hated her. As for him, most ardently he
hoped that, some day or other, they might again meet at six o’clock in the
morning in Kensington Gardens, but in a different relation to each other.
</p>
<p>
It was dark when he entered the Castle. He was about ascending to his own
room, when he determined not to be cowed, and resolved to show himself the
regardless witness of their mutual loves: so he repaired to the
drawing-room. At one end of this very spacious apartment, Mr. Dacre and
Arundel were walking in deep converse; at the other sat Miss Dacre at a
table reading. The Duke seized a chair without looking at her, dragged it
along to the fireplace, and there seating himself, with his arms folded,
his feet on the fender, and his chair tilting, he appeared to be lost in
the abstracting contemplation of the consuming fuel.
</p>
<p>
Some minutes had passed, when a slight sound, like a fluttering bird, made
him look up: Miss Dacre was standing at his side.
</p>
<p>
‘Is your head better?’ she asked him, in a soft voice.
</p>
<p>
‘Thank you, it is quite well,’ he replied, in a sullen one.
</p>
<p>
There was a moment’s pause, and then she again spoke.
</p>
<p>
‘I am sure you are not well.’
</p>
<p>
‘Perfectly, thank you.’
</p>
<p>
‘Something has happened, then,’ she said, rather imploringly.
</p>
<p>
‘What should have happened?’ he rejoined, pettishly.
</p>
<p>
‘You are very strange; very unlike what you always are.’
</p>
<p>
‘What I always am is of no consequence to myself, or to anyone else; and
as for what I am now, I cannot always command my feelings, though I shall
take care that they are not again observed.’
</p>
<p>
‘I have offended you?’
</p>
<p>
‘Then you have shown your discretion, for you should always offend the
forlorn.’
</p>
<p>
‘I did not think before that you were bitter.’
</p>
<p>
‘That has made me bitter which has made all others so.’
</p>
<p>
‘What?’
</p>
<p>
‘Disappointment.’
</p>
<p>
Another pause, yet she did not go.
</p>
<p>
‘I will not quarrel, and so you need not try. You are consigned to my
care, and I am to amuse you. What shall we do?’
</p>
<p>
‘Do what you like, Miss Dacre; but spare, oh! spare me your pity!’
</p>
<p>
‘You do indeed surprise me. Pity! I was not thinking of pity! But you are
indeed serious, and I leave you.’
</p>
<p>
He turned; he seized her hand.
</p>
<p>
‘Nay! do not go. Forgive me,’ he said, ‘forgive me, for I am most
miserable.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why, why are you?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! do not ask; you agonise me.’
</p>
<p>
‘Shall I sing? Shall I charm the evil spirit?’
</p>
<p>
‘Anything?’
</p>
<p>
She tripped to the piano, and an air, bursting like the spring, and gay as
a village feast, filled the room with its delight. He listened, and each
instant the chilly weight loosened from his heart. Her balmy voice now
came upon his ear, breathing joy and cheerfulness, content and love. Could
love be the savage passion which lately subjugated his soul? He rose from
his seat; he walked about the room; each minute his heart was lighter, his
brow more smooth. A thousand thoughts, beautiful and quivering like the
twilight, glanced o’er his mind in indistinct but exquisite tumult, and
hope, like the voice of an angel in a storm, was heard above all. He
lifted a chair gently from the ground, and, stealing to the enchantress,
seated himself at her side. So softly he reached her, that for a moment he
was unperceived. She turned her head, and her eyes met his. Even the
ineffable incident was forgotten, as he marked the strange gush of lovely
light, that seemed to say—— what to think of was, after all,
madness.
</p>
<p>
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<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER V.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Arundel’s Disappointment</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE storm was past. He vowed that a dark thought should not again cross
his mind. It was fated that she should not be his; but it was some
miserable satisfaction that he was only rejected in favour of an
attachment which had grown with her years, and had strengthened with her
stature, and in deference to an engagement hallowed by time as well as by
affection. It was deadly indeed to remember that Fate seemed to have
destined him for that happy position, and that his folly had rejected the
proffered draught of bliss. He blasphemed against the Fitz-pompeys.
However, he did not leave Dacre at the same time as Arundel, but lingered
on. His affairs were far from being arranged. The Irish business gave
great trouble, and he determined therefore to remain.
</p>
<p>
It was ridiculous to talk of feeding a passion which was not susceptible
of increase. Her society was Heaven; and he resolved to enjoy it, although
he was to be expelled. As for his loss of fortune, it gave him not a
moment’s care. Without her, he felt he could not live in England, and,
even ruined, he would be a match for an Italian prince.
</p>
<p>
So he continued her companion, each day rising with purer feelings and a
more benevolent heart; each day more convinced of the falseness of his
past existence, and of the possibility of happiness to a well-regulated
mind; each day more conscious that duty is nothing more than
self-knowledge, and the performance of it consequently the development of
feelings which are the only true source of self-gratification. He mourned
over the opportunities which he had forfeited of conducing to the
happiness of others and himself. Sometimes he had resolved to remain in
England and devote himself to his tenantry; but passion blinded him, and
he felt that he had erred too far ever to regain the right road.
</p>
<p>
The election for which Arundel Dacre was a candidate came on. Each day the
state of the poll arrived. It was nearly equal to the last. Their
agitation was terrible, but forgotten in the deep mortification which they
experienced at the announcement of his defeat. He talked to the public
boldly of petitioning, and his certainty of ultimate success; but he let
them know privately that he had no intention of the first, and no chance
of the second. Even Mr. Dacre could mot conceal his deep disappointment;
but May was quite in despair. Even if her father could find means of
securing him a seat another time, the present great opportunity was lost.
</p>
<p>
‘Surely we can make some arrangement for next session,’ said the Duke,
whispering hope to her.
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! no, no, no; so much depended upon this. It is not merely his taking a
part in the debate, but—but Arundel is so odd, and everything was
staked upon this. I cannot tell you what depended upon it. He will leave
England directly.’
</p>
<p>
She did not attempt to conceal her agitation. The Duke rose, and paced the
room in a state scarcely less moved. A thought had suddenly flashed upon
him. Their marriage doubtless depended upon this success. He knew
something of Arundel Dacre, and had heard more. He was convinced of the
truth of his suspicion. Either the nephew would not claim her hand until
he had carved out his own fortunes, or perhaps the uncle made his
distinction the condition of his consent. Yet this was odd. It was all
odd. A thousand things had occurred which equally puzzled him. Yet he had
seen enough to weigh against a thousand thoughts.
</p>
<p>
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</p>
<div style="height: 4em;">
<br /><br /><br /><br />
</div>
<h2>
CHAPTER VI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Generous Action</i>
</pre>
<p>
ANOTHER fortnight glided away, and he was still at the Castle, still the
constant and almost sole companion of May Dacre. It is breakfast; the
servant is delivering the letter-bag to Mr. Dacre. Interesting moment!
when you extend your hand for the billet of a mistress, and receive your
tailor’s bill! How provokingly slow are most domestic chieftains in this
anxious operation! They turn the letters over and over, and upside and
down; arrange, confuse, mistake, assort; pretend, like Champollion, to
decipher illegible franks, and deliver with a slight remark, which is
intended as a friendly admonition, the documents of the unlucky wight who
encourages unprivileged correspondents.
</p>
<p>
A letter was delivered to Miss Dacre. She started, exclaimed, blushed, and
tore it open.
</p>
<p>
‘Only you, only you,’ she said, extending her hand to the young Duke,
‘only you were capable of this!’
</p>
<p>
It was a letter from Arundel Dacre, not only written but franked by him.
</p>
<p>
It explained everything that the Duke of St. James might have told them
before; but he preferred hearing all himself, from the delighted and
delightful lips of Miss Dacre, who read to her father her cousin’s letter.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had returned him for one of his Cornish boroughs. It
appeared that Lord St. Maurice was the previous member, who had accepted
the Chiltern Hundreds in his favour.
</p>
<p>
‘You were determined to surprise, as well as delight us,’ said Mr. Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘I am no admirer of mysteries,’ said the Duke; ‘but the fact is, in the
present case, it was not in my power to give you any positive information,
and I had no desire to provide you, after your late disappointment, with
new sources of anxiety. The only person I could take the liberty with, at
so short a notice, was St. Maurice. He, you know, is a Liberal; but he
cannot forget that he is the son of a Tory, and has no great ambition to
take any active part in affairs at present. I anticipated less difficulty
with him than with his father. St. Maurice can command me again when it
suits him; but, I confess to you, I have been surprised at my uncle’s
kindness in this affair. I really have not done justice to his character
before, and regret it. He has behaved in the most kind-hearted and the
most liberal manner, and put me under obligations which I never shall
forget. He seems as desirous of serving my friend as myself; and I assure
you, sir, it would give you pleasure to know in what terms of respect he
speaks of your family, and particularly of Arundel.’
</p>
<p>
‘Arundel says he shall take his seat the morning of the debate. How very
near! how admirably managed! Oh! I never shall recover my surprise and
delight! How good you are!’
</p>
<p>
‘He takes his seat, then, to-morrow,’ said Mr. Dacre, in a musing tone.
‘My letters give a rather nervous account of affairs. We are to win it,
they hope, but by two only. As for the Lords, the majority against us
will, it is said, be somewhat smaller than usual. We shall never triumph,
George, till May is M.P. for the county. Cannot you return her for Pen
Bronnock too?’
</p>
<p>
They talked, as you may suppose, of nothing else. At last Mr. Dacre
remembered an appointment with his bailiff, and proposed to the Duke to
join him, who acceded.
</p>
<p>
‘And I to be left alone this morning, then!’ said Miss Dacre. ‘I am sure,
as they say of children, I can set to nothing.’
</p>
<p>
‘Come and ride with us, then!’
</p>
<p>
‘An excellent idea! Let us canter over to Hauteville! I am just in the
humour for a gallop up the avenue, and feel half emancipated already with
a Dacre in the House! Oh! to-morrow, how nervous I shall be!’
</p>
<p>
‘I will despatch Barrington, then,’ said Mr. Dacre, ‘and join you in ten
minutes.’
</p>
<p>
‘How good you are!’ said Miss Dacre to the Duke. ‘How can we thank you
enough? What can we do for you?’
</p>
<p>
‘You have thanked me enough. What have I done after all? My opportunity to
serve my friends is brief. Is it wonderful that I seize the opportunity?’
</p>
<p>
‘Brief! brief! Why do you always say so? Why do you talk so of leaving
us?’
</p>
<p>
‘My visit to you has been already too long. It must soon end, and I remain
not in England when it ceases.’
</p>
<p>
‘Come and live at Hauteville, and be near us?’
</p>
<p>
He faintly smiled as he said, ‘No, no; my doom is fixed. Hauteville is the
last place that I should choose for my residence, even if I remained in
England. But I hear the horses.’
</p>
<p>
The important night at length arrived, or rather the important messenger,
who brought down, express, a report of its proceedings to Castle Dacre.
</p>
<p>
Nothing is more singular than the various success of men in the House of
Commons. Fellows who have been the oracles of coteries from their birth;
who have gone through the regular process of gold medals, senior
wranglerships, and double firsts, who have nightly sat down amid
tumultuous cheering in debating societies, and can harangue with unruffled
foreheads and unfaltering voice, from one end of a dinner-table to the
other, who, on all occasions, have something to say, and can speak with
fluency on what they know nothing about, no sooner rise in the House than
their spells desert them. All their effrontery vanishes. Commonplace ideas
are rendered even more uninteresting by monotonous delivery; and keenly
alive as even boobies are in those sacred walls to the ridiculous, no one
appears more thoroughly aware of his unexpected and astounding
deficiencies than the orator himself. He regains his seat hot and hard,
sultry and stiff, with a burning cheek and an icy hand, repressing his
breath lest it should give evidence of an existence of which he is
ashamed, and clenching his fist, that the pressure may secretly convince
him that he has not as completely annihilated his stupid body as his false
reputation.
</p>
<p>
On the other hand, persons whom the women have long deplored, and the men
long pitied, as having ‘no manner,’ who blush when you speak to them, and
blunder when they speak to you, suddenly jump up in the House with a
self-confidence, which is only equalled by their consummate ability. And
so it was with Arundel Dacre. He rose the first night that he took his
seat (a great disadvantage, of which no one was more sensible than
himself), and for an hour and a half he addressed the fullest House that
had long been assembled, with the self-possession of an habitual debater.
His clenching argument, and his luminous detail, might have been expected
from one who had the reputation of having been a student. What was more
surprising was, the withering sarcasm that blasted like the simoom, the
brilliant sallies of wit that flashed like a sabre, the gushing eddies of
humour that drowned all opposition and overwhelmed those ponderous and
unwieldy arguments which the producers announced as rocks, but which he
proved to be porpoises. Never was there such a triumphant début; and a
peroration of genuine eloquence, because of genuine feeling, concluded
amid the long and renewed cheers of all parties.
</p>
<p>
The truth is, Eloquence is the child of Knowledge. When a mind is full,
like a wholesome river, it is also clear. Confusion and obscurity are much
oftener the results of ignorance than of inefficiency. Few are the men who
cannot express their meaning, when the occasion demands the energy; as the
lowest will defend their lives with acuteness, and sometimes even with
eloquence. They are masters of their subject. Knowledge must be gained by
ourselves. Mankind may supply us with facts; but the results, even if they
agree with previous ones, must be the work of our own mind. To make others
feel, we must feel ourselves; and to feel ourselves, we must be natural.
This we can never be, when we are vomiting forth the dogmas of the
schools. Knowledge is not a mere collection of words; and it is a delusion
to suppose that thought can be obtained by the aid of any other intellect
than our own. What is repetition, by a curious mystery ceases to be truth,
even if it were truth when it was first heard; as the shadow in a mirror,
though it move and mimic all the actions of vitality, is not life. When a
man is not speaking, or writing, from his own mind, he is as insipid
company as a looking-glass.
</p>
<p>
Before a man can address a popular assembly with command, he must know
something of mankind; and he can know nothing of mankind without knowing
something of himself. Self-knowledge is the property of that man whose
passions have their play, but who ponders over their results. Such a man
sympathises by inspiration with his kind. He has a key to every heart. He
can divine, in the flash of a single thought, all that they require, all
that they wish. Such a man speaks to their very core. All feel that a
master-hand tears off the veil of cant, with which, from necessity, they
have enveloped their souls; for cant is nothing more than the sophistry
which results from attempting to account for what is unintelligible, or to
defend what is improper.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps, although we use the term, we never have had oratory in England.
There is an essential difference between oratory and debating. Oratory
seems an accomplishment confined to the ancients, unless the French
preachers may put in their claim, and some of the Irish lawyers. Mr.
Shiel’s speech in Kent was a fine oration; and the boobies who taunted him
for having got it by rote, were not aware that in doing so he only wisely
followed the example of Pericles, Demosthenes, Lysias, Isocrates,
Hortensius, Cicero, Cæsar, and every great orator of antiquity. Oratory is
essentially the accomplishment of antiquity: it was their most efficient
mode of communicating thought; it was their substitute for printing.
</p>
<p>
I like a good debate; and, when a stripling, used sometimes to be stifled
in the Gallery, or enjoy the easier privileges of a member’s son. I like,
I say, a good debate, and have no objection to a due mixture of bores,
which are a relief. I remember none of the giants of former days; but I
have heard Canning. He was a consummate rhetorician; but there seemed to
me a dash of commonplace in all that he said, and frequent indications of
the absence of an original mind. To the last, he never got clear of ‘Good
God, sir!’ and all the other hackneyed ejaculations of his youthful
debating clubs. The most commanding speaker that I ever listened to is, I
think, Sir Francis Burdett. I never heard him in the House; but at an
election. He was full of music, grace» and dignity, even amid all the
vulgar tumult; and, unlike all mob orators, raised the taste of the
populace to him, instead of lowering his own to theirs. His colleague, Mr.
Hobhouse, seemed to me ill qualified for a demagogue, though he spoke with
power. He is rather too elaborate, and a little heavy, but fluent, and
never weak. His thoughtful and highly-cultivated mind maintains him under
all circumstances; and his breeding never deserts him. Sound sense comes
recommended from his lips by the language of a scholar and the urbanity of
a gentleman.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Brougham, at present, reigns paramount in the House of Commons. I
think the lawyer has spoiled the statesman. He is said to have great
powers of sarcasm. From what I have observed there, I should think very
little ones would be quite sufficient. Many a sneer withers in those
walls, which would scarcely, I think, blight a currant-bush out of them;
and I have seen the House convulsed with raillery which, in other society,
would infallibly settle the rallier to be a bore beyond all tolerance.
Even an idiot can raise a smile. They are so good-natured, or find it so
dull. Mr. Canning’s badinage was the most successful, though I confess I
have listened to few things more calculated to make a man gloomy. But the
House always ran riot, taking everything for granted, and cracked their
universal sides before he opened his mouth. The fault of Mr. Brougham is,
that he holds no intellect at present in great dread, and, consequently,
allows himself on all occasions to run wild. Few men hazard more
unphilosophical observations; but he is safe, because there is no one to
notice them. On all great occasions, Mr. Brougham has come up to the mark;
an infallible test of a man of genius.
</p>
<p>
I hear that Mr. Macaulay is to be returned. If he speaks half as well as
he writes, the House will be in fashion again. I fear that he is one of
those who, like the individual whom he has most studied, will ‘give up to
party what was meant for mankind.’
</p>
<p>
At any rate, he must get rid of his rabidity. He writes now on all
subjects, as if he certainly intended to be a renegade, and was determined
to make the contrast complete.
</p>
<p>
Mr. Peel is the model of a minister, and improves as a speaker; though,
like most of the rest, he is fluent without the least style. He should not
get so often in a passion either, or, if he do, should not get out of one
so easily. His sweet apologies are cloying. His candour—he will do
well to get rid of that. He can make a present of it to Mr. Huskisson, who
is a memorable instance of the value of knowledge, which maintains a man
under all circumstances and all disadvantages, and will.
</p>
<p>
In the Lords, I admire the Duke. The readiness with which he has adopted
the air of a debater, shows the man of genius. There is a gruff, husky
sort of a downright Montaignish naïveté about him, which is quaint,
unusual, and tells. You plainly perceive that he is determined to be a
civilian; and he is as offended if you drop a hint that he occasionally
wears an uniform, as a servant on a holiday if you mention the word <i>livery</i>.
</p>
<p>
Lord Grey speaks with feeling, and is better to hear than to read, though
ever strong and impressive. Lord Holland’s speeches are like a <i>refacimento</i>
of all the suppressed passages in Clarendon, and the notes in the new
edition of Bishop Burnet’s Memoirs: but taste throws a delicate hue over
the curious medley, and the candour of a philosophic mind shows that in
the library of Holland House he can sometimes cease to be a partisan.
</p>
<p>
One thing is clear, that a man may speak very well in the House of
Commons, and fail very completely in the House of Lords. There are two
distinct styles requisite: I intend, in the course of my career, if I have
time, to give a specimen of both. In the Lower House Don Juan may perhaps
be our model; in the Upper House, Paradise Lost.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
BOOK V [CONTINUED]
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<h2>
CHAPTER VII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘To See Ourselves as Others See Us.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
NOTHING was talked of in Yorkshire but Mr. Arundel Dacre’s speech. All the
world flocked to Castle Dacre to compliment and to congratulate; and an
universal hope was expressed that he might come in for the county, if
indeed the success of his eloquence did not enable his uncle to pre-occupy
that honour. Even the calm Mr. Dacre shared the general elation, and told
the Duke of St. James regularly every day that it was all owing to him.
May Dacre was enthusiastic; but her gratitude to him was synonymous with
her love for Arundel, and valued accordingly. The Duke, however, felt that
he had acted at once magnanimously, generously, and wisely. The
consciousness of a noble action is itself ennobling. His spirit expanded
with the exciting effects which his conduct had produced; and he felt
consolation under all his misery from the conviction that he had now
claims to be remembered, and perhaps regarded, when he was no more among
them.
</p>
<p>
The Bill went swimmingly through the Commons, the majority of two
gradually swelling into eleven; and the important night in the Lords was
at hand.
</p>
<p>
‘Lord Faulconcourt writes,’ said Mr. Dacre, ‘that they expect only
thirty-eight against us.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! that terrible House of Lords!’ said Miss Dacre. ‘Let us see: when
does it come on, the day after to-morrow? Scarcely forty-eight hours and
all will be over, and we shall be just where we were. You and your friends
manage very badly in your House,’ she added, addressing herself to the
Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘I do all I can,’ said his Grace, smiling. ‘Burlington has my proxy.’
</p>
<p>
‘That is exactly what I complain of. On such an occasion, there should be
no proxies. Personal attendance would indicate a keener interest in the
result. Ah! if I were Duke of St. James for one night!’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! that you would be Duchess of St. James!’ thought the Duke; but a
despairing lover has no heart for jokes, and so he did not give utterance
to the wish. He felt a little agitated, and caught May Dacre’s eye. She
smiled, and slightly blushed, as if she felt the awkwardness of her
remark, though too late.
</p>
<p>
The Duke retired early, but not to sleep. His mind was busied on a great
deed. It was past midnight before he could compose his agitated feelings
to repose, and by five o’clock he was again up. He dressed himself, and
then put on a rough travelling coat, which, with a shawl, effectually
disguised his person; and putting in one pocket a shirt, and in the other
a few articles from his dressing-case, the Duke of St. James stole out of
Castle Dacre, leaving a note for his host, accounting for his sudden
departure by urgent business at Hauteville, and promising a return in a
day or two.
</p>
<p>
The fresh morn had fully broke. He took his hurried way through the long
dewy grass, and, crossing the Park, gained the road, which, however, was
not the high one. He had yet another hour’s rapid walk, before he could
reach his point of destination; and when that was accomplished, he found
himself at a small public-house, bearing for a sign his own arms, and
situated in the high road opposite his own Park. He was confident that his
person was unknown to the host, or to any of the early idlers who were
lingering about the mail, then breakfasting.
</p>
<p>
‘Any room, guard, to London?’
</p>
<p>
‘Room inside, sir: just going off.’
</p>
<p>
The door was opened, and the Duke of St. James took his seat in the
Edinburgh and York Mail. He had two companions: the first, because
apparently the most important, was a hard-featured, grey-headed gentleman,
with a somewhat supercilious look, and a mingled air of acuteness and
conceit; the other was a humble-looking widow in her weeds, middle-aged,
and sad. These persons had recently roused themselves from their nocturnal
slumbers, and now, after their welcome meal and hurried toilet, looked as
fresh as birds.
</p>
<p>
‘Well! now we are off,’ said the gentleman. ‘Very neat, cleanly little
house this, ma’am,’ continued he to his companion. ‘What is the sign?’
‘The Hauteville Arms.’ ‘Oh! Hauteville; that is—that is, let me see!
the St. James family. Ah! a pretty fool that young man has made of
himself, by all accounts. Eh! sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have reason to believe so,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘I suppose this is his park, eh? Hem! going to London, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘I am.’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! hem! Hauteville Park, I suppose, this. Fine ground wasted. What the
use of parks is, I can’t say.’
</p>
<p>
‘The place seems well kept up,’ said the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘So much the worse; I wish it were in ruins.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, for my part,’ continued the widow in a low voice, ‘I think a park
nearly the most beautiful thing we have. Foreigners, you know, sir——’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! I know what you are going to say,’ observed the gentleman in a curt,
gruffish voice. ‘It is all nonsense. Foreigners are fools. Don’t talk to
me of beauty; a mere word. What is the use of all this? It produces about
as much benefit to society as its owner does.’
</p>
<p>
‘And do you think his existence, then, perfectly useless?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘To be sure, I do. So the world will, some day or other. We are opening
our eyes fast. Men begin to ask themselves what the use of an aristocracy
is. That is the test, sir.’
</p>
<p>
‘I think it not very difficult to demonstrate the use of an aristocracy,’
mildly observed the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! nonsense, sir! I know what you are going to say; but we have got
beyond all that. Have you read this, sir? This article on the aristocracy
in “The Screw and Lever Review?”’
</p>
<p>
‘I have not, sir.’
</p>
<p>
‘Then I advise you to make yourself master of it, and you will talk no
more of the aristocracy. A few more articles like this, and a few more
noblemen like the man who has got this park, and people will open their
eyes at last.’
</p>
<p>
‘I should think,’ said his Grace, ‘that the follies of the man who had got
this park have been productive of evil only to himself. In fact, sir,
according to your own system, a prodigal noble seems to be a very
desirable member of the commonwealth and a complete leveller.’
</p>
<p>
‘We shall get rid of them all soon, sir,’ said his companion, with a
malignant smile.
</p>
<p>
‘I have heard that he is very young, sir,’ remarked the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘What is that to you or me?’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! youth is a trying time. Let us hope the best! He may turn out well
yet, poor soul!’
</p>
<p>
‘I hope not. Don’t talk to me of poor souls. There is a poor soul,’ said
the utilitarian, pointing to an old man breaking stones on the highway.
‘That is what I call a poor soul, not a young prodigal, whose life has
been one long career of infamous debauchery.’
</p>
<p>
‘You appear to have heard much of this young nobleman,’ said the Duke;
‘but it does not follow, sir, that you have heard truth.’
</p>
<p>
‘Very true, sir,’ said the widow. ‘The world is very foul-mouthed. Let us
hope he is not so very bad.’
</p>
<p>
‘I tell you what, my friends; you know nothing about what you are talking
of. I don’t speak without foundation. You have not the least idea, sir,
how this fellow has lived. Now, what I am going to tell you is a fact: I
know it to be a fact. A very intimate friend of mine, who knows a person,
who is a very intimate friend of an intimate friend of a person, who knows
the Duke of St. James, told me himself, that one night they had for supper—what
do you think ma’am?—Venison cutlets, each served up in a hundred
pound note!’
</p>
<p>
‘Mercy!’ exclaimed the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘And do you believe it?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Believe it! I know it!’
</p>
<p>
‘He is very young,’ said the widow. ‘Youth is a very trying time.’
</p>
<p>
‘Nothing to do with his youth. It’s the system, the infernal system. If
that man had to work for his bread, like everybody else, do you think he
would dine off bank notes? No! to be sure he wouldn’t! It’s the system.’
</p>
<p>
‘Young people are very wild!’ said the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘Pooh! ma’am. Nonsense! Don’t talk cant. If a man be properly educated, he
is as capable at one-and-twenty of managing anything, as at any time in
his life; more capable. Look at the men who write “The Screw and Lever;”
the first men in the country. Look at them. Not one of age. Look at the
man who wrote this article on the aristocracy: young Duncan Macmorrogh.
Look at him, I say, the first man in the country by far.’
</p>
<p>
‘I never heard his name before,’ calmly observed the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Not heard his name? Not heard of young Duncan Macmorrogh, the first man
of the day, by far; not heard of him? Go and ask the Marquess of
Sheepshead what he thinks of him. Go and ask Lord Two and Two what he
thinks of him. Duncan dines with Lord Two and Two every week.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke smiled, and his companion proceeded.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, again, look at his friends. There is young First Principles. What a
«head that fellow has got! Here, this article on India is by him. He’ll
knock up their Charter. He is a clerk in the India House. Up to the
detail, you see. Let me read you this passage on monopolies. Then there is
young Tribonian Quirk. By G—, what a mind that fellow has got! By G—,
nothing but first principles will go down with these fellows! They laugh
at anything else. By G—, sir, they look upon the administration of
the present day as a parcel of sucking babes! When I was last in town,
Quirk told me that he would not give that for all the public men that ever
existed! He is keeping his terms at Gray’s Inn. This article on a new Code
is by him. Shows as plain as light, that, by sticking close to first
principles, the laws of the country might be carried in every man’s
waistcoat pocket.’
</p>
<p>
The coach stopped, and a colloquy ensued.
</p>
<p>
‘Any room to Selby?’
</p>
<p>
‘Outside or in?’
</p>
<p>
‘Out, to be sure.’
</p>
<p>
‘Room inside only.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well! in then.’
</p>
<p>
The door opened, and a singularly quaint-looking personage presented
himself. He was very stiff and prim in his appearance; dressed in a blue
coat and scarlet waistcoat, with a rich bandanna handkerchief tied very
neatly round his neck, and a very new hat, to which his head seemed little
habituated.
</p>
<p>
‘Sorry to disturb you, ladies and gentlemen: not exactly the proper place
for me. Don’t be alarmed. I’m always respectful wherever I am. My rule
through life is to be respectful.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, now, in with you,’ said the guard.
</p>
<p>
‘Be respectful, my friend, and don’t talk so to an old soldier who has
served his king and his country.’
</p>
<p>
Off they went.
</p>
<p>
‘Majesty’s service?’ asked the stranger of the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘I have not that honour.’
</p>
<p>
‘Hum! Lawyer, perhaps?’
</p>
<p>
‘Not a lawyer.’
</p>
<p>
‘Hum! A gentleman, I suppose?’
</p>
<p>
The Duke was silent; and so the stranger addressed himself to the
anti-aristocrat, who seemed vastly annoyed by the intrusion of so low a
personage.
</p>
<p>
‘Going to London, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘I tell you what, my friend, at once; I never answer impertinent
questions.’
</p>
<p>
‘No offence, I hope, sir! Sorry to offend. I’m always respectful. Madam! I
hope I don’t inconvenience you; I should be sorry to do that. We sailors,
you know, are always ready to accommodate the ladies.’
</p>
<p>
‘Sailor!’ exclaimed the acute utilitarian, his curiosity stifling his
hauteur. ‘Why! just now, I thought you were a soldier.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well! so I am.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, my friend, you are a conjuror then.’
</p>
<p>
‘No, I ayn’t; I’m a marine.’
</p>
<p>
‘A very useless person, then.’
</p>
<p>
‘What do you mean?’
</p>
<p>
‘I mean to say, that if the sailors were properly educated, such an
amphibious corps would never have been formed, and some of the most
atrocious sinecures ever tolerated would consequently not have existed.’
</p>
<p>
‘Sinecures! I never heard of him. I served under Lord Combermere. Maybe
you have heard of him, ma’am? A nice man; a beautiful man. I have seen him
stand in a field like that, with the shot falling about him like hail, and
caring no more for them than peas.’
</p>
<p>
‘If that were for bravado,’ said the utilitarian, ‘I think it a very silly
thing.’
</p>
<p>
‘Bravado! I never heard of him. It was for his king and country.’
</p>
<p>
‘Was it in India?’ asked the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘In a manner, ma’am,’ said the marine, very courteously. ‘At Bhurtpore, up
by Pershy, and thereabouts; the lake of Cashmere, where all the shawls
come from. Maybe you have heard of Cashmere, ma’am?’
</p>
<p>
‘“Who has not heard of the vale of Cashmere!’” hummed the Duke to himself.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! I thought so,’ said the marine; ‘all people know much the same; for
some have seen, and some have read. I can’t read, but I have served my
king and country for five-and-twenty years, and I have used my eyes.’
</p>
<p>
‘Better than reading,’ said the Duke, humouring the character.
</p>
<p>
‘I’ll tell you what,’ said the marine, with a knowing look. ‘I suspect
there is a d—d lot of lies in your books. I landed in England last
seventh of June, and went to see St. Paul’s. “This is the greatest
building in the world,” says the man. Thinks I, “You lie.” I did not tell
him so, because I am always respectful. I tell you what, sir; maybe you
think St. Paul’s the greatest building in the world, but I tell you what,
it’s a lie. I have seen one greater. Maybe, ma’am, you think I am telling
you a lie too; but I am not. Go and ask Captain Jones, of the 58th. I went
with him: I give you his name: go and ask Captain Jones, of the 58th, if I
be telling you a lie. The building I mean is the palace of the Sultan
Acber; for I have served my king and country five-and-twenty years last
seventh of June, and have seen strange things; all built of precious
stones, ma’am. What do you think of that? All built of precious stones;
carnelian, of which you make your seals; as sure as I’m a sinner saved. If
I ayn’t speaking the truth, I am not going to Selby. Maybe you’d like to
know why I am going to Selby? I’ll tell you what. Five-and-twenty years
have I served my king and country last seventh of June. Now I begin with
the beginning. I ran away from home when I was eighteen, you see! and,
after the siege of Bhurtpore, I was sitting on a bale of silk alone, and I
said to myself, I’ll go and see my mother. Sure as I am going to Selby,
that’s the whole. I landed in England last seventh of June, absent
five-and-twenty years, serving my king and country. I sent them a letter
last night. I put it in the post myself. Maybe I shall be there before my
letter now.’
</p>
<p>
‘To be sure you will,’ said the utilitarian; ‘what made you do such a
silly thing? Why, your letter is in this coach.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well! I shouldn’t wonder. I shall be there before my letter now. All
nonsense, letters: my wife wrote it at Falmouth.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are married, then?’ said the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘Ayn’t I, though? The sweetest cretur, madam, though I say it before you,
that ever lived.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why did you not bring your wife with you?’ asked the widow.
</p>
<p>
‘And wouldn’t I be very glad to? but she wouldn’t come among strangers at
once; and so I have got a letter, which she wrote for me, to put in the
post, in case they are glad to see me, and then she will come on.’
</p>
<p>
‘And you, I suppose, are not sorry to have a holiday?’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Ayn’t I, though? Ayn’t I as low about leaving her as ever I was in my
life; and so is the poor cretur. She won’t eat a bit of victuals till I
come back, I’ll be sworn; not a bit, I’ll be bound to say that; and
myself, although I am an old soldier and served my king and country for
five-and-twenty years, and so got knocked about, and used to anything, as
it were, I don’t know how it is, but I always feel queer whenever I am
away from her. I shan’t make a hearty meal till I see her. Somehow or
other, when I am away from her, everything feels dry in the throat.’
</p>
<p>
‘You are very fond of her, I see,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘And ought I not to be? Didn’t I ask her three times before she said <i>yes</i>?
Those are the wives for wear, sir. None of the fruit that falls at a
shaking for me! Hasn’t she stuck by me in every climate, and in every land
I was in? Not a fellow in the company had such a wife. Wouldn’t I throw
myself off this coach this moment, to give her a moment’s peace? That I
would, though; d——me if I wouldn’t.’
</p>
<p>
‘Hush! hush!’ said the widow; ‘never swear. I am afraid you talk too much
of your love,’ she added, with a faint smile.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! you don’t know my wife, ma’am. Are you married, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have not that happiness,’ said the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, there is nothing like it! but don’t take the fruit that falls at a
shake. But this, I suppose, is Selby?’
</p>
<p>
The marine took his departure, having stayed long enough to raise in the
young Duke’s mind curious feelings.
</p>
<p>
As he was plunged into reverie, and as the widow was silent, conversation
was not resumed until the coach stopped for dinner.
</p>
<p>
‘We stop here half-an-hour, gentlemen,’ said the guard. ‘Mrs. Burnet,’ he
continued, to the widow, ‘let me hand you out.’
</p>
<p>
They entered the parlour of the inn. The Duke, who was ignorant of the
etiquette of the road, did not proceed to the discharge of his duties, as
the youngest guest, with all the promptness desired by his
fellow-travellers.
</p>
<p>
‘Now, sir,’ said an outside, ‘I will thank you for a slice of that mutton,
and will join you, if you have no objection in a bottle of sherry.’
</p>
<p>
‘What you please, sir. May I have the pleasure of helping you, ma’am?’
</p>
<p>
After dinner the Duke took advantage of a vacant outside place.
</p>
<p>
Tom Rawlins was the model of a guard. Young, robust, and gay, he had a
letter, a word, or a wink for all he met. All seasons were the same to
him; night or day he was ever awake, and ever alive to all the interest of
the road; now joining in conversation with a passenger, shrewd, sensible,
and respectful; now exchanging a little elegant badinage with the
coachman; now bowing to a pretty girl; now quizzing a passer-by; he was
off and on his seat in an instant, and, in the whiff of his cigar, would
lock a wheel, or unlock a passenger.
</p>
<p>
From him the young Duke learned that his fellow-inside was Mr. Duncan
Macmorrogh, senior, a writer at Edinburgh, and, of course, the father of
the first man of the day. Tom Rawlins could not tell his Grace as much
about the principal writer in ‘The Screw and Lever Review’ as we can; for
Tom was no patron of our periodical literature, farther than a police
report in the Publican’s Journal. Young Duncan Macmorrogh was a limb of
the law, who had just brought himself into notice by a series of articles
in ‘The Screw and Lever,’ in which he had subjected the universe piecemeal
to his critical analysis. Duncan Macmorrogh cut up the creation, and got a
name. His attack upon mountains was most violent, and proved, by its
personality, that he had come from the Lowlands. He demonstrated the
inutility of all elevation, and declared that the Andes were the
aristocracy of the globe. Rivers he rather patronised; but flowers he
quite pulled to pieces, and proved them to be the most useless of
existences. Duncan Macmorrogh informed us that we were quite wrong in
supposing ourselves to be the miracle of creation. On the contrary, he
avowed that already there were various pieces of machinery of far more
importance than man; and he had no doubt, in time, that a superior race
would arise, got by a steam-engine on a spinning-jenny.
</p>
<p>
The other ‘inside’ was the widow of a former curate of a Northumbrian
village. Some friend had obtained for her only child a clerkship in a
public office, and for some time this idol of her heart had gone on
prospering; but unfortunately, of late, Charles Burnet had got into a bad
set, was now involved in a terrible scrape, and, as Tom Rawlins feared,
must lose his situation and go to ruin.
</p>
<p>
‘She was half distracted when she heard it first, poor creature! I have
known her all my life, sir. Many the kind word and glass of ale I have had
at her house, and that’s what makes me feel for her, you see. I do what I
can to make the journey easy to her, for it is a pull at her years. God
bless her! there is not a better body in this world; that I will, say for
her. When I was a boy, I used to be the playfellow in a manner with
Charley Burnet: a gay lad, sir, as ever you’d wish to see in a summer’s
day, and the devil among the girls always, and that’s been the ruin of
him; and as open-a-hearted fellow as ever lived. D——me! I’d
walk to the land’s end to save him, if it were only for his mother’s sake,
to say nothing of himself.’
</p>
<p>
‘And can nothing be done?’ asked the Duke.
</p>
<p>
‘Why, you see, he is back in £ s. d.; and, to make it up, the poor body
must sell her all, and he won’t let her do it, and wrote a letter like a
prince (No room, sir), as fine a letter as ever you read (Hilloa, there!
What! are you asleep?)—as ever you read on a summer’s day. I didn’t
see it, but my mother told me it was as good as e’er a one of the old
gentleman’s sermons. “Mother,” said he, “my sins be upon my own head. I
can bear disgrace (How do, Mr. Wilkins?), but I cannot bear to see you a
beggar!”’
</p>
<p>
‘Poor fellow!’
</p>
<p>
‘Ay! sir, as good-a-hearted fellow as ever you’d wish to meet!’
</p>
<p>
‘Is he involved to a great extent, think you?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! a long figure, sir (I say, Betty, I’ve got a letter for you from your
sweetheart), a very long figure, sir (Here, take it!); I should be sorry
(Don’t blush; no message?)—I should be sorry to take two hundred
pounds to pay it. No, I wouldn’t take two hundred pounds, that I wouldn’t
(I say, Jacob, stop at old Bag Smith’s).’
</p>
<p>
Night came on, and the Duke resumed his inside place. Mr. Macmorrogh went
to sleep over his son’s article; and the Duke feigned slumber, though he
was only indulging in reverie. He opened his eyes, and a light, which they
passed, revealed the countenance of the widow. Tears were stealing down
her face.
</p>
<p>
‘I have no mother; I have no one to weep for me,’ thought the Duke; ‘and
yet, if I had been in this youth’s station, my career probably would have
been as fatal. Let me assist her. Alas! how I have misused my power, when,
even to do this slight deed, I am obliged to hesitate, and consider
whether it be practicable.’
</p>
<p>
The coach again stopped for a quarter of an hour. The Duke had, in
consideration of the indefinite period of his visit, supplied himself
amply with money on repairing to Dacre. Besides his purse, which was well
stored for the road, he had somewhat more than three hundred pounds in his
notebook. He took advantage of their tarrying, to inclose it and its
contents in a sheet of paper with these lines:
</p>
<p>
‘An unknown friend requests Mrs. Burnet to accept this token of his
sympathy with suffering virtue.’
</p>
<p>
Determined to find some means to put this in her possession before their
parting, he resumed his place. The Scotchman now prepared for his night’s
repose. He produced a pillow for his back, a bag for his feet, and a cap
for his head. These, and a glass of brandy-and-water, in time produced a
due effect, and he was soon fast asleep. Even to the widow, night brought
some solace. The Duke alone found no repose. Unused to travelling in
public conveyances at night, and unprovided with any of the ingenious
expedients of a mail coach adventurer, he felt all the inconveniences of
an inexperienced traveller. The seat was unendurably hard, his back ached,
his head whirled, the confounded sherry, slight as was his portion, had
made him feverish, and he felt at once excited and exhausted. He was sad,
too; very depressed. Alone, and no longer surrounded with that splendour
which had hitherto made solitude precious, life seemed stripped of all its
ennobling spirit. His energy vanished. He repented his rashness; and the
impulse of the previous night, which had gathered fresh power from the
dewy moon, vanished. He felt alone, and without a friend, and night passed
without a moment’s slumber, watching the driving clouds.
</p>
<p>
The last fifteen miles seemed longer than the whole journey. At St.
Alban’s he got out, took a cup of coffee with Tom Rawlins, and, although
the morning was raw, again seated himself by his side. In the first gloomy
little suburb Mrs. Burnet got out. The Duke sent Rawlins after her with
the parcel, with peremptory instructions to leave it. He watched the widow
protesting it was not hers, his faithful emissary appealing to the
direction, and with delight he observed it left in her hands. They rattled
into London, stopped in Lombard Street, reached Holborn, entered an
archway; the coachman threw the whip and reins from his now careless
hands. The Duke bade farewell to Tom Rawlins, and was shown to a bed.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER VIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>The Duke Makes a Speech</i>
</pre>
<p>
THE return of morning had in some degree dissipated the gloom that had
settled on the young Duke during the night. Sound and light made him feel
less forlorn, and for a moment his soul again responded to his high
purpose. But now he was to seek necessary repose. In vain. His heated
frame and anxious mind were alike restless. He turned, he tossed in his
bed, but he could not banish from his ear the whirling sound of his late
conveyance, the snore of Mr. Macmorrogh, and the voice of Tom Rawlins. He
kept dwelling on every petty incident of his journey, and repeating in his
mind every petty saying. His determination to slumber made him even less
sleepy. Conscious that repose was absolutely necessary to the performance
of his task, and dreading that the boon was now unattainable, he became
each moment more feverish and more nervous; a crowd of half-formed ideas
and images flitted over his heated brain. Failure, misery, May Dacre, Tom
Rawlins, boiled beef, Mrs. Burnet, the aristocracy, mountains and the
marine, and the tower of St. Alban’s cathedral, hurried along in infinite
confusion. But there is nothing like experience. In a state of
distraction, he remembered the hopeless but refreshing sleep he had gained
after his fatal adventure at Brighton. He jumped out of bed, and threw
himself on the floor, and in a few minutes, from the same cause, his
excited senses subsided into slumber.
</p>
<p>
He awoke; the sun was shining through his rough shutter. It was noon. He
jumped up, rang the bell, and asked for a bath. The chambermaid did not
seem exactly to comprehend his meaning, but said she would speak to the
waiter. He was the first gentleman who ever had asked for a bath at the
Dragon with Two Tails. The waiter informed him that he might get a bath,
he believed, at the Hum-mums. The Duke dressed, and to the Hummums he then
took his way. As he was leaving the yard, he was followed by an ostler,
who, in a voice musically hoarse, thus addressed him:
</p>
<p>
‘Have you seen missis, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘Do you mean me? No, I have not seen your missis;’ and the Duke proceeded.
</p>
<p>
‘Sir, sir,’ said the ostler, running after him, ‘I think you said you had
not seen missis?’
</p>
<p>
‘You think right,’ said the Duke, astonished; and again he walked on.
</p>
<p>
‘Sir, sir,’ said the pursuing ostler, ‘I don’t think you have got any
luggage?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! I beg your pardon,’ said the Duke; ‘I see it. I am in your debt; but
I meant to return.’
</p>
<p>
‘No doubt on’t, sir; but when gemmen don’t have no luggage, they sees
missis before they go, sir.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, what am I in your debt? I can pay you here.’
</p>
<p>
‘Five shillings, sir.’
</p>
<p>
‘Here!’ said the Duke; ‘and tell me when a coach leaves this place
to-morrow for Yorkshire.’
</p>
<p>
‘Half-past six o’clock in the morning precisely,’ said the ostler.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, my good fellow, I depend upon your securing me a place; and that is
for yourself,’ added his Grace, throwing him a sovereign. ‘Now, mind; I
depend upon you.’
</p>
<p>
The man stared as if he had been suddenly taken into partnership with
missis; at length he found his tongue.
</p>
<p>
‘Your honour may depend upon me. Where would you like to sit? In or out?
Back to your horses, or the front? Get you the box if you like. Where’s
your great coat, sir? I’ll brush it for you.’
</p>
<p>
The bath and the breakfast brought our hero round a good deal, and at
half-past two he stole to a solitary part of St. James’s Park, to stretch
his legs and collect his senses. We must now let our readers into a
secret, which perhaps they have already unravelled. The Duke had hurried
to London with the determination, not only of attending the debate, but of
participating in it. His Grace was no politician; but the question at
issue was one simple in its nature and so domestic in its spirit, that few
men could have arrived at his period of life without having heard its
merits, both too often and too amply discussed. He was master of all the
points of interest, and he had sufficient confidence in himself to believe
that he could do them justice. He walked up and down, conning over in his
mind not only the remarks which he intended to make, but the very language
in which he meant to offer them. As he formed sentences, almost for the
first time, his courage and his fancy alike warmed: his sanguine spirit
sympathised with the nobility of the imaginary scene, and inspirited the
intonations of his modulated voice.
</p>
<p>
About four o’clock he repaired to the House. Walking up one of the
passages his progress was stopped by the back of an individual bowing with
great civility to a patronising peer, and my-lording him with painful
repetition. The nobleman was Lord Fitz-pompey; the bowing gentleman, Mr.
Duncan Macmorrogh, the anti-aristocrat, and father of the first man of the
day.
</p>
<p>
‘George! is it possible!’ exclaimed Lord Fitz-pompey. ‘I will speak to you
in the House,’ said the Duke, passing on, and bowing to Mr. Duncan
Macmorrogh.
</p>
<p>
He recalled his proxy from the Duke of Burlington, and accounted for his
presence to many astonished friends by being on his way to the Continent;
and, passing through London, thought he might as well be present,
particularly as he was about to reside for some time in Catholic
countries. It was the last compliment that he could pay his future host.
‘Give me a pinch of snuff.’
</p>
<p>
The debate began. Don’t be alarmed. I shall not describe it. Five or six
peers had spoken, and one of the ministers had just sat down when the Duke
of St. James rose. He was extremely nervous, but he repeated to himself
the name of May Dacre for the hundredth time, and proceeded. He was nearly
commencing ‘May Dacre’ instead of ‘My Lords,’ but he escaped this blunder.
For the first five or ten minutes he spoke in almost as cold and lifeless
a style as when he echoed the King’s speech; but he was young and seldom
troubled them, and was listened to therefore with indulgence. The Duke
warmed, and a courteous ‘hear, hear,’ frequently sounded; the Duke became
totally free from embarrassment, and spoke with eloquence and energy. A
cheer, a stranger in the House of Lords, rewarded and encouraged him. As
an Irish landlord, his sincerity could not be disbelieved when he
expressed his conviction of the safety of emancipation; but it was as an
English proprietor and British noble that it was evident that his Grace
felt most keenly upon this important measure. He described with power the
peculiar injustice of the situation of the English Catholics. He professed
to feel keenly upon this subject, because his native county had made him
well acquainted with the temper of this class; he painted in glowing terms
the loyalty, the wealth, the influence, the noble virtues of his Catholic
neighbours; and he closed a speech of an hour’s duration, in which he had
shown that a worn subject was susceptible of novel treatment, and novel
interest, amid loud and general cheers. The Lords gathered round him, and
many personally congratulated him upon his distinguished success. The
debate took its course. At three o’clock the pro-Catholics found
themselves in a minority, but a minority in which the prescient might have
well discovered the herald of future justice. The speech of the Duke of
St. James was the speech of the night.
</p>
<p>
The Duke walked into White’s. It was crowded. The first man who welcomed
him was Annesley. He congratulated the Duke with a warmth for which the
world did not give him credit.
</p>
<p>
‘I assure you, my dear St. James, that I am one of the few people whom
this display has not surprised. I have long observed that you were formed
for something better than mere frivolity. And between ourselves I am sick
of it. Don’t be surprised if you hear that I go to Algiers. Depend upon it
that I am on the point of doing something dreadful.’ ‘Sup with me, St.
James,’ said Lord Squib; ‘I will ask O’Connell to meet you.’
</p>
<p>
Lord Fitz-pompey and Lord Darrell were profuse in congratulations; but he
broke away from them to welcome the man who now advanced. He was one of
whom he never thought without a shudder, but whom, for all that, he
greatly liked.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Duke of St. James,’ said Arundel Dacre, ‘how ashamed I am that
this is the first time I have personally thanked you for all your
goodness!’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Dacre, I have to thank you for proving for the first time to the
world that I was not without discrimination.’
</p>
<p>
‘No, no,’ said Dacre, gaily and easily; ‘all the congratulations and all
the compliments to-night shall be for you. Believe me, my dear friend, I
share your triumph.’
</p>
<p>
They shook hands with earnestness.
</p>
<p>
‘May will read your speech with exultation,’ said Arundel. ‘I think we
must thank her for making you an orator.’
</p>
<p>
The Duke faintly smiled and shook his head.
</p>
<p>
‘And how are all our Yorkshire friends?’ continued Arundel. ‘I am
disappointed again in getting down to them; but I hope in the course of
the month to pay them a visit.’
</p>
<p>
‘I shall see them in a day or two,’ said the Duke. ‘I pay Mr. Dacre one
more visit before my departure form England.’
</p>
<p>
‘Are you then indeed going?’ asked Arundel, in a kind voice.
</p>
<p>
‘For ever.’
</p>
<p>
‘Nay, nay, <i>ever</i> is a strong word.’
</p>
<p>
‘It becomes, then, my feelings. However, we will not talk of this. Can I
bear any letter for you?’
</p>
<p>
‘I have just written,’ replied Arundel, in a gloomy voice, and with a
changing countenance, ‘and therefore will not trouble you. And yet——’
</p>
<p>
‘What!’
</p>
<p>
‘And yet the letter is an important letter: to me. The post, to be sure,
never does miss; but if it were not troubling your Grace too much, I
almost would ask you to be its bearer.’
</p>
<p>
‘It will be there as soon,’ said the Duke, ‘for I shall be off in an
hour.’
</p>
<p>
‘I will take it out of the box then,’ said Arundel; and he fetched it.
‘Here is the letter,’ said he on his return: ‘pardon me if I impress upon
you its importance. Excuse this emotion, but, indeed, this letter decides
my fate. My happiness for life is dependent on its reception!’
</p>
<p>
He spoke with an air and voice of agitation.
</p>
<p>
The Duke received the letter in a manner scarcely less disturbed; and with
a hope that they might meet before his departure, faintly murmured by one
party, and scarcely responded to by the other, they parted.
</p>
<p>
‘Well, now,’ said the Duke, ‘the farce is complete; and I have come to
London to be the bearer of his offered heart! I like this, now. Is there a
more contemptible, a more ludicrous, absolutely ludicrous ass than myself?
Fear not for its delivery, most religiously shall it be consigned to the
hand of its owner. The fellow has paid a compliment to my honour or my
simplicity: I fear the last, and really I feel rather proud. But away with
these feelings! Have I not seen her in his arms? Pah! Thank God! I spoke.
At least, I die in a blaze. Even Annesley does not think me quite a fool.
O, May Dacre, May Dacre! if you were but mine, I should be the happiest
fellow that ever breathed!’
</p>
<p>
He breakfasted, and then took his way to the Dragon with Two Tails. The
morning was bright, and fresh, and beautiful, even in London. Joy came
upon his heart, in spite of all his loneliness, and he was glad and
sanguine. He arrived just in time. The coach was about to start. The
faithful ostler was there with his great-coat, and the Duke found that he
had three fellow-passengers. They were lawyers, and talked for the first
two hours of nothing but the case respecting which they were going down
into the country. At Woburn, a despatch arrived with the newspapers. All
purchased one, and the Duke among the rest. He was well reported, and
could now sympathise with, instead of smile at, the anxiety of Lord
Darrell.
</p>
<p>
‘The young Duke of St. James seems to have distinguished himself very
much,’ said the first lawyer.
</p>
<p>
‘So I observe,’ said the second one. ‘The leading article calls our
attention to his speech as the most brilliant delivered.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am surprised,’ said the third. ‘I thought he was quite a different sort
of person.’
</p>
<p>
‘By no means,’ said the first: ‘I have always had a high opinion of him. I
am not one of those who think the worse of a young man because he is a
little wild.’
</p>
<p>
‘Nor I,’ said the second. ‘Young blood, you know, is young blood.’
</p>
<p>
‘A very intimate friend of mine, who knows the Duke of St. James well,
once told me,’ rejoined the first, ‘that I was quite mistaken about him;
that he was a person of no common talents; well read, quite a man of the
world, and a good deal of wit, too; and let me tell you that in these days
wit is no common thing.’
</p>
<p>
‘Certainly not,’ said the third. ‘We have no wit now.’
</p>
<p>
‘And a kind-hearted, generous fellow,’ continued the first, ‘and <i>very</i>
unaffected.’
</p>
<p>
‘I can’t bear an affected man,’ said the second, without looking off his
paper. ‘He seems to have made a very fine speech indeed.’
</p>
<p>
‘I should not wonder at his turning out something great,’ said the third.
</p>
<p>
‘I have no doubt of it,’ said the second.
</p>
<p>
‘Many of these wild fellows do.’
</p>
<p>
‘He is not so wild as we think,’ said the first.
</p>
<p>
‘But he is done up,’ said the second.
</p>
<p>
‘Is he indeed?’ said the third. ‘Perhaps by making a speech he wants a
place?’
</p>
<p>
‘People don’t make speeches for nothing,’ said the third.
</p>
<p>
‘I shouldn’t wonder if he is after a place in the Household,’ said the
second.
</p>
<p>
‘Depend upon it, he looks to something more active,’ said the first.
</p>
<p>
‘Perhaps he would like to be head of the Admiralty?’ said the second.
</p>
<p>
‘Or the Treasury?’ said the third.
</p>
<p>
‘That is impossible!’ said the first. ‘He is too young.’
</p>
<p>
‘He is as old as Pitt,’ said the third.
</p>
<p>
‘I hope he will resemble him in nothing but his age, then,’ said the
first.
</p>
<p>
‘I look upon Pitt as the first man that ever lived,’ said the third.
</p>
<p>
‘What!’ said the first. ‘The man who worked up the national debt to nearly
eight hundred millions!’
</p>
<p>
‘What of that?’ said the third. ‘I look upon the national debt as the
source of all our prosperity.’
</p>
<p>
‘The source of all our taxes, you mean.’
</p>
<p>
‘What is the harm of taxes?’
</p>
<p>
‘The harm is, that you will soon have no trade; and when you have no
trade, you will have no duties; and when you have no duties, you will have
no dividends; and when you have no dividends, you will have no law; and
then, where is your source of prosperity?’ said the first.
</p>
<p>
But here the coach stopped, and the Duke got out for an hour.
</p>
<p>
By midnight they had reached a town not more than thirty miles from Dacre.
The Duke was quite exhausted, and determined to stop. In half an hour he
enjoyed that deep, dreamless slumber, with which no luxury can compete.
One must have passed restless nights for years, to be able to appreciate
the value of sound sleep.
</p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER IX.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>A Last Appeal</i>
</pre>
<p>
HE ROSE early, and managed to reach Dacre at the breakfast hour of the
family. He discharged his chaise at the Park gate, and entered the house
unseen. He took his way along a corridor lined with plants, which led to
the small and favourite room in which the morning meetings of May and
himself always took place when they were alone. As he lightly stepped
along, he heard a voice that he could not mistake, as it were in animated
converse. Agitated by sounds which ever created in him emotion, for a
moment he paused. He starts, his eye sparkles with strange delight, a
flush comes over his panting features, half of modesty, half of triumph.
He listens to his own speech from the lips of the woman he loves. She is
reading to her father with melodious energy the passage in which he
describes the high qualities of his Catholic neighbours. The intonations
of the voice indicate the deep sympathy of the reader. She ceases. He
hears the admiring exclamation of his host. He rallies his strength, he
advances, he stands before them. She utters almost a shriek of delightful
surprise as she welcomes him.
</p>
<p>
How much there was to say! how much to ask! how much to answer! Even Mr.
Dacre poured forth questions like a boy. But May: she could not speak, but
leant forward in her chair with an eager ear, and a look of
congratulation, that rewarded him for all his exertion. Everything was to
be told. How he went; whether he slept in the mail; where he went; what he
did; whom he saw; what they said; what they thought; all must be answered.
Then fresh exclamations of wonder, delight, and triumph. The Duke forgot
everything but his love, and for three hours felt the happiest of men.
</p>
<p>
At length Mr. Dacre rose and looked at his watch with a shaking head. ‘I
have a most important appointment,’ said he, ‘and I must gallop to keep
it. God bless you, my dear St. James! I could stay talking with you for
ever; but you must be utterly wearied. Now, my dear boy, go to bed.’
</p>
<p>
‘To bed!’ exclaimed the Duke. ‘Why, Tom Rawlins would laugh at you!’
</p>
<p>
‘And who is Tom Rawlins?’
</p>
<p>
‘Ah! I cannot tell you everything; but assuredly I am not going to bed.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, May, I leave him to your care; but do not let him talk any more.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! sir,’ said the Duke, ‘I really had forgotten. I am the bearer to you,
sir, of a letter from Mr. Arundel Dacre.’ He gave it him.
</p>
<p>
As Mr. Dacre read the communication, his countenance changed, and the
smile which before was on his face, vanished. But whether he were
displeased, or only serious, it was impossible to ascertain, although the
Duke watched him narrowly. At length he said, ‘May! here is a letter from
Arundel, in which you are much interested.’
</p>
<p>
‘Give it me, then, papa!’
</p>
<p>
‘No, my love; we must speak of this together. But I am pressed for time.
When I come home. Remember.’ He quitted the room.
</p>
<p>
They were alone: the Duke began again talking, and Miss Dacre put her
finger to her mouth, with a smile.
</p>
<p>
‘I assure you,’ said he, ‘I am not wearied. I slept at——y, and
the only thing I now want is a good walk. Let me be your companion this
morning!’
</p>
<p>
‘I was thinking of paying nurse a visit. What say you?’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! I am ready; anywhere.’
</p>
<p>
She ran for her bonnet, and he kissed her handkerchief, which she left
behind, and, I believe, everything else in the room which bore the
slightest relation to her. And then the recollection of Arundel’s letter
came over him, and his joy fled. When she returned, he was standing before
the fire, gloomy and dull.
</p>
<p>
‘I fear you are tired,’ she said.
</p>
<p>
‘Not in the least.’
</p>
<p>
‘I shall never forgive myself if all this exertion make you ill.’
</p>
<p>
‘Why not?’
</p>
<p>
‘Because, although I will not tell papa, I am sure my nonsense is the
cause of your having gone to London.’
</p>
<p>
‘It is probable; for you are the cause of all that does not disgrace me.’
He advanced, and was about to seize her hand; but the accursed miniature
occurred to him, and he repressed his feelings, almost with a groan. She,
too, had turned away her head, and was busily engaged in tending a flower.
</p>
<p>
‘Because she has explicitly declared her feelings to me, and, sincere in
that declaration, honours me by a friendship of which alone I am unworthy,
am I to persecute her with my dishonoured overtures—the twice
rejected? No, no!’
</p>
<p>
They took their way through the park, and he soon succeeded in re-assuming
the tone that befitted their situation. Traits of the debate, and the
debaters, which newspapers cannot convey, and which he had not yet
recounted; anecdotes of Annesley and their friends, and other gossip, were
offered for her amusement. But if she were amused, she was not lively, but
singularly, unusually silent. There was only one point on which she seemed
interested, and that was his speech. When he was cheered, and who
particularly cheered; who gathered round him, and what they said after the
debate: on all these points she was most inquisitive.
</p>
<p>
They rambled on: nurse was quite forgotten; and at length they found
themselves in the beautiful valley, rendered more lovely by the ruins of
the abbey. It was a place that the Duke could never forget, and which he
ever avoided. He had never renewed his visit since he first gave vent,
among its reverend ruins, to his overcharged and most tumultuous heart.
</p>
<p>
They stood in silence before the holy pile with its vaulting arches and
crumbling walls, mellowed by the mild lustre of the declining sun. Not two
years had fled since here he first staggered after the breaking glimpses
of self-knowledge, and struggled to call order from out the chaos of his
mind. Not two years, and yet what a change had come over his existence!
How diametrically opposite now were all his thoughts, and views, and
feelings, to those which then controlled his fatal soul! How capable, as
he firmly believed, was he now of discharging his duty to his Creator and
his fellow-men! and yet the boon that ought to have been the reward for
all this self-contest, the sweet seal that ought to have ratified this new
contract of existence, was wanting.
</p>
<p>
‘Ah!’ he exclaimed aloud, and in a voice of anguish, ‘ah! if I ne’er had
left the walls of Dacre, how different might have been my lot!’
</p>
<p>
A gentle but involuntary pressure reminded him of the companion whom, for
once in his life, he had for a moment forgotten.
</p>
<p>
‘I feel it is madness; I feel it is worse than madness; but must I yield
without a struggle, and see my dark fate cover me without an effort? Oh!
yes, here, even here, where I have wept over your contempt, even here,
although I subject myself to renewed rejection, let—let me tell you,
before we part, how I adore you!’
</p>
<p>
She was silent; a strange courage came over his spirit; and, with a
reckless boldness, and rapid voice, a misty sight, and total
unconsciousness of all other existence, he resumed the words which had
broken out, as if by inspiration.
</p>
<p>
‘I am not worthy of you. Who is? I was worthless. I did not know it. Have
not I struggled to be pure? have not I sighed on my nightly pillow for
your blessing? Oh! could you read my heart (and sometimes, I think, you
can read it, for indeed, with all its faults, it is without guile) I dare
to hope that you would pity me. Since we first met, your image has not
quitted my conscience for a second. When you thought me least worthy; when
you thought me vile, or mad, oh! by all that is sacred, I was the most
miserable wretch that ever breathed, and flew to dissipation only for
distraction!
</p>
<p>
‘Not—not for a moment have I ceased to think you the best, the most
beautiful, the most enchanting and endearing creature that ever graced our
earth. Even when I first dared to whisper my insolent affection, believe
me, even then, your presence controlled my spirit as no other woman had. I
bent to you then in pride and power. The station that I could then offer
you was not utterly unworthy of your perfection. I am now a beggar, or,
worse, an insolvent noble, and dare I—dare I to ask you to share the
fortunes that are broken, and the existence that is obscure?’
</p>
<p>
She turned; her arm fell over his shoulder; she buried her head in his
breast.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER X.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘Love is Like a Dizziness.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
MR. DACRE returned home with an excellent appetite, and almost as keen a
desire to renew his conversation with his guest; but dinner and the Duke
were neither to be commanded. Miss Dacre also could not be found. No
information could be obtained of them from any quarter. It was nearly
seven o’clock, the hour of dinner. That meal, somewhat to Mr. Dacre’s
regret, was postponed for half an hour, servants were sent out, and the
bell was rung, but no tidings. Mr. Dacre was a little annoyed and more
alarmed; he was also hungry, and at half-past seven he sat down to a
solitary meal.
</p>
<p>
About a quarter-past eight a figure rapped at the dining-room window: it
was the young Duke. The fat butler seemed astonished, not to say shocked,
at this violation of etiquette; nevertheless, he slowly opened the window.
</p>
<p>
‘Anything the matter, George? Where is May?’
</p>
<p>
‘Nothing. We lost our way. That is all. May—Miss Dacre desired me to
say, that she would not join us at dinner.’
</p>
<p>
‘I am sure, something has happened.’
</p>
<p>
‘I assure you, my dear sir, nothing, nothing at all the least unpleasant,
but we took the wrong turning. All my fault.’
</p>
<p>
‘Shall I send for the soup?’
</p>
<p>
‘No. I am not hungry, I will take some wine.’ So saying, his Grace poured
out a tumbler of claret.
</p>
<p>
‘Shall I take your Grace’s hat?’ asked the fat butler.
</p>
<p>
‘Dear me! have I my hat on?’
</p>
<p>
This was not the only evidence afforded by our hero’s conduct that his
presence of mind had slightly deserted him. He was soon buried in a deep
reverie, and sat with a full plate, but idle knife and fork before him, a
perfect puzzle to the fat butler, who had hitherto considered his Grace
the very pink of propriety.
</p>
<p>
‘George, you have eaten no dinner,’ said Mr. Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘Thank you, a very good one indeed, a remarkably good dinner. Give me some
red wine, if you please.’
</p>
<p>
At length they were left alone.
</p>
<p>
‘I have some good news for you, George.’
</p>
<p>
‘Indeed.’
</p>
<p>
‘I think I have let Rosemount.’
</p>
<p>
‘So!’
</p>
<p>
‘And exactly to the kind of person that you wanted, a man who will take a
pride, although merely a tenant, in not permitting his poor neighbours to
feel the <i>want</i> of a landlord. You will never guess: Lord Mildmay!’
</p>
<p>
‘What did you say of Lord Mildmay, sir?’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear fellow, your wits are wool-gathering; I say I think I have let
Rosemount.’
</p>
<p>
‘Oh! I have changed my mind about letting Rosemount.’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear Duke, there is no trouble which I will grudge, to further your
interests; but really I must beg, in future, that you will, at least,
apprise me when you change your mind. There is nothing, as we have both
agreed, more desirable than to find an eligible tenant for Rosemount. You
never can expect to have a more beneficial one than Lord Mildmay; and
really, unless you have positively promised the place to another person
(which, excuse me for saying, you were not authorised to do) I must
insist, after what has passed, upon his having the preference.’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear sir, I only changed my mind this afternoon: I couldn’t tell you
before. I have promised it to no one; but I think of living there myself.’
</p>
<p>
‘Yourself! Oh! if that be the case, I shall be quite reconciled to the
disappointment of Lord Mildmay. But what in the name of goodness, my dear
fellow, has produced this wonderful revolution in all your plans in the
course of a few hours? I thought you were going to mope away life on the
Lake of Geneva, or dawdle it away in Florence or Rome.’
</p>
<p>
‘It is very odd, sir. I can hardly believe it myself: and yet it must be
true. I hear her voice even at this moment. Oh! my dear Mr. Dacre, I am
the happiest fellow that ever breathed!’
</p>
<p>
‘What is all this?’
</p>
<p>
‘Is it possible, my dear sir, that you have not long before detected the
feelings I ventured to entertain for your daughter? In a word, she
requires only your sanction to my being the most fortunate of men.’
</p>
<p>
‘My dear friend, my dear, dear boy!’ cried Mr. Dacre, rising from his
chair and embracing him, ‘it is out of the power of man to impart to me
any event which could afford me such exquisite pleasure! Indeed, indeed,
it is to me most surprising! for I had been induced to suspect, George,
that some explanation had passed between you and May, which, while it
accounted for your mutual esteem, gave little hope of a stronger
sentiment.’
</p>
<p>
‘I believe, sir,’ said the young Duke, with a smile, ‘I was obstinate.’
</p>
<p>
‘Well, this changes all our plans. I have intended, for this fortnight
past, to speak to you finally on your affairs. No better time than the
present; and, in the first place——’
</p>
<p>
But, really, this interview is confidential.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XI.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>‘Perfection in a Petticoat.‘</i>
</pre>
<p>
THEY come not: it is late. He is already telling all! She relapses into
her sweet reverie. Her thought fixes on no subject; her mind is intent on
no idea; her soul is melted into dreamy delight; her only consciousness is
perfect bliss! Sweet sounds still echo in her ear, and still her pure
pulse beats, from the first embrace of passion.
</p>
<p>
The door opens, and her father enters, leaning upon the arm of her
beloved. Yes, he has told all! Mr. Dacre approached, and, bending down,
pressed the lips of his child. It was the seal to their plighted faith,
and told, without speech, that the blessing of a parent mingled with the
vows of a lover! No other intimation was at present necessary;’ but she,
the daughter, thought now only of her father, that friend of her long
life, whose love had ne’er been wanting: was she about to leave him? She
arose, she threw her arms around his neck and wept.
</p>
<p>
The young Duke walked away, that his presence might not control the full
expression of her hallowed soul. ‘This jewel is mine,’ was his thought;
‘what, what have I done to be so blessed?’
</p>
<p>
In a few minutes he again joined them, and was seated by her side; and Mr.
Dacre considerately remembered that he wished to see his steward, and they
were left alone. Their eyes meet, and their soft looks tell that they were
thinking of each other. His arm steals round the back of her chair, and
with his other hand he gently captures hers.
</p>
<p>
First love, first love! how many a glowing bard has sung thy beauties! How
many a poor devil of a prosing novelist, like myself, has echoed all our
superiors, the poets, teach us! No doubt, thou rosy god of young Desire,
thou art a most bewitching little demon; and yet, for my part, give me
last love.
</p>
<p>
Ask a man which turned out best, the first horse he bought, or the one he
now canters on? Ask—but in short there is nothing in which knowledge
is more important and experience more valuable than in love. When we first
love, we are enamoured of our own imaginations. Our thoughts are high, our
feelings rise from out the deepest caves of the tumultuous tide of our
full life. We look around for one to share our exquisite existence, and
sanctify the beauties of our being.
</p>
<p>
But those beauties are only in our thoughts. We feel like heroes, when we
are but boys. Yet our mistress must bear a relation, not to ourselves, but
to our imagination. She must be a real heroine, while our perfection is
but ideal. And the quick and dangerous fancy of our race will, at first,
rise to the pitch. She is all we can conceive. Mild and pure as youthful
priests, we bow down before our altar. But the idol to which we breathe
our warm and gushing vows, and bend our eager knees, all its power, does
it not exist only in our idea; all its beauty, is it not the creation of
our excited fancy? And then the sweetest of superstitions ends. The long
delusion bursts, and we are left like men upon a heath when fairies
vanish; cold and dreary, gloomy, bitter, harsh, existence seems a blunder.
</p>
<p>
But just when we are most miserable, and curse the poet’s cunning and our
own conceits, there lights upon our path, just like a ray fresh from the
sun, some sparkling child of light, that makes us think we are premature,
at least, in our resolves. Yet we are determined not to be taken in, and
try her well in all the points in which the others failed. One by one, her
charms steal on our warming soul, as, one by one, those of the other
beauty sadly stole away, and then we bless our stars, and feel quite sure
that we have found perfection in a petticoat.
</p>
<p>
But our Duke—where are we? He had read woman thoroughly, and
consequently knew how to value the virgin pages on which his thoughts now
fixed. He and May Dacre wandered in the woods, and nature seemed to them
more beautiful from their beautiful loves. They gazed upon the sky; a
brighter light fell o’er the luminous earth. Sweeter to them the fragrance
of the sweetest flowers, and a more balmy breath brought on the universal
promise of the opening year.
</p>
<p>
They wandered in the woods, and there they breathed their mutual
adoration. She to him was all in all, and he to her was like a new
divinity. She poured forth all that she long had felt, and scarcely could
suppress. From the moment he tore her from the insulter’s arms, his image
fixed in her heart, and the struggle which she experienced to repel his
renewed vows was great indeed. When she heard of his misfortunes, she had
wept; but it was the strange delight she experienced when his letter
arrived to her father that first convinced her how irrevocably her mind
was his.
</p>
<p>
And now she does not cease to blame herself for all her past obduracy; now
she will not for a moment yield that he could have been ever anything but
all that was pure, and beautiful, and good.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Another Betrothal</i>
</pre>
<p>
BUT although we are in love, business must not be utterly neglected, and
Mr. Dacre insisted that the young Duke should for one morning cease to
wander in his park, and listen to the result of his exertions during the
last three months. His Grace listened. Rents had not risen, but it was
hoped that they had seen their worst; the railroad had been successfully
opposed; and coals had improved. The London mansion and the Alhambra had
both been disposed of, and well: the first to the new French Ambassador,
and the second to a grey-headed stock-jobber, very rich, who, having no
society, determined to make solitude amusing. The proceeds of these sales,
together with sundry sums obtained by converting into cash the stud, the
furniture, and the <i>bijouterie,</i> produced a most respectable fund,
which nearly paid off the annoying miscellaneous debts. For the rest, Mr.
Dacre, while he agreed that it was on the whole advisable that the
buildings should be completed, determined that none of the estates should
be sold, or even mortgaged. His plan was to procrastinate the termination
of these undertakings, and to allow each year itself to afford the
necessary supplies. By annually setting aside one hundred thousand pounds,
in seven or eight years he hoped to find everything completed and all
debts cleared. He did not think that the extravagance of the Duke could
justify any diminution in the sum which had hitherto been apportioned for
the maintenance of the Irish establishments; but he was of opinion that
the decreased portion which they, as well as the western estates, now
afforded to the total income, was a sufficient reason. Fourteen thousand
a-year were consequently allotted to Ireland, and seven to Pen Bronnock.
There remained to the Duke about thirty thousand per annum; but then
Hauteville was to be kept up with this. Mr. Dacre proposed that the young
people should reside at Rosemount, and that consequently they might form
their establishment from the Castle, without reducing their Yorkshire
appointments, and avail themselves, without any obligation, or even the
opportunity, of great expenses, of all the advantages afforded by the
necessary expenditure. Finally, Mr. Dacre presented his son with his town
mansion and furniture; and as the young Duke insisted that the settlements
upon her Grace should be prepared in full reference to his inherited and
future income, this generous father at once made over to him the great
bulk of his personal property amounting to upwards of a hundred thousand
pounds, a little ready money, of which he knew the value.
</p>
<p>
The Duke of St. James had duly informed his uncle, the Earl of
Fitz-pompey, of the intended change in his condition, and in answer
received the following letter:—
</p>
<p>
‘Fitz-pompey Hall, May, 18—.
</p>
<p>
‘My dear George,—Your letter did not give us so much surprise as you
expected; but I assure you it gave us as much pleasure. You have shown
your wisdom and your taste in your choice; and I am free to confess that I
am acquainted with no one more worthy of the station which the Duchess of
St. James must always fill in society, and more calculated to maintain the
dignity of your family, than the lady whom you are about to introduce to
us as our niece. Believe me, my dear George, that the notification of this
agreeable event has occasioned even additional gratification both to your
aunt and to myself, from the reflection that you are about to ally
yourself with a family in whose welfare we must ever take an especial
interest, and whom we may in a manner look upon as our own relatives. For,
my dear George, in answer to your flattering and most pleasing
communication, it is my truly agreeable duty to inform you (and, believe
me, you are the first person out of our immediate family to whom this
intelligence is made known) that our Caroline, in whose happiness we are
well assured you take a lively interest, is about to be united to one who
may now be described as your near relative, namely, Mr. Arundel Dacre.
</p>
<p>
‘It has been a long attachment, though for a considerable time, I confess,
unknown to us; and indeed at first sight, with Caroline’s rank and other
advantages, it may not appear, in a mere worldly point of view, so
desirable a connection as some perhaps might expect. And to be quite
confidential, both your aunt and myself were at first a little disinclined
(great as our esteem and regard have ever been for him), a little
disinclined, I say, to the union. But Dacre is certainly the most rising
man of the day. In point of family, he is second to none; and his uncle
has indeed behaved in the most truly liberal manner. I assure you, he
considers him as a son; and even if there were no other inducement, the
mere fact of your connection with the family would alone not only
reconcile, but, so to say, make us perfectly satisfied with the
arrangement. It is unnecessary to speak to you of the antiquity of the
Dacres. Arundel will ultimately be one of the richest Commoners, and I
think it is not too bold to anticipate, taking into consideration the
family into which he marries, and above all, his connection with you, that
we may finally succeed in having him called up to us. You are of course
aware that there was once a barony in the family.
</p>
<p>
‘Everybody talks of your speech. I assure you, although I ever gave you
credit for uncommon talents, I was astonished. So you are to have the
vacant ribbon! Why did you not tell me? I learnt it to-day, from Lord
Bobbleshim. But we must not quarrel with men in love for not
communicating.
</p>
<p>
‘You ask me for news of all your old friends. You of course saw the death
of old Annesley. The new Lord took his seat yesterday; he was introduced
by Lord Bloomerly. I was not surprised to hear in the evening that he was
about to be married to Lady Charlotte, though the world affect to be
astonished.
</p>
<p>
I should not forget to say that Lord Annesley asked most particularly
after you. For him, quite warm, I assure you.
</p>
<p>
‘The oddest thing has happened to your friend, Lord Squib. Old Colonel
Carlisle is dead, and has left his whole fortune, some say half a million,
to the oddest person, merely because she had the reputation of being his
daughter. Quite an odd person, you understand me: Mrs. Montfort. St.
Maurice says you know her; but we must not talk of these things now. Well,
Squib is going to be married to her. He says that he knows all his old
friends will cut him when they are married, and so he is determined to
give them an excuse. I understand she is a fine woman. He talks of living
at Rome and Florence for a year or two.
</p>
<p>
‘Lord Darrell is about to marry Harriet Wrekin; and between ourselves (but
don’t let this go any further at present) I have very little doubt that
young Pococurante will shortly be united to Isabel. Connected as we are
with the Shropshires, these excellent alliances are gratifying.
</p>
<p>
‘I see very little of Lucius Grafton. He seems ill.
</p>
<p>
I understand, for certain, that her Ladyship opposes the divorce. <i>On
dit</i>, she has got hold of some letters, through the treachery of her
soubrette, whom he supposed quite his creature, and that your friend is
rather taken in. But I should not think this true. People talk very
loosely. There was a gay party at Mrs. Dallington’s the other night, who
asked very kindly after you.
</p>
<p>
‘I think I have now written you a very long letter. I once more
congratulate you on your admirable selection, and with the united
remembrance of our circle, particularly Caroline, who will write perhaps
by this post to Miss Dacre, believe me, dear George, your truly
affectionate uncle,
</p>
<p>
‘FITZ-POMPEY.
</p>
<p>
‘P.S.—Lord Marylebone is very unpopular, quite a brute. We all miss
you.’
</p>
<p>
It is not to be supposed that this letter conveyed the first intimation to
the Duke of St. James of the most interesting event of which it spoke. On
the contrary, he had long been aware of the whole affair; but we have been
too much engaged with his own conduct to find time to let the reader into
the secret, which, like all secrets, it is to be hoped was no secret. Next
to gaining the affections of May Dacre, it was impossible for any event to
occur more delightful to our hero than the present. His heart had often
misgiven him when he had thought of Caroline. Now she was happy, and not
only happy, but connected with him for life, just as he wished. Arundel
Dacre, too, of all men he most wished to like, and indeed most liked. One
feeling alone had prevented them from being bosom friends, and that
feeling had long triumphantly vanished.
</p>
<p>
May had been almost from the beginning the <i>confidante</i> of her
cousin. In vain, however, had she beseeched him to entrust all to her
father. Although he now repented his past feelings he could not be induced
to change; and not till he had entered Parliament and succeeded and gained
a name, which would reflect honour on the family with which he wished to
identify himself, would he impart to his uncle the secret of his heart,
and gain that support without which his great object could never have been
achieved. The Duke of St. James, by returning him to Parliament, had been
the unconscious cause of all his happiness, and ardently did he pray that
his generous friend might succeed in what he was well aware was his secret
aspiration, and that his beloved cousin might yield her hand to the only
man whom Arundel Dacre considered worthy of her.
</p>
<p>
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<h2>
CHAPTER XIII.
</h2>
<pre xml:space="preserve">
<i>Joy’s Beginning</i>
</pre>
<p>
ANOTHER week brought another letter from the Earl of Fitz-pompey.
</p>
<p>
The Earl of Fitz-pompey to the Duke of St. James. [Read this alone.]
</p>
<p>
‘My dear George,
</p>
<p>
‘I beg you will not be alarmed by the above memorandum, which I thought it
but prudent to prefix. A very disagreeable affair has just taken place,
and to a degree exceedingly alarming; but it might have turned out much
more distressing, and, on the whole, we may all congratulate ourselves at
the result. Not to keep you in fearful suspense, I beg to recall your
recollection to the rumour which I noticed in my last, of the intention of
Lady Aphrodite Grafton to oppose the divorce. A few days back, her brother
Lord Wariston, with whom I was previously unacquainted, called upon me by
appointment, having previously requested a private interview. The object
of his seeing me was no less than to submit to my inspection the letters
by aid of which it was anticipated that the divorce might be successfully
opposed. You will be astounded to hear that these consist of a long series
of correspondence of Mrs. Dallington Vere’s, developing, I am shocked to
say, machinations of a very alarming nature, the effect of which, my dear
George, was no less than very materially to control your fortunes in life,
and those of that charming and truly admirable lady whom you have
delighted us all so much by declaring to be our future relative.
</p>
<p>
‘From the very delicate nature of the disclosures, Lord Wariston felt the
great importance of obtaining all necessary results without making them
public; and, actuated by these feelings, he applied to me, both as your
nearest relative, and an acquaintance of Sir Lucius, and, as he expressed
it, and I may be permitted to repeat, as one whose experience in the
management of difficult and delicate negotiations was not altogether
unknown, in order that I might be put in possession of the facts of the
case, advise and perhaps interfere for the common good.
</p>
<p>
‘Under these circumstances, and taking into consideration the extreme
difficulty attendant upon a satisfactory arrangement of the affair, I
thought fit, in confidence, to apply to Arundel, whose talents I consider
of the first order, and only equalled by his prudence and calm temper. As
a relation, too, of more than one of the parties concerned, it was perhaps
only proper that the correspondence should be submitted to him.
</p>
<p>
‘I am sorry to say, my dear George, that Arundel behaved in a very odd
manner, and not at all with that discretion which might have been expected
both from one of his remarkably sober and staid disposition, and one not a
little experienced in diplomatic life. He exhibited the most unequivocal
signs of his displeasure at the conduct of the parties principally
concerned, and expressed himself in so vindictive a manner against one of
them, that I very much regretted my application, and requested him to be
cool.
</p>
<p>
‘He seemed to yield to my solicitations, but I regret to say his composure
was only feigned, and the next morning he and Sir Lucius Grafton met. Sir
Lucius fired first, without effect, but Arundel’s aim was more fatal, and
his ball was lodged in the thigh of his adversary. Sir Lucius has only
been saved by amputation; and I need not remark to you that to such a man
life on such conditions is scarcely desirable. All idea of a divorce is
quite given over. The letters in question were stolen from his cabinet by
his valet, and given to a soubrette of his wife, whom Sir Lucius
considered in his interest, but who, as you see, betrayed him.
</p>
<p>
‘For me remained the not very agreeable office of seeing Mrs. Dallington
Vere. I made known to her, in a manner as little offensive as possible,
the object of my visit. The scene, my dear George, was trying; and I think
it hard that the follies of a parcel of young people should really place
me in such a distressing position. She fainted, &c, and wished the
letters to be given up, but Lord Wariston would not consent to this,
though he promised to keep their contents secret provided she quitted the
country. She goes directly; and I am well assured, which is not the least
surprising part of this strange history, that her affairs are in a state
of great distraction. The relatives of her late husband are about again to
try the will, and with prospect of success. She has been negotiating with
them for some time through the agency of Sir Lucius Grafton, and the late
<i>exposé</i> will not favour her interests.
</p>
<p>
‘If anything further happens, my dear George, depend upon my writing; but
Arundel desires me to say that on Saturday he will run down to Dacre for a
few days, as he very much wishes to see you and all. With our united
remembrance to Mr. and Miss Dacre,
</p>
<p>
‘Ever, my dear George,
</p>
<p>
‘Your very affectionate uncle,
</p>
<p>
‘Fitz-pompey.’
</p>
<p>
The young Duke turned with trembling and disgust from these dark
terminations of unprincipled careers; and these fatal evidences of the
indulgence of unbridled passions. How nearly, too, had he been shipwrecked
in this moral whirlpool! With what gratitude did he not invoke the
beneficent Providence that had not permitted the innate seeds of human
virtue to be blighted in his wild and neglected soul! With what admiration
did he not gaze upon the pure and beautiful being whose virtue and whose
loveliness were the causes of his regeneration, the sources of his present
happiness, and the guarantees of his future joy!
</p>
<p>
Four years have now elapsed since the young Duke of St. James was united
to May Dacre; and it would not be too bold to declare, that during that
period he has never for an instant ceased to consider himself the happiest
and the most fortunate of men. His life is passed in the agreeable
discharge of all the important duties of his exalted station, and his
present career is by far a better answer to the lucubrations of young
Duncan Macmorrogh than all the abstract arguments that ever yet were
offered in favour of the existence of an aristocracy.
</p>
<p>
Hauteville House and Hauteville Castle proceed in regular course. These
magnificent dwellings will never erase simple and delightful Rosemount
from the grateful memory of the Duchess of St. James. Parliament, and in a
degree society, invite the Duke and Duchess each year to the metropolis,
and Mr. Dacre is generally their guest. Their most intimate and beloved
friends are Arundel and his wife, and as Lady Caroline now heads the
establishment of Castle Dacre, they are seldom separated. But among their
most agreeable company is a young gentleman styled by courtesy Dacre,
Marquess of Hauteville, and his young sister, who has not yet escaped from
her beautiful mother’s arms, and who beareth the blooming title of the
Lady May.
</p>
<p>
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