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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+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: Barrington
+ Volume II (of II)
+
+Author: Charles James Lever
+
+Illustrator: Phiz.
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34883]
+Last Updated: February 27, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+BARRINGTON
+
+Volume II.
+
+By Charles James Lever
+
+With Illustrations By Phiz.
+
+Boston: Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+1907.
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. FIFINE AND POLLY
+
+There are a few days in our autumnal season--very few and rare!--when we
+draw the curtain against the glare of the sun at breakfast, and yet in
+the evening are glad to gather around the cheerful glow of the fire.
+These are days of varied skies, with fleecy clouds lying low beneath a
+broad expanse of blue, with massive shadows on the mountains, and here
+and there over the landscape tips of sunlight that make the meanest
+objects pictures; and, with all these, a breezy wind that scatters the
+yellow leaves and shakes the tree-tops, while it curls the current of
+the bright river into mimic waves. The sportsman will tell you that on
+such days the birds are somewhat wild, and the angler will vow that no
+fish will rise to the fly, nor is it a scent-lying day for the harriers;
+and yet, with all this, there is a spring and elasticity in the air that
+impart themselves to the temperament, so that the active grow energetic,
+and even the indolent feel no touch of lassitude.
+
+It was on the morning of such a day that Barrington, with his sister
+and granddaughter, drew nigh the Home. Conyers had parted with them at
+Dublin, where his regiment was now stationed, but was to follow in a day
+or two. All the descriptions--descriptions which had taken the shape
+of warnings--which they had given Josephine of the cottage could not
+prevent her asking at each turn of the road if that large house yonder,
+if that sombre tower over the trees, if that massive gate-lodge were
+not theirs. “I know this is it, grandpapa,” said she, clapping her
+hands with delight as they came opposite a low wall within which lay the
+spacious lawn of Cobham Park, a portion of the house itself being just
+visible through the trees; “don't tell me, aunt,” cried she, “but let me
+guess it.”
+
+“It is the seat of Sir Charles Cobham, child, one of the richest
+baronets in the kingdom.”
+
+“There it is at last,--there it is!” cried she, straining oat of the
+carriage to see the handsome portico of a very large building, to which
+a straight avenue of oaks led up from the high-road. “My heart tells me,
+aunt, that this is ours!”
+
+“It was once on a time, Fifiue,” said the old man, with a quivering
+voice, and a glassy film over his eyes; “it was once, but it is so no
+longer.”
+
+“Barrington Hall has long ceased to belong to us,” said Miss Dinah; “and
+after all the pains I have taken in description, I cannot see how you
+could possibly confound it with our little cottage.”
+
+The young girl sat back without a word, and, whether from disappointment
+or the rebuke, looked forth no more.
+
+“We are drawing very near now, Fifine,” said the old man, after a long
+silence, which lasted fully two miles of the way. “Where you see the
+tall larches yonder--not there--lower down, at the bend of the stream;
+those are the trees. I declare, Dinah, I fancy they have grown since we
+saw them last.”
+
+“I have no doubt you do, Peter; not that you will find the cottage far
+more commodious and comfortable than you remembered it.”
+
+“Ah, they've repaired that stile, I see,” cried he; “and very well
+they've done it, without cutting away the ivy. Here we are, darling;
+here we are!” and he grasped the young girl's hand in one of his, while
+he drew the other across his eyes.
+
+“They 're not very attentive, I must say, brother Peter, or they would
+not leave us standing, with our own gate locked against us.”
+
+“I see Darby running as fast as he can. Here he comes!”
+
+“Oh, by the powers, ye're welcome home, your honor's reverence, and the
+mistresses!” cried Darby, as he fumbled at the lock, and then failing in
+all his efforts,--not very wonderful, seeing that he had taken a wrong
+key,--he seized a huge stone, and, smashing the padlock at a blow, threw
+wide the gate to admit them.
+
+“You are initiated at once into our Irish ways, Fifine,” said Miss
+Barrington. “All that you will see here is in the same style. Let that
+be repaired this evening, sir, and at your own cost,” whispered she to
+Darby, into whose hand at the same moment Peter was pressing a crown
+piece.
+
+“'T is the light of my eyes to see your honors home again! 'Tis like
+rain to the new potatoes what I feel in my heart, and looking so fresh
+and well too! And the young lady, she isn't--”
+
+From what dread anticipation Darby's sudden halt saved him the
+expression is not for me to say, but that Peter Barrington guessed it is
+probable, for he lay back in the carriage and shook with laughter.
+
+“Drive on, sir,” said Miss Dinah to the postilion, “and pull up at the
+stone cross.”
+
+“You can drive to the door now, ma'am,” said Darby, “the whole way; Miss
+Polly had the road made while you were away.”
+
+“What a clever girl! Who could have thought it?” said Barrington.
+
+“I opine that we might have been consulted as to the change. On a matter
+as important as this, Peter, I think our voices might have been asked.”
+
+“And how well she has done it too!” muttered he, half aloud; “never
+touched one of those copper beeches, and given us a peep of the bright
+river through the meadows.”
+
+As the carriage rolled briskly along, Darby, who trotted alongside, kept
+up a current narrative of the changes effected during their absence.
+
+“The ould pigeon-house is tuck down, and an iligant new one put up in
+the island; and the calves' paddock is thrown into the flower-garden,
+and there's a beautiful flight of steps down to the river, paved with
+white stones,--sorrow one is n't white as snow.”
+
+“It is a mercy we had not a sign over the door, brother Peter,”
+ whispered Miss Dinah, “or this young lady's zeal would have had it
+emblazoned like a shield in heraldry.”
+
+“Oh, how lovely, how beautiful, how exquisite!” cried Josephine, as they
+came suddenly round the angle of a copse and directly in front of the
+cottage.
+
+Nor was the praise exaggerated. It was all that she had said. Over
+a light trellis-work, carried along under the thatch, the roses and
+jessamine blended with the clematis and the passion-flower, forming
+a deep eave of flowers, drooping in heavy festoons across the spaces
+between the windows, and meeting the geraniums which grew below. Through
+the open sashes the rooms might be seen, looking more like beautifnl
+bowers than the chambers of a dwelling-house. And over all, in sombre
+grandeur, bent the great ilex-trees, throwing their grand and tranquil
+shade over the cottage and the little grass-plot and even the river
+itself, as it swept smoothly by. There was in the stillness of that
+perfumed air, loaded with the sweet-brier and the rose, a something of
+calm and tranquillity; while in the isolation of the spot there was a
+sense of security that seemed to fill op the measure of the young
+girl's hopes, and made her exclaim with rapture, “Oh, this, indeed, is
+beautiful!”
+
+“Yes, my darling Fifine!” said the old man, as he pressed her to his
+heart; “your home, your own home! I told you, my dear child, it was not
+a great castle, no fine château, like those on the Meuse and the Sambre,
+but a lowly cottage with a thatched roof and a rustic porch.”
+
+“In all this ardor for decoration and smartness,” broke in Miss Dinah,
+“it would not surprise me to find that the peacock's tail had been
+picked out in fresh colors and varnished.”
+
+“Faix! your honor is not far wrong,” interposed Darby, who had an Irish
+tendency to side with the majority. “She made us curry and wash ould
+Sheela, the ass, as if she was a race-horse.”
+
+“I hope poor Wowsky escaped,” said Barrington, laughing.
+
+“That's what he didn't! He has to be scrubbed with soap and water
+every morning, and his hair divided all the way down his back, like a
+Christian's, and his tail looks like a bunch of switch grass.”
+
+“That 's the reason he has n't come out to meet me; the poor fellow
+is like his betters,--he's not quite sure that his altered condition
+improves him.”
+
+“You have at least one satisfaction, brother Peter,” said Miss Dinah,
+sharply; “you find Darby just as dirty and uncared for as you left him.”
+
+“By my conscience, there 's another of us is n't much changed since we
+met last,” muttered Darby, but in a voice only audible to himself.
+
+“Oh, what a sweet cottage! What a pretty summer-house!” cried Josephine,
+as the carriage swept round the copse, and drew short up at the door.
+
+“This summer-house is your home, Fifine,” said Miss Barrington, tartly.
+
+“Home! home! Do you mean that we live here,--live here always, aunt?”
+
+“Most distinctly I do,” said she, descending and addressing herself to
+other cares. “Where's Jane? Take these trunks round by the back door.
+Carry this box to the green-room,--to Miss Josephine's room,” said she,
+with a stronger stress on the words.
+
+“Well, darling, it is a very humble, it is a very lowly,” said
+Barrington, “but let us see if we cannot make it a very happy home;” but
+as he turned to embrace her, she was gone.
+
+“I told you so, brother Peter,--I told you so, more than once; but, of
+course, you have your usual answer, 'We must do the best we can!' which
+simply means, doing worse than we need do.”
+
+Barrington was in no mood for a discussion; he was too happy to be once
+more at home to be ruffled by any provocation his sister could give him.
+Wherever he turned, some old familiar object met his eye and seemed
+to greet him, and he bustled in and out from his little study to the
+garden, and then to the stable, where he patted old Roger; and across
+to the cow-house, where Maggie knew him, and bent her great lazy eyes
+softly on him; and then down to the liver-side, where, in gilt letters,
+“Josephine” shone on the trim row-boat he had last seen half rotten on
+the bank; for Polly had been there too, and her thoughtful good-nature,
+forgetting nothing which might glad them on their coming.
+
+Meanwhile, Josephine had reached her chamber, and, locking the door,
+sat down and leaned her head on the table. Though no tears fell from
+her eyes, her bosom heaved and fell heavily, and more than one deep sigh
+escaped her. Was it disappointment that had so overcome her? Had she
+fancied something grander and more pretentious than this lonely
+cottage? Was it that Aunt Dinah's welcome was wanting in affection? What
+revulsion could it be that so suddenly overwhelmed her? Who can tell
+these things, who can explain how it is that, without any definite
+picture of an unexpected joy, imagination will so work upon us that
+reality will bring nothing but a blank? It is not that the object is
+less attractive than is hoped for, it is simply that a dark shadow has
+passed over our own hearts; the sense of enjoyment has been dulled, and
+we are sad without a reason. If we underrate sorrows of our youth,--and
+this is essentially one of them,--it is because our mature age leaves us
+nothing of that temperament on which such afflictions preyed.
+
+Josephine, without knowing why, without even a reason, wished herself
+back in the convent. There, if there was a life of sombre monotony and
+quietude, there was at least companionship; she had associates of her
+own age. They had pursuits in common, shared the same hopes and wishes
+and fears; but here--but here--Just as her thoughts had carried her so
+far, a tap--a very gentle tap--came to the door. Josephine heard it, but
+made no answer. It was repeated a little louder, and then a low pleasing
+voice she had never heard before said, “May I come in?”
+
+“No,” said Josephine,--“yes--that is--who are you?”
+
+“Polly Dill,” was the answer; and Josephine arose and unlocked the door.
+
+“Miss Barrington told me I might take this liberty,” said Polly, with a
+faint smile. “She said, 'Go and make acquaintance for yourself; I never
+play master of the ceremonies.'”
+
+“And you are Polly,--the Polly Dill I have heard so much of?” said
+Josephine, regarding her steadily and fixedly.
+
+“How stranded your friends must have been for a topic when they talked
+of _me!_” said Polly, laughing.
+
+“It is quite true you have beautiful teeth,--I never saw such beautiful
+teeth,” said Josephine to herself, while she still gazed earnestly at
+her.
+
+“And you,” said Polly, “are so like what I had pictured you,--what I
+hoped you would be. I find it hard to believe I see you for the first
+time.”
+
+“So, then, _you_ did not think the Rajah's daughter should be a
+Moor?” said Josephine, half haughtily. “It is very sad to see what
+disappointments I had caused.” Neither the saucy toss of the head, nor
+the tone that accompanied these words, were lost upon Polly, who began
+to feel at once that she understood the speaker.
+
+“And your brother,” continued Josephine, “is the famous Tom Dill I have
+heard such stories about?”
+
+“Poor Tom! he is anything rather than famous.”
+
+“Well, he is remarkable; he is odd, original, or whatever you would call
+it. Fred told me he never met any one like him.”
+
+“Tom might say as much of Mr. Conyers, for, in truth, no one ever showed
+him such kindness.”
+
+“Fred told me nothing of that; but perhaps,” added she, with a flashing
+eye, “you were more in his confidence than I was.”
+
+“I knew very little of Mr. Conyers; I believe I could count on the
+fingers of one hand every time I met him.”
+
+“How strange that you should have made so deep an impression, Miss
+Dill!”
+
+“I am flattered to hear it, but more surprised than flattered.”
+
+“But I don't wonder at it in the least,” said Josephine, boldly. “You
+are very handsome, you are very graceful, and then--” She hesitated and
+grew confused, and stammered, and at last said, “and then there is that
+about you which seems to say, 'I have only to wish, and I can do it.'”
+
+“I have no such gift, I assure you,” said Polly, with a half-sad smile.
+
+“Oh, I know you are very clever; I have heard how accomplished you were,
+how beautifully you rode, how charmingly you sang. I wish he had not
+told me of it all--for if--for if--”
+
+“If what? Say on!”
+
+“If you were not so superior to me, I feel that I could love you;” and
+then with a bound she threw her arms around Polly's neck, and clasped
+her affectionately to her bosom.
+
+Sympathy, like a fashionable physician, is wonderfully successful where
+there is little the matter. In the great ills of life, when the
+real afflictions come down to crush, to wound, or to stun us, we are
+comparatively removed from even the kindest of our comforters. Great
+sorrows are very selfish things. In the lighter maladies, however, in
+the smaller casualties of fortune, sympathy is a great remedy, and we
+are certain to find that, however various our temperaments, it has a
+sort of specific for each. Now Josephine Barrington had not any great
+cares upon her heart; if the balance were to be struck between them,
+Polly Dill could have numbered ten, ay, twenty, for her one, but
+she thought hers was a case for much commiseration, and she liked
+commiseration, for there are moral hypochondrias as well as physical
+ones. And so she told Polly how she had neither father nor mother, nor
+any other belongings than “dear old grandpapa and austere Aunt Dinah;”
+ that she had been brought up in a convent, never knowing one of the
+pleasures of youth, or her mind being permitted to stray beyond the
+dreary routine of prayer and penance. Of music she knew nothing but the
+solemn chants of the organ, and even flowers were to her eyes but the
+festal decorations of the high altar; and, lastly, she vaguely balanced
+between going back to the dismal existence of the cloister, or entering
+upon the troubled sea of life, so full of perils to one unpractised
+and unskilled as she was. Now Polly was a very pretty comforter through
+these afflictions; her own home experiences were not all rose-colored,
+but the physician who whispers honeyed consolations to the patient has
+often the painful consciousness of a deeper malady within than that for
+which he ministers. Polly knew something of a life of struggle and small
+fortune, with its daily incident of debt and dun. She knew what it was
+to see money mix itself with every phase of existence, throwing its
+damper over joy, arresting the hand of benevolence, even denying to the
+sick-bed the little comforts that help to cheat misery. She knew how
+penury can eat its canker into the heart till all things take the color
+of thrift, and life becomes at last the terrible struggle of a swimmer
+storm-tossed and weary; and yet, with all this experience in her heart,
+she could whisper cheerful counsels to Josephine, and tell her that
+the world had a great many pleasant paths through it, though one was
+occasionally footsore before reaching them; and in this way they talked
+till they grew very fond of each other, and Josephine was ready to
+confess that the sorrow nearest to her heart was parting with her. “But
+must you go, dearest Polly,--must you really go?”
+
+“I must, indeed,” said she, laughing; “for if I did not, two little
+sisters of mine would go supperless to bed, not to speak of a small boy
+who is waiting for me with a Latin grammar before him; and the cook
+must get her orders for to-morrow; and papa must have his tea; and this
+short, stumpy little key that you see here unlocks the oat-bin, without
+which an honest old pony would share in the family fast: so that, all
+things considered, my absence would be far from advisable.”
+
+“And when shall we meet again, Polly?”
+
+“Not to-morrow, dear; for to-morrow is our fair at Inistioge, and I have
+yarn to buy, and some lambs to sell.”
+
+“And could you sell lambs, Polly?” said Josephine, with an expression of
+blank disappointment in her face.
+
+Polly smiled, but not without a certain sadness, as she said, “There are
+some sentimentalities which, to one in my condition, would just be as
+unsuitable as Brussels lace or diamonds. They are born of luxury and
+indolence, and pertain to those whose existence is assured to them; and
+my own opinion is, they are a poor privilege. At all events,” added she,
+rapidly, “they are not for me, and I do not wish for them.”
+
+“The day after to-morrow, then, you will come here,--promise me that.”
+
+“It will be late, then, towards evening, for I have made an engagement
+to put a young horse in harness,--a three-year-old, and a sprightly one,
+they tell me,--so that I may look on the morning as filled. I see, my
+dear child, how shocked you are with all these unladylike cares and
+duties; but poor Tom and I used to weld our lives together, and while
+I took my share of boat-building one day, he helped me in the dairy the
+day after; but now that he is gone, our double functions devolve upon
+me.”
+
+“How happy you must be!”
+
+“I think I am; at least, I have no time to spare for unhappiness.”
+
+“If I could but change with you, Polly!”
+
+“Change what, my dear child?”
+
+“Condition, fortune, belongings,--everything.”
+
+“Take my word for it, you are just as well as you are; but I suppose
+it's very natural for one to fancy he could carry another's burden
+easier than his own, for it was only a few moments back I thought how I
+should like to be you.”
+
+“To be me,--to be me!”
+
+“Of course I was wrong, dearest. It was only a passing, fleeting
+thought, and I now see how absurd I was to wish to be very beautiful,
+dearly loved, and affectionately cared for, with a beautiful home to
+live in, and every hour free to be happy. Oh, what a sigh, dearest, what
+a sigh! but I assure you I have my calamities too; the mice have got at
+the seeds in my onion-bed, and I don't expect to see one come up.”
+
+If Josephine's first impulse was to feel angry, her next was to laugh
+out, which she did heartily; and passing her arm fondly round Polly's
+waist, she said, “I 'll get used to your raillery, Polly, and not feel
+sore at it; but remember, too, it's a spirit I never knew before.”
+
+“How good and generous, then, to bear it so well!” said Polly,
+affectionately; “your friend Mr. Conyers did not show the same
+patience.”
+
+“You tried him, then?” said Josephine, with a half-eager glance.
+
+“Of course; I talked to him as I do to every one. But there goes your
+dinner-bell.” Checking herself on a reflection over the pretension of
+this summons of three people to a family meal in a cottage, Polly tied
+on her bonnet and said “Good-bye.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. AT HOME AGAIN
+
+The Barringtons had not been quite a fortnight settled in their home,
+when a note came from Conyers, lamenting, in most feeling terms, that he
+could not pay them his promised visit. If the epistle was not very long,
+it was a grumble from beginning to end. “Nobody would know,” wrote he,
+“it was the same regiment poor Colonel Hunter commanded. Our Major is
+now in command,--the same Stapylton you have heard me speak of; and if
+we never looked on him too favorably, we now especially detest him.
+His first step was to tell us we were disorderly, ill-dressed, and
+ill-disciplined; but we were even less prepared to hear that we could
+not ride. The result of all this is, we have gone to school again,--even
+old captains, who have served with distinction in the field, have been
+consigned to the riding-house; and we poor subs are treated as if we
+were the last refuse of all the regiments of the army, sent here to
+be reformed and corrected. We have incessant drills, parades, and
+inspections, and, worse again, all leave is stopped. If I was not in the
+best of temper with the service before, you may judge how I feel towards
+it now. In fact, if it were not that I expect my father back in England
+by the middle of May, I 'd send in my papers and leave at once. How I
+fall back now in memory to the happy days of my ramble with you, and
+wonder if I shall ever see the like again. And how I hate myself for not
+having felt at the time how immeasurably delightful they were! Trust me
+never to repeat the mistake if I have the opportunity given me. I asked
+this morning for three days--only three--to run down and see you once
+more before we leave,--for we are ordered to Honnslow,--and I was
+refused. But this was not all: not content with rejecting my request,
+he added what he called an expression of astonishment that an officer
+so deficient in his duties should care to absent himself from regimental
+discipline.”
+
+“Poor boy!--this is, indeed, too bad,” said Miss Dinah, as she had read
+thus far; “only think, Peter, how this young fellow, spoiled and petted
+as he was as a child,--denied nothing, pampered as though he were a
+prince,--should find himself the mark of so insulting a tyranny. Are you
+listening to me, Peter Barrington?”
+
+“Eh,--what? No, thank you, Dinah; I have made an excellent breakfast,”
+ said Barrington, hurriedly, and again addressed himself to the letter he
+was reading. “That's what I call a Trump, Dinah,--a regular Trump.”
+
+“Who is the especial favorite that has called for the very choice
+eulogy?” said she, bridling up.
+
+“Gone into the thing, too, with heart and soul,--a noble fellow!”
+ continued Barrington.
+
+“Pray enlighten us as to the name that calls forth such enthusiasm.”
+
+“Stapylton, my dear Dinah,--Major Stapylton. In all my life I do not
+remember one instance to parallel with this generous and disinterested
+conduct. Listen to what Withering says,--not a man given to take up rash
+impressions in favor of a stranger. Listen to this: 'Stapylton has been
+very active,--written to friends, both at Calcutta and Agra, and shown,
+besides, an amount of acuteness in pursuit of what is really important,
+that satisfies me a right good common lawyer has been lost by his being
+a soldier.' And here, again he recurs to him: it is with reference to
+certain documents: 'S. persists in believing that with proper diligence
+these may be recovered; he says that it is a common practice with the
+Moonshees to retain papers, in the hope of their being one day deemed
+of value; and he is fully persuaded that they have not been destroyed.
+There is that about the man's manner of examining a question,--his
+patience, his instinctive seizure of what is of moment, and his
+invariable rejection of whatever is immaterial; and, lastly, his
+thorough appreciation of the character of that evidence which would have
+most weight with the Indian Board, which dispose me to regard him as an
+invaluable ally to our cause.'”
+
+“Do me the favor to regard this picture of your friend now,” said Miss
+Barrington, as she handed the letter from Conyers across the table.
+
+Barrington read it over attentively. “And what does this prove, my dear
+sister?” said he. “This is the sort of stereotyped complaint of every
+young fellow who has been refused a leave. I have no doubt Hunter was
+too easy-tempered to have been strict in discipline, and the chances
+are these young dogs had everything their own way till Stapylton
+came amongst them. I find it hard to believe that any man likes
+unpopularity.”
+
+“Perhaps not, Peter Barrington; but he may like tyranny more than he
+hates unpopularity; and, for my own part, this man is odious to me.”
+
+“Don't say so, Dinah,--don't say so, I entreat of you, for he will be
+our guest here this very day.”
+
+“Our guest!--why, is not the regiment under orders to leave?”
+
+“So it is; but Withering says it would be a great matter if we could
+have a sort of consultation together before the Major leaves Ireland.
+There are innumerable little details which he sees ought to be discussed
+between us; and so he has persuaded him to give us a day,--perhaps two
+days,--no small boon, Dinah, from one so fully occupied as he is.”
+
+“I wish he would not make the sacrifice, Peter.”
+
+“My dear sister, are we so befriended by Fortune that we can afford to
+reject the kindness of our fellows?”
+
+“I'm no believer in chance friendships, Peter Barrington; neither you
+nor I are such interesting orphans as to inspire sympathy at first
+sight.”
+
+Josephine could not help a laugh at Miss Dinah's illustration, and old
+Barriqgton himself heartily joined in the merriment, not sorry the while
+to draw the discussion into a less stern field. “Come, come, Dinah,”
+ said he, gayly, “let us put out a few bottles of that old Madeira in
+the sun; and if Darby can find us a salmon-trout, we 'll do our best to
+entertain our visitors.”
+
+“It never occurred to me to doubt the probability of their enjoying
+themselves, Peter; my anxieties were quite on another score.”
+
+“Now, Fifine,” continued Barrington, “we shall see if Polly Dill has
+really made you the perfect housekeeper she boasted. The next day or two
+will put your talents to the test.”
+
+“Oh, if we could only have Polly herself here!”
+
+“What for?--on what pretext, Miss Barrington?” said Dinah, haughtily.
+“I have not, so far as I am aware, been accounted very ignorant of
+household cares.”
+
+“Withering declares that your equal is not in Europe, Dinah.”
+
+“Mr. Withering's suffrage can always be bought by a mock-turtle soup,
+and a glass of Roman punch after it.”
+
+“How he likes it,--how he relishes it! He says that he comes back to the
+rest of the dinner with the freshness of a man at an assize case.”
+
+“So like him!” said Dinah, scornfully; “he has never an illustration
+that is not taken from the Four Courts. I remember one day, when asking
+for the bill of fare, he said, 'Will you kindly let me look at the cause
+list.' Prepare yourself, Josephine, for an avalanche of law anecdotes
+and Old Bailey stories, for I assure you you will hear nothing for the
+next three days but drolleries that have been engrossed on parchment and
+paid stamp duty to the Crown.”
+
+Barrington gave a smile, as though in protest against the speech, and
+left the room. In truth, he was very anxious to be alone, and to think
+over, at his leisure, a short passage in his letter which he had not
+summoned courage to read aloud. It was Withering's opinion that to
+institute the inquiries in India a considerable sum of money would be
+required, and he had left it for Barrington's consideration whether it
+were wiser to risk the great peril of this further involvement, or once
+more to try what chance there might be of a compromise. Who knows what
+success might have attended the suggestion if the old lawyer had but
+employed any other word! Compromise, however, sounded to his ears like
+an unworthy concession,--a surrender of George's honor. Compromise might
+mean money for his granddaughter, and shame to her father's memory. Not,
+indeed, that Withering was, as a man, one to counsel such a course, but
+Withering was a lawyer, and in the same spirit that he would have
+taken a verdict for half his claim if he saw an adverse feeling in the
+jury-box, so he would bow to circumstances that were stronger than him,
+and accept the best he could, if he might not have all that he ought But
+could Barrington take this view? He thought not. His conviction was that
+the main question to establish was the fair fame and honor of his son;
+his guide was, how George himself would have acted--would have felt--in
+the same contingency; and he muttered, “He'd have been a hardy fellow
+who would have hinted at compromise to _him_.”
+
+The next point was how the means for the coming campaign were to be
+provided. He had already raised a small sum by way of mortgage on the
+“Home,” and nothing remained but to see what further advance could be
+made on the same security. When Barrington was a great estated gentleman
+with a vast fortune at his command, it cost him wonderfully little
+thought to contract a loan, or even to sell a farm. A costly election,
+a few weeks of unusual splendor, an unfortunate night at play, had made
+such sacrifices nothing very unusual, and he would give his orders on
+this score as unconcernedly as he would bid his servant replenish his
+glass at table. Indeed, he had no more fear of exhausting his fortune
+than he felt as to out-drinking his cellar. There was enough there,
+as he often said, for those who should come after him. And now, what a
+change! He stood actually appalled at the thought of a mortgage for less
+than a thousand pounds. But so it is; the cockboat may be more to a man
+than was once the three-decker. The cottage was his all now; that lost,
+and they were houseless. Was it not a bold thing to risk everything on
+one more throw? There was the point over which he now pondered as he
+walked slowly along in the little shady alley between the laurel hedges.
+He had no friend nearer his heart than Withering, no one to whom he
+could unbosom himself so frankly and so freely, and yet this was a
+case on which he could not ask his counsel. All his life long he had
+strenuously avoided suffering a question of the kind to intervene
+between them. Of his means, his resources, his straits, or his demands,
+Withering knew positively nothing. It was with Barrington a point of
+delicacy to maintain this reserve towards one who was always his lawyer,
+and often his guest. The very circumstance of his turning innkeeper was
+regarded by Withering as savoring far more of caprice than necessity,
+and Barrington took care to strengthen this impression.
+
+If, then, Withering's good sense and worldly knowledge would have been
+invaluable aids to him in this conjunction, he saw he could not have
+them. The same delicacy which debarred him heretofore, would still
+interpose against his appeal to that authority. And then he thought
+how he had once troops of friends to whom he could address himself for
+counsel. There is nothing more true, indeed, than the oft-uttered scoff
+on the hollowness of those friendships which attach to the days of
+prosperous fortune, and the world is very prone to point to the utter
+loneliness of him who has been shipwrecked by Fate; but let us be just
+in our severity, and let us own that a man's belongings, his associates,
+his--what common parlance calls--friends, are the mere accidents of his
+station, and they no more accompany him in his fall than do the luxuries
+he has forfeited. From the level from which he has lapsed they have not
+descended. They are there, living to-day as they lived yesterday.
+If their sympathy is not with him, it is because neither are they
+themselves; they cross each other no more. Such friendships are like the
+contracts made with a crew for a particular voyage,--they end with the
+cruise. No man ever understood this better than Barrington; no man ever
+bore the world less of ill will for its part towards himself. If now
+and then a sense of sadness would cloud him at some mark of passing
+forgetfulness, he would not own to the gloomy feeling; while to any show
+of recognition, to any sign of a grateful remembrance of the past, he
+would grow boastful to very vanity. “Look there, Dinah,” he would say,
+“what a noble-hearted fellow that is! I scarcely was more than commonly
+civil to him formerly, and you saw how courteous he was in making a
+place for us, how heartily he hoped I was in good health.”
+
+“I'll send over to Dill and have a talk with him,” was Barrington's last
+resolve, as he turned the subject over and over in his mind. “Dill 's a
+shrewd fellow, and I 'm not sure that he has not laid by a little
+money; he might feel no objection to a good investment for it, with such
+security.” And he looked around as he spoke on the trees, some of which
+he planted, every one of which he knew, and sighed heavily. “He 'll
+scarce love the spot more than I did,” muttered he, and walked along
+with his head down. After a while he took out Withering's letter from
+his pocket and re-read it. Somehow, it was hard to say why, it did not
+read so promisingly as at first. The difficulties to be encountered were
+very stubborn ones, so much so that he very palpably hinted how much
+better some amicable settlement would be than an open contest wherein
+legal subtlety and craft should be evoked. There was so much of that
+matter always taken for granted, to be proved, to be demonstrated true
+on evidence, that it actually looked appalling. “Of the searches and
+inquiries instituted in India,” wrote Withering, “I can speak but
+vaguely; but I own the very distance magnifies them immensely to my
+eyes.” “Tom is growing old, not a doubt of it,” muttered Barrington;
+“these were not the sort of obstacles that could have terrified him once
+on a time. He 'd have said, 'If there 's evidence, we 'll have it; if
+there's a document, we 'll find it.' It's India, that far-away land,
+that has frightened him. These lawyers, like certain sportsmen, lose
+their nerve if you take them out of their own country. It 's the new
+style of fences they can't face. Well, thanks to him who gave it, I have
+my stout heart still, and I 'll go on.”
+
+“Going on” was, however, not the easy task it first seemed, nor was
+the pleasantest part of it the necessity of keeping the secret from his
+sister. Miss Dinah had from the first discouraged the whole suit. The
+adversary was too powerful, the odds against them were too great; the
+India Board had only to protract and prolong the case and _they_ must
+be beaten from sheer exhaustion. How, then, should he reconcile her to
+mortgaging the last remnant of all their fortune for “one more throw on
+the table”? “No chance of persuading a woman that this would be wise,”
+ said he. And he thought, when he had laid the prejudice of sex as the
+ground of error, he had completed his argument.
+
+“Going on” had its fine generous side about it, also, that cheered and
+elevated him. It was for George he was doing it, and that dear girl,
+whose every trait recalled her father; for let those explain it who can,
+she, who had never seen nor even heard of her father since her infancy,
+inherited all his peculiar ways and habits, and every trick of his
+manner. Let me own that these, even more than any qualities of sterling
+worth, endeared her to her grandfather; and just as he had often
+declared no rank or position that could befall George would have been
+above his deserts, so he averred that if Josephine were to be the
+greatest heiress in England to-morrow, she would be a grace and an
+ornament to the station. If Aunt Dinah would occasionally attempt to
+curb this spirit, or even limit its extravagance, his invariable answer
+was, “It may be all as you say, sister, but for the life of me I cannot
+think my swans to be geese.”
+
+As he thus mused and meditated, he heard the wicket of the garden open
+and shut, and shortly afterwards a half-shambling shuffling step on the
+gravel. Before he had time to speculate on whose it should be, he saw
+Major M'Cormick limping laboriously towards him.
+
+“How is this, Major?” cried he; “has the change of weather disagreed
+with your rheumatism?”
+
+“It's the wound; it's always worse in the fall of the year,” croaked the
+other. “I'd have been up to see you before but for the pains, and that
+old fool Dill--a greater fool myself for trusting him--made me put on
+a blister down what he calls the course of the nerve, and I never knew
+torture till I tried it.”
+
+“My sister Dinah has, I verily believe, the most sovereign remedy for
+these pains.”
+
+“Is it the green draught? Oh, don't I know it,” burst out the Major.
+“You might hear my shouts the day I took it down at Inistioge. There was
+n't a bit of skin left on my lips, and when I wiped the perspiration off
+my head my hair came off too. Aquafortis is like egg-flip compared
+to that blessed draught; and I remember well how I crawled to my
+writing-desk and wrote, 'Have me opened,' for I knew I was poisoned.”
+
+“Did you tell my sister of your sufferings?”
+
+“To be sure I did, and she only smiled and said that I took it when I
+was fasting, or when I was full, I forget which; and that I ought to
+have taken a brisk walk, and I only able to creep; and only one spoonful
+at a time, and it was the whole bottle I swallowed. In fact, she owned
+afterwards that nothing but the strength of a horse could have saved
+me.”
+
+Peter found it very hard to maintain a decent gravity at the play of
+the Major's features, which during the narrative recalled every dire
+experience of his medicine.
+
+“Well, come into the house and we'll give you something better,” said
+Barrington, at last.
+
+“I think I saw your granddaughter at the window as I came by,--a
+good-looking young woman, and not so dark as I suspected she 'd be.”
+
+“There's not a handsomer girl in Ireland; and as to skin, she 's not as
+brown as her father.”
+
+“It wouldn't be easy to be that; he was about three shades deeper than a
+Portuguese.”
+
+“George Barrington was confessedly the finest-looking fellow in the
+King's army, and as English-looking a gentleman as any man in it.”
+
+The tone of this speech was so palpably that of one who would not stand
+the very shadow of a rejoinder, that the Major held his peace, and
+shuffled along without a word. The thought, however, of administering a
+rebuke to any one within the precincts of his home was so repugnant to
+Barrington's nature, that he had scarcely uttered the words than he was
+eager to repair them, and with a most embarrassed humility he stammered
+out something about their recent tour abroad and all the enjoyment it
+had given them.
+
+“Maybe so,” rejoined the other, dryly; “but I never saw any pleasure in
+spending money you could keep.”
+
+“My dear Major, that is precisely the very money that does procure
+pleasure.”
+
+“Wasn't that a post-chaise I saw through the trees? There it is again;
+it's making straight for the 'Home,'” said M'Cormick, pointing with his
+stick.
+
+“Yes,” said Peter; “I was expecting a couple of friends to pass a day or
+so with me here. Will you excuse me if I hurry forward to welcome them?”
+
+“Don't make a stranger of me; I'll saunter along at my leisure,” said
+the Major, as Barrington walked briskly on towards the cottage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. A SMALL DINNER-PARTY
+
+Withering and Stapylton had arrived fully two hoars earlier than they
+were expected, and Miss Dinah was too deeply engaged in the household
+cares that were to do them honor to receive them. Josephine, too, was
+not less busily occupied, for her conventual education had made her
+wonderfully skilful in all sorts of confectionery, and she was mistress
+of devices in spun sugar and preserved fruits, which rose in Aunt
+Dinah's eyes to the dignity of high art. Barrington, however, was there
+to meet them, and with a cordial welcome which no man could express more
+gracefully. The luncheon hour passed pleasantly over, for all were in
+good humor and good spirits. Withering's holiday always found him ready
+to enjoy it, and when could old Peter feel so happy as when he had
+a guest beneath his roof who thoroughly appreciated the cottage, and
+entered into the full charm of its lovely scenery! Such was Stapylton;
+he blended a fair liking for the picturesque with a natural instinct for
+comfort and homeliness, and he saw in this spot what precisely embraced
+both elements. It was very beautiful; but, better still, it was very
+lovable. “It was so rare”--so, at least, he told Barrington--“to find
+a cottage wherein internal comfort had not been sacrificed to some
+requirement of outward show. There was only one way of doing this,”
+ said he, as Barrington led him through the little flower-garden,
+giving glimpses of the rooms within as they passed,--“only one way, Mr.
+Barrington; a man must have consummate taste, and strong credit at his
+banker's.” Barrington's cheek grew a thought redder, and he smiled that
+faint sad smile which now and then will break from one who feels that he
+could rebut what he has just heard, if it were but right or fitting he
+should do so. Of course, amongst really distressing sensations this has
+no place; but yet there is a peculiar pain in being complimented by your
+friend on the well-to-do condition of your fortune when your conscience
+is full of the long watching hours of the night, or, worse still, the
+first awaking thought of difficulties to which you open your eyes of
+a morning. It is not often, nor are there many to whom you can say, “I
+cannot tell the day or the hour when all this shall pass away from
+me; my head is racked with care, and my heart heavy with anxiety.” How
+jarring to be told of all the things you ought to do! You who could
+so well afford it! And how trying to have to take shelter from your
+necessity under the shadow of a seeming stinginess, and to bear every
+reflection on your supposed thrift rather than own to your poverty!
+
+If Withering had been with them as they strolled, this, perhaps, might
+have been avoided; he had all a lawyer's technical skill to change a
+topic; but Withering had gone to take his accustomed midday nap, the
+greatest of all the luxuries his time of idleness bestowed upon him.
+
+Now, although Stapylton's alludings--and they were no more--to
+Barrington's gifts of fortune were such as perfectly consisted with
+good taste and good breeding, Barring-ton felt them all painfully, and
+probably nothing restrained him from an open disclaimer of their
+fitness save the thought that from a host such an avowal would sound
+ungracefully. “It is my duty now,” reasoned he, “to make my guest feel
+that all the attentions he receives exact no sacrifice, and that the
+pleasure his presence affords is unalloyed by a single embarrassment.
+If he must hear of my difficulties, let it be when he is not beneath my
+roof.” And so he let Stapylton talk away about the blessings of tranquil
+affluence, and the happiness of him whose only care was to find time
+for the enjoyments that were secured to him. He let him quote Pope and
+Wharton and Edmund Burke, and smiled the blandest concurrence with what
+was irritating him almost to fever.
+
+“This is Withering's favorite spot,” said Peter, as they gained the
+shade of a huge ilex-tree, from which two distinct reaches of the river
+were visible.
+
+“And it shall be mine, too,” said Stapylton, throwing himself down in
+the deep grass; “and as I know you have scores of things which claim
+your attention, let me release you, while I add a cigar--the only
+possible enhancement--to the delight of this glorious nook.”
+
+“Well, it shall be as you wish. We dine at six. I 'll go and look after
+a fish for our entertainment;” and Barrington turned away into the
+copse, not sorry to release his heart by a heavy sigh, and to feel he
+was alone with his cares.
+
+Let us turn for a moment to M'Cormick, who continued to saunter slowly
+about the garden, in the expectation of Barrington's return. Wearied
+at length with waiting, and resolved that his patience should not go
+entirely unrequited, he turned into a little shady walk on which the
+windows of the kitchen opened. Stationing himself there, in a position
+to see without being seen, he took what he called an observation of all
+within. The sight was interesting, even if he did not bring to it the
+appreciation of a painter. There, upon a spacious kitchen table, lay a
+lordly sirloin, richly and variously colored, flanked by a pair of plump
+guinea-hens and a fresh salmon of fully twenty pounds' weight. Luscious
+fruit and vegetables were heaped and mingled in a wild profusion, and
+the speckled plumage of game was half hidden under the massive bunches
+of great hot-house grapes. It is doubtful if Sneyders himself could have
+looked upon the display with a higher sense of enjoyment It is, indeed,
+a question between the relative merits of two senses, and the issue lies
+between the eye and the palate.
+
+Wisely reasoning that such preparations were not made for common guests,
+M'Cormick ran over in his mind all the possible and impossible names he
+could think of, ending at last with the conviction it was some “Nob” he
+must have met abroad, and whom in a moment of his expansive hospitality
+he had invited to visit him. “Isn't it like them!” muttered he. “It
+would be long before they'd think of such an entertainment to an
+old neighbor like myself; but here they are spending--who knows how
+much?--for somebody that to-morrow or next day won't remember their
+names, or maybe, perhaps, laugh when they think of the funny old woman
+they saw,--the 'Fright' with the yellow shawl and the orange bonnet. Oh,
+the world, the world!”
+
+It is not for me to speculate on what sort of thing the world had been,
+if the Major himself had been intrusted with the control and fashion of
+it; but I have my doubts that we are just as well off as we are. “Well,
+though they haven't the manners to say 'M'Cormick; will you stop and
+dine?' they haven't done with me yet; not a bit!” And with this resolve
+he entered the cottage, and found his way to the drawing-room. It was
+unoccupied; so he sat himself down in a comfortable armchair, to await
+events and their issue. There were books and journals and newspapers
+about; but the Major was not a reader, and so he sat musing and
+meditating, while the time went by. Just as the clock struck five, Miss
+Dinah, whose various cares of housewifery had given her a very busy day,
+was about to have a look at the drawing-room before she went to dress,
+and being fully aware that one of her guests was asleep, and the other
+full stretched beside the river, she felt she could go her “rounds”
+ without fear of being observed. Now, whatever had been the peculiar
+functions she was lately engaged in, they had exacted from her certain
+changes in costume more picturesque than flattering. In the first place,
+the sleeves of her dress were rolled up above the elbows, displaying
+arms more remarkable for bone than beauty. A similar curtailment of her
+petticoats exhibited feet and ankles which--not to be ungallant--might
+be called massive rather than elegant; and lastly, her two long curls
+of auburn hair--curls which, in the splendor of her full toilette,
+were supposed to be no mean aids to her captivating powers--were now
+tastefully festooned and fastened to the back of her head, pretty
+much as a pair of hawsers are occasionally disposed on the bow of a
+merchantman! Thus costumed, she had advanced into the middle of the room
+before she saw the Major.
+
+“A pleasure quite unexpected, sir, is this,” said she, with a vigorous
+effort to shake out what sailors would call her “lower courses.” “I was
+not aware that you were here.”
+
+“Indeed, then, I came in myself, just like old times. I said this
+morning, if it 's fine to-day, I 'll just go over to the 'Fisherman's
+Home.'”
+
+“'The Home,' sir, if you please. We retain so much of the former name.”
+ But just as she uttered the correction, a chance look at the glass
+conveyed the condition of her head-gear,--a startling fact which made
+her cheeks perfectly crimson. “I lay stress upon the change of name,
+sir,” continued she, “as intimating that we are no longer innkeepers,
+and expect something, at least, of the deference rendered to those who
+call their house their own.”
+
+“To be sure, and why not?” croaked out the Major, with a malicious grin.
+“And I forgot all about it, little thinking, indeed, to surprise you in
+'dishabille,' as they call it.”
+
+“_You_ surprise me, sir, every time we meet,” said she, with flashing
+eyes. “And you make me feel surprised with myself for my endurance!”
+ And so saying, she retired towards the door, covering her retreat as
+she went by every object of furniture that presented itself, and, like
+a skilful general, defending her rear by every artifice of the ground.
+Thus did she exit, and with a bang of the door--as eloquent as any
+speech--close the colloquy.
+
+“Faix! and the Swiss costume doesn't become you at all!” said the Major,
+as he sat back in his chair, and cackled over the scene.
+
+As Miss Barrington, boiling with passion, passed her brother's door, she
+stopped to knock.
+
+“Peter!” cried she. “Peter Barrington, I say!” The words were, however,
+not well out, when she heard a step ascending the stair. She could not
+risk another discovery like the last; so, opening the door, she said,
+“That hateful M'Cormick is below. Peter, take care that on no account--”
+
+There was no time to finish, and she had barely an instant to gain her
+own room, when Stapylton reached the corridor.
+
+Peter Barrington had, however, heard enough to inform him of his
+sister's high behest. Indeed, he was as quick at interpreting brief
+messages as people have grown in these latter days of telegraphic
+communication. Oracular utterings had been more than once in his life
+his only instructors, and he now knew that he had been peremptorily
+ordered not to ask the Major to dinner.
+
+There are, doubtless, people in this world--I almost fancy I have met
+one or two such myself--who would not have felt peculiar difficulty in
+obeying this command; who would have gone down to the drawing-room
+and talked coolly to the visitor, discussing commonplaces, easily and
+carelessly, noting the while how at every pause of the conversation each
+was dwelling on the self-same point, and yet, with a quiet abstinence,
+never touching it, till with a sigh, that was half a malediction, the
+uninvited would rise to take leave. Barrington was not of this number.
+The man who sat under his roof was sacred. He could have no faults; and
+to such a pitch had this punctilio carried him, that had an actual enemy
+gained the inside of his threshold, he would have spared nothing to
+treat him with honor and respect.
+
+“Well, well,” muttered he, as he slowly descended the stairs, “it will
+be the first time in my life I ever did it, and I don't know how to go
+about it now.”
+
+When a frank and generous man is about to do something he is ashamed
+of, how readily will a crafty and less scrupulous observer detect it!
+M'Cormick read Barrington's secret before he was a minute in the room.
+It was in vain Peter affected an off-hand easy manner, incidentally
+dropping a hint that the Attorney-General and another friend had just
+arrived,--a visit, a mere business visit it was, to be passed with
+law papers and parchments. “Poor fun when the partridges were in the
+stubble, but there was no help for it. Who knew, however, if he could
+not induce them to give him an extra day, and if I can, Major, you must
+promise to come over and meet them. You 'll be charmed with Withering,
+he has such a fund of agreeability. One of the old school, but not the
+less delightful to you and me. Come, now, give me your word--for--shall
+we say Saturday?--Yes, Saturday!”
+
+“I 've nothing to say against it,” grumbled out M'Cormick, whose assent
+was given, as attorneys say, without prejudice to any other claim.
+
+“You shall hear from me in the morning, then,” said Peter. “I 'll send
+you a line to say what success I have had with my friends.”
+
+“Any time in the day will do,” said the Major, unconcernedly; for, in
+truth, the future never had in his estimation the same interest as the
+present. As for the birds in the bush, he simply did not believe in them
+at all.
+
+“No, no,” said Barrington, hurriedly. “You shall hear from me early,
+for I am anxious you should meet Withering and his companion, too,--a
+brother-soldier.”
+
+“Who may he be?” asked M'Cormick.
+
+“That's my secret, Major,--that's my secret,” said Peter, with a forced
+laugh, for it now wanted but ten minutes to six; “but you shall know all
+on Saturday.”
+
+Had he said on the day of judgment, the assurance would have been as
+palatable to M'Cormick. Talking to him of Saturday on a Monday was
+asking him to speculate on the infinite. Meanwhile he sat on, as only
+they sit who understand the deep and high mystery of that process. Oh,
+if you who have your fortunes to make in life, without any assignable
+mode for so doing, without a craft, a calling, or a trade, knew what
+success there was to be achieved merely by sitting--by simply being
+“there,” eternally “there”--a warning, an example, an illustration, a
+what you will, of boredom or infliction; but still “there.” The butt
+of this man, the terror of that,--hated, feared, trembled at,--but yet
+recognized as a thing that must be, an institution that was, and is, and
+shall be, when we are all dead and buried.
+
+Long and dreary may be the days of the sitter, but the hour of his
+reward will come at last. There will come the time when some one--any
+one--will be wanted to pair off with some other bore, to listen to his
+stories and make up his whist-table; and then he will be “there.” I knew
+a man who, merely by sitting on patiently for years, was at last chosen
+to be sent as a Minister and special Envoy to a foreign Court just
+to get rid of him. And for the women sitters,--the well-dressed
+and prettily got-up simperers, who have sat their husbands into
+Commissionerships, Colonial Secretaryships, and such like,--are they not
+written of in the Book of Beauty?
+
+“Here 's M'Cormick, Dinah,” said Barrington, with a voice shaking with
+agitation and anxiety, “whom I want to pledge himself to us for Saturday
+next. Will you add your persuasions to mine, and see what can be done?”
+
+“Don't you think you can depend upon me?” cackled out the Major.
+
+“I am certain of it, sir; I feel your word like your bond on such a
+matter,” said Miss Dinah. “My grandniece, Miss Josephine Barrington,”
+ said she, presenting that young lady, who courtesied formally to the
+unprepossessing stranger.
+
+“I'm proud of the honor, ma'am,” said M'Cormick, with a deep bow, and
+resumed his seat; to rise again, however, as Withering entered the room
+and was introduced to him.
+
+“This is intolerable, Peter,” whispered Miss Barrington, while the
+lawyer and the Major were talking together. “You are certain you have
+not asked him?”
+
+“On my honor, Dinah! on my honor!”
+
+“I hope I am not late?” cried Stapylton, entering; then turning hastily
+to Barrington, said, “Pray present me to your niece.”
+
+“This is my sister, Major Stapylton; this is my granddaughter;” and the
+ladies courtesied, each with a degree of satisfaction which the reader
+shall be left to assign them.
+
+After a few words of commonplace civility, uttered, however, with
+a courtesy and tact which won their way for the speaker, Stapylton
+recognized and shook hands with M'Cormick.
+
+“You know my neighbor, then?” said Barrington, in some surprise.
+
+“I am charmed to say I do; he owes me the _denouement_ of a most amusing
+story, which was suddenly broken off when we last parted, but which I
+shall certainly claim after dinner.”
+
+“He has been kind enough to engage himself to us for Saturday,” began
+Dinah. But M'Cormick, who saw the moment critical, stepped in,--
+
+“You shall hear every word of it before you sleep. It's all about
+Walcheren, though they think Waterloo more the fashion now.”
+
+“Just as this young lady might fancy Major Stapylton a more interesting
+event than one of us,” said Withering, laughing. “But what 's become of
+your boasted punctuality, Barrington? A quarter past,--are you waiting
+for any one?”
+
+“Are we, Dinah?” asked Barrington, with a look of sheepishness.
+
+“Not that I am aware of, Peter. There is no one to _come_;” and she
+laid such an emphasis on the word as made the significance palpable.
+
+To Barrington it was painful as well as palpable; so painful, indeed,
+that he hurriedly rang the bell, saying, in a sharp voice, “Of course,
+we are all here,--there are six of us. Dinner, Darby!”
+
+The Major had won, but he was too crafty to show any triumph at his
+victory, and he did not dare even to look towards where Miss Barrington
+stood, lest he should chance to catch her eye. Dinner was at length
+announced. Withering gave his arm to Miss Barrington, Stapylton took
+charge of Josephine, and old Peter, pleasantly drawing his arm within
+M'Cormick's, said, “I hope you 've got a good appetite, Major, for I
+have a rare fish for you to-day, and your favorite sauce, too,--smelt,
+not lobster.”
+
+Poor Barrington! it was a trying moment for him, that short walk into
+the dinner-room, and he felt very grateful to M'Cormick that he said
+nothing peevish or sarcastic to him on the way. Many a dinner begins in
+awkwardness, but warms as it proceeds into a pleasant geniality. Such
+was the case here. Amongst those, besides, who have not the ties of
+old friendship between them, or have not as yet warmed into that genial
+good-fellowship which is, so to say, its foster-brother, a character of
+the M'Cormick class is not so damaging an element as might be imagined,
+and at times there is a positive advantage in having one of whose
+merits, by a tacit understanding, all are quite agreed. Withering
+and Stapylton both read the man at once, and drew out his salient
+points--his parsimony, his malice, and his prying curiosity--in various
+ways, but so neatly and so advisedly as to make him fancy he was the
+attacking party, and very successful, too, in his assaults upon the
+enemy. Even Barrington, in the honest simplicity of his nature, was
+taken in, and more than once thought that the old Major was too severe
+upon the others, and sat in wondering admiration of their self-command
+and good temper. No deception of this sort prevailed with Miss
+Barrington, who enjoyed to the fullest extent the subtle raillery with
+which they induced him to betray every meanness of his nature, and yet
+never suffered the disclosure to soar above the region of the ludicrous.
+
+“You have been rather hard upon them, Major,” said Barrington, as they
+strolled about on the greensward after dinner to enjoy their coffee and
+a cigar. “Don't you think you have been a shade too severe?”
+
+“It will do them good. They wanted to turn me out like a bagged fox, and
+show the ladies some sport; but I taught them a thing or two.”
+
+“No, no, M'Cormick, you wrong them there; they had no such intentions,
+believe me.”
+
+“I know that _you_ did n't see it,” said he, with emphasis, “but your
+sister did, and liked it well, besides; ay, and the young one joined in
+the fun. And, after all, I don't see that they got much by the victory,
+for Withering was not pleased at my little hit about the days when he
+used to be a Whig and spout liberal politics; and the other liked just
+as little my remark about the fellows in the Company's service, and how
+nobody knew who they were or where they came from. He was in the Madras
+army himself, but I pretended not to know it; but I found his name
+written on the leaf of an old book he gave me, and the regiment he was
+in: and did you see how he looked when I touched on it? But here he
+comes now.”
+
+“Make your peace with him, M'Cormick, make your peace!” said Barrington,
+as he moved away, not sorry, as he went, to mark the easy familiarity
+with which Stapylton drew his arm within the other's, and walked along
+at his side.
+
+“Wasn't that a wonderful dinner we had to-day, from a man that hasn't a
+cross in his pocket?” croaked out M'Cormick to Stapylton.
+
+“Is it possible?”
+
+“Sherry and Madeira after your soup, then Sauterne,--a thing I don't
+care for any more than the oyster patties it came with; champagne next,
+and in tumblers too! Do you ever see it better done at your mess? Or
+where did you ever taste a finer glass of claret?”
+
+“It was all admirable.”
+
+“There was only one thing forgotten,--not that it signifies to me.”
+
+“And what might that be?”
+
+“It was n't paid for! No, nor will it ever be!”
+
+“You amaze me, Major. My impression was that our friend here was,
+without being rich, in very comfortable circumstances; able to live
+handsomely, while he carried on a somewhat costly suit.”
+
+“That 's the greatest folly of all,” broke out M'Cormick; “and it's to
+get money for that now that he's going to mortgage this place here,--ay,
+the very ground under our feet!” And this he said with a sort of
+tremulous indignation, as though the atrocity bore especially hard upon
+_them_. “Kinshela, the attorney from Kilkenny, was up with me about it
+yesterday. 'It's an elegant investment, Major,' says he, 'and you 're
+very likely to get the place into your hands for all the chance old
+Peter has of paying off the charge. His heart is in that suit, and he
+'ll not stop as long as he has a guinea to go on with it.'
+
+“I said, 'I 'd think of it: I 'd turn it over in my mind;' for there's
+various ways of looking at it.”
+
+“I fancy I apprehend one of them,” said Stapylton, with a half-jocular
+glance at his companion. “You have been reflecting over another
+investment, eh? Am I not right? I remarked you at dinner. I saw how the
+young brunette had struck you, and I said to myself, 'She has made a
+conquest already!'”
+
+“Not a bit of it; nothing of the kind,” said M'Cormick, awkwardly. “I 'm
+too 'cute to be caught that way.”
+
+“Yes, but remember it might be a very good catch. I don't speak of the
+suit, because I agree with you, the chances in that direction are very
+small, indeed, and I cannot understand the hopeful feeling with which
+he prosecutes it; but she is a fine, handsome girl, very attractive in
+manner, and equal to any station.”
+
+“And what's the good of all that to me? Wouldn't it be better if she
+could make a pease-pudding, like Polly Dill, or know how to fatten a
+turkey, or salt down a side of bacon?”
+
+“I don't think so; I declare, I don't think so,” said Stapylton, as he
+lighted a fresh cigar. “These are household cares, and to be bought with
+money, and not expensively, either. What a man like you or I wants is
+one who should give a sort of tone,--impart a degree of elegance to his
+daily life. We old bachelors grow into self-indulgence, which is only
+another name for barbarism. With a mistaken idea of comfort we neglect
+scores of little observances which constitute the small currency of
+civilization, and without which all intercourse is unpleasing and
+ungraceful.”
+
+“I'm not quite sure that I understand you aright, but there's one thing
+I know, I 'd think twice of it before I 'd ask that young woman to be
+Mrs. M'Cormick. And, besides,” added he, with a sly side-look, “if it's
+so good a thing, why don't you think of it for yourself?”
+
+“I need not tell an old soldier like _you_ that full pay and a wife are
+incompatible. Every wise man's experience shows it; and when a fellow
+goes to the bishop for a license, he should send in his papers to the
+Horse Guards. Now, I 'm too poor to give up my career. I have not, like
+you, a charming cottage on a river's bank, and a swelling lawn dotted
+over with my own sheep before my door. I cannot put off the harness.”
+
+“Who talks of putting off the harness?” cried Withering, gayly, as he
+joined them. “Who ever dreamed of doing anything so ill-judging and so
+mistaken? Why, if it were only to hide the spots where the collar has
+galled you, you ought to wear the trappings to the last. No man ever
+knew how to idle, who had n't passed all his life at it! Some go so far
+as to say that for real success a man's father and grandfather should
+have been idlers before him. But have you seen Barrington? He has been
+looking for you all over the grounds.”
+
+“No,” said Stapylton; “my old brother-officer and myself got into
+pipeclay and barrack talk, and strolled away down here unconsciously.”
+
+“Well, we 'd better not be late for tea,” broke in the Major, “or we
+'ll hear of it from Miss Dinah!” And there was something so comic in
+the seriousness of his tone, that they laughed heartily as they turned
+towards the house.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. A MOVE IN ADVANCE
+
+How pleasantly did the next day break on the “Home”! Polly Dill arrived
+in the best of possible spirits. A few lines from Tom had just reached
+them. They were written at sea; but the poor fellow's notions of
+latitude and longitude were so confused that it was not easy to say from
+whence. They were cheery, however, he was in good health, his comrades
+were kind-hearted creatures, and evidently recognized in him one of
+a station above their own. He said that he could have been appointed
+hospital sergeant-if he liked, but that whatever reminded him of his old
+calling was so distasteful that he preferred remaining as he was, the
+rather as he was given to believe he should soon be a corporal.
+
+“Not that I mean to stop there, Polly; and now that I have n't got to
+study for it, I feel a courage as to the future I never knew before.
+Give my love to Mr. Conyers, and say that I 'm never tired of thinking
+over the last night I saw him, and of all his good nature to me, and
+that I hope I 'll see his father some day or other to thank him. I
+suppose father does n't miss me? I 'm sure mother does n't; and it
+'s only yourself, Polly, will ever feel a heavy heart for the poor
+castaway! But cheer up! for as sure as my name is Tom, I 'll not bring
+discredit on you, and you 'll not be ashamed to take my arm down the
+main street when we meet. I must close now, for the boat is going.
+
+“P. S. I dreamed last night you rode Sid Davis's brown mare over the
+Millrace at Graigue. Would n't it be strange if it came true? I wish I
+could know it.”
+
+“May I show this to my friend here, Polly?” said Barrington, pointing
+to Withering. “It's a letter he 'd like to read; and as she nodded
+assent, he handed it across the breakfast-table.
+
+“What is your brother's regiment, Miss Dill?” said Stapylton, who had
+just caught a stray word or two of what passed.
+
+“The Forty-ninth.”
+
+“The Forty-ninth,” said he, repeating the words once or twice. “Let me
+see,--don't I know some Forty-ninth men? To be sure I do. There's Rep
+ton and Hare. Your brother will be delighted with Hare.”
+
+“My brother is in the ranks, Major Stapylton,” said she, flushing a deep
+scarlet; and Barrington quickly interposed,--
+
+“It was the wild frolic of a young man to escape a profession he had no
+mind for.”
+
+“But in foreign armies every one does it,” broke in Stapylton,
+hurriedly. “No matter what a man's rank may be, he must carry the
+musket; and I own I like the practice,--if for nothing else for that
+fine spirit of _camaraderie_ which it engenders.”
+
+Fifine's eyes sparkled with pleasure at what she deemed the well-bred
+readiness of this speech, while Polly became deadly pale, and seemed
+with difficulty to repress the repartee that rose to her mind. Not so
+Miss Dinah, who promptly said, “No foreign customs can palliate a breach
+of our habits. We are English, and we don't desire to be Frenchmen or
+Germans.”
+
+“Might we not occasionally borrow from our neighbors with advantage?”
+ asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+“I agree with Miss Barrington,” said Withering,--“I agree with Miss
+Barrington, whose very prejudices are always right. An army formed by a
+conscription which exempts no man is on a totally different footing from
+one derived from voluntary enlistment.”
+
+“A practice that some say should be reserved for marriage,” said
+Barrington, whose happy tact it was to relieve a discussion by a ready
+joke.
+
+They arose from table soon after,--Polly to accompany Miss Barrington
+over the garden and the shrubberies, and show all that had been done
+in their absence, and all that she yet intended to do, if approved of;
+Withering adjourned to Barrington's study to pore over parchments; and
+Stapylton, after vainly seeking to find Josephine in the drawing-room,
+the flower-garden, or the lawn, betook himself with a book, the first he
+could find on the table, to the river's side, and lay down, less to read
+than to meditate and reflect.
+
+A breezy morning of a fine day in early autumn, with slow sailing clouds
+above and a flickering sunlight on the grass below, besides a rippling
+river, whose banks are glowing with blue and purple heath-bells,--all
+these and a Waverley novel were not enough to distract Stapylton from
+the cares that pressed upon his mind; for so it is, look where we may on
+those whom Fortune would seem to have made her especial favorites, and
+we shall find some unsatisfied ambition, some craving wish doomed to
+disappointment, some hope deferred till the heart that held it has
+ceased to care for its accomplishment. To the world's eyes, here was a
+man eminently fortunate: already high up in the service, with health,
+vigor, and good looks, a reputation established for personal gallantry
+in the field, and an amount of capacity that had already won for him
+more than one distinction, and yet all these, great and solid advantages
+as they are, were not sufficient to give the ease of mind we call
+happiness.
+
+He had debts, some of them heavy debts, but these sat lightly on him.
+He was one of those men creditors never crush, some secret consciousness
+seeming to whisper that, however ill the world may go with them for a
+while, in the long run they must triumph; and thus Mr. Hirman Davis, to
+whom he owed thousands, would have cashed him another bill to-morrow,
+all on the faith of that future which Stapylton talked about with the
+careless confidence of a mind assured.
+
+He had enemies, too,--powerful and determined enemies,--who opposed his
+advancement for many a year, and were still adverse to him; but, like
+the creditors, they felt he was not a man to be crushed, and so he and
+his ill-wishers smiled blandly when they met, exchanged the most
+cordial greetings, and even imparted little confidences of their
+several fortunes with all that well-bred duplicity which so simulates
+friendship.
+
+He had been crossed,--no, not in love, but in his ambition to marry one
+greatly above him in station; but her subsequent marriage had been so
+unfortunate that he felt in part recompensed for the slight she passed
+upon him; so that, taking it all and all, fate had never been cruel to
+him without a compensation.
+
+There are men who feel their whole existence to be a hand-to-hand
+struggle with the world, who regard the world as an adversary to be
+worsted, and all whose efforts are devoted to reach that point upon
+which they can turn round and say, “You see that I have won the game.
+I was unknown, and I am famous; I was poor, and I am rich; I was passed
+over and ignored, and now the very highest are proud to recognize me!”
+ Stapylton was one of these. All the egotism of his nature took this
+form, and it was far more in a spirit against his fellows than in any
+indulgence of himself he fought and struggled with Fortune. Intrusted by
+Withering with much of the secret history of Barring-ton's claim against
+the India Company, he had learned considerably more through inquiries
+instituted by himself, and at length arrived at the conclusion that if
+old Barring-ton could be persuaded to limit his demands within moderate
+bounds, and not insist upon the details of that personal reparation
+which he assumed so essential to his son's honor, a very ample
+recompense would not be refused him. It was to induce Barrington to take
+this course Stapylton had consented to come down with Withering,--so, at
+least, he said, and so Withering believed. Old lawyer that he was,
+with a hundred instincts of distrust about him, he had conceived a real
+liking for Stapylton, and a great confidence in his judgment. “We shall
+have to divide our labors here, Major,” said he, as they travelled along
+together; “I will leave the ladies to your care. Barrington shall be
+mine.” A very brief acquaintance with Miss Dinah satisfied Stapylton
+that she was one to require nice treatment, and what he called “a
+very light hand.” The two or three little baits he had thrown out
+took nothing; the stray bits of sentimentality, or chance scraps of
+high-toned principle he had addressed to her, had failed. It was
+only when he had with some sharpness hit off some small meanness
+in M'Cormick's nature that she had even vouchsafed him so much as
+a half-smile of approval, and he saw that even then she watched him
+closely.
+
+“No,” said he, half aloud to himself, “that old woman is not one easily
+to be dealt with; and the younger one, too, would have a will of her own
+if she had but the way to use it. If Polly had been in her place,--the
+clever, quickwitted Polly,--she would have gone with me in my plans,
+associated herself in all my projects, and assured their success. Oh for
+a good colleague just to keep the boat's head straight when one is weary
+of rowing!”
+
+“Would I do?” said a low voice near. And, on looking up, he saw
+Josephine standing over him, with an arch smile on her face as though
+she had surprised him in a confession.
+
+“How long have you been there?” asked he, hurriedly.
+
+“A few seconds.''
+
+“And what have you heard me say?”
+
+“That you wanted a colleague, or a companion of some sort; and as I was
+the only useless person here, I offered myself.”
+
+“In good faith?”
+
+“In good faith!--why not? I am more likely to gain by the association
+than you are; at least, if you can only be as pleasant of a morning as
+you were yesterday at dinner.”
+
+“I 'll try,” said he, springing to his feet; “and as a success in these
+efforts is mainly owing to the amount of zeal that animates them, I am
+hopeful.”
+
+“Which means a flattery at the outset,” said she, smiling.
+
+“Only as much as your friend Mr. Withering would throw out to dispose
+the court in his favor; and now, which way shall we walk? Are you to be
+the guide, or I?”
+
+“You, by all means, since you know nothing of the locality.”
+
+“Agreed. Well, here is my plan. We cross the river in this boat, and
+take that path yonder that leads up by the waterfall. I know, from the
+dark shadow of the mountain, that there is a deep glen, very wild, very
+romantic, and very solemn, through which I mean to conduct you.”
+
+“All this means a very long excursion, does it not?”
+
+“You have just told me that you were free from all engagement.”
+
+“Yes; but not from all control. I must ask Aunt Dinah's leave before I
+set out on this notable expedition.”
+
+“Do nothing of the kind. It would be to make a caprice seem a plan. Let
+us go where you will,--here, along the river's side; anywhere, so that
+we may affect to think that we are free agents, and not merely good
+children sent out for a walk.”
+
+“What a rebel against authority you are for one so despotic yourself!”
+
+“I despotic! Who ever called me so?”
+
+“Your officers say as much.”
+
+“I know from what quarter that came,” said he; and his bronzed face grew
+a shade deeper. “That dilettante soldier, young Conyers, has given me
+this character; but I 'd rather talk of you than myself. Tell me all
+about your life. Is it as delightful as everything around would bespeak
+it? Are these trees and flowers, this sunny bank, this perfumed sward,
+true emblems of the existence they embellish, or is Paradise only a
+cheat?”
+
+“I don't think so. I think Paradise is very like what it looks, not but
+I own that the garden is pleasanter with guests in it than when only
+Adam and Eve were there. Mr. Withering is charming, and you can be very
+agreeable.”
+
+“I would I knew how to be so,” said he, seriously, “just at this moment;
+for I am going away from Ireland, and I am very desirous of leaving a
+good impression behind me.”
+
+“What could it signify to you how you were thought of in this lonely
+spot?”
+
+“More than you suspect,--more than you would, perhaps, credit,” said he,
+feelingly.
+
+There was a little pause, during which they walked along side by side.
+
+“What are you thinking of?” said she, at last
+
+“I was thinking of a strange thing,--it was this: About a week ago there
+was no effort I was not making to obtain the command of my regiment. I
+wanted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; and so bent was I on gaining my object,
+that if giving away three or four years of that life that I may hope for
+would have done it, I 'd have closed the bargain; and now the ambition
+is gone, and I am speculating whether I 'll not take the cottage of your
+friend Major M'Cormick,--he offered it to me last night,--and become
+your neighbor. What say _you_ to the project?”
+
+“For us the exchange will be all a gain.”
+
+“I want your opinion,--your own,” said he, with a voice reduced to a
+mere whisper.
+
+“I'd like it of all things; although, if I were your sister or your
+daughter, I'd not counsel it.”
+
+“And why not, if you were my sister?” said he, with a certain constraint
+in his manner.
+
+“I'd say it was inglorious to change from the noble activity of a
+soldier's life to come and dream away existence here.”
+
+“But what if I have done enough for this same thing men call fame?
+I have had my share of campaigning, and as the world looks there is
+wondrous little prospect of any renewal of it. These peace achievements
+suit your friend Conyers better than me.”
+
+“I think you are not just to him. If I read him aright, he is burning
+for an occasion to distinguish himself.”
+
+A cold shrug of the shoulders was his only acknowledgment of this
+speech, and again a silence fell between them.
+
+“I would rather talk of _you_, if you would let me,” said he, with much
+significance of voice and manner. “Say would you like to have me for
+your neighbor?”
+
+“It would be a pleasant exchange for Major M'Cormick,” said she,
+laughing.
+
+“I want you to be serious now. What I am asking you interests me too
+deeply to jest over.”
+
+“First of all, is the project a serious one?”
+
+“It is.”
+
+“Next, why ask advice from one as inexperienced as I am?”
+
+“Because it is not counsel I ask,--it is something more. Don't look
+surprised, and, above all, don't look angry, but listen to me. What I
+have said now, and what more I would say, might more properly have been
+uttered when we had known each other longer; but there are emergencies
+in life which give no time for slow approaches, and there are men,
+too, that they suit not. Imagine such now before you,--I mean, both the
+moment and the man. Imagine one who has gone through a great deal in
+life, seen, heard, and felt much, and yet never till now, never till
+this very morning, understood what it was to know one whose least word
+or passing look was more to him than ambition, higher than all the
+rewards of glory.”
+
+“We never met till yesterday,” said she, calmly.
+
+“True; and if we part to-morrow, it will be forever. I feel too
+painfully,” added he, with more eagerness, “how I compromise all that I
+value by an avowal abrupt and rash as this is; but I have had no choice.
+I have been offered the command of a native force in India, and must
+give my answer at once. With hope--the very faintest, so that it be
+hope--I will refuse. Remember I want no pledge, no promise; all I
+entreat is that you will regard me as one who seeks to win your favor.
+Let time do the rest.”
+
+“I do not think I ought to do this--I do not know if you should ask it.”
+
+“May I speak to your grandfather--may I tell him what I have told
+you--may I say, 'It is with Josephine's permission--'”
+
+“I am called Miss Barrington, sir, by all but those of my own family.”
+
+“Forgive me, I entreat you,” said he, with a deep humility in his tone.
+“I had never so far forgotten myself if calm reason had not deserted me.
+I will not transgress again.”
+
+“This is the shortest way back to the cottage,” said she, turning into a
+narrow path in the wood.
+
+“It does not lead to my hope,” said he, despondingly; and no more was
+uttered between them for some paces.
+
+“Do not walk so very fast, Miss Barrington,” said he, in a tone which
+trembled slightly. “In the few minutes--the seconds you could accord
+me--I might build the whole fortune of my life. I have already
+endangered my hopes by rashness; let me own that it is the fault I have
+struggled against in vain. This scar”--and he showed the deep mark of a
+sabre-wound on the temple--“was the price of one of my offendings; but
+it was light in suffering to what I am now enduring.”
+
+“Can we not talk of what will exact no such sacrifice?” said she,
+calmly.
+
+“Not now, not now!” said he, with emotion; “if you pass that porch
+without giving me an answer, life has no longer a tie for me. You
+know that I ask for no pledge, no promise, merely time,--no more than
+time,--a few more of those moments of which you now would seem eager to
+deny me. Linger an instant here, I beseech you, and remember that what
+to _you_ may be a caprice may to _me_ be a destiny.”
+
+“I will not hear more of this,” said she, half angrily. “If it were not
+for my own foolish trustfulness, you never would have dared to address
+such words to one whom you met yesterday for the first time.”
+
+“It is true your generous frankness, the nature they told me you
+inherited, gives me boldness, but it might teach you to have some pity
+for a disposition akin to it. One word,--only one word more.”
+
+“Not one, sir! The lesson my frankness has taught me is, never to incur
+this peril again.”
+
+“Do you part from me in anger?”
+
+“Not with _you_; but I will not answer for myself if you press me
+further.”
+
+“Even this much is better than despair,” said he, mournfully; and
+she passed into the cottage, while he stood in the porch and bowed
+respectfully as she went by. “Better than I looked for, better than
+I could have hoped,” muttered he to himself, as he strolled away and
+disappeared in the wood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. A CABINET COUNCIL
+
+“What do you think of it, Dinah?” said Barrington, as they sat in
+conclave the next morning in her own sitting-room.
+
+She laid down a letter she had just finished reading on the table,
+carefully folding it, like one trying to gain time before she spoke:
+“He's a clever man, and writes well, Peter; there can be no second
+opinion upon that.”
+
+“But his proposal, Dinah,--his proposal?”
+
+“Pleases me less the more I think of it. There is great disparity of
+age,--a wide discrepancy in character. A certain gravity of demeanor
+would not be undesirable, perhaps, in a husband for Josephine, who has
+her moments of capricious fancy; but if I mistake not, this man's nature
+is stern and unbending.”
+
+“There will be time enough to consider all that, Dinah. It is, in fact,
+to weigh well the chances of his fitness to secure her happiness that he
+pleads; he asks permission to make himself known to her, rather than to
+make his court.”
+
+“I used to fancy that they meant the same thing,--I know that they did
+in my day, Peter,” said she, bridling; “but come to the plain question
+before us. So far as I understand him, his position is this: 'If I
+satisfy you that my rank and fortune are satisfactory to you, have I
+your permission to come back here as your granddaughter's suitor?'”
+
+“Not precisely, Dinah,--not exactly this. Here are his words: 'I am well
+aware that I am much older than Miss Barrington, and it is simply to
+ascertain from herself if, in that disparity of years, there exists that
+disparity of tastes and temper which would indispose her to regard me as
+one to whom she would intrust her happiness. I hope to do this without
+any offence to her delicacy, though not without peril to my own
+self-love. Have I your leave for this experiment?'”
+
+“Who is he? Who are his friends, connections, belongings? What is his
+station independently of his military rank, and what are his means? Can
+you answer these questions?”
+
+“Not one of them. I never found myself till to-day in a position to
+inquire after them.”
+
+“Let us begin, then, by that investigation, Peter. There is no such
+test of a man as to make him talk of himself. With you alone the matter,
+perhaps, would not present much difficulty to him, but I intend that Mr.
+Withering's name and my own shall be on the committee; and, take _my_
+word for it, we shall sift the evidence carefully.”
+
+“Bear in mind, sister Dinah, that this gentleman is, first of all, our
+guest.”
+
+“The first of all that I mean to bear in mind is, that he desires to be
+your grandson.”
+
+“Of course,--of course. I would only observe on the reserve that should
+be maintained towards one who honors us with his presence.”
+
+“Peter Barrington, the Arabs, from whom you seem to borrow your notions
+on hospitality, seldom scruple about cutting a guest's head off when he
+passes the threshold; therefore I would advise you to adopt habits that
+may be more suited to the land we live in.”
+
+“All I know is,” said Barrington, rising and pacing the room, “that I
+could no more put a gentleman under my roof to the question as to his
+father and mother and his fortune, than I could rifle his writing-desk
+and read his letters.”
+
+“Brother Peter, the weakness of your disposition has cost you one of
+the finest estates in your country, and if it could be restored to you
+to-morrow, the same imbecility would forfeit it again. I will, however,
+take the matter into my own hands.”
+
+“With Withering, I suppose, to assist you?”
+
+“Certainly not. I am perfectly competent to make any inquiry I deem
+requisite without a legal adviser. Perhaps, were I to be so accompanied,
+Major Stapylton would suppose that he, too, should appear with his
+lawyer.”
+
+Barrington smiled faintly at the dry jest, but said nothing.
+
+“I see,” resumed she, “that you are very much afraid about my want of
+tact and delicacy in this investigation. It is a somewhat common belief
+amongst men that in all matters of business women err on the score of
+hardness and persistence. I have listened to some edifying homilies from
+your friend Withering on female incredulity and so forth,--reproaches
+which will cease to apply when men shall condescend to treat us as
+creatures accessible to reason, and not as mere dupes. See who is
+knocking at the door, Peter,” added she, sharply. “I declare it recalls
+the old days of our innkeeping, and Darby asking for the bill of the
+lame gentleman in No. 4.”
+
+“Upon my life, they were pleasant days, too,” said Barrington, but in a
+tone so low as to be unheard by his sister.
+
+“May I come in?” said Withering, as he opened the door a few inches,
+and peeped inside. “I want to show you a note I have just had from
+Kinshela, in Kilkenny.”
+
+“Yes, yes; come in,” said Miss Barrington. “I only wish you had arrived
+a little earlier. What is your note about?”
+
+“It's very short and very purpose-like. The first of it is all about
+Brazier's costs, which it seems the taxing-officer thinks fair and
+reasonable,--all excepting that charge for the additional affidavits.
+But here is what I want to show you. 'Major M'Cormick, of M'Cormick's
+Grove, has just been here; and although I am not entitled to say as much
+officially on his part, I entertain no doubt whatever but that he is
+ready to advance the money we require. I spoke of fifteen hundred, but
+said twelve might possibly be taken, and twelve would be, I imagine, his
+limit, since he held to this amount in all our conversation afterwards.
+He appears to be a man of strange and eccentric habits, and these
+will probably be deemed a sufficient excuse for the singular turn
+our interview took towards its conclusion. I was speaking of Mr.
+Barrington's wish for the insertion in the deed of a definite period for
+redemption, and he stopped me hastily with, “What if we could strike out
+another arrangement? What if he was to make a settlement of the place
+on his granddaughter? I am not too old to marry, and I 'd give him
+the money at five per cent.” I have been careful to give you the very
+expressions he employed, and of which I made a note when he left the
+office; for although fully aware how improper it would be in me to
+submit this proposal to Mr. Barrington, I have felt it my duty to put
+you in possession of all that has passed between us.'”
+
+“How can you laugh, Peter Barrington?--how is it possible you can laugh
+at such an insult,--such an outrage as this? Go on, sir,” said she,
+turning to Withering; “let us hear it to the end, for nothing worse can
+remain behind.”
+
+“There is no more; at least, there is not anything worth hearing.
+Kinshela winds up with many apologies, and hopes that I will only use
+his communication for my own guidance, and not permit it in any case to
+prejudice him in your estimation.” As he spoke, he crumpled up the note
+in his hand in some confusion.
+
+“Who thinks of Mr. Kinshela, or wants to think of him, in the matter?”
+ said she, angrily. “I wish, however, I were a man for a couple of hours,
+to show Major M'Cormick the estimate I take of the honor he intends us.”
+
+“After all, Dinah, it is not that he holds us more cheaply, but rates
+himself higher.”
+
+“Just so,” broke in Withering; “and I know, for my own part, I have
+never been able to shake off the flattery of being chosen by the most
+nefarious rascal to defend him on his trial. Every man is a great
+creature in his own eyes.”
+
+“Well, sir, be proud of your client,” said she, trembling with anger.
+
+“No, no,--he 's no client of mine, nor is this a case I would plead for
+him. I read you Kinshela's note because I thought you were building too
+confidently on M'Cormick's readiness to advance this money.”
+
+“I understood what that readiness meant, though my brother did not.
+M'Cormick looked forward to the day--and not a very distant day did he
+deem it--when he should step into possession of this place, and settle
+down here as its owner.”
+
+Barrington's face grew pale, and a glassy film spread over his eyes,
+as his sister's words sunk into his heart. “I declare, Dinah,” said he,
+falteringly, “that never did strike me before.”
+
+“'It never rains but it pours,' says the Irish adage,” resumed she. “My
+brother and I were just discussing another proposal of the same kind
+when you knocked. Read that letter. It is from a more adroit courtier
+than the other, and, at least, he does n't preface his intentions with a
+bargain.” And she handed Stapylton's letter to Withering.
+
+“Ah!” said the lawyer, “this is another guess sort of man, and a very
+different sort of proposal.”
+
+“I suspected that he was a favorite of yours,” said Miss Dinah,
+significantly.
+
+“Well, I own to it. He is one of those men who have a great attraction
+for me,--men who come out of the conflict of life and its interests
+without any exaggerated notions of human perfectibility or the opposite,
+who recognize plenty of good and no small share of bad in the world,
+but, on the whole, are satisfied that, saving ill health, very few of
+our calamities are not of our own providing.”
+
+“All of which is perfectly compatible with an odious egotism, sir,” said
+she, warmly; “but I feel proud to say such characters find few admirers
+amongst women.”
+
+“From which I opine that he is not fortunate enough to number Miss Dinah
+Barrington amongst his supporters?”
+
+“You are right there, sir. The prejudice I had against him before we met
+has been strengthened since I have seen him.”
+
+“It is candid of you, however, to call it a prejudice,” said he, with a
+smile.
+
+“Be it so, Mr. Withering; but prejudice is only another word for an
+instinct.”
+
+“I 'm afraid if we get into ethics we 'll forget all about the
+proposal,” said Barrington.
+
+“What a sarcasm!” cried Withering, “that if we talk of morals we shall
+ignore matrimony.”
+
+“I like the man, and I like his letter,” said Barrington.
+
+“I distrust both one and the other,” said Miss Dinah.
+
+“I almost fancy I could hold a brief on either side,” interposed
+Withering.
+
+“Of course you could, sir; and if the choice were open to you, it would
+be the defence of the guilty.”
+
+“My dear Miss Barrington,” said Withering, calmly, “when a great legal
+authority once said that he only needed three lines of any man's writing
+'to hang him,' it ought to make us very lenient in our construction of a
+letter. Now, so far as I can see in this one before us, he neither asks
+nor protests too much. He begs simply for time, he entreats leave to
+draw a bill on your affections, and he promises to meet it.”
+
+“No, sir, he wishes to draw at sight, though he has never shown us the
+letter of credit.”
+
+“I vow to Heaven it is hopeless to expect anything practical when you
+two stand up together for a sparring-match,” cried Barrington.
+
+“Be practical, then, brother Peter, and ask this gentleman to give you a
+quarter of an hour in your study. Find out who he is; I don't expect you
+to learn what he is, but what he has. With his fortune we shall get the
+clew to himself.”
+
+“Yes,” chimed in Withering, “all that is very businesslike and
+reasonable.”
+
+“And it pledges us to nothing,” added she. “We take soundings, but we
+don't promise to anchor.”
+
+“If you go off again with your figures of speech, Dinah, there is an
+end of me, for I have one of those unhappy memories that retain the
+illustration and forget what it typified. Besides this, here is a man
+who, out of pure good nature and respect for poor George's memory, has
+been doing us most important services, written letters innumerable, and
+taken the most active measures for our benefit. What sort of a figure
+shall I present if I bring him to book about his rental and the state of
+his bank account?”
+
+“With the exercise of a little tact, Barrington,--a little management--”
+
+“Ask a man with a club-foot to walk gingerly! I have no more notion of
+getting at anything by address than I have of tying the femoral artery.”
+
+“The more blunt the better, Peter Barrington. You may tumble into the
+truth, though you'd never pick your way into it. Meanwhile, leave me to
+deal with Major M'Cor-mick.”
+
+“You'll do it courteously, Dinah; you'll bear in mind that he is a
+neighbor of some twenty years' standing?” said Barrington, in a voice
+of anxiety.
+
+“I 'll do it in a manner that shall satisfy _my_ conscience and _his_
+presumption.”
+
+She seated herself at the table as she said this, and dashed off a few
+hasty lines. Indeed, so hurried was the action, that it looked far more
+like one of those instances of correspondence we see on the stage than
+an event of real life.
+
+“Will that do?” said she, showing the lines to Withering.
+
+The old lawyer read them over to himself, a faint twitching of the mouth
+being the only sign his face presented of any emotion. “I should say
+admirably,--nothing better.”
+
+“May I see it, Dinah?” asked Peter.
+
+“You shall hear it, brother,” said she, taking the paper and reading,--
+
+“'Miss Barrington informs Mr. Kinshela that if he does not at once
+retract his epistle of this morning's date, she will place it in the
+hands of her legal adviser, and proceed against it as a threatening
+letter.'”
+
+“Oh, sister, you will not send this?”
+
+“As sure as my name is Dinah Barrington.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. AN EXPRESS
+
+In the times before telegraphs,--and it is of such I am writing,--a
+hurried express was a far more stirring event than in these our days
+of incessant oracles. While, therefore, Barrington and his sister and
+Withering sat in deep consultation on Josephine's fate and future, a
+hasty summons arrived from Dublin, requiring the instantaneous departure
+of Stapylton, whose regiment was urgently needed in the north of
+England, at that time agitated by those disturbances called the Bread
+Riots. They were very formidable troubles, and when we look back upon
+them now, with the light which the great events of later years on the
+Continent afford us, seem more terrible still. It was the fashion,
+however, then, to treat them lightly, and talk of them contemptuously;
+and as Stapylton was eating a hasty luncheon before departure, he
+sneered at the rabble, and scoffed at the insolent pretension of their
+demands. Neither Barrington nor Withering sympathized with the spirit
+of the revolt, and yet each felt shocked at the tone of haughty contempt
+Stapylton assumed towards the people. “You'll see,” cried he, rising,
+“how a couple of brisk charges from our fellows will do more to bring
+these rascals to reason than all the fine pledges of your Parliament
+folk; and I promise you, for my own part, if I chance upon one of their
+leaders, I mean to lay my mark on him.”
+
+“I fear, sir, it is your instinctive dislike to the plebeian that moves
+you here,” said Miss Dinah. “You will not entertain the question whether
+these people may not have some wrongs to complain of.”
+
+“Perhaps so, madam,” said he; and his swarthy face grew darker as he
+spoke. “I suppose this is the case where the blood of a gentleman boils
+indignantly at the challenge of the _canaille_.”
+
+“I will not have a French word applied to our own people, sir,” said
+she, angrily.
+
+“Well said,” chimed in Withering. “It is wonderful how a phrase can seem
+to carry an argument along with it.”
+
+And old Peter smiled, and nodded his concurrence with this speech.
+
+“What a sad minority do I stand in!” said Stapylton, with an effort to
+smile very far from successful. “Will not Miss Josephine Barrington have
+generosity enough to aid the weaker side?”
+
+“Not if it be the worst cause,” interposed Dinah. “My niece needs not to
+be told she must be just before she is generous.”
+
+“Then it is to your own generosity I will appeal,” said Stapylton,
+turning to her; “and I will ask you to ascribe some, at least, of my
+bitterness to the sorrow I feel at being thus summoned away. Believe me
+it is no light matter to leave this place and its company.”
+
+“But only for a season, and a very brief season too, I trust,” said
+Barrington. “You are going away in our debt, remember.”
+
+“It is a loser's privilege, all the world over, to withdraw when he has
+lost enough,” said Stapylton, with a sad smile towards Miss Dinah; and
+though the speech was made in the hope it might elicit a contradiction,
+none came, and a very awkward silence ensued.
+
+“You will reach Dublin to-night, I suppose?” said Withering, to relieve
+the painful pause in the conversation.
+
+“It will be late,--after midnight, perhaps.”
+
+“And embark the next morning?”
+
+“Two of our squadrons have sailed already; the others will, of course,
+follow to-morrow.”
+
+“And young Conyers,” broke in Miss Dinah,--“he will, I suppose,
+accompany this--what shall I call it?--this raid?”
+
+“Yes, madam. Am I to convey to him your compliments upon the first
+opportunity to flesh his maiden sword?”
+
+“You are to do nothing of the kind, sir; but tell him from me not to
+forget that the angry passions of a starving multitude are not to be
+confounded with the vindictive hate of our natural enemies.”
+
+“Natural enemies, my dear Miss Barrington! I hope you cannot mean that
+there exists anything so monstrous in humanity as a natural enemy?”
+
+“I do, sir; and I mean all those whose jealousy of us ripens into
+hatred, and who would spill their heart's blood to see us humbled. When
+there exists a people like this, and who at every fresh outbreak of a
+war with us have carried into the new contest all the bitter animosities
+of long past struggles as debts to be liquidated, I call these
+natural enemies; and, if you prefer a shorter word for it, I call them
+Frenchmen.”
+
+“Dinah, Dinah!”
+
+“Peter, Peter! don't interrupt me. Major Stapylton has thought to tax me
+with a blunder, but I accept it as a boast!”
+
+“Madam, I am proud to be vanquished by you,” said Stapylton, bowing low.
+
+“And I trust, sir,” said she, continuing her speech, and as if heedless
+of his interruption, “that no similarity of name will make you behave at
+Peterloo--if that be the name--as though you were at Waterloo.”
+
+“Upon my life!” cried he, with a saucy laugh, “I don't know how I am
+to win your good opinion, except it be by tearing off my epaulettes, and
+putting myself at the head of the mob.”
+
+“You know very little of my sister, Major Stapylton,” said Barrington,
+“or you would scarcely have selected that mode of cultivating her
+favor.”
+
+“There is a popular belief that ladies always side with the winning
+cause,” said Stapylton, affecting a light and easy manner; “so I must
+do my best to be successful. May I hope I carry your _good_ wishes away
+with me?” said he, in a lower tone to Josephine.
+
+“I hope that nobody will hurt you, and you hurt nobody,” said she,
+laughingly.
+
+“And this, I take it, is about as much sympathy as ever attends a man
+on such a campaign. Mr. Barrington, will you grant me two minutes
+of conversation in your own room?” And, with a bow of acquiescence,
+Barrington led the way to his study.
+
+“I ought to have anticipated your request, Major Stapyl-ton,” said
+Barrington, when they found themselves alone. “I owe you a reply to your
+letter, but the simple fact is, I do not know what answer to give it;
+for while most sensible of the honor you intend us, I feel still there
+is much to be explained on both sides. We know scarcely anything of each
+other, and though I am conscious of the generosity which prompts a
+man with _your_ prospects and in _your_ position to ally himself with
+persons in _ours_, yet I owe it to myself to say, it hangs upon a
+contingency to restore us to wealth and station. Even a portion of what
+I claim from the East India Company would make my granddaughter one of
+the richest heiresses in England.”
+
+Stapylton gave a cold, a very cold smile, in reply to this speech. It
+might mean that he was incredulous or indifferent, or it might imply
+that the issue was one which need not have been introduced into the
+case at all. Whatever its signification, Barrington felt hurt by it, and
+hastily said,--
+
+“Not that I have any need to trouble you with these details: it is
+rather my province to ask for information regarding _your_ circumstances
+than to enter upon a discussion of _ours_.”
+
+“I am quite ready to give you the very fullest and clearest,--I mean
+to yourself personally, or to your sister; for, except where the lawyer
+intervenes of necessity and _de droit_, I own that I resent his
+presence as an insult. I suppose few of us are devoid of certain
+family circumstances which it would be more agreeable to deal with in
+confidence; and though, perhaps, I am as fortunate as most men in this
+respect, there are one or two small matters on which I would ask your
+attention. These, however, are neither important nor pressing. My first
+care is to know,--and I hope I am not peremptory in asking it,--have I
+your consent to the proposition contained in my letter; am I at liberty
+to address Miss Barrington?”
+
+Barrington flushed deeply and fidgeted; he arose and sat down
+again,--all his excitement only aggravated by the well-bred composure
+of the other, who seemed utterly unconscious of the uneasiness he was
+causing.
+
+“Don't you think, Major, that this is a case for a little time to
+reflect,--that in a matter so momentous as this, a few days at least are
+requisite for consideration? We ought to ascertain something at least of
+my granddaughter's own sentiments,--I mean, of course, in a general way.
+It might be, too, that a day or two might give us some better insight
+into her future prospects.”
+
+“Pardon my interrupting you; but, on the last point, I am perfectly
+indifferent. Miss Barrington with half a province for her dower, would
+be no more in my eyes than Miss Barrington as she sat at breakfast
+this morning. Nor is there anything of high-flown sentiment in this
+declaration, as my means are sufficiently ample for all that I want or
+care.”
+
+“There, at least, is one difficulty disposed of. You are an eldest son?”
+ said he; and he blushed at his own boldness in making the inquiry.
+
+“I am an only son.”
+
+“Easier again,” said Barrington, trying to laugh off the awkward moment.
+“No cutting down one's old timber to pay off the provisions for younger
+brothers.”
+
+“In my case there is no need of this.”
+
+“And your father. Is he still living, Major Stapylton?”
+
+“My father has been dead some years.”
+
+Barrington fidgeted again, fumbled with his watch-chain and his
+eye-glass, and would have given more than he could afford for any
+casualty that should cut short the interview. He wanted to say, “What is
+the amount of your fortune? What is it? Where is it? Are you Wiltshire
+or Staffordshire? Who are your uncles and aunts, and your good friends
+that you pray for, and where do you pray for them?” A thousand questions
+of this sort arose in his mind, one only more prying and impertinent
+than another. He knew he ought to ask them; he knew Dinah would have
+asked them. Ay, and would have the answers to them as plain and palpable
+as the replies to a life assurance circular; but he could n't do it. No;
+not if his life depended on it.
+
+He had already gone further in his transgression of good manners than it
+ever occurred to him before to do, and he felt something between a holy
+inquisitor and a spy of the police.
+
+Stapylton looked at his watch, and gave a slight start.
+
+“Later than you thought, eh?” cried Peter, overjoyed at the diversion.
+
+Stapylton smiled a cold assent, and put up his watch without a word. He
+saw all the confusion and embarrassment of the other, and made no effort
+to relieve him. At last, but not until after a considerable pause,
+he said,--“I believe, Mr. Barrington,--I hope, at least,--I have
+satisfactorily answered the questions which, with every right on your
+part, you have deemed proper to put to me. I cannot but feel how painful
+the task has been to you, and I regret it the more, since probably
+it has set a limit to inquiries which you are perfectly justified in
+making, but which closer relations between us may make a matter far less
+formidable one of these days.”
+
+“Yes, yes,--just so; of course,” said Barrington, hurriedly assenting to
+he knew not what.
+
+“And I trust I take my leave of you with the understanding that when
+we meet again, it shall be as in the commencement of these pleasanter
+relations. I own to you I am the more eager on this point, that
+I perceive your sister, Miss Barrington, scarcely regards me very
+favorably, and I stand the more in need of your alliance.”
+
+“I don't think it possible, Major Stapylton,” said Barrington, boldly,
+“that my sister and I could have two opinions upon anything or anybody.”
+
+“Then I only ask that she may partake of yours on this occasion,” said
+Stapylton, bowing. “But I must start; as it is, I shall be very late in
+Dublin. Will you present my most respectful adieux to the ladies, and
+say also a goodbye for me to Mr. Withering?”
+
+“You'll come in for a moment to the drawing-room, won't you?” cried
+Barrington.
+
+“I think not. I opine it would be better not. There would be a certain
+awkwardness about it,--that is, until you have informed Miss Dinah
+Barrington of the extent to which you have accorded me your confidence,
+and how completely I have opened every detail of my circumstances.
+I believe it would be in better taste not to present myself. Tell
+Withering that if he writes, Manchester will find me. I don't suspect
+he need give himself any more trouble about establishing the proofs of
+marriage. They will scarcely contest that point. The great question will
+and must be, to ascertain if the Company will cease to oppose the claim
+on being fully convinced that the letter to the Meer Busherat was a
+forgery, and that no menace ever came from Colonel Barrington's hand as
+to the consequences of opposing his rule. Get them to admit this,--let
+the issue rest upon this,--and it will narrow the whole suit within
+manageable limits.”
+
+“Would you not say this much to him before you go? It would come with so
+much more force and clearness from yourself.”
+
+“I have done so till I was wearied. Like a true lawyer, he insists upon
+proving each step as he goes, and will not condescend to a hypothetical
+conclusion, though I have told him over and over again we want a
+settlement, not a victory. Good-bye, good-bye! If I once launch out into
+the cause, I cannot tear myself away again.”
+
+“Has your guest gone, Peter?” said Miss Dinah, as her brother re-entered
+the drawing-room.
+
+“Yes; it was a hurried departure, and he had no great heart for it,
+either. By the way, Withering, while it is fresh in my head, let me tell
+you the message he has sent you.”
+
+“Was there none for _me_, Peter?” said she, scofflngly.
+
+“Ay, but there was, Dinah! He left with me I know not how many polite
+and charming things to say for him.”
+
+“And am I alone forgotten in this wide dispensation of favors?” asked
+Josephine, smiling.
+
+“Of course not, dear,” chimed in Miss Dinah. “Your grandpapa has been
+charged with them all. You could not expect a gentleman so naturally
+timid and bashful as our late guest to utter them by his own lips.”
+
+“I see,” said Withering, laughing, “that you have not forgiven the
+haughty aristocrat for his insolent estimate of the people!”
+
+“He an aristocrat! Such bitter words as his never fell from any man who
+had a grandfather!”
+
+“Wrong for once, Dinah,” broke in Barrington. “I can answer for it that
+you are unjust to him.”
+
+“We shall see,” said she. “Come, Josephine, I have a whole morning's
+work before me in the flower-garden, and I want your help. Don't forget,
+Peter, that Major M'Cormick's butler, or boatman, or bailiff, whichever
+he be, has been up here with a present of seakale this morning. Give him
+something as you pass the kitchen; and you, Mr. Withering, whose trade
+it is to read and unravel mysteries, explain if you can the meaning of
+this unwonted generosity.”
+
+“I suppose we can all guess it,” said he, laughing. “It's a custom that
+begins in the East and goes round the whole world till it reaches the
+vast prairie in the Far West.”
+
+“And what can that custom be, Aunt Dinah?” asked Josephine, innocently.
+
+“It's an ancient rite Mr. Withering speaks, of, child, pertaining to the
+days when men offered sacrifices. Come along; I 'm going!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. CROSS-EXAMININGS.
+
+While Barrington and his lawyer sat in conclave over the details of the
+great suit, Stapylton hurried along his road with all the speed he could
+summon. The way, which for some miles led along the river-side, brought
+into view M'Cormick's cottage, and the Major himself, as he stood
+listlessly at his door.'
+
+Halting his carriage for a moment, Stapylton jumped out and drew nigh
+the little quickset hedge which flanked the road.
+
+“What can I do for you in the neighborhood of Manchester, Major? We are
+just ordered off there to ride down the Radicals.”
+
+“I wish it was nearer home you were going to do it,” said he, crankily.
+“Look here,”--and he pointed to some fresh-turned earth,--“they were
+stealing my turnips last night.”
+
+“It would appear that these fellows in the North are growing dangerous,”
+ said Stapylton.
+
+“'T is little matter to us,” said M'Cormick, sulkily. “I'd care more
+about a blight in the potatoes than for all the politics in Europe.”
+
+“A genuine philosopher! How snug you are here, to be sure! A man in a
+pleasant nook like this can well afford to smile at the busy ambitions
+of the outer world. I take it you are about the very happiest fellow I
+know?”
+
+“Maybe I am, maybe I'm not,” said he, peevishly.
+
+“This spot only wants what I hinted to you t'other evening, to be
+perfection.”
+
+“Ay!” said the other, dryly.
+
+“And you agree with me heartily, if you had the candor to say it. Come,
+out with it, man, at once. I saw your gardener this morning with a great
+basketful of greenery, and a large bouquet on the top of it,--are not
+these significant signs of a projected campaign? You are wrong, Major,
+upon my life you are wrong, not to be frank with me. I could, by a
+strange hazard, as the newspapers say, 'tell you something to your
+advantage.'”
+
+“About what?”
+
+“About the very matter you were thinking of as I drove up. Come, I will
+be more generous than you deserve.” And, laying his arm on M'Cormick's
+shoulder, he halt whispered in his ear; “It is a good thing,--a deuced
+good thing! and I promise you, if I were a marrying man, you 'd have a
+competitor. I won't say she 'll have one of the great fortunes people
+rave about, but it will be considerable,--very considerable.”
+
+“How do you know, or what do you know?”
+
+“I 'll tell you in three words. How I know is, because I have been the
+channel for certain inquiries they made in India. What I know is, the
+Directors are sick of the case, they are sorely ashamed of it, and not a
+little uneasy lest it should come before the public, perhaps before the
+Parliament. Old Barrington has made all negotiation difficult by the
+extravagant pretensions he puts forward about his son's honor, and so
+forth. If, however, the girl were married, her husband would be
+the person to treat with, and I am assured with him they would deal
+handsomely, even generously.”
+
+“And why would n't all this make a marrying man of you, though you were
+n't before?”
+
+“There's a slight canonical objection, if you must know,” said
+Stapylton, with a smile.
+
+“Oh, I perceive,--a wife already! In India, perhaps?”
+
+“I have no time just now for a long story, M'Cormick,” said he,
+familiarly, “nor am I quite certain I 'd tell it if I had. However, you
+know enough for all practical purposes, and I repeat to you this is a
+stake I can't enter for,--you understand me?”
+
+“There's another thing, now,” said M'Cormick; “and as we are talking so
+freely together, there's no harm in mentioning it. It 's only the other
+day, as I may call it, that we met for the first time?”
+
+“Very true: when I was down here at Cobham.”
+
+“And never heard of each other before?”
+
+“Not to my knowledge, certainly.”
+
+“That being the case, I 'm curious to hear how you took this wonderful
+interest in me. It wasn't anything in my appearance, I 'm sure, nor my
+manner; and as to what you 'd hear about me among those blackguards down
+here, there's nothing too bad to say of me.”
+
+“I'll be as frank as yourself,” said Stapylton, boldly; “you ask for
+candor, and you shall have it. I had n't talked ten minutes with you
+till I saw that you were a thorough man of the world; the true old
+soldier, who had seen enough of life to know that whatever one gets for
+nothing in this world is just worth nothing, and so I said to myself,
+'If it ever occurs to me to chance upon a good opportunity of which I
+cannot from circumstances avail myself, there's my man. I'll go to him
+and say, “M'Cormick, that's open to you, there's a safe thing!” And when
+in return he 'd say, “Stapylton, what can I do for you?” my answer would
+be, “Wait till you are satisfied that I have done you a good turn; be
+perfectly assured that I have really served you.” And then, if I
+wanted a loan of a thousand or fifteen hundred to lodge for the
+Lieutenant-Colonelcy, I 'd not be ashamed to say, “M'Cormick, let me
+have so much.”'”
+
+“That's _it_, is it?” said M'Cormick, with a leer of intense cunning.
+“Not a bad bargain for _you_, anyhow. It is not every day that a man can
+sell what is n't his own.”
+
+“I might say, it's not every day that a man regards a possible loan as
+a gift, but I 'm quite ready to reassure all your fears on that score;
+I'll even pledge myself never to borrow a shilling from you.”
+
+“Oh, I don't mean that; you took me up so quick,” said the old fellow,
+reddening with a sense of shame he had not felt for many a year. “I may
+be as stingy as they call me, but for all that I 'd stand to a man who
+stands to _me_.”
+
+“Between gentlemen and men of the world these things are better left
+to a sense of an honorable understanding than made matters of compact.
+There is no need of another word on the matter. I shall be curious,
+however, to know how your project speeds. Write to me,--you have plenty
+of time,--and write often. I 'm not unlikely to learn something about
+the Indian claim, and if I do, you shall hear of it.”
+
+“I'm not over good at pen and ink work; indeed, I haven't much practice,
+but I'll do my best.”
+
+“Do, by all means. Tell me how you get on with Aunt Dinah, who, I
+suspect, has no strong affection for either of us. Don't be precipitate;
+hazard nothing by a rash step; secure your way by intimacy, mere
+intimacy: avoid particular attentions strictly; be always there, and on
+some pretext or other--But why do I say all this to an old soldier, who
+has made such sieges scores of times?”
+
+“Well, I think I see my way clear enough,” said the old fellow, with a
+grin. “I wish I was as sure I knew why you take such an interest in me.”
+
+“I believe I have told you already; I hope there is nothing so strange
+in the assurance as to require corroboration. Come, I must say
+good-bye; I meant to have said five words to you, and I have stayed here
+five-and-twenty minutes.”
+
+“Would n't you take something?--could n't I offer you anything?” said
+M'Cormick, hesitatingly.
+
+“Nothing, thanks. I lunched before I started; and although old Dinah
+made several assaults upon me while I ate, I managed to secure two
+cutlets and part of a grouse-pie, and a rare glass of Madeira to wash
+them down.”
+
+“That old woman is dreadful, and I'll take her down a peg yet, as sure
+as my name is Dan.”
+
+“No, don't, Major; don't do anything of the kind. The people who tame
+tigers are sure to get scratched at last, and nobody thanks them for
+their pains. Regard her as the sailors do a fire-ship; give her a wide
+berth, and steer away from her.”
+
+“Ay, but she sometimes gives chase.”
+
+“Strike your flag, then, if it must be; for, trust me, you 'll not
+conquer _her_.”
+
+“We 'll see, we 'll see,” muttered the old fellow, as he waved his
+adieux, and then turned back into the house again.
+
+As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering
+a malediction on the “dear friend” he had just parted with. When the
+_bourgeois gentilhomme_ objected to his adversary pushing him _en
+tierce_ while he attacked him _en quarte_, he was expressing a great
+social want, applicable to those people who in conversation will persist
+in saying many things which ought not to be uttered, and expressing
+doubts and distrusts which, however it be reasonable to feel, are an
+outrage to avow.
+
+“The old fox,” said Stapylton, aloud, “taunted me with selling what did
+not belong to me; but he never suspects that I have bought something
+without paying for it, and that something himself! Yes, the mock siege
+he will lay to the fortress will occupy the garrison till it suits me
+to open the real attack, and I will make use of him, besides, to learn
+whatever goes on in my absence. How the old fellow swallowed the bait!
+What self-esteem there must be in such a rugged nature, to make him
+imagine he could be successful in a cause like this! He is, after all,
+a clumsy agent to trust one's interest to. If the choice had been given
+me, I'd far rather have had a woman to watch over them. Polly Dill, for
+instance, the very girl to understand such a mission well. How adroitly
+would she have played the game, and how clearly would her letters have
+shown me the exact state of events!”
+
+Such were the texts of his musings as he drove along, and deep as were
+his thoughts, they never withdrew him, when the emergency called,
+from attention to every detail of the journey, and he scrutinized the
+post-horses as they were led out, and apportioned the rewards to the
+postilions as though no heavier care lay on his heart than the road and
+its belongings. While he rolled thus smoothly along, Peter Barrington
+had been summoned to his sister's presence, to narrate in full all that
+he had asked, and all that he had learned of Stapylton and his fortunes.
+
+Miss Dinah was seated in a deep armchair, behind a formidable
+embroidery-frame,--a thing so complex and mysterious in form as to
+suggest an implement of torture. At a short distance off sat Withering,
+with pen, ink, and paper before him, as if to set down any details of
+unusual importance; and into this imposing presence poor Barrington
+entered with a woful sense of misgiving and humiliation.
+
+“We have got a quiet moment at last, Peter,” said Miss Barrington. “I
+have sent the girls over to Brown's Barn for the tulip-roots, and I have
+told Darby that if any visitors came they were to be informed we were
+particularly occupied by business, and could see no one.”
+
+“Just so,” added Withering; “it is a case before the Judge in Chamber.”
+
+“But what have we got to hear?” asked Barrington, with an air of
+innocence.
+
+“We have got to hear your report, brother Peter; the narrative of your
+late conversation with Major Stapylton; given, as nearly as your memory
+will serve, in the exact words and in the precise order everything
+occurred.”
+
+“October the twenty-third,” said Withering, writing as he spoke; “minute
+of interview between P. B. and Major S. Taken on the same morning it
+occurred, with remarks and observations explanatory.”
+
+“Begin,” said Dinah, imperiously, while she worked away without lifting
+her head. “And avoid, so far as possible, anything beyond the precise
+expression employed.”
+
+“But you don't suppose I took notes in shorthand of what we said to each
+other, do you?”
+
+“I certainly suppose you can have retained in your memory a conversation
+that took place two hours ago,” said Miss Dinah, sternly.
+
+“And can relate it circumstantially and clearly,” added Withering.
+
+“Then I 'm very sorry to disappoint you, but I can do nothing of the
+kind.”
+
+“Do you mean to say that you had no interview with Major Stapylton,
+Peter?”
+
+“Or that you have forgotten all about it?” said Withering.
+
+“Or is it that you have taken a pledge of secrecy, brother Peter?”
+
+“No, no, no! It is simply this, that though I retain a pretty fair
+general impression of what I said myself, and what he said afterwards,
+I could no more pretend to recount it accurately than I could say off by
+heart a scene in 'Romeo and Juliet.'”
+
+“Why don't you take the 'Comedy of Errors' for your illustration, Peter
+Barrington? I ask you, Mr. Withering, have you in all your experience
+met anything like this?”
+
+“It would go hard with a man in the witness-box to make such a
+declaration, I must say.”
+
+“What would a jury think of, what would a judge say to him?” said she,
+using the most formidable of all penalties to her brother's imagination.
+“Wouldn't the court tell him that he would be compelled to speak out?”
+
+“They'd have it out on the cross-examination, at all events, if not on
+the direct.”
+
+“In the name of confusion, what do you want with me?” exclaimed Peter,
+in despair.
+
+“We want everything,--everything that you heard about this man. Who he
+is, what he is; what by the father's side, what by the mother's; what
+are his means, and where; who knows him, who are his associates. Bear in
+mind that to us, here, he has dropped out of the clouds.”
+
+“And gone back there too,” added Withering.
+
+“I wish to Heaven he had taken me with him!” sighed Peter, drearily.
+
+“I think in this case, Miss Barrington,” said Withering, with a
+well-affected gravity, “we had better withdraw a juror, and accept a
+nonsuit.”
+
+“I have done with it altogether,” said she, gathering up her worsted and
+her needles, and preparing to leave the room.
+
+“My dear Dinah,” said Barrington, entreatingly, “imagine a man as
+wanting in tact as I am,--and as timid, too, about giving casual
+offence,--conducting such an inquiry as you committed to my hands. Fancy
+how, at every attempt to obtain information, his own boldness, I might
+call it rudeness, stared him in the face, till at last, rather than
+push his investigations, he grew puzzled how to apologize for his prying
+curiosity.”
+
+“Brother, brother, this is too bad! It had been better to have thought
+more of your granddaughter's fate and less of your own feelings.” And
+with this she flounced out of the room, upsetting a spider-table, and a
+case of stuffed birds that stood on it, as she passed.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+“I don't doubt but she 's right, Tom,” said Peter, when the door closed.
+
+“Did he not tell you who he was, and what his fortune? Did you really
+learn nothing from him?”
+
+“He told me everything; and if I had not been so cruelly badgered, I
+could have repeated every word of it; but you never made a hound true to
+the scent by flogging him, Tom,--is n't that a fact, eh?” And consoled
+by an illustration that seemed so pat to his case, he took his hat and
+strolled out into the garden.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. GENERAL CONYERS
+
+In a snug little room of the Old Ship Hotel, at Dover, a large, heavy
+man, with snow-white hair, and moustaches,--the latter less common in
+those days than the present,--sat at table with a younger one, so like
+him that no doubt could have existed as to their being father and son.
+They had dined, and were sitting over their wine, talking occasionally,
+but oftener looking fondly and affectionately at each other; and once,
+by an instinct of sudden love, grasping each other's hand, and sitting
+thus several minutes without a word on either side.
+
+“You did not expect me before to-morrow, Fred,” said the old man, at
+last.
+
+“No, father,” replied young Conyers. “I saw by the newspapers that you
+were to dine at the Tuileries on Tuesday, and I thought you would not
+quit Paris the same evening.”
+
+“Yes; I started the moment I took off my uniform. I wanted to be with
+you, my boy; and the royal politeness that detained me was anything but
+a favor. How you have grown, Fred,--almost my own height, I believe.”
+
+“The more like you the better,” said the youth, as his eyes ran over,
+and the old man turned away to hide his emotion.
+
+After a moment he said: “How strange you should not have got my letters,
+Fred; but, after all, it is just as well as it is. I wrote in a very
+angry spirit, and was less just than a little cool reflection might have
+made me. They made no charges against me, though I thought they had.
+There were grumblings and discontents, and such-like. They called me a
+Rajah, and raked up all the old stories they used to circulate once on a
+time about a far better fellow--”
+
+“You mean Colonel Barrington, don't you?” said Fred.
+
+“Where or how did you hear of that name?” said the old man, almost
+sternly.
+
+“An accident made me the guest of his family, at a little cottage they
+live in on an hish river. I passed weeks there, and, through the favor
+of the name I bore, I received more kindness than I ever before met in
+life.”
+
+“And they knew you to be a Conyers, and to be my son?”
+
+“It was Colonel Barrington's aunt was my hostess, and she it was who,
+on hearing my name, admitted me at once to all the privileges of old
+friendship. She told me of the close companionship which once subsisted
+between you and her nephew, and gave me rolls of his letters to read
+wherein every line spoke of you.”
+
+“And Mr. Barrington, the father of George, how did he receive you?”
+
+“At first with such coolness that I could n't bring myself to recross
+his threshold. He had been away from home when I arrived, and the day
+of his return I was unexpectedly presented to him by his sister, who
+evidently was as unprepared as myself for the reception I met with.”
+
+“And what was that reception,--how was it? Tell me all as it happened.”
+
+“It was the affair of a moment. Miss Barrington introduced me, saying,
+'This is the son of poor George's dearest friend,--this is a Conyers;'
+and the old man faltered, and seemed like to faint, and after a moment
+stammered out something about an honor he had never counted upon,--a
+visit he scarcely could have hoped for; and, indeed, so overcome was he
+that he staggered into the house only to take to his bed, where he lay
+seriously ill for several days after.”
+
+“Poor fellow! It was hard to forgive,--very hard.”
+
+“Ay, but he has forgiven it--whatever it was--heartily, and wholly
+forgiven it. We met afterwards by a chance in Germany, and while I was
+hesitating how to avoid a repetition of the painful scene which marked
+our first meeting, he came manfully towards me with his hand out, and
+said, 'I have a forgiveness to beg of you; and if you only know how I
+long to obtain it, you would scarce say me no.'”
+
+“The worthy father of poor George! I think I hear him speak the very
+words himself. Go on, Fred,--go on, and tell me further.”
+
+“There is no more to tell, sir, unless I speak of all the affectionate
+kindness he has shown,--the trustfulness and honor with which he has
+treated me. I have been in his house like his own son.”
+
+“Ah! if you had known that son! If you had seen what a type of a soldier
+he was! The most intrepid, the boldest fellow that ever breathed; but
+with a heart of childlike simplicity and gentleness. I could tell
+you traits of him, of his forbearance, his forgiveness, his generous
+devotion to friendship, that would seem to bespeak a nature that had no
+room for other than soft and tender emotion; and yet, if ever there was
+a lion's heart within a man's bosom it was his.” For a moment or two
+the old man seemed overcome by his recollections, and then, as if by an
+effort, rallying himself, he went on: “You have often heard the adage,
+Fred, that enjoins watching one's pennies and leaving the pounds to take
+care of themselves; and yet, trust me, the maxim is truer as applied
+to our morals than our money. It is by the smaller, finer, and least
+important traits of a man that his fate in life is fashioned. The
+caprices we take no pains to curb, the tempers we leave unchecked, the
+petty indulgences we extend to our vanity and self-love,--these are the
+great sands that wreck us far oftener than the more stern and formidable
+features of our character. I ought to know this truth; I myself lost the
+best and truest and the noblest friend that ever man had, just from the
+exercise of a spirit of bantering and ridicule which amused those about
+me, and gave me that pre-eminence which a sarcastic and witty spirit
+is sure to assert. You know already how George Barrington and I lived
+together like brothers. I do not believe two men ever existed more
+thoroughly and sincerely attached to each other. All the contrarieties
+of our dispositions served but to heighten the interest that linked us
+together. As for myself, I was never wearied in exploring the strange
+recesses of that great nature that seemed to unite all that could be
+daring and dashing in man with the tenderness of a woman. I believe I
+knew him far better than he knew himself. But to come to what I wanted
+to tell you, and which is an agony to me to dwell on. Though for a long
+while our close friendship was known in the regiment, and spoken of as a
+thing incapable of change, a sort of rumor--no, not even a rumor, but an
+impression--seemed to gain, that the ties between us were looser on my
+side than his; that George looked up to _me_, and that I, with the pride
+of a certain superiority, rather lorded it over _him_. This feeling
+became painfully strengthened when it got about that Barrington had lent
+me the greater part of the purchase-money for my troop,--a promotion, by
+the way, which barred his own advancement,--and it was whispered, so
+at least I heard, that Barrington was a mere child in my hands, whom I
+rebuked or rewarded at pleasure. If I could have traced these rumors to
+any direct source, I could have known how to deal with them. As it was,
+they were vague, shadowy, and unreal; and their very unsubstantiality
+maddened me the more. To have told George of them would have been rasher
+still. The thought of a wrong done to _me_ would have driven him beyond
+all reason, and he would infallibly have compromised himself beyond
+recall. It was the very first time in my life I had a secret from him,
+and it eat into my heart like a virulent disease. The consciousness that
+I was watched, the feeling that eyes were upon me marking all I did, and
+tongues were commenting on all I said, exasperated me, and at one moment
+I would parade my friendship for Barrington in a sort of spirit of
+defiance, and at another, as though to give the lie to my slanderers,
+treat him with indifference and carelessness, as it were, to show that I
+was not bound to him by the weight of a direct obligation, and that our
+relations involved nothing of dependence. It was when, by some cruel
+mischance, I had been pursuing this spirit to its extreme, that the
+conversation one night at mess turned upon sport and tiger-hunting.
+Many stories were told, of course, and we had the usual narratives of
+hairbreadth escapes and perils of the most appalling kind; till, at
+length, some one--I forget exactly who it was--narrated a single-handed
+encounter with a jaguar, which in horror exceeded anything we had heard
+before. The details were alone not so terrible, but the circumstances so
+marvellous, that one and all who listened cried out, 'Who did it?'
+
+“'The man who told me the tale,' replied the narrator, 'and who will
+probably be back to relate it here to you in a few days,--Colonel
+Barrington.'
+
+“I have told you the devilish spirit which had me in possession. I have
+already said that I was in one of those moods of insolent mockery in
+which nothing was sacred to me. No sooner, then, did I hear Barrington's
+name than I burst into a hearty laugh, and said, 'Oh! if it was one of
+George Barrington's tigers, you ought to have mentioned that fact at the
+outset. You have been exciting our feelings unfairly.'
+
+“'I assume that his statement was true,' said the other, gravely.
+
+“'Doubtless; just as battle-pieces are true, that is, pic-torially
+true. The tiger did nothing that a tiger ought not to do, nor did George
+transgress any of those “unities” which such combats require. At the
+same time, Barring-ton's stories have always a something about them that
+stamps the authorship, and you recognize this trait just as you do a
+white horse in a picture by Wouvermans.'
+
+“In this strain I went on, heated by my own warmed imagination, and the
+approving laughter of those around me. I recounted more than one feat
+of Barrington's,--things which I knew he had done, some of them almost
+incredible in boldness. These I told with many a humorous addition and
+many an absurd commentary, convulsing the listeners with laughter, and
+rendering my friend ridiculous.
+
+“He came back from the hills within the week, and before he was two
+hours in his quarters he had heard the whole story. We were at luncheon
+in the mess-room when he entered, flushed and excited, but far more
+moved by emotion than resentment.
+
+“'Ormsby,' said he, 'you may laugh at me to your heart's content and
+I'll never grumble at it; but there are some young officers here who,
+not knowing the ties that attach us, may fancy that these quizzings
+pass the limits of mere drollery, and even jeopardize something of my
+truthfulness. _You_, I know, never meant this any more than I have felt
+it, but others might, and might, besides, on leaving this and sitting at
+other tables, repeat what they had heard here. Tell them that you spoke
+of me as you have a free right to do, in jest, and that your ridicule
+was the good-humored banter of a friend,--of a friend who never did,
+never could, impugn my honor.'
+
+“His eyes were swimming over, and his lips trembling, as he uttered the
+last words. I see him now, as he stood there, his very cheek shaking
+in agitation. That brave, bold fellow, who would have marched up to a
+battery without quailing, shook like a sickly girl.
+
+“'Am I to say that you never draw the long-bow, George?' asked I, half
+insolently.
+
+“'You are to say, sir, that I never told a lie,' cried he, dark with
+passion.
+
+“'Oh, this discussion will be better carried on elsewhere,' said I, as I
+arose and left the room.
+
+“As I was in the wrong, totally in the wrong, I was passionate and
+headstrong. I sat down and wrote a most insolent letter to Barrington. I
+turned all the self-hate that was consuming _me_ against my friend, and
+said I know not what of outrage and insult. I did worse; I took a copy
+of my letter, and declared that I would read it to the officers in the
+mess-room. He sent a friend to me to beg I would not take this course of
+open insult. My answer was, 'Colonel Barrington knows his remedy.' When
+I sent this message, I prepared for what I felt certain would follow. I
+knew Barrington so well that I thought even the delay of an hour, then
+two hours, strange. At length evening drew nigh, and, though I sat
+waiting in my quarters, no one came from him,--not a letter nor a line
+apprised me what course he meant to take.
+
+“Not caring to meet the mess at such a moment, I ordered my horses and
+drove up to a small station about twenty miles off, leaving word where
+I was to be found. I passed three days there in a state of fevered
+expectancy. Barrington made no sign, and, at length, racked and
+distressed by the conflict with myself,--now summoning up an insolent
+spirit of defiance to the whole world, now humbling myself in a
+consciousness of the evil line I had adopted,--I returned one night to
+my quarters. The first news that greeted me was that Barrington had left
+us. He had accepted the offer of a Native command which had been made to
+him some months before, and of which we had often canvassed together
+all the advantages and disadvantages. I heard that he had written
+two letters to me before he started, and torn them up after they were
+sealed. I never heard from him, never saw him more, till I saw his dead
+body carried into camp the morning he fell.
+
+“I must get to the end of this quickly, Fred, and I will tell you all at
+once, for it is a theme I will never go back on. I came to England with
+despatches about two years after Barrington's death. It was a hurried
+visit, for I was ordered to hold myself in readiness to return almost
+as soon as I arrived. I was greatly occupied, going about from place
+to place, and person to person, so many great people desired to have a
+verbal account of what was doing in India, and to hear confidentially
+what I thought of matters there. In the midst of the mass of letters
+which the post brought me every morning, and through which, without the
+aid of an officer on the staff, I could never have got through, there
+came one whose singular address struck me. It was to 'Captain Ormsby
+Conyers, 22d Light Dragoons,' a rank I had held fourteen years before
+that time in that same regiment. I opined at once that my correspondent
+must have been one who had known me at that time and not followed me
+in the interval. I was right. It was from old Mr. Barrington,--George
+Barrington's father. What version of my quarrel with his son could have
+reached him, I cannot even guess, nor by what light he read my conduct
+in the affair; but such a letter I never read in my life. It was a
+challenge to meet him anywhere, and with any weapon, but couched in
+language so insulting as to impugn my courage, and hint that I would
+probably shelter myself behind the pretext of his advanced age. 'But
+remember,' said he, 'if God has permitted me to be an old man, it is
+_you_ who have made me a childless one!'”
+
+For a few seconds he paused, overcome by emotion, and then went on:
+“I sat down and wrote him a letter of contrition, almost abject in its
+terms. I entreated him to believe that for every wrong I had done his
+noble-hearted son, my own conscience had repaid me in misery ten times
+told; that if he deemed my self-condemnation insufficient, it was open
+to him to add to it whatever he wished of obloquy or shame; that if he
+proclaimed me a coward before the world, and degraded me in the eyes of
+men, I would not offer one word in my defence. I cannot repeat all that
+I said in my deep humiliation. His answer came at last, one single line,
+re-enclosing my own letter to me: 'Lest I should be tempted to make use
+of this letter, I send it back to you; there is no need of more between
+us.'
+
+“With this our intercourse ceased. When a correspondence was published
+in the 'Barrington Inquiry,' as it was called, I half hoped he would
+have noticed some letters of mine about George; but he never did, and in
+his silence I thought I read his continued unforgiveness.”
+
+“I hope, father, that you never believed the charges that were made
+against Captain Barrington?”
+
+“Not one of them; disloyalty was no more his than cowardice. I never
+knew the Englishman with such a pride of country as he had, nor could
+you have held out a greater bribe to him, for any achievement of peril,
+than to say, 'What a gain it would be for England!'”
+
+“How was it that such a man should have had a host of enemies?”
+
+“Nothing so natural. Barrington was the most diffident of men; his
+bashfulness amounted to actual pain. With strangers, this made him
+cold to very sternness, or, as is often seen in the effort to conquer
+a natural defect, gave him a manner of over-easy confidence that looked
+like impertinence. And thus the man who would not have wounded the
+self-love of the meanest beggar, got the reputation of being haughty,
+insolent, and oppressive. Besides this, when he was in the right, and
+felt himself so, he took no pains to convince others of the fact. His
+maxim was,--have I not heard it from his lips scores of times,--'The end
+will show.'”
+
+“And yet the end will not show, father; his fame has not been
+vindicated, nor his character cleared.”
+
+“In some measure the fault of those who took up his cause. They seemed
+less to insist on reparation than punishment. They did not say, 'Do
+justice to this man's memory;' but, 'Come forward and own you wronged
+him, and broke his heart.' Now, the accusation brought against George
+Barrington of assuming sovereign power was not settled by his death;
+his relatives forgot this, or merged it in their own charge against the
+Company. They mismanaged everything.”
+
+“Is it too late to put them on the right track, father; or could you do
+it?” asked the youth, eagerly.
+
+“It is not too late, boy! There is time for it yet. There is, however,
+one condition necessary, and I do not see how that is to be secured.”
+
+“And what is that?”
+
+“I should see Mr. Barrington and confer with him alone; he must admit me
+to his confidence, and I own to you, I scarcely deem that possible.”
+
+“May I try--may I attempt this?”
+
+“I do not like to refuse you, Fred: but if I say Yes, it will be to
+include you in my own defeated hopes. For many a year Mr. Barrington
+has refused to give one sign of his forgiveness; for in his treatment of
+you I only recognize the honorable feeling of exempting the son from
+the penalty due to the father. But perhaps defeat is better than
+self-reproach, and as I have a strong conviction I could serve him, I am
+ready to risk a failure.”
+
+“I may make the attempt, then?” said Fred, eagerly. “I will write to
+Miss Barrington to-day.”
+
+“And now of yourself. What of your career? How do you like soldiering,
+boy?”
+
+“Less than ever, sir; it is only within the last week or two that we
+have seen anything beyond barrack or parade duty. Now, however, we have
+been called to repress what are called risings in the northern shires;
+and our task has been to ride at large unarmed mobs and charge down
+masses, whose grape-shot are brickbats. Not a very glorious campaign!”
+
+The old man smiled, but said nothing for a moment.
+
+“Your colonel is on leave, is he not?” asked he.
+
+“Yes. We are commanded by that Major Stapylton I told you of.”
+
+“A smart officer, but no friend of yours, Fred,” said the General,
+smiling.
+
+“No, sir; certainly no friend of mine,” said the young man, resolutely.
+“To refuse me a week's leave to go and meet my father, whom I have not
+seen for years, and, when pressed, to accord me four days, is to disgust
+me with himself and the service together.”
+
+“Well, as you cannot be my guest, Fred, I will be yours. I 'll go back
+with you to headquarters. Stapylton is a name I used to be familiar with
+long ago. It may turn out that I know his family; but let us talk of
+Barrington. I have been thinking it would be better not to link any
+question of his own interests with my desire to meet him, but simply to
+say I 'm in England, and wish to know if he would receive me.”
+
+“It shall be as you wish, sir. I will write to his sister by this post.”
+
+“And after one day in town, Fred, I am ready to accompany you anywhere.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. MAJOR M'CORMICK'S LETTER
+
+As it was not often that Major M'Cormick performed the part of a
+letter-writer, perhaps my reader will pardon me if I place him before
+him on one of these rare occasions. If success would always respond to
+labor, his would have been a real triumph; for the effort cost him many
+days, two sleepless nights, a headache, and half a quire of paper.
+
+Had not Stapylton retained him by an admirably selected hamper of good
+things from a celebrated Italian warehouse in the Strand, I am
+afraid that M'Cormick's zeal might have cooled down to the zero of
+forgetfulness; but the reindeer hams and the Yarmouth bloaters, the
+potted shrimps and the preserved guavas, were an appeal that addressed
+themselves to that organ which with him paid the double debt of
+digestion and emotion. He felt that such a correspondent was worth a
+sacrifice, and he made it That my reader may appreciate the cost of the
+achievement, I would have him imagine how a mason about to build a wall
+should be obliged to examine each stone before he laid it, test its
+constituent qualities, its shape and its size,--for it was thus that
+almost every word occasioned the Major a reference to the dictionary,
+spelling not having been cultivated in his youth, nor much practised in
+his riper years. Graces of style, however, troubled him little; and,
+to recur to my figure of the stone-mason, if he was embarrassed in
+his search for the materials, he cared wonderfully little for the
+architecture. His letter ran thus, and the reader will perceive that it
+must have been written some weeks after the events recorded in the last
+chapter:--
+
+“Mac's Nest, October, Thursday.
+
+“Dear S.,--A touch of my old Walcheren complaint has laid me up since
+Tuesday, and if the shakes make me illegible now, that's the reason
+why. Besides this the weather is dreadful; cold east winds and rains,
+sometimes sleet, every day; and the turf so wet, it 's only smoke, not
+fire. I believe it is the worst climate in Europe, and it gets wetter
+every year.
+
+“The hamper came to hand, but though it was marked 'Carriage paid, this
+side up,' they upset it and broke two bottles, and charged seven and
+fourpence-halfpenny for the bringing it, which is, I think, enormous; at
+least, Tim Hacket got over a thrashing-machine from Scotland last spring
+for twelve and four, and there 's no comparison between the two. Thanks
+to you, however, all the same; but if you can get any of this charge
+reduced, so much the better, not to speak of the bottles,--both mixed
+pickles--which they ought to make good.
+
+“I am glad to see you are touching up the Radicals in the North;
+powder and ball will do more to bring them to reason than spouting
+in Parliament. The papers say there was nine killed and twenty-three
+wounded; and one fellow, the 'Stockport Bee,' says, that 'if the Butcher
+that led the dragoons is n't turned out of the service with disgrace no
+gentleman will degrade himself by entering the army.' Isn't the Butcher
+yourself? Miss Barrington, always your friend, says it is; and that if
+the account of another paper, called the 'Ægis,' be true, you 'll have
+to go to a court-martial. I stood stoutly to you through it all, and
+declared that when the niggers was up at Jamaica, we had n't time to
+take the names of the prisoners, and we always cut one of their ears off
+to know them again. Old Peter laughed till the tears ran down his face,
+but Dinah said, 'If I did not suppose, sir, that you were inventing a
+very graceless joke, I'd insist on your leaving this room and this house
+on the instant.' It was ten o'clock at night, and raining hard; so you
+may guess I gave in. Bad as she is, the young one is her equal, and
+I gave up all thoughts of what you call 'prosecuting my suit' in that
+quarter. She isn't even commonly civil to me, and when I ask her for,
+maybe, the mustard at dinner, she turns away her head, and says, 'Darby,
+give Major M'Cormick the salt.' That's French politeness, perhaps; but
+I'll pay them all off yet, for they can't get sixpence on the mortgage,
+and I 'm only drinking out that bin of old Madeira before I tell them
+that I won't advance the money. Why should I? The women treat me worse
+than a dog, and old B. is neither more nor less than a fool. Dill, the
+doctor, however he got it, says it's all up about the suit with the
+India Company; that there's no proof of the Colonel's marriage at all,
+that the charges against him were never cleared up, and that nothing can
+come out of it but more disgrace and more exposure.
+
+“I wish you 'd send me the correct account of what took place between
+you and one of your subalterns, for old Dinah keeps harping on it in a
+sort of mysterious and mischievous way of her own, that provokes me. Was
+it that he refused to obey orders, or that _you_, as _she_ says, used
+such language towards him that he wrote to report you? Give it to me
+in black and white, and maybe I won't try her temper with it. At
+all events, make out some sort of a case, for the old woman is now
+intolerable. She said yesterday, 'Major Stapylton, to whom I write
+by this post, will see that his visit here must be preceded by an
+explanation.' There's her words for you, and I hope you like them!
+
+“I think you are right to be in no hurry about purchasing, for many
+say the whole system will be changed soon, and the money would be clean
+thrown away. Besides this, I have been looking over my bauk-book, and
+I find I could n't help you just now. Two bad harvests, and the smut in
+the wheat last year, are running me mighty close. I won't finish this
+till to-morrow, for I 'm going to dine at 'The Home' to-day. It is the
+granddaughter's birthday, and there was a regular shindy about who was
+going to be asked. Old Peter was for a grand celebration, and inviting
+the Admiral, and the Gores, and God knows who besides; and Dinah was for
+what she called a family party, consisting, I suppose, of herself and
+Darby. I 'll be able, before I close this, to tell you how it was ended;
+for I only know now that Dill and his daughter are to be there.
+
+“Wednesday.--I sit down with a murdering headache to finish this letter.
+Maybe it was the pickled lobster, or the ice punch, or the other drink
+they called champagne-cup that did it. But I never passed such a night
+since I was in the trenches, and I am shaking still, so that I can
+scarce hold the pen. It was a grand dinner, to be sure, for ruined
+people to give. Venison from Carrick Woods, and game of every kind, with
+all kinds of wine; and my Lord Car-rickmore talking to Miss Dinah, and
+the Admiral following up with the niece, and Tom Brabazon, and Dean of
+Deanspark, and the devil knows who besides, bringing up the rear, with
+Dill and your obedient servant. Every dish that came in, and every
+bottle that was uncorked, I said to myself, 'There goes another strap on
+the property;' and I felt as if we were eating the trees and the timber
+and the meadows all the time at table.
+
+“It 's little of the same sympathy troubled the others. My Lord was as
+jolly as if he was dining with the King; and old Cobham called for more
+of the Madeira, as if it was an inn; and Peter himself--the heartless
+old fool--when he got up to thank the company for drinking his
+granddaughter's health, said, 'May I trust that even at my advanced age
+this may not be the last time I may have to speak my gratitude to you
+all for the generous warmth with which you have pledged this toast; but
+even should it be so, I shall carry away with me from this evening's
+happiness a glow of pleasure that will animate me to the last. It
+was only this morning I learned what I know you will all hear with
+satisfaction, that there is every probability of a speedy arrangement of
+my long-pending suit with the Company, and that my child here will
+soon have her own again.' Grand applause and huzzas, with a noise that
+drowned 'Bother!' from myself, and in the middle of the row up jumps the
+Admiral, and cries out, 'Three cheers more for the Rajah's daughter!' I
+thought the old roof would come down; and the blackguards in the kitchen
+took up the cry and shouted like mad, and then we yelled again, and this
+went on for maybe five minutes. 'What does it all mean,' says I, 'but
+a cheer for the Court of Bankruptcy, and Hip, hip, hurray! for
+the Marshalsea Prison!' After that, he had half an hour or more of
+flatteries and compliments. My Lord was so happy, and Peter Barrington
+so proud, and the Admiral so delighted, and the rest of us so much
+honored, that I could n't stand it any longer, but stole away, and got
+into the garden, to taste a little fresh air and quietness. I had n't
+gone ten paces, when I came plump upon Miss Dinah, taking her coffee
+under a tree. 'You are a deserter, I fear, sir,' said she, in her own
+snappish way; so I thought I 'd pay her off, and I said, 'To tell you
+the truth, Miss Barrington, at our time of life these sort of things are
+more full of sadness than pleasure. We know how hollow they are, and how
+little heart there is in the cheers of the people that are so jolly
+over your wine, but would n't stop to talk to you when you came down to
+water!'
+
+“'The worse we think of the world, Major M'Cormick,' says she, 'the more
+risk we run of making ourselves mean enough to suit it.'
+
+“'I don't suspect, ma'am,' says I, 'that when people have known it so
+long as you and I, that they are greatly in love with it.'
+
+“'They may, however, be mannerly in their dealings with it, sir,' said
+she, fiercely; and so we drew the game, and settled the men for another
+battle.
+
+“'Is there anything new, ma'am?' says I, after a while.
+
+“'I believe not, sir. The bread riots still continue in the North, where
+what would seem the needless severity of some of the military commanders
+has only exasperated the people. You have heard, I suppose, of Major
+Stapylton's business?'
+
+“'Not a word, ma'am,' says I; 'for I never see a paper.'
+
+“'I know very little of the matter myself,' says she. 'It was, it would
+appear, at some night assemblage at a place called Lund's Common. A
+young officer sent forward by Major Stapylton to disperse the people,
+was so struck by the destitution and misery he witnessed, and the
+respectful attitude they exhibited, that he hesitated about employing
+force, and restricted himself to counsels of quietness and submission.
+He did more,--not perhaps very prudently, as some would say,--he
+actually emptied his pockets of all the money he had, giving even his
+watch to aid the starving horde before him. What precise version of
+his conduct reached his superior, I cannot say; but certainly Major
+Stapylton commented on it in terms of the harshest severity, and he even
+hinted at a reason for the forbearance too offensive for any soldier to
+endure.'
+
+“She did not seem exactly to know what followed after this, but some
+sort of inquiry appeared to take place, and witnesses were examined as
+to what really occurred at Lund's Common; and amongst others, a Lascar,
+who was one of the factory hands,--having come to England a great many
+years before with an officer from India. This fellow's evidence was
+greatly in favor of young Conyers, and was subjected to a very severe
+cross-examination from yourself, in the middle of which he said
+something in Hindostanee that nobody in the court understood but you;
+and after this he was soon dismissed and the case closed for that day.
+
+“'What do you think, Major M'Cormick,' said she, 'but when the court of
+inquiry opened the next morning, Lal-Adeen, the Lascar, was not to be
+found high or low. The court have suspended their sittings to search for
+him; but only one opinion prevails,--that Major Stapylton knows more of
+this man's escape than he is likely to tell.' I have taken great pains
+to give you her own very words in all this business, and I wrote them
+down the moment I got home, for I thought to myself you 'd maybe write
+about the matter to old Peter, and you ought to be prepared for the
+way they look at it; the more because Miss Dinah has a liking for young
+Conyers,--what she calls a motherly affection; but I don't believe in
+the motherly part of it! But of course you care very little what the
+people here say about you at all. At least, I know it would n't trouble
+_me_ much, if I was in your place. At all events, whatever you do,
+do with a high hand, and the Horse Guards is sure to stand to you.
+Moderation may be an elegant thing in civil life, but I never knew it
+succeed in the army. There's the rain coming on again, and I just sent
+out six cars to the bog for turf; so I must conclude, and remain, yours
+sincerely,
+
+“Daniel T. M'Cormick.
+
+“I 'm thinking of foreclosing the small mortgage I hold on 'The Home,'
+but as they pay the interest regularly, five per cent, I would n't do it
+if I knew things were going on reasonably well with them; send me a line
+about what is doing regarding the 'claim,' and it will guide me.”
+
+While Major M'Cormick awaited the answer to his postscript, which to
+him--as to a lady--was the important part of his letter, a short note
+arrived at 'The Home' from Mr. Withering, enclosing a letter he had just
+received from Major Stapylton. Withering's communication was in answer
+to one from Barrington, and ran thus:--
+
+“Dear B.,--All things considered, I believe you are right in not
+receiving General Conyers at this moment. It would probably, as you
+suspect, enable calumnious people to say that you could make your
+resentments play second when they came in the way of your interests.
+If matters go on well, as I have every hope they will, you can make
+the _amende_ to him more satisfactorily and more gracefully hereafter.
+Buxton has at length consented to bring the case before the House;
+of course it will not go to a division, nor, if it did, could it be
+carried; but the discussion will excite interest, the Press will take
+it up, and after a few regretful and half-civil expressions from the
+Ministry, the India Board will see the necessity of an arrangement.
+
+“It is somewhat unfortunate and _mal à propos_ that Stapylton should at
+this moment have got into an angry collision with young Conyers. I have
+not followed the case closely, but, as usual in such things, they seem
+each of them in the wrong,--the young sub wanting to make his generous
+sympathy supply the place of military obedience, and the old officer
+enforcing discipline at the cost of very harsh language. I learn this
+morning that Conyers has sold out, intending to demand a personal
+satisfaction. You will see by S.'s letter that he scarcely alludes to
+this part of the transaction at all. S. feels very painfully the attacks
+of the Press, and sees, perhaps, more forcibly than I should in his
+place, the necessity of an exchange. Read attentively the portion I have
+underlined.”
+
+It is to this alone I have to direct my readers' attention, the first
+two sides of the letter being entirely filled with details about the
+“claim”:--
+
+“'The newspapers have kept me before you for some days back, much more,
+I doubt not, to their readers' amusement than to my own gratification. I
+could, if I pleased, have told these slanderers that I did not charge a
+crowd of women and children,--that I did not cut down an elderly man
+at his own door-sill,--that I did not use language “offensive and
+unbecoming” to one of my officers, for his having remonstrated in the
+name of humanity against the cruelty of my orders. In a word, I might
+have shown the contemptible scribblers that I knew how to temper duty
+with discretion, as I shall know how, when the occasion offers, to make
+the punishment of a calumniator a terror to his colleagues. However,
+there is a very absurd story going about of a fellow whose insolence I
+certainly _did_ reply to with the flat of my sabre, and whom I should
+be but too happy to punish legally, if he could be apprehended. That he
+made his escape after being captured, and that I connived at or assisted
+in it,--I forget which,--you have probably heard. In fact, there is
+nothing too incredible to say of me for the moment; and what is worse,
+I begin to suspect that the Home Secretary, having rather burned his
+fingers in the business, will not be very sorry to make an Admiral
+Byng of a Major of Hussars. For each and all these reasons I mean to
+exchange, and, if possible, into a regiment in India. This will, of
+course, take some time; meanwhile, I have asked for and obtained some
+months' leave. You will be surprised at my troubling you with so much
+of purely personal matters, but they are the necessary preface to what
+I now come. You are aware of the letter I wrote some time back to Mr.
+Barrington, and the request it preferred. If the reply I received was
+not discouraging, neither was it conclusive. The ordinary commonplaces
+as to the shortness of our acquaintance, the want of sufficient
+knowledge of each other's tastes, characters, &c, were duly dwelt upon;
+but I could not at the end say, was I an accepted or a rejected suitor.
+Now that the critical moment of my life draws nigh,--for such I feel
+the present emergency,--an act of confidence in me would have more than
+double value. Can you tell me that this is the sentiment felt towards
+me, or am I to learn that the yells of a rabble have drowned the voices
+of my friends? In plain words, will Miss Josephine Barrington accept
+my offer? Will she intrust her happiness to my keeping, and change
+the darkest shadow that ever lowered over my life into a gleam of
+unspeakable brightness? You have given me too many proofs of a friendly
+disposition towards me, not to make me feel that you are the best fitted
+to bring this negotiation to a good issue. If I do not mistake you much,
+you look with favor on my suit and wish it success. I am ashamed to say
+how deeply my hopes have jeopardized my future happiness, but I tell you
+frankly life has no such prize to my ambition, nor, in fact, any such
+alternative of despair before me.'
+
+“Now, my dear Barrington,” continued Withering's letter, “there is a
+great deal in this that I like, and something with which I am not so
+much pleased. If, however, I am not the Major's advocate to the extent
+he asks, or expects me, it is because I feel that to be unjustly dealt
+with is a stronger claim on _your_ heart than that of any other man I
+ever met with, and the real danger here would be that you should
+suffer that feeling to predominate over all others. Consult your
+granddaughter's interests, if you can, independently of this; reflect
+well if the plan be one likely to promise her happiness. Take your
+sensible, clear-headed sister into your counsels; but, above all,
+ascertain Josephine's own sentiments, and do nothing in direct
+opposition to them.”
+
+“There, Dinah,” said Barrington, placing the letter in her hands, “this
+is as much to your address as to mine. Read it over carefully, and
+you'll find me in the garden when you have done.”
+
+Miss Barrington laid down her great roll of worsted work, and began
+her task without a word. She had not proceeded very far, however, when
+Josephine entered in search of a book. “I beg pardon, aunt, if I derange
+you.”
+
+“We say disturb, or inconvenience, in English, Miss Barrington. What is
+it you are looking for?”
+
+“The 'Legend of Montrose,' aunt. I am so much amused by that Major
+Dalgetty that I can think of nothing but him.”
+
+“Umph!” muttered the old lady. “It was of a character not altogether
+dissimilar I was thinking myself at that moment. Sit down here, child,
+and let me talk to you. This letter that I hold here, Josephine,
+concerns you.”
+
+“Me, aunt--concerns _me?_ And who on earth could have written a letter
+in which I am interested?”
+
+“You shall hear it.” She coughed only once or twice, and then went on:
+“It's a proposal of marriage,--no less. That gallant soldier who left
+us so lately has fallen in love with you,--so he says, and of course he
+knows best. He seems fully aware that, being older than you, and graver
+in temperament, his offer must come heralded with certain expressions
+almost apologetic; but he deals with the matter skillfully, and tells
+us that being well off as regards fortune, of good blood, and with fair
+prospects before him, he does not wish to regard his suit as hopeless.
+Your grandfather was minded to learn how you might feel disposed to
+accept his addresses by observing your demeanor, by watching what
+emotion mention of him might occasion, by seeing how far you felt
+interested in his good or ill repute. I did not agree with him. I am
+never for the long road when there is a short one, and therefore I mean
+to let you hear his letter. This is what he writes.” While Miss Dinah
+read the extract which the reader has just seen, she never noticed, or,
+if noticed, never attended to, the agitation in her niece's manner, or
+seemed to remark that from a deep-crimson at first her cheeks grew pale
+as death, and her lips-tremulous. “There, child,” said Miss Dinah, as
+she finished--“there are his own words; very ardent words, but withal
+respectful. What do you think of them,--of them and of him?”
+
+Josephine hung down her head, and with her hands firmly clasped
+together, she sat for a few moments so motionless that she seemed
+scarcely to breathe.
+
+“Would you like to think over this before you speak of it, Josephine?
+Would you like to take this letter to your room and ponder over it
+alone?” No answer came but a low, half-subdued sigh.
+
+“If you do not wish to make a confidante of me, Josephine, I am sorry
+for it, but not offended.”
+
+“No, no, aunt, it is not that,” burst she in; “it is to _you_ and you
+alone, I wish to speak, and I will be as candid as yourself. I am not
+surprised at the contents of this letter. I mean, I was in a measure
+prepared for them.”
+
+“That is to say, child, that he paid you certain attentions?”
+
+She nodded assent.
+
+“And how did you receive them? Did you let him understand that you were
+not indifferent to him,--that his addresses were agreeable to you?”
+
+Another, but shorter, nod replied to this question.
+
+“I must confess,” said the old lady, bridling up, “all this amazes me
+greatly. Why, child, it is but the other day you met each other for the
+first time. How, when, and where you found time for such relations as
+you speak of, I cannot imagine. Do you mean to tell me, Josephine, that
+you ever talked alone together?”
+
+“Constantly, aunt!”
+
+“Constantly!”
+
+“Yes, aunt. We talked a great deal together.”
+
+“But how, child,--where?”
+
+“Here, aunt, as we used to stroll together every morning through
+the wood or in the garden; then as we went on the river or to the
+waterfall.”
+
+“I can comprehend nothing of all this, Josephine. I know you mean to
+deal openly with me; so say at once, how did this intimacy begin?”
+
+“I can scarcely say how, aunt, because I believe we drifted into it. We
+used to talk a great deal of ourselves, and at length we grew to talk of
+each other,--of our likings and dislikings, our tastes and our tempers.
+And these did not always agree!”
+
+“Indeed!”
+
+“No, aunt,” said she, with a heavy sigh. “We quarrelled very often; and
+once,--I shall not easily forget it,--once seriously.”
+
+“What was it about?”
+
+“It was about India, aunt; and he was in the wrong, and had to own it
+afterwards and ask pardon.”
+
+“He must know much more of that country than you, child. How came it
+that you presumed to set up your opinion against his?”
+
+“The presumption was his,” said she, haughtily. “He spoke of _his_
+father's position as something the same as _my_ father's. He talked of
+him as a Rajah!”
+
+“I did not know that he spoke of his father,” said Miss Dinah,
+thoughtfully.
+
+“Oh, he spoke much of him. He told me, amongst other things, how he had
+been a dear friend of papa's; that as young men they lived together
+like brothers, and never were separate till the fortune of life divided
+them.”
+
+“What is all this I am listening to? Of whom are you telling me,
+Josephine?”
+
+“Of Fred, Aunt Dinah; of Fred, of course.”
+
+“Do you mean young Conyers, child?”
+
+“Yes. How could I mean any other?”
+
+“Ta, ta, ta!” said the old lady, drumming with her heel on the floor
+and her fingers on the table. “It has all turned out as I said it would!
+Peter, Peter, will you never be taught wisdom? Listen to me, child!”
+ said she, turning almost sternly towards Josephine. “We have been at
+cross-purposes with each other all this time. This letter which I have
+just read for you--” She stopped suddenly as she reached thus far,
+and after a second's pause, said, “Wait for me here; I will be back
+presently. I have a word to say to your grandfather.”
+
+Leaving poor Josephine in a state of trepidation and
+bewilderment,--ashamed at the confession she had just made, and
+trembling with a vague sense of some danger that impended over
+her,--Miss Dinah hurried away to the garden.
+
+“Here's a new sort of worm got into the celery, Dinah,” said he, as
+she came up, “and a most destructive fellow he is. He looks like a mere
+ruffling of the leaf, and you 'd never suspect him.”
+
+“It is your peculiarity never to suspect anything, brother Peter, even
+after you have had warning of peril. Do you remember my telling you,
+when we were up the Rhine, what would come of that intimacy between
+Conyers and Josephine?”
+
+“I think I do,” said he, making what seemed an effort of memory.
+
+“And can you recall the indolent slipshod answer you made me about it?
+But of course you cannot. It was an old-maid's apprehensions, and you
+forgot the whole thing. Well, Peter, I was right and you were wrong.”
+
+“Not the first time that the double event has come off so!” said he,
+smiling.
+
+“You are too fond of that cloak of humility, Peter Barrington. The plea
+of Guilty never saved any one from transportation!” Waiting a moment to
+recover her breath after this burst of passion, she went on: “After I
+had read that letter you gave me, I spoke to Josephine; I told her in a
+few words how it referred to her, and frankly asked her what she thought
+of it. She was very candid and very open, and, I must say, also very
+collected and composed. Young ladies of the present day possess that
+inestimable advantage over their predecessors. Their emotions do not
+overpower them.” This was the second time of “blowing off the steam,”
+ and she had to wait a moment to rally. “She told me, frankly, that she
+was not unprepared for such an offer; that tender passages had already
+been exchanged between them. The usual tomfoolery, I conclude,--that
+supreme effort of selfishness people call love,--in a word, Peter, she
+was in no wise disinclined to the proposal; the only misfortune was, she
+believed it came from young Conyers.”
+
+Barrington would have laughed, and laughed heartily, if he dared. As it
+was, the effort to restrain himself sent the blood to his head, and made
+his eyes run over.
+
+“You may well blush, Peter Barrington,” said she, shaking her finger at
+him. “It's all your own doing.”
+
+“And when you undeceived her, Dinah, what did she say?”
+
+“I have not done so yet; but my impression is that so susceptible
+a young lady should find no great difficulty in transferring her
+affections. For the present I mean to limit myself to declaring that
+this offer is not from Conyers; if she has curiosity to know the writer,
+she shall learn it. I always had my doubts about these convents Bread
+and water diet makes more epicures than abstinents!”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. INTERCHANGED CONFESSIONS
+
+Miss Barrington, with Josephine at one side and Polly Dill on the other,
+sat at work in her little room that opened on the garden. Each was
+engaged in some peculiar task, and each seemed bent upon her labor in
+that preoccupied way which would imply that the cares of needlework make
+no mean call upon human faculties. A close observer would, however, have
+remarked that though Miss Barrington stitched vigorously away at the
+background for a fierce tiger with measly spots over him, Polly seemed
+oftener to contemplate than continue her handiwork; while Josephine's
+looks strayed constantly from the delicate tracery she was following, to
+the garden, where the roses blended with the jasmine, and the drooping
+honeysuckles hung listlessly over the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+“If your work wearies you, Fifine,” said Miss Dinah, “you had better
+read for us.”
+
+“Oh no, not at all, aunt; I like it immensely. I was only wondering why
+one should devise such impossible foliage, when we have the real thing
+before us, in all its grace and beauty.”
+
+“Humph!” said the old lady; “the sight of a real tiger would not put me
+out of countenance with my own.”
+
+“It certainly ought not, ma'am,” said Polly; while she added, in a faint
+whisper, “for there is assuredly no rivalry in the case.”
+
+“Perhaps Miss Dill is not too absorbed in her study of nature, as
+applied to needlework, to read out the newspaper.”
+
+“I will do it with pleasure, ma'am. Where shall I begin?”
+
+“Deaths and marriages first, of course, child. Then fashion and
+varieties; take the accidents afterwards, and close with anything
+remarkable in politics, or any disastrous occurrence in high life.”
+
+Polly obeyed to the letter; once only straying into an animated account
+of a run with the Springfield fox-hounds, where three riders out of a
+large field came in at the death; when Miss Dinah stopped her abruptly,
+saying, “I don't care for the obituary of a fox, young lady. Go on with
+something else.”
+
+“Will you have the recent tragedy at Ring's End, ma'am?”
+
+“I know it by heart Is there nothing new in the fashions,--how are
+bonnets worn? What's the latest sleeve? What's the color in vogue?”
+
+“A delicate blue, ma'am; a little off the sky, and on the hyacinth.”
+
+“Very becoming to fair people,” said Miss Dinah, with a shake of her
+blond ringlets.
+
+“'The Prince's Hussars!' Would you like to hear about _them_, ma'am?”
+
+“By all means.”
+
+“It's a very short paragraph. 'The internal troubles of this unhappy
+regiment would seem to be never ending. We last week informed our
+readers that a young subaltern of the corps, the son of one of our most
+distinguished generals, had thrown up his commission and repaired to
+the Continent, to enable him to demand a personal satisfaction from
+his commanding officer, and we now learn that the Major in question is
+precluded from accepting the gage of battle by something stronger than
+military etiquette.'”
+
+“Read it again, child; that vile newspaper slang always puzzles me.”
+
+Polly recited the passage in a clear and distinct voice.
+
+“What do you understand by it, Polly?”
+
+“I take it to mean nothing, madam. One of those stirring pieces of
+intelligence which excites curiosity, and are no more expected to be
+explained than a bad riddle.”
+
+“It cannot surely be that he shelters himself under his position towards
+us? That I conclude is hardly possible!”
+
+Though Miss Barrington said this as a reflection, she addressed herself
+almost directly to Josephine.
+
+“As far as I am concerned, aunt,” answered Josephine, promptly, “the
+Major may fight the monster of the Drachenfels to-morrow, if he wishes
+it.”
+
+“Oh, here is another mystery apparently on the same subject. 'The
+Lascar, Lal-Adeen, whom our readers will remember as having figured in a
+police-court a few days back, and was remanded till the condition of
+his wound--a severe sabre-cut on the scalp--should permit his further
+examination, and on the same night made his escape from the hospital,
+has once again, and very unexpectedly, turned up at Boulogne-sur-Mer.
+His arrival in this country--some say voluntarily, others under a
+warrant issued for his apprehension--will probably take place to-day or
+to-morrow, and, if report speak truly, be followed by some of the most
+singular confessions which the public has heard for a long time back.'
+'The Post' contradicts the statement, and declares 'no such person has
+ever been examined before the magistrate, if he even have any existence
+at all.'”
+
+“And what interest has all this for us?” asked Miss Dinah, sharply.
+
+“You do not forget, ma'am, that this is the same man Major Stapylton was
+said to have wounded; and whose escape scandal hinted he had connived
+at, and who now 'does not exist.'”
+
+“I declare Miss Dill, I remember no such thing; but it appears to me
+that Major Stapylton occupies a very considerable space in your own
+thoughts.”
+
+“I fancy Polly likes him, aunt,” said Josephine, with a slight smile.
+
+“Well, I will own he interests me; there is about him a mysterious
+something that says, 'I have more in my head and on my heart than you
+think of, and more, perhaps, than you could carry if the burden were
+yours.'”
+
+“A galley-slave might say the same, Miss Dill.”
+
+“No doubt of it, ma'am; and if there be men who mix in the great world,
+and dine at grand houses, with something of the galley-slave on their
+conscience, they assuredly impress us with an amount of fear that is
+half a homage. One dreads them as he does a tiger, but the terror is
+mingled with admiration.”
+
+“This is nonsense, young lady, and baneful nonsense, too, begotten of
+French novels and a sickly sentimentality. I hope Fifine despises it as
+heartily as I do.” The passionate wrath which she displayed extended to
+the materials of her work-basket, and while rolls of worsted were
+upset here, needles were thrown there; and at last, pushing her
+embroidery-frame rudely away, she arose and left the room.
+
+“Dearest Polly, how could you be so indiscreet! You know, far better
+than I do, how little patience she has with a paradox.”
+
+“My sweet Fifine,” said the other, in a low whisper, “I was dying to get
+rid of her, and I knew there was only one way of effecting it. You
+may remark that whenever she gets into a rage, she rushes out into the
+flower-garden, and walks round and round till she's ready to drop. There
+she is already; you may gauge her anger by the number of her revolutions
+in a minute.”
+
+“But why did you wish her away, Polly?”
+
+“I'll tell you why; that is, there is a charming French word for what
+I mean, the verb 'agacer,' all untranslatable as it is. Now there
+are moments when a person working in the same room--reading, writing,
+looking out of the window--becomes an insupportable infliction. You
+reason, and say, 'How absurd, how childish, how ungenerous,' and so
+forth. It won't do; for as you look round he is there still, and by his
+mere presence keeps up the ferment in your thoughts. You fancy, at last,
+that he stands between you and your inner self, a witness that won't let
+your own conscience whisper to you, and you come in the end to hate him.
+Your dear aunt was on the high-road to this goal, when I bethought me of
+my expedient! And now we are all alone, dearest, make me a confession.”
+
+“What is it?”
+
+“You do not like Major Stapylton?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“And you do like somebody else?”
+
+“Perhaps,” said she, slowly, and dividing the syllables as she spoke
+them.
+
+“That being the case, and seeing, as you do, that your aunt is entirely
+of your own mind, at least as to the man you do not care for, why don't
+you declare as much frankly to your grandfather, and break off the
+negotiation at once?”
+
+“Just because that dear old grandpapa asked me not to be precipitate,
+not to be rash. He did not tell me that I must love Major Stapylton, or
+must marry him; but he said, 'If you only knew, Fifine, what a change in
+our fortune would come of a change in _your_ feelings; if you could but
+imagine, child, how the whole journey of life might be rendered easier,
+all because you took the right-hand road instead of the left; if you
+could guess these things, and what might follow them--'” She stopped.
+
+“Well, go on.”
+
+“No. I have said all that he said; he kissed my cheek as he got thus
+far, and hurried away from the room.”
+
+“And you, like a sweet, obedient child, hastened away to yours; wrote a
+farewell, a heart-broken farewell, to Fred Conyers; and solemnly swore
+to your own conscience you 'd marry a man you disliked. These are the
+sort of sacrifices the world has a high admiration for; but do you know,
+Fifine, the world limps a little in its morality sometimes, and is not
+one-half the fine creature it thinks itself. For instance, in the midst
+of all its enthusiasm for you, it has forgotten that in accepting for
+your husband a man you do not love, you are doing a dishonesty; and
+that, besides this, you really love another. It is what the French call
+the aggravating circumstance.”
+
+“I mean to do nothing of the kind!” broke in Fifine, boldly. “Your
+lecture does not address itself to _me_.”
+
+“Do not be angry, Fifine,” said the other, calmly.
+
+“It is rather too hard to be rebuked for the faults one might have, but
+has not committed. It's like saying how wet you 'd have been had you
+fallen into that pool!”
+
+“Well, it also means, don't fall into the pool!”
+
+“Do you know, Polly,” said Josephine, archly, “I have a sort of
+suspicion that you don't dislike this Major yourself! Am I right?”
+
+“I'm not say you were altogether wrong; that is, he interests me, or,
+rather, he puzzles me, and it piques my ingenuity to read him, just as
+it would to make out a cipher to which I had only one-half the key.”
+
+“Such a feeling as that would never inspire a tender interest, at least,
+with _me_.”
+
+“Nor did I say it was, Fifine. I have read in some book of my father's
+how certain physicians inoculated themselves with plague, the better
+to note the phenomena, and trace the course; and I own I can understand
+their zeal, and I 'd risk something to decipher this man.”
+
+“This may be very nice in medicine, Polly, but very bad in morals! At
+all events, don't catch the plague for the sake of saving _me?_”
+
+“Oh! I assure you any step I take shall be done in the interests of
+science solely; not but that I have a small debt to acquit towards the
+gallant Major.”
+
+“You have! What can it possibly be?”
+
+“Well, it was this wise,” said she, with a half-sigh. “We met at
+a country-house here, and he paid me certain attentions, made me
+compliments on my riding, which I knew to be good, and my singing, which
+was just tolerable; said the usual things which mean nothing, and a few
+of those more serious ones which are supposed to be more significant;
+and then he asked my father's leave to come and visit him, and actually
+fixed a day and an hour. And we, poor people, all delighted with the
+flattery of such high notice, and thinking of the effect upon our
+neighbors so splendid a visitor would produce, made the most magnificent
+preparations to receive him,--papa in a black satin waistcoat, mamma in
+her lilac ribbons. I myself,--having put the roof on a pigeon-pie,
+and given the last finishing touch to a pagoda of ruby jelly,--I, in a
+charming figured muslin and a blush rose in my hair, awaited the hour of
+attack! And, after all, he never came. No, Fifine, never came! He forgot
+us, or he changed his mind, or something else turned up that he liked
+better; or--which is just as likely as any of the three--he thought
+it would be a charming piece of impertinence to pass off on such small
+folk, who presumed to fancy themselves company for him. At all events,
+Fifine, we saw him no more. He went his way somewhere, and we were left
+lamenting.”
+
+“And you really liked him, Polly?”
+
+“No, of the two, I disliked him; but I wished very much that he might
+like _me!_ I saw him very overbearing and very insolent to those
+who were certainly his equals, assuming a most offensive superiority
+everywhere and to any one, and I thought what an awful humiliation it
+would be if so great a personage were to be snubbed by the doctor's
+daughter. I wanted to give a lesson which could only be severe if it
+came from one humble as myself; but he defeated me, Fifine, and I am
+still his debtor! If I did not like him before, you may believe that
+I hate him now; and I came off here this morning, in hot haste, for no
+other purpose than to set you against him, and induce you to regard him
+as I do.”
+
+“There was little need,” said Fifine, calmly; “but here comes my aunt
+back again. Make your submission quickly, Polly, or it will be too late
+to expect mercy.”
+
+“I 'll do better,” said Polly, rising. “I 'll let my trial go on in my
+absence;” and with this she stepped out of the window as Miss Barrington
+entered by the door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. STAPYLTON'S VISIT AT “THE HOME”
+
+So secretly had Barrington managed, that he negotiated the loan of five
+hundred pounds on a mortgage of the cottage without ever letting his
+sister hear of it; and when she heard on a particular day that her
+brother expected Mr. Kinshela, the attorney, from Kilkenny, on business,
+she made the occasion the pretext of a visit to Dr. Dill, taking
+Josephine with her, to pass the day there.
+
+Barrington was therefore free to receive his lawyer at his ease, and
+confer with him alone. Not that he cared much for his company; he
+felt towards the attorney pretty much as an ardent soldier feels to
+a non-combatant, the commissary, or the paymaster. Had he been a
+barrister, indeed, old Peter would have welcomed him with the zest of
+true companionship; he would have ransacked his memory for anecdotes,
+and prepared for the meeting as for an encounter of sharp wits. Now it
+is no part of my task to present Mr. Kinshela more than passingly to
+my reader, and I will merely say that he was a shrewd, commonplace
+man, whose practice rarely introduced him to the higher classes of his
+county, and who recognized Barrington, even in his decline, as a person
+of some consideration.
+
+They had dined well, and sat over their wine in the little dining-room
+over the river, a favorite spot of Barrington's when he wished to be
+confidential, for it was apart from the rest of the cottage, and removed
+from all intrusion.
+
+“So, you won't tell me, Kinshela, who lent us this money?” said the old
+man, as he passed the decanter across the table.
+
+“It is not that I won't, sir, but I can't. It was in answer to an
+advertisement I inserted in the 'Times,' that I got an application from
+Granger and Wood to supply particulars; and I must say there was
+no unnecessary security on their part. It was as speedily settled a
+transaction as I ever conducted, and I believe in my heart we might have
+had a thousand pounds on it just as easily as five hundred.”
+
+“As well as it is, Kinshela. When the day of repayment comes round, I'll
+perhaps find it heavy enough;” and he sighed deeply as he spoke.
+
+“Who knows, sir? There never was a time that capital expended on land
+was more remunerative than the present.”
+
+Now, Mr. Kinshela well knew that the destination of the money they
+spoke of was not in this direction, and that it had as little to say to
+subsoil drainage or top dressing as to the conversion of the heathen;
+but he was angling for a confidence, and he did not see how to attain
+it.
+
+Barrington smiled before he answered,--one of those sad, melancholy
+smiles which reveal a sorrow a man is not able to suppress,--and then he
+said, “I 'm afraid, Kinshela, I 'll not test the problem this time.”
+
+“It will be better employed, perhaps, sir. You mean, probably, to take
+your granddaughter up to the drawing-room at the Castle?”
+
+“I never so much as thought of it, Joe Kinshela; the fact is, that money
+is going where I have sent many a hundred before it,--in law! I have had
+a long, wearisome, costly suit, that has well-nigh beggared me; and of
+that sum you raised for me I don't expect to have a shilling by this day
+week.”
+
+“I heard something about that, sir,” said the other, cautiously.
+
+“And what was it you heard?”
+
+“Nothing, of course, worth repeating; nothing from any one that knew the
+matter himself; just the gossip that goes about, and no more.”
+
+“Well, let us hear the gossip that goes about, and I'll promise to tell
+you if it's true.”
+
+“Well, indeed,” said Kinshela, drawing a long breath, “they say that
+your claim is against the India Board.”
+
+Barring ton nodded.
+
+“And that it is a matter little short of a million is in dispute.”
+
+He nodded again twice.
+
+“And they say, too,--of course, on very insufficient knowledge,--that
+if you would have abated your demands once on a time, you might readily
+have got a hundred thousand pounds, or even more.”
+
+“That's not impossible,” muttered Barrington.
+
+“But that, now--” he stammered for an instant, and then stopped.
+
+“But now? Go on.”
+
+“Sure, sir, they can know nothing about it; it's just idle talk, and no
+more.”
+
+“Go on, and tell me what they say _now_,” said Barrington, with a strong
+force on the last word.
+
+“They say you 'll be beaten, sir,” said he, with an effort.
+
+“And do they say why, Kinshela?”
+
+“Yes, sir; they say you won't take advice; and no matter what Mr.
+Withering counsels, or is settled in consultation, you go your own way
+and won't mind them; and that you have been heard to declare you 'll
+have all, or nothing.”
+
+“They give me more credit than I deserve, Kinshela. It is, perhaps, what
+I ought to have said, for I have often _thought it_. But in return for
+all the kind interest my neighbors take about me, let them know that
+matters look better for us than they once did. Perhaps,” added he, with
+a laugh,--“perhaps I have overcome my obstinacy, or perhaps my opponents
+have yielded to it. At all events, Joe, I believe I see land at last,
+and it was a long 'lookout' and many a fog-bank I mistook for it.”
+
+“And what makes you think now you'll win?” said the other, growing
+bolder by the confidence reposed in him.
+
+Barrington half started at the presumption of the question; but
+he suddenly remembered how it was he himself who had invited the
+discussion, so he said calmly,--
+
+“My hope is not without a foundation. I expect by the mail to-night a
+friend who may be able to tell me that I have won, or as good as won.”
+
+Kinshela was dying to ask who the friend was, but even his curiosity had
+its prudential limits; so he merely took out his watch, and, looking at
+it, remarked that the mail would pass in about twenty minutes or so.
+
+“By the way, I must n't forget to send a servant to wait on the
+roadside;” and he rang the bell and said, “Let Darby go up to the road
+and take Major Stapylton's luggage when he arrives.”
+
+“Is that the Major Stapylton is going to be broke for the doings at
+Manchester, sir?” asked Kinshela.
+
+“He is the same Major Stapylton that a rascally press is now libelling
+and calumniating,” said Barrington, hotly. “As to being broke, I
+don't believe that we have come yet to that pass in England that
+the discipline of our army is administered by every scribbler in a
+newspaper.”
+
+“I humbly crave your pardon, sir, if I have said the slightest thing
+to offend; but I only meant to ask, was he the officer they were making
+such a fuss about?” “He is an officer of the highest distinction, and a
+wellborn gentleman to boot,--two admirable reasons for the assaults of a
+contemptible party. Look you, Kinshela; you and I are neither of us very
+young or inexperienced men, but I would ask you, have we learned
+any wiser lesson from our intercourse with life than to withhold our
+judgment on the case of one who rejects the sentence of a mob, and
+appeals to the verdict of his equals?”
+
+“But if he cut the people down in cold blood,--if it be true that he
+laid open that poor black fellow's cheek from the temple to the chin--”
+
+“If he did no such thing,” broke in Barrington; “that is to say, if
+there is no evidence whatever that he did so, what will your legal mind
+say then, Joe Kinshela?”
+
+“Just this, sir. I'd say--what all the newspapers are saying--that he
+got the man out of the way,--bribed and sent him off.”
+
+“Why not hint that he murdered him, and buried him within the precincts
+of the jail? I declare I wonder at your moderation.”
+
+“I am sure, sir, that if I suspected he was an old friend of yours--”
+
+“Nothing of the kind,--a friend of very short standing; but what has
+that to say to it? Is he less entitled to fair play whether he knew me
+or not?”
+
+“All I know of the case is from the newspapers; and as I scarcely see
+one word in his favor, I take it there is not much to be said in his
+defence.”
+
+“Well, if my ears don't deceive me, that was the guard's horn I heard
+then. The man himself will be here in five minutes or so. You shall
+conduct the prosecution, Kinshela, and I 'll be judge between you.”
+
+“Heaven forbid, sir; on no account whatever!” said Kinshela, trembling
+all over. “I'm sure, Mr. Barrington, you couldn't think of repeating
+what I said to you in confidence--”
+
+“No, no, Kinshela. You shall do it yourself; and it's only fair to tell
+you that he is a right clever fellow, and fully equal to the task of
+defending himself.” Peter arose as he spoke, and walked out upon the
+lawn, affectedly to meet his coming guest, but in reality to cover a
+laugh that was half smothering him, so comical was the misery expressed
+in the attorney's face, and so ludicrous was his look of terror.
+
+Of course I need not say that it never occurred to Barrington to realize
+his threat, which he merely uttered in the spirit of that quizzing habit
+that was familiar to him. “Yes, Kinshela,” cried he, “here he comes.
+I recognize his voice already;” and Barrington now walked forward to
+welcome his friend.
+
+It was not till after some minutes of conversation, and when the light
+fell strongly on Stapylton's features, that Barrington saw how changed
+a few weeks of care had made him. He looked at the least ten years older
+than before. His eyes had lost their bold and daring expression, too,
+and were deep sunk, and almost furtive in their glance.
+
+“You are tired, I fear,” said Barrington, as the other moved his hand
+across his forehead, and, with a slight sigh, sank down upon a sofa.
+
+“Less tired than worried,--harassed,” said he, faintly. “Just as at a
+gaming-table a man may lose more in half an hour's high play than years
+of hard labor could acquire, there are times of life when we dissipate
+more strength and vigor than we ever regain. I have had rough usage
+since I saw you last,” said he, with a very sickly smile. “How are the
+ladies,--well, I hope?”
+
+“Perfectly well. They have gone to pass the day with a neighbor, and
+will be home presently. By the way, I left a friend here a few moments
+ago. What can have become of him?” and he rang the bell hastily.
+“Where's Mr. Kinshela, Darby?”
+
+“Gone to bed, sir. He said he 'd a murthering headache, and hoped your
+honor would excuse him.”
+
+Though Barrington laughed heartily at this message, Stapylton never
+asked the reason, but sat immersed in thought and unmindful of all
+around him.
+
+“I half suspect you ought to follow his good example, Major,” said
+Peter. “A mug of mulled claret for a nightcap, and a good sleep, will
+set you all right.”
+
+“It will take more than that to do it,” said the Major, sadly. Then
+suddenly rising, and pacing the room with quick, impatient steps, he
+said, “What could have induced you to let them bring your claim before
+the House? They are going to do so, ain't they?”
+
+“Yes. Tom Withering says that nothing will be so effectual, and I
+thought you agreed with him.”
+
+“Never. Nothing of the kind. I said, threaten it; insist that if they
+continue the opposition, that you will,--that you must do so; but I
+never was the fool to imagine that it could really be a wise step. What
+'s the fate of all such motions? I ask you. There's a speech--sometimes
+an able one--setting forth a long catalogue of unmerited injuries and
+long suffering. There's a claim made out that none can find a flaw in,
+and a story that, if Parliament was given to softness, might move men
+almost to tears, and at the end of it up rises a Minister to say how
+deeply he sympathizes with the calamity of the case, but that this
+house is, after all, not the fitting locality for a discussion which is
+essentially a question of law, and that, even if it were, and if all
+the allegations were established,--a point to which he by no means gave
+adhesion,--there was really no available fund at the disposal of the
+Crown to make reparation for such losses. Have you not seen this,
+or something like this, scores of times? Can you tell me of one that
+succeeded?”
+
+“A case of such wrong as this cannot go without reparation,” said Peter,
+with emotion. “The whole country will demand it.”
+
+“The country will do no such thing. If it were a question of penalty
+or punishment,--yes! the country would demand it. Fine, imprison,
+transport, hang him! are easy words to utter, and cheap ones; but
+pay him, reinstate him, reward him! have a very different sound and
+significance. They figure in the budget, and are formidable on the
+hustings. Depend on it, Mr. Barrington, the step will be a false one.”
+
+“It has been my fate never to have got the same advice for two weeks
+together since the day I entered on this weary suit,” said Barrington,
+with a peevishness not natural to him.
+
+“I may as well tell you the whole truth at once,” said Stapylton. “The
+Board have gone back of all their good intentions towards us; some
+recent arrivals from India, it is said, have kindled again the old
+fire of opposition, and we are to be met by a resistance bold and
+uncompromising. They are prepared to deny everything we assert; in fact,
+they have resolved to sweep all the pieces off the board and begin the
+whole game again, and all because you have taken this unfortunate course
+of appeal to Parliament.”
+
+“Have you told Withering this?”
+
+“Yes; I have talked the matter over for nearly four hours with him.
+Like a lawyer, he was most eager to know from what source came the new
+evidence so damaging to us. I could only guess at this.”
+
+“And your guess was--”
+
+“I scarcely like to own to you that I take a less favorable view of
+mankind than you do, who know it better; but in this case my suspicion
+attaches to a man who was once your son's dearest friend, but grew to be
+afterwards his deadliest enemy.”
+
+“I will not have this said, Major Stapylton. I know whom you mean, and I
+don't believe a word of it.”
+
+Stapylton simply shrugged his shoulders, and continued to pace the room
+without speaking, while Barrington went on muttering, half aloud: “No,
+no, impossible; quite impossible. These things are not in nature. I
+don't credit them.”
+
+“You like to think very well of the world, sir!” said the Major, with a
+faint scorn, so faint as scarcely to color his words.
+
+“Think very badly of it, and you 'll soon come down to the level you
+assign it,” said Peter, boldly.
+
+“I 'm afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best
+suffrages. You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I
+have met with from the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous
+usage,--not very just. Well! what will you say when I tell you that I
+have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester; that the
+Government is of opinion that such an investigation might at the
+moment be prejudicial to the public peace, without any counterbalancing
+advantage on the score of a personal vindication; that they do not deem
+the time favorable for the calm and unbiassed judgment of the country;
+in one short word, sir, they 'd rather ruin a Major of Hussars than risk
+a Cabinet. I am to exchange into any corps or any service I can;
+and they are to tide over these troubles on the assumption of having
+degraded me.”
+
+“I hope you wrong them,--I do hope you wrong them!” cried Barrington,
+passionately.
+
+“You shall see if I do,” said he, taking several letters from his
+pocket, and searching for one in particular. “Yes, here it is. This is
+from Aldridge, the private secretary of the Commander-in-chief. It is
+very brief, and strictly secret:--
+
+“'Dear S.,--The “Chief” does not like your scrape at all. You did rather
+too much, or too little,--a fatal mistake dealing with a mob. You must
+consent--there's no help for it--to be badly used, and an injured man.
+If you don't like the half-pay list,--which would, in my mind, be the
+best step,--there 's the Seventeenth ordered to Baroda, and Maidstone
+refuses to go. This, or the Second West India, are the only things open.
+Above all, don't show fight; don't rally a party round you, for there
+is not a man in England whose influence is sufficiently great to stand
+between you and the public. A conple of years' patience and a hot
+climate will set all right, and reinstate you everywhere. Come over here
+at once and I 'll do my best for you.
+
+“'Yours ever,
+
+“'St. George Aldridge.'
+
+“This is a friend's letter,” said Stapylton, with a sneer; “and he
+has no better counsel to give me than to plead guilty, and ask for a
+mitigated punishment.”
+
+Harrington was silenced; he would not by any expression of indignation
+add to the great anger of the other, and he said nothing. At last he
+said, “I wish from my heart--I wish I could be of any service to you.”
+
+“You are the only man living who can,” was the prompt answer.
+
+“How so--in what way? Let me hear.”
+
+“When I addressed a certain letter to you some time back, I was in a
+position both of fortune and prospect to take at least something from
+the presumption of my offer. Now, though my fortune remains, my future
+is more than clouded, and if I ask you to look favorably on my cause
+now, it is to your generosity I must appeal; I am, in fact, asking you
+to stand by a fallen man.”
+
+This speech, uttered in a voice slightly shaken by agitation, went to
+Barrington's heart. There was not a sentiment in his nature so certain
+to respond to a call upon it as this one of sympathy with the beaten
+man; the weaker side was always certain of his adherence. With a nice
+tact Stapylton said no more, but, pushing open the window, walked out
+upon the smooth sward, on which a faint moonlight flickered. He had shot
+his bolt, and saw it as it quivered in his victim's flesh. Barrington
+was after him in an instant, and, drawing an arm within his he said in
+a low voice, “You may count upon me.”
+
+Stapylton wrung his hand warmly, without speaking. After walking for
+a few moments, side by side, he said: “I must be frank with you, Mr.
+Barrington. I have little time and no taste for circumlocution; I cannot
+conceal from myself that I am no favorite with your sister. I was not
+as eager as I ought to have been to cultivate her good opinion; I was
+a little piqued at what I thought mere injustices on her part,--small
+ones, to be sure, but they wounded me, and with a temper that always
+revolted against a wrong, I resented them, and I fear me, in doing so,
+I jeopardized her esteem. If she is as generous as her brother, she will
+not remember these to me in my day of defeat. Women, however, have their
+own ideas of mercy, as they have of everything, and she may not choose
+to regard me as you have done.”
+
+“I suspect you are wrong about this,” said Harrington, breaking in.
+
+“Well, I wish I may be; at all events, I must put the feeling to
+the test at once, for I have formed my plan, and mean to begin it
+immediately.”
+
+“And what is it?”
+
+“Very few words will tell it. I intend to go on half-pay, or sell out if
+that be refused me; set out for India by the next mail, and, with what
+energy remains to me, vindicate your son's claim. I have qualifications
+that will make me better than a better man. I am well versed in
+Hindostanee, and a fair Persian scholar; I have a wide acquaintance with
+natives of every rank, and I know how and where to look for information.
+It is not my disposition to feel over-sanguine, but I would stake all I
+possess on my success, for I see exactly the flaws in the chain, and I
+know where to go to repair them. You have witnessed with what ardor I
+adopted the suit before; but you cannot estimate the zeal with which I
+throw myself into it now--_now_ that, like George Barring-ton himself,
+I am a man wronged, outraged, and insulted.” For a few seconds be seemed
+overcome by passion and unable to continue; then he went on: “If your
+granddaughter will accept me, it is my intention to settle on her all I
+possess. Our marriage can be private, and she shall be free to accompany
+me or to remain here, as she likes.”
+
+“But how can all this be done so hurriedly? You talk of starting at
+once.”
+
+“I must, if I would save your son's cause. The India Board are sending
+out their emissaries to Calcutta, and I must anticipate them--if I
+cannot do more, by gaining them over to us on the voyage out. It is a
+case for energy and activity, and I want to employ both.”
+
+“The time is very short for all this,” said Barrington, again.
+
+“So it is, sir, and so are the few seconds which may rescue a man from
+drowning! It is in the crisis of my fate that I ask you to stand by me.”
+
+“But have you any reason to believe that my granddaughter will hear you
+favorably? You are almost strangers to each other?”
+
+“If she will not give me the legal right to make her my heir, I mean to
+usurp the privilege. I have already been with a lawyer for that purpose.
+My dear sir,” added he, passionately, “I want to break with the past
+forever! When the world sets up its howl against a man, the odds are too
+great! To stand and defy it he must succumb or retreat. Now, I mean to
+retire, but with the honors of war, mark you.”
+
+“My sister will never consent to it,” muttered Barrington.
+
+“Will you? Have I the assurance of _your_ support?”
+
+“I can scarcely venture to say 'yes,' and yet I can't bear to say 'no'
+to you!”
+
+“This is less than I looked for from you,” said Stapylton, mournfully.
+
+“I know Dinah so well. I know how hopeless it would be to ask her
+concurrence to this plan.”
+
+“She may not take the generous view of it; but there is a worldly one
+worth considering,” said Stapylton, bitterly.
+
+“Then, sir, if you count on _that_, I would not give a copper half-penny
+for your chance of success!” cried Barrington, passionately.
+
+“You have quite misconceived me; you have wronged me altogether,” broke
+in Stapylton, in a tone of apology; for he saw the mistake he had made,
+and hastened to repair it. “My meaning was this--”
+
+“So much the better. I'm glad I misunderstood you. But here come the
+ladies. Let us go and meet them.”
+
+“One word,--only one word. Will you befriend me?”
+
+“I will do all that I can,--that is, all that I ought,” said Barrington,
+as he led him away, and re-entered the cottage.
+
+“I will not meet them to-night,” said Stapylton, hurriedly. “I am
+nervous and agitated. I will say good-night now.”
+
+This was the second time within a few days that Stapylton had shown an
+unwillingness to confront Miss Barrington, and Peter thought over it
+long and anxiously. “What can he mean by it?” said he, to himself. “Why
+should he be so frank and outspoken with me, and so reserved with her?
+What can Dinah know of him? What can she suspect, that is not known
+to me? It is true they never did like each other,--never 'hit it off'
+together; but that is scarcely _his_ fault. My excellent sister throws
+away little love on strangers, and opens every fresh acquaintance with
+a very fortifying prejudice against the newly presented. However it
+happens,” muttered he, with a sigh, “_she_ is not often wrong, and _I_
+am very seldom right;” and, with this reflection, he turned once again
+to resume his walk in the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT
+
+Stapylton did not make his appearance at breakfast; he sent down a
+message that he had passed a feverish night, and begged that Dr. Dill
+might be sent for. Though Barrington made two attempts to see his
+guest, the quietness of the room on each occasion implied that he was
+asleep, and, fearing to disturb him, he went downstairs again on tiptoe.
+
+“This is what the persecution has done, Dinah,” said he. “They have
+brought that stout-hearted fellow so low that he may be the victim of a
+fever to-morrow.”
+
+“Nonsense, Peter. Men of courage don't fall sick because the newspapers
+calumniate them. They have other things on their minds than such puny
+attacks.”
+
+“So he may, likely enough, too. He is bent heart and soul on what I
+told you last night, and I 'm not surprised if he never closed his eyes
+thinking of it.”
+
+“Neither did I!” said she, curtly, and left the room.
+
+The doctor was not long in arriving, and, after a word or two with
+Barrington, hastened to the patient's room.
+
+“Are we alone?” asked Stapylton, cutting short the bland speech with
+which Dill was making his approaches. “Draw that curtain a bit, and take
+a good look at me. Are my eyes bloodshot? Are the pupils dilated? I had
+a bad sunstroke once; see if there be any signs of congestion about me.”
+
+“No, I see none. A little flushed; your pulse, too, is accelerated, and
+the heart's action is labored--”
+
+“Never mind the heart; if the head be well, it will take care of it.
+Reach me that pocket-book; I want to acquit one debt to you before I
+incur another. No humbug between us;” and he pressed some notes into the
+other's palm as he spoke. “Let us understand each other fully, and at
+once. I 'm not very ill; but I want _you_.”
+
+“And I am at your orders.”
+
+“Faithfully,--loyally?”
+
+“Faithfully,--loyally!” repeated the other after him.
+
+[Illustration: 454]
+
+“You've read the papers lately,--you've seen these attacks on me?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Well, what do they say and think here--I mean in this house--about
+them? How do they discuss them? Remember, I want candor and frankness;
+no humbug. I'll not stand humbug.”
+
+“The women are against you.”
+
+“Both of them?”
+
+“Both.”
+
+“How comes that?--on what grounds?”
+
+“The papers accused you of cruelty; they affirmed that there was no
+cause for the measures of severity you adopted; and they argued--”
+
+“Don't bore me with all that balderdash. I asked you how was it that
+these women assumed I was in the wrong?”
+
+“And I was about to tell you, if you had not interrupted me.”
+
+“That is, they believed what they read in the newspapers?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“And, of course, swallowed that fine story about the Hindoo fellow that
+I first cut down, and afterwards bribed to make his escape from the
+hospital?”
+
+“I suspect they half believed it.”
+
+“Or rather, believed half of it, the cutting down part! Can you tell me
+physiologically,--for I think it comes into that category,--why it is
+that women not otherwise ill-natured, in nine cases out of ten take the
+worst alternative as the credible one? But never mind that. They condemn
+me. Is n't it so?”
+
+“Yes; and while old Barrington insists--”
+
+“Who cares what he insists? Such advocacy as his only provokes attack,
+and invites persecution. I 'd rather have no such allies!”
+
+“I believe you are right.”
+
+“I want fellows like yourself, doctor,--sly, cautious, subtle
+fellows,--accustomed to stealing strong medicines into the system in
+small doses; putting the patient, as you call it in your slang, 'under
+the influence' of this, that, and t'other,--eh?”
+
+Dill smiled blandly at the compliment to his art, and Stapylton went
+on:--
+
+“Not that I have time just now for this sort of chronic treatment. I
+need a heroic remedy, doctor. I 'm in love.”
+
+“Indeed!” said Dill, with an accent nicely balanced between interest and
+incredulity.
+
+“Yes, and I want to marry!
+
+“Miss Barrington?”
+
+“The granddaughter. There is no need, I hope, to make the distinction,
+for I don't wish to be thought insane. Now you have the case. What 's
+your prescription?”
+
+“Propose for her!”
+
+“So I have, but they hesitate. The old man is not unfavorable; he is,
+perhaps, more: he is, in a measure, friendly; but what avails such
+advocacy? I want another guess sort of aid,--a clever man; or, what is
+better still, a clever woman, to befriend me.”
+
+He waited some seconds for a reply, but Dill did not speak; so he went
+on: “A clever woman, to take a woman's view of the case, balancing this
+against that, never ignoring an obstacle, but inquiring what there may
+be to compensate for it Do you know such a one, doctor?”
+
+“Perhaps I may; but I have my doubts about securing her services.”
+
+“Even with a retainer?”
+
+“Even with a retainer. You see, Major,”--here Dill dropped his voice to
+a most confidential whisper,--“my daughter Polly,--for I know we both
+have her in mind,--Polly is a strange sort of girl, and very hard to
+understand; for while, if the case were her own, she 'd no more think
+of romance than she would of giving ten guineas for a dress, if she was
+advising another whose position and prospects were higher than hers,
+it's the romantic part of it she'd lay all the stress on.”
+
+“From which I gather that my suit will not stand this test!” said
+Stapylton, with a peculiar smile. “Eh, is n't that your meaning?”
+
+“You are certainly some years older than the lady,” said Dill, blandly.
+
+“Not old enough to be, as the world would surely say, 'her father,' but
+fully old enough to give license for sarcasm.”
+
+“Then, as she will be a great fortune--”
+
+“Not a sixpence,--she'll not have sixpence, doctor. That bubble has
+burst at last, and can never be blown again. The whole claim has been
+rejected, refused, thrown out, and there 's an end of it. It amuses
+the old man to sit on the wreck and fancy he can repair the shattered
+timbers and make them seaworthy; and, for the time he is likely to
+last, it is only kindness to leave him to his delusion; but he is
+ruined,--ruined beyond recall, and as I have told you, the girl will
+have nothing.”
+
+“Do they know this,--has Barrington heard it?”
+
+“Yes, I broke it to him last night, but I don't think he fully realized
+the tidings; he has certain reserves--certain little conceits of his
+own--which are to supply him with a sort of hope; but let us talk of
+something more practical. How can we secure Miss Dill's services?”
+
+“A few days ago, the easiest way would have been to offer to befriend
+her brother, but this morning brings us news that this is not
+needed,--he is coming home.”
+
+“How so?”
+
+“It is a great event in its way; at least, it may be for Tom. It seems
+there was a collision at sea, somewhere near the Cape, between the ship
+'St. Helen's,' that carried out General Hunter and his staff, and
+the 'Regulus,' with the Forty-ninth on board. It was at night, and a
+terrible sea on at the time. In the shock the 'St. Helen's' took fire;
+and as the two ships were inextricably locked together, the danger was
+common to each. While the boats were being lowered and manned,--for it
+was soon seen the vessel could not be saved,--a cry was raised that the
+fire was gaining on the fore-hold, and would soon reach the magazine.
+The woful news spread at once, and many jumped overboard in their
+terror. Just then Tom heard that there was a means of drowning the
+powder by opening a certain sluice, and, without waiting for more, he
+clambered across into the sinking vessel, made his way through smoke and
+fire, gained the spot, and succeeded, just as the very ladder itself
+had caught the flames. How he got back he cannot tell, for the vessel
+foundered in a few minutes, and he was so burned--face, cheek, and
+one shoulder--that he was unconscious of everything; and even when the
+account came, was still in bed, and not able to see.”
+
+“He was a wild sort of lad, was he not,--a scamp, in short?”
+
+“No, not exactly that; idle--careless--kept bad company at times.”
+
+“These are the fellows who do this kind of thing once in their
+lives,--mark you, never twice. They never have more than one shot in
+their locker, but it will suffice in this case.”
+
+Though the worthy doctor was very far from enthusiastic about his son's
+gallantry, there was a degree of coolness in the Major's estimate of
+it that almost shocked him; and he sat staring steadily at the stern
+bronzed face, and the hard lineaments of the man, and wondering of what
+strange stuff such natures were fashioned.
+
+“It's quite clear, then, that for Master Tom we can do nothing half
+so good as chance has done for him,” said Stapylton, after a short
+interval.
+
+“Chance and himself too,” added the doctor.
+
+Stapylton made no answer, but, covering his eyes with his hand, lay deep
+in thought.
+
+“If you only had the Attorney-General, Mr. Withering, on your side,”
+ said Dill. “There is no man has the same influence over this family.”
+
+“It is not what _you_ call influence I want, my good sir. It is a far
+more subtle and more delicate agent. I require the sort of aid, in fact,
+which your daughter could supply, if she would. An appointment awaits
+me in India, but I must occupy it at once. I have no time for a long
+courtship. I 'm just as hurried as that boy of yours was when he swamped
+the powder-magazine. It's a skirmish where I can't wait for the heavy
+artillery, but must do my best with the light field-guns,--do you
+understand me?”
+
+Dill nodded, and Stapylton resumed: “The thing can be done just by the
+very road that you have pronounced impossible,--that is, by the romantic
+side of it,--making it a case of violent love at first sight, the
+passion of a man past the heyday of youth, but yet young enough to
+feel a most ardent affection. I am, besides,” said he, laughing with a
+strange blending of levity and sarcasm, “a sort of Brummagem hero; have
+been wounded, led assaults, and that kind of thing, to a degree that
+puffery can take the benefit of. And, last of all, doctor, I am rich
+enough to satisfy greater ambitions than ought to live under such a roof
+as this. Do you see the part your daughter can take in this drama?”
+
+“Perhaps I do.”
+
+“And could you induce her to accept it?”
+
+“I'm not very certain,--I'd be slow to pledge myself to it.”
+
+“Certainly,” said Stapylton, mockingly; “the passing glimpses we
+bachelors obtain of the working of that vaunted institution, The Family,
+fail to impress us with all its imputed excellence; you are, it seems to
+me, just as powerless within your own doors as I am regarding what goes
+on in a neighbor's house. I take it, however, that it can't be helped.
+Children, like colonies, are only governable when helpless.”
+
+“I suspect you are wrong, sir; at least, I fancy I have as much of the
+sort of influence you speak of as others; but still, I think, here, in
+this particular case, you would yourself be your best ambassador, if you
+were strong enough to come down with me in the boat to-day.”
+
+“Of course I am!” cried Stapylton, starting up to a sitting posture;
+“and what then?”
+
+“You would be better in my house than this,” said Dill, mysteriously.
+
+“Speak out, and speak clearly, doctor; I have very little the matter
+with me, and am in no want of change of air. What I need is the
+assistance of one dexterous enough to advocate my plans with persons
+and in places to which I have no access. Your daughter is just such a
+one,--will she do it?”
+
+“We can ask her.”
+
+“Well, how will you explain my absence to these people here? What will
+you say for my not appearing at breakfast, and yet being able to take an
+airing with you?”
+
+“I will put it on hygienic grounds,” said Dill, smiling acutely. “My
+profession has a number of sanctuaries the profane vulgar can never
+enter. I 'll just step down now and ask Barrington to lend me his boat,
+and I 'll throw out a dark hint that I 'd like to manage a consultation
+on your case without alarming you, for which purpose I 'd ask Dr. Tobin
+to be at my house, when we arrive there, by mere accident, so that a
+conference would follow as a matter of course.”
+
+“Very wily,--very subtle all this, doctor. Do you know, I 'm half
+frightened at the thought of trusting myself to such a master of
+intrigue and mystification.”
+
+“Have no fears; I reserve all my craft for my clients.” And with this he
+left the room, but only for a few minutes; for he met Barrington on the
+stairs, and speedily obtained permission to take his boat to Inistioge,
+having first pledged himself to come back with Stapylton to dinner.
+
+“We shall see, we shall see,” muttered Stapylton to himself. “Your
+daughter must decide where I am to dine today.”
+
+By the way--that is, as they glided along the bright river--Dill tried
+to prepare Stapylton for the task before him, by sundry hints as to
+Polly's temper and disposition, with warnings against this, and cautions
+about that. “Above all,” said he, “don't try to overreach her.”
+
+“Perfect frankness--candor itself--is my device. Won't that do?”
+
+“You must first see will she believe it,” said the doctor, slyly; and
+for the remainder of the way there was a silence between them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. CROSS-PURPOSES
+
+“Where 's Miss Polly?” said Dill, hastily, as he passed his threshold.
+
+“She's making the confusion of roses in the kitchen, sir,” said the
+maid, whose chemistry had been a neglected study.
+
+“Tell her that I have come back, and that there is a gentleman along
+with me,” said he, imperiously, as he led the way into his study. “I
+have brought you into this den of mine, Major, because I would just say
+one word more by way of caution before you see Polly. You may imagine,
+from the small range of her intercourse with the world, and her village
+life, that her acuteness will not go very far; don't be too sure of
+that,--don't reckon too much on her want of experience.”
+
+“I suppose I have encountered as sharp wits as hers before this time
+o' day,” replied he, half peevishly; and then, with an air of better
+temper, added, “I have no secrets to hide, no mystery to cloak. If
+I want her alliance, she shall herself dictate the terms that shall
+requite it.”
+
+The doctor shook his head dubiously, but was silent.
+
+“I half suspect, my good doctor,” said Stapylton, laughing, “that your
+charming daughter is a little, a very little, of a domestic despot; you
+are all afraid of her; never very sure of what she will say or do or
+think on any given circumstances, and nervously alive to the risk of her
+displeasure.”
+
+“There is something in what you say,” remarked Dill, with a sigh; “but
+it was always my mistake to bring up my children with too much liberty
+of action. From the time they were so high”--and he held his hand out
+about a yard above the floor--“they were their own masters.”
+
+Just as the words had fallen from him, a little chubby, shock-headed
+fellow, about five years old, burst into the room, which he believed
+unoccupied, and then, suddenly seeing his papa, set up a howl of terror
+that made the house ring.
+
+“What is it, Jimmy,--what is it, my poor man?” said Polly, rushing with
+tucked-up sleeves to the spot; and, catching him up in her arms, she
+kissed him affectionately.
+
+“Will you take him away?--will you take him out of that?” hissed out
+Dill between his teeth. “Don't you see Major Stapylton here?”
+
+“Oh, Major Stapylton will excuse a toilette that was never intended for
+his presence.”
+
+“I will certainly say there could not be a more becoming one, nor a more
+charming tableau to display it in!”
+
+“There, Jimmy,” said she, laughing; “you must have some bread and jam
+for getting me such a nice compliment.”
+
+And she bore away the still sobbing urchin, who, burying his head in her
+bosom, could never summon courage to meet his father's eye.
+
+“What a spacious garden you appear to have here!” said Stapylton, who
+saw all the importance of a diversion to the conversation.
+
+“It is a very much neglected one,” said Dill, pathetically. “My poor
+dear boy Tom used to take care of it when he was here; he had a perfect
+passion for flowers.”
+
+Whether that Tom was associated in the Major's mind with some other very
+different tastes or not, Stapylton smiled slightly, and after a moment
+said, “If you permit me, I 'll take a stroll through your garden, and
+think over what we have been talking of.”
+
+“Make yourself at home in every respect,” said Dill. “I have a few
+professional calls to make in the village, but we 'll meet at luncheon.”
+
+“He's in the garden, Polly,” said Dill, as he passed his daughter on the
+stairs; “he came over here this morning to have a talk with you.”
+
+“Indeed, sir!”
+
+“Yes; he has got it into his head that you can be of service to him.”
+
+“It is not impossible, sir; I think I might.”
+
+“I'm glad to bear it, Polly; I'm delighted to see you take a good
+sensible view of things. I need not tell you he's a knowing one.”
+
+“No, sir. But, as I have heard you card-players say, 'he shows his
+hand.'”
+
+“So he does, Polly; but I have known fellows do that just to mislead the
+adversary.”
+
+“Sorry adversaries that could be taken in so easily.” And with a saucy
+toss of her head she passed on, scarcely noticing the warning gesture of
+her father's finger as she went.
+
+When she had found her work-basket and supplied herself with the means
+of occupying her fingers for an hour or so, she repaired to the garden
+and took her seat under a large elm, around whose massive trunk a mossy
+bench ran, divided by rustic-work into a series of separate places.
+
+“What a churlish idea it was to erect these barricades, Miss Dill!” said
+Stapylton as he seated himself at her side; “how unpicturesque and how
+prudish!”
+
+“It was a simple notion of my brother Tom's,” said she, smiling, “who
+thought people would not be less agreeable by being reminded that
+they had a place of their own, and ought not to invade that of their
+neighbor.”
+
+“What an unsocial thought!”
+
+“Poor Tom! A strange reproach to make against _you_,” said she, laughing
+out.
+
+“By the way, has n't he turned out a hero,--saved a ship and all she
+carried from the flames,--and all at the hazard of his own life?”
+
+“He has done a very gallant thing; and, what's more, I 'll venture to
+say there is not a man who saw it thinks so little of it as himself.”
+
+“I suppose that every brave man has more or less of that feeling.”
+
+“I'm glad to learn this fact from such good authority,” said she, with a
+slight bend of the head.
+
+“A prettily turned compliment, Miss Dill. Are you habitually given to
+flattery?”
+
+“No? I rather think not. I believe the world is pleased to call me more
+candid than courteous.”
+
+“Will you let me take you at the world's estimate,--that is, will you
+do me the inestimable favor to bestow a little of this same candor upon
+_me?_”
+
+“Willingly. What is to be the subject of it?”
+
+“The subject is a very humble one,--myself!”
+
+“How can I possibly adjudicate on such a theme?”
+
+“Better than you think for, perhaps!” And for a moment he appeared
+awkward and ill at ease. “Miss Dill,” said he, after a pause, “fortune
+has been using me roughly of late; and, like all men who deem themselves
+hardly treated, I fly at once to any quarter where I fancy I have found
+a more kindly disposition towards me. Am I indulging a self-delusion in
+believing that such sentiments are yours?”
+
+Polly Dill, with her own keen tact, had guessed what was the real object
+of Stapylton's visit. She had even read in her father's manner how he
+himself was a shareholder in the scheme, and she had made up her mind
+for a great frankness on each side; but now, seeing the diplomatic
+mys-teriousness with which the Major opened his attack, that love of
+mischievous drollery which entered into her nature suggested a very
+different line. She determined, in fact, to seem to accept the Major's
+speech as the preliminary to an offer of his hand. She therefore merely
+turned her head slightly, and in a low voice said, “Continue!”
+
+“I have not deceived myself, then,” said he, with more warmth of manner.
+“I have secured one kind heart in my interest?”
+
+“You must own,” said she, with a half-coquettish look of pique, “that
+you scarcely deserve it.”
+
+“How,--in what way?” asked he, in astonishment.
+
+“What a very short memory you are blessed with! Must I, then, remind you
+of a certain evening at Cobham? Must I recall what I thought at the time
+very particular, as they certainly were very pleasant, attentions on
+your part? Must I, also, bring to mind a certain promised visit from
+you, the day and hour all named by yourself,--a visit which never came
+off? And after all this, Major, are you not really a bold man to come
+down and take up your negotiation where you dropped it? Is there not
+in this a strong conviction of the greatness of Major Stapylton and the
+littleness of the doctor's daughter?”
+
+Stapylton was struck dumb. When a general sees that what he meant as
+a feint has been converted into a real attack, the situation is often
+imminent; but what comparison in difficulty is there between that
+mistake and that of him who assails what he never desired to conquer?
+How he inwardly cursed the stupidity with which he had opened his
+negotiation!
+
+“I perceive,” said she, triumphing over his confusion, “that your calmer
+judgment does not reassure you. You feel that there is a certain levity
+in this conduct not quite excusable! Own it frankly, and at once!”
+
+“I will own, if you like, that I was never in a situation of greater
+embarrassment!”
+
+“Shall I tell you why?”
+
+“You couldn't; it would be totally impossible.”
+
+“I will try, however, if you permit me. You do! Then here goes. You no
+more intended anything to come of your little flirtation at Cobham than
+you now do of a more serious blunder. You never came here this morning
+to make your court to _me_, You are much pained at the awkwardness of
+a situation so naturally wounding to me, and for the life of you, you
+cannot imagine what escape there is out of such a difficulty.”
+
+“You are wonderfully clever, Miss Dill,” said he; and there was an
+honest admiration in his look that gave the words a full significance.
+
+“No,” said she, “but I am wonderfully good-natured. I forgive you what
+is the hardest thing in the world to forgive!”
+
+“Oh! if you would but be my friend,” cried he, warmly.
+
+“What a want of tact there was in that speech, Major Stapylton!” said
+she, with a laugh; “but perhaps you wanted to reverse the line of our
+dear little poet, who tells of some one 'that came but for Friendship,
+and took away Love'!”
+
+“How cruel you are in all this mockery of me!”
+
+“Does not the charge of cruelty come rather ill from _you?--you_, who
+can afford to sport with the affections of poor village maidens. From
+the time of that 'Major bold of Halifax' the song tells of, I never
+heard your equal.”
+
+“Could you prevail upon yourself to be serious for a few minutes?” said
+he, gravely.
+
+“I think not,--at least not just now; but why should I make the
+attempt?”
+
+“Because I would wish your aid in a serious contingency,--a matter in
+which I am deeply interested, and which involves probably my future
+happiness.”
+
+“Ah, Major! is it possible that you are going to trifle with my feelings
+once more?”
+
+“My dear Miss Dill, must I plead once more for a little mercy?”
+
+“No, don't do any such thing; it would seem ungenerous to refuse, and
+yet I could not accord it.”
+
+“Fairly beaten,” said he, with a sigh; “there is no help for it. You are
+the victor!”
+
+“How did you leave our friends at 'The Home'?” said she, with an easy
+indifference in her tone.
+
+“All well, perfectly well; that is to say, I believe so, for I only saw
+my host himself.”
+
+“What a pleasant house; how well they understand receiving their
+friends!”
+
+“It is so peaceful and so quiet!” said he, with an effort to seem at
+ease.
+
+“And the garden is charming!”
+
+“And all this is perfectly intolerable,” said he, rising, and speaking
+in a voice thick with suppressed anger. “I never came here to play a
+part in a vaudeville! Your father led me to believe, Miss Dill, that you
+might not be indisposed to lend me your favoring aid in a suit which
+I am interested in. He told me I should at least find you frank and
+outspoken; that if you felt inclined to assist me, you'd never enhance
+the service by a seeming doubt or hesitation--”
+
+“And if I should not feel so inclined, what did he then give you to
+expect?”
+
+“That you'd say so!”
+
+“So I do, then, clearly and distinctly tell you, if my counsels offer a
+bar to your wishes, they are all enlisted against you.”
+
+“This is the acme of candor. You can only equal it by saying how I could
+have incurred your disfavor.”
+
+“There is nothing of disfavor in the matter. I think you charming. You
+are a hero,--very clever, very fascinating, very accomplished; but
+I believe it would be a great mistake for Fifine to marry you. Your
+tempers have that sort of resemblance that leave no reliefs in their
+mutual play. You are each of you hot and hasty, and a little imperious;
+and if she were not very much in love, and consequently disposed to
+think a great deal of you and very little of herself, these traits that
+I speak of would work ill. But if every one of them were otherwise,
+there would still be one obstacle worse than all!”
+
+“And that is--”
+
+“Can you not guess what I mean, Major Stapylton? You do not, surely,
+want confidences from me that are more than candor!”
+
+“Do I understand you aright?” said he, growing red and pale by turns, as
+passion worked within him; “do I apprehend you correctly? These people
+here are credulous enough to be influenced by the shadowy slanders of
+the newspapers, and they listen to the half-muttered accusations of a
+hireling press?”
+
+“They do say very awkward things in the daily press, certainly,” said
+she, dryly; “and your friends marvel at the silence with which you treat
+them.”
+
+“Then I _have_ divined your meaning,” said he. “It is by these cowardly
+assailants I am supposed to be vanquished. I suspect, however, that
+Colonel Barrington himself was, once on a time, indulged with the same
+sort of flattery. They said that he had usurped a sovereignty, falsified
+documents, purloined jewels of immense value. I don't know what they did
+not charge him with. And what do they say of me? That I exhibited great
+severity--cruelty, if you will--towards a mob in a state of rebellion;
+that I reprimanded a very silly subaltern for a misplaced act of
+humanity. That I have been cashiered, too, they assert, in face of the
+'Gazette,' which announces my appointment to an unattached majority. In
+a word, the enormity of the falsehood has never stayed their hand, and
+they write of me whatever their unthinking malevolence can suggest to
+them. You have, perhaps, seen some of these paragraphs?”
+
+“Like every one else, I have read them occasionally; not very
+attentively, indeed. But, in truth, I'm not a reader of newspapers.
+Here, for instance, is this morning's as it came from Dublin, still
+unopened;” and she handed it as she spoke.
+
+“Let us see if I be still honored with their notice,” said he, unfolding
+the paper, and running his eyes hastily over it. “Debate on the Sugar
+Bill--Prison Reforms--China--Reinforcements for Canada--Mail Service to
+the Colonies--Bankruptcy Court. Oh, here we have it--here it is!” and he
+crushed the paper while he folded down one part of it. “Shall I read it
+for you? The heading is very tempting: 'Late Military Scandal.--A very
+curious report is now going through our West-end Clubs, and especially
+such as are the resort of military officers. It is to the purport that a
+certain Field-officer of Cavalry--whose conduct has been the subject of
+severe strictures from the Press--will speedily be called to answer for
+a much graver offence than the transgression of regimental discipline.
+The story which has reached us is a very strange one, and we should call
+it incredible, if we were not informed, on author-ity, that one of our
+most distinguished Indian generals has declared himself fully satisfied
+of its truth in every particular.' Can you fancy anything worse than
+that, Miss Dill? An unknown somebody is alleged to be convinced of an
+unknown something that attaches to me; for, of course, I am designated
+as the 'Field-officer of Cavalry,' and the public is graciously pleased
+to hold me in abhorrence till I have found out my calumniator and
+refuted him!”
+
+“It seems very hard. Who do you suspect is the Indian General alluded
+to?”
+
+“Tell me, first of all,--does he exist?” “And this, too, you will not
+reply to, nor notice?” “Not, certainly, through such a channel as it
+reaches me. If the slanderer will stand forth and avow himself, I may
+know how to deal with him. But what has led us into this digression? I
+am sure it is as little to your taste as to mine. I have failed in my
+mission, and if I were able to justify every act of my life, what would
+it avail me? You have pronounced against me; at least, you will not take
+my brief.”
+
+“What if I were retained by the other side?” said she, smiling.
+
+“I never suspected that there was another side,” said he, with an air of
+extreme indifference. “Who is my formidable rival?”
+
+“I might have told you if I saw you were really anxious on the subject.”
+
+“It would be but hypocrisy in me to pretend it. If, for example, Major
+McCormick--”
+
+“Oh, that is too bad!” cried Polly, interrupting. “This would mean an
+impertinence to Miss Barrington.”
+
+“How pleasant we must have been! Almost five o'clock, and I scarcely
+thought it could be three!” said he, with an affected languor.
+
+“'Time's foot is not heard when he treads upon flowers,'” said she,
+smiling.
+
+“Where shall I find your father, Miss Dill? I want to tell him what a
+charming creature his daughter is, and how wretched I feel at not being
+able to win her favor.”
+
+“Pray don't; or he might fall into my own mistake, and imagine that you
+wanted a lease of it for life.”
+
+“Still cruel, still inexorable!” said he, with a mockery of affliction
+in his tone. “Will you say all the proper things--the regrets, and
+such like--I feel at not meeting him again; and if he has asked me to
+dinner--which I really forget--will you make the fitting apology?”
+
+“And what is it, in the present case?”
+
+“I 'm not exactly sure whether I am engaged to dine elsewhere, or too
+ill to dine at all.”
+
+“Why not say it is the despair at being rejected renders you unequal to
+the effort? I mean, of course, by myself, Major Stapylton.”
+
+“I have no objection; say so, if you like,” said he, with an insulting
+indifference. “Good-day, Miss Dill. This is the way to the road, I
+believe;” and, with a low bow, very deferential but very distant, he
+turned away to leave the garden. He had not, however, gone many
+paces, when he stopped and seemed to ponder. He looked up at the sky,
+singularly clear and cloudless as it was, without a breath of wind in
+the air; he gazed around him on every side, as if in search of an object
+he wanted; and then, taking out his purse, he drew forth a shilling and
+examined it. “Yes,” muttered he, “Chance has been my only counsellor for
+many a year, and the only one that never takes a bribe! And yet, is it
+not taking to the raft before the ship has foundered? True; but shall
+I be sure of the raft if I wait for the shipwreck? She is intensely
+crafty. She has that sort of head that loves a hard knot to unravel!
+Here goes! Let Destiny take all the consequences!” and as he flung up
+the piece of money in the air, he cried, “Head!” It was some minutes
+ere he could discover where it had fallen, amongst the close leaves of a
+border of strawberries. He bent down to look, and exclaimed, “Head! she
+has won!” Just as he arose from his stooping attitude he perceived that
+Polly was engaged in the adjoining walk, making a bouquet of roses. He
+sprang across the space, and stood beside her.
+
+“I thought you had been a mile off by this time, at least,” said she,
+calmly.
+
+“So I meant, and so I intended; but just as I parted from you, a thought
+struck me--one of those thoughts which come from no process of reasoning
+or reflection, but seem impelled by a force out of our own natures--that
+I would come back and tell you something that was passing in my mind.
+Can you guess it?”
+
+“No; except it be that you are sorry for having trifled so unfeelingly
+with my hopes, and have come back to make the best reparation in your
+power, asking me to forgive and accept you.”
+
+“You have guessed aright; it was for that I returned.”
+
+“What a clever guess I made! Confess I am very ready-witted!”
+
+“You are; and it is to engage those ready wits in my behalf that I am
+now before you.”
+
+“'At my feet,' sir, is the appropriate expression. I wonder how a
+gentleman so suited to be the hero of a story could forget the language
+of the novel.”
+
+“I want you to be serious,” said he, almost sternly.
+
+“And why should that provoke seriousness from _me_ which only costs
+_you_ levity?”
+
+“Levity!--where is the levity?”
+
+“Is it not this instant that you flung a shilling in the air, and cried
+out, as you looked on it, 'She has won'? Is it not that you asked Chance
+to decide for you what most men are led to by their affections, or at
+least their interests; and if so, is levity not the name for this?”
+
+“True in part, but not in whole; for I felt it was _I_ who had won when
+'head' came uppermost.”
+
+“And yet you have lost.”
+
+“How so! You refuse me?”
+
+“I forgive your astonishment. It is really strange, but I do refuse
+you.”
+
+“But why? Are you piqued with me for anything that occurred this
+morning? Have I offended you by anything that dropped from me in that
+conversation? Tell me frankly, that I may, if in my power, rectify it.”
+
+“No; I rather felt flattered at the notion of being consulted. I thought
+it a great tribute to my clear-headedness and my tact.”
+
+“Then tell me what it was.”
+
+“You really wish it?”
+
+“I do.”
+
+“Insist upon it?”
+
+“I insist upon it.”
+
+“Well, it was this. Seeing that you were intrusting your future fortune
+to chance, I thought that I would do the same, and so I tossed up
+whether, opportunity serving, I should accept you or a certain other,
+and the other won!”
+
+“May I ask for the name of my fortunate rival?”
+
+“I don't think it is very fair, perhaps not altogether delicate of you;
+and the more since he has not proposed, nor possibly ever may. But no
+matter, you shall hear his name. It was Major McCormick.”
+
+“McCormick! You mean this for an insult to me, Miss Dill?”
+
+[Illustration: 472]
+
+“Well, it certainly is open to that objection,” said she, with a very
+slight closure of her eyes, and a look of steady, resolute defiance.
+
+“And in this way,” continued he, “to throw ridicule over the offer I
+have made you?”
+
+“Scarcely that; the proposition was in itself too ridiculous to require
+any such aid from me.”
+
+For a moment Stapylton lost his self-possession, and he turned on her
+with a look of savage malignity.
+
+“An insult, and an intentional insult!” said he; “a bold thing to avow.”
+
+“I don't think so, Major Stapylton. We have been playing a very rough
+game with each other, and it is not very wonderful if each of us should
+have to complain of hard treatment.”
+
+“Could not so very clever a person as Miss Dill perceive that I was only
+jesting?” said he, with a cutting insolence in his tone.
+
+“I assure you that I did not,” said she, calmly; “had I known or even
+suspected it was a jest, I never should have been angry. That the
+distinguished Major Stapylton should mock and quiz--or whatever be the
+name for it--the doctor's daughter, however questionable the good taste,
+was, after all, only a passing slight. The thought of asking her to
+marry him was different,--that was an outrage!”
+
+“You shall pay for this one day, perhaps,” said he, biting his lip.
+
+“No, Major Stapylton,” said she, laughing; “this is not a debt of honor;
+you can afford to ignore it.”
+
+“I tell you again, you shall pay for it.”
+
+“Till then, sir!” said she, with a courtesy; and without giving him
+time for another word, she turned and re-entered the house.
+
+Scarcely had Stapylton gained the road when he was joined by McCormick.
+“Faith, you didn't get the best of that brush, anyhow,” said he, with a
+grin.
+
+“What do you mean, sir?” replied Stapylton, savagely.
+
+“I mean that I heard every word that passed between you, and I would n't
+have been standing in your shoes for a fifty-pound note.”
+
+“How is your rheumatism this morning?” asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+“Pretty much as it always is,” croaked out the other.
+
+“Be thankful to it, then; for if you were not a cripple, I 'd throw you
+into that river as sure as I stand here to say it.”
+
+Major McCormick did not wait for a less merciful moment, but hobbled
+away from the spot with all the speed he could muster.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. STORMS
+
+When Stapylton stepped out of his boat and landed at “The Home,” the
+first person he saw was certainly the last in his wishes. It was Miss
+Dinah who stood at the jetty, as though awaiting him. Scarcely deigning
+to notice, beyond a faint smile of acquiescence, the somewhat bungling
+explanation he gave of his absence, she asked if he had met her brother.
+
+“No,” said he. “I left the village a couple of hours ago; rather
+loitering, as I came along, to enjoy the river scenery.”
+
+“He took the road, and in this way missed you,” said she, dryly.
+
+“How unfortunate!--for me, I mean, of course. I own to you, Miss
+Barrington, wide as the difference between our ages, I never yet met any
+one so thoroughly companionable to me as your brother. To meet a man
+so consummately acquainted with the world, and yet not soured by his
+knowledge; to see the ripe wisdom of age blended with the generous
+warmth of youth; to find one whose experiences only make him more
+patient, more forgiving, more trustful--”
+
+“Too trustful, Major Stapylton, far too trustful.” And her bold gray
+eyes were turned upon him as she spoke, with a significance that could
+not be mistaken.
+
+“It is a noble feeling, madam,” said he, haughtily.
+
+“It is a great misfortune to its possessor, sir.”
+
+“Can we deem that misfortune, Miss Barrington, which enlarges the
+charity of our natures, and teaches us to be slow to think ill?”
+
+Not paying the slightest attention to his question, she said,--
+
+“My brother went in search of you, sir, to place in your hands some
+very urgent letters from the Horse Guards, and which a special messenger
+brought here this morning.”
+
+“Truly kind of him. They relate, I have no doubt, to my Indian
+appointment. They told me I should have news by to-day or to-morrow.”
+
+“He received a letter also for himself, sir, which he desired to show
+you.”
+
+“About his lawsuit, of course? It is alike a pleasure and a duty to me
+to serve him in that affair.”
+
+“It more nearly concerns yourself, sir,” said she, in the same cold,
+stern tone; “though it has certainly its bearing on the case you speak
+of.”
+
+“More nearly concerns myself!” said he, repeating her words slowly. “I
+am about the worst guesser of a riddle in the world, Miss Barrington.
+Would you kindly relieve my curiosity? Is this letter a continuation of
+those cowardly attacks which, in the want of a worthier theme, the Press
+have amused themselves by making upon me? Is it possible that some enemy
+has had the malice to attack me through my friends?”
+
+“The writer of the letter in question is a sufficient guarantee for its
+honor, Mr. Withering.”
+
+“Mr. Withering!” repeated he, with a start, and then, as suddenly
+assuming an easy smile, added: “I am perfectly tranquil to find myself
+in such hands as Mr. Withering's. And what, pray, does _he_ say of me?”
+
+“Will you excuse me, Major Stapylton, if I do not enter upon a subject
+on which I am not merely very imperfectly informed, but on which so
+humble a judgment as mine would be valueless? My brother showed me the
+letter very hurriedly; I had but time to see to what it referred, and to
+be aware that it was his duty to let you see it at once,--if possible,
+indeed, before you were again under his roof.”
+
+“What a grave significance your words have, Miss Barrington!” said he,
+with a cold smile. “They actually set me to think over all my faults and
+failings, and wonder for which of them I am now arraigned.”
+
+“We do not profess to judge you, sir.”
+
+By this time they had sauntered up to the little garden in front of
+the cottage, within the paling of which Josephine was busily engaged
+in training a japonica. She arose as she heard the voices, and in her
+accustomed tone wished Stapylton good-evening. “_She_, at least, has
+heard nothing of all this,” muttered he to himself, as he saluted
+her. He then opened the little wicket; and Miss Barrington passed
+in, acknowledging his attention by a short nod, as she walked hastily
+forward and entered the cottage. Instead of following her, Stapylton
+closed the wicket again, remaining on the outside, and leaning his arm
+on the upper rail.
+
+“Why do you perform sentry? Are you not free to enter the fortress?”
+ said Fifine.
+
+“I half suspect not,” said he, in a low tone, and to hear which she was
+obliged to draw nigher to where he stood.
+
+“What do you mean? I don't understand you!”
+
+“No great wonder, for I don't understand myself. Your aunt has, however,
+in her own most mysterious way, given me to believe that somebody has
+written something about me to somebody else, and until I clear up what
+in all probability I shall never hear, that I had better keep to what
+the Scotch call the 'back o' the gate.'”
+
+“This is quite unintelligible.”
+
+“I hope it is, for it is almost unendurable. I am sorely afraid,” added
+he, after a minute, “that I am not so patient as I ought to be under
+Miss Barrington's strictures. I am so much more in the habit of command
+than of obedience, that I may forget myself now and then. To _you_,
+however, I am ready to submit all my past life and conduct. By you I am
+willing to be judged. If these cruel calumnies which are going the round
+of the papers on me have lowered me in your estimation, my case is a
+lost one; but if, as I love to think, your woman's heart resents an
+injustice,--if, taking counsel of your courage and your generosity,
+you feel it is not the time to withdraw esteem when the dark hour of
+adversity looms over a man,--then, I care no more for these slanders
+than for the veriest trifles which cross one's every-day life. In one
+word,--your verdict is life or death to me.”
+
+“In that case,” said she, with an effort to dispel the seriousness of
+his manner, “I must have time to consider my sentence.”
+
+“But that is exactly what you cannot have, Josephine,” said he; and
+there was a certain earnestness in his voice and look, which made her
+hear him call her by her name without any sense of being off ended.
+“First relieve the suffering; there will be ample leisure to question
+the sufferer afterwards. The Good Samaritan wasted few words, and asked
+for no time. The noblest services are those of which the cost is never
+calculated. Your own heart can tell you: can you befriend me, and will
+you?”
+
+“I do not know what it is you ask of me,” said she, with a frank
+boldness which actually disconcerted him. “Tell me distinctly, what is
+it?”
+
+“I will tell you,” said he, taking her hand, but so gently, so
+respectfully withal, that she did not at first withdraw it,--“I will
+tell you. It is that you will share that fate on which fortune is now
+frowning; that you will add your own high-couraged heart to that of one
+who never knew a fear till now; that you will accept my lot in this the
+day of my reverse, and enable me to turn upon my pursuers and scatter
+them. To-morrow or next day will be too late. It is now, at this hour,
+that friends hold back, that one more than friend is needed. Can you be
+that, Josephine?”
+
+“No!” said she, firmly. “If I read your meaning aright, I cannot.”
+
+“You cannot love me, Josephine,” said he, in a voice of intense emotion;
+and though he waited some time for her to speak, she was silent. “It
+is true, then,” said he, passionately, “the slanderers have done their
+work!”
+
+“I know nothing of these calumnies. When my grandfather told me that
+they accused you falsely, and condemned you unfairly, I believed him.
+I am as ready as ever to say so. I do not understand your cause; but I
+believe you to be a true and gallant gentleman!”
+
+“But yet, not one to love!” whispered he, faintly.
+
+Again she was silent, and for some time he did not speak.
+
+“A true and gallant gentleman!” said he, slowly repeating her own words;
+“and if so, is it an unsafe keeping to which to intrust your happiness?
+It is no graceful task to have oneself for a theme; but I cannot help
+it. I have no witnesses to call to character; a few brief lines in an
+army list, and some scars--old reminders of French sabres--are poor
+certificates, and yet I have no others.”
+
+There was something which touched her in the sadness of his tone as he
+said these words, and if she knew how, she would have spoken to him in
+kindliness. He mistook the struggle for a change of purpose, and with
+greater eagerness continued: “After all I am scarcely more alone in the
+world than you are! The dear friends who now surround you cannot be long
+spared, and what isolation will be your fate then! Think of this, and
+think, too, how, in assuring your own future, you rescue mine.”
+
+Very differently from his former speech did the present affect her;
+and her cheeks glowed and her eyes flashed as she said, “I have never
+intrusted my fate to your keeping, sir; and you may spare yourself all
+anxiety about it.”
+
+“You mistake me. You wrong me, Josephine--”
+
+“You wrong yourself when you call me by my Christian name; and you arm
+me with distrust of one who would presume upon an interest he has not
+created.”
+
+“You refuse me, then?” said he, slowly and calmly.
+
+“Once, and forever!”
+
+“It may be that you are mistaken, Miss Barrington. It may be that this
+other affection, which you prefer to mine, is but the sickly sentiment
+of a foolish boy, whose life up to this has not given one single
+guarantee, nor shown one single trait of those which make 'true and
+gallant gentlemen.' But you have made your choice.”
+
+“I have,” said she, with a low but firm voice.
+
+“You acknowledge, then, that I was right,” cried he, suddenly; “there is
+a prior attachment? Your heart is not your own to give?”
+
+“And by what right do you presume to question me? Who are you, that
+dares to do this?”
+
+“Who am I?” cried he, and for once his voice rose to the discordant ring
+of passion.
+
+“Yes, that was my question,” repeated she, firmly.
+
+“So, then, you have had your lesson, young lady,” said he; and the words
+came from him with a hissing sound, that indicated intense anger. “Who
+am I? You want my birth, my parentage, my bringing up! Had you no friend
+who could have asked this in your stead? Or were all those around you
+so bereft of courage that they deputed to a young girl what should have
+been the office of a man?”
+
+Though the savage earnestness of his manner startled, it did not
+affright her; and it was with a cold quietness she said, “If you had
+known my father, Major Stapylton, I suspect you would not have accused
+his daughter of cowardice!”
+
+“Was he so very terrible?” said he, with a smile that was half a sneer.
+
+“He would have been, to a man like you.”
+
+“To a man like me,--a man like me! Do you know, young lady, that either
+your words are very idle words or very offensive ones?”
+
+“And yet I have no wish to recall them, sir.”
+
+“It would be better you could find some one to sustain them.
+Unfortunately, however, you cannot ask that gallant gentleman we were
+just talking of; for it is only the other day, and after passing over
+to Calais to meet me, his friends pretend that there is some obstacle
+to our meeting. I owe my tailor or my bootmaker something; or I have
+not paid my subscription to a club; or I have left an unsettled bill ar
+Baden. I really forget the precise pretext; but it was one which to them
+seemed quite sufficient to balk me of a redress, and at the same time to
+shelter their friend.”
+
+“I will not believe one word of it, sir!”
+
+“Well, we have at least arrived at a perfect frankness in our
+intercourse. May I ask you, young lady, which of your relatives has
+suggested your present course! Is it to your aunt or to your grandfather
+I must go for an explanation?”
+
+“I suspect it is to me, Major Stapylton,” said Barrington, as he came
+from behind Josephine. “It is to me you must address yourself. Fifine,
+my dear, your aunt is looking for you; go and tell her, too, that I am
+quite ready for tea, and you will find me here when it is ready. Major
+Stapylton and I will take a stroll along the river-side.” Now this last
+was less an invitation than a sort of significant hint to Stapylton that
+his host had no intention to ask him to cross his threshold, at least
+for the present; and, indeed, as Barrington passed out and closed the
+wicket after him, he seemed as though closing the entrance forever.
+
+With a manner far more assured thau his wont, Barrington said: “I have
+been in pursuit of you, Major Stapylton, since four o'clock. I missed
+you by having taken the road instead of the river; and am much grieved
+that the communication I have to make you should not take place anywhere
+rather than near my roof or within my own gates.”
+
+“I am to suppose from your words, sir, that what you are about to say
+can scarcely be said to a friend; and if so, cannot you hit upon a more
+convenient mode of making your communication?”
+
+“I think not. I believe that I shall be dealing more fairly with you by
+saying what I have to say in person.”
+
+“Go on,” said Stapylton, calmly, as the other paused.
+
+“You are aware,” continued Barrington, “that the chief obstacle to a
+settlement of the claims I have long preferred against the India Company
+has been a certain document which they possess, declaring that a
+large portion of the territory held by the Rajah of Luckerabad was not
+amenable to the laws that regulate succession, being what is called
+'Lurkar-teea,'--conquered country,--over which, under no circumstances,
+could the Rajah exercise prospective rights. To this deed, for their
+better protection, the Company obtained the signature and seal of the
+Rajah himself, by means which, of course, we could never discover; but
+they held it, and always declared that no portion of my son's claim
+could extend to these lands. Now, as they denied that he could
+succeed to what are called the 'Turban lands,' meaning the right of
+sovereignty--being a British subject--on the one hand, and rejected
+his claim to these conquered countries on the other,--they excluded him
+altogether.”
+
+“My dear sir,” said Stapylton, mildly, “I'm shocked to interrupt you,
+but I am forced to ask, what is the intimate bearing of all this upon
+me, or on your position towards me?”
+
+“Have a little patience, sir, and suffer me to proceed. If it should
+turn out that this document--I mean that which bears the signature and
+seal of the Rajah--should be a forgery; if, I say, it could be shown
+that what the India Board have long relied on to sustain their case and
+corroborate their own view could be proved false, a great point would be
+gained towards the establishment of our claim.”
+
+“Doubtless,” said Stapylton, with the half-peevish indifference of one
+listening against his will.
+
+“Well, there is a good prospect of this,” said Barring-ton, boldly.
+“Nay, more, it is a certainty.”
+
+“Mr. Barrington,” said Stapylton, drawing himself haughtily up, “a few
+hours ago this history would have had a very great interest for me. My
+hopes pointed to a very close relationship with your family; the last
+hour has sufficed to dispel those hopes. Your granddaughter has rejected
+me so decidedly that I cannot presume to suppose a change in her opinion
+possible. Let me not then, obtain any share in your confidence to which
+I have no right whatever.”
+
+“What I am about to say will have more interest for you, sir,” continued
+Barrington. “I am about to mention a name that you will recognize,--the
+Moonshee, Ali Gohur.”
+
+Stapylton started, and dropped the cigar he was smoking. To take out
+another and light it, however, sufficed to employ him, as he murmured
+between his teeth, “Go on.”
+
+“This man says--” continued Barrington.
+
+“Said, perhaps, if you like,” broke in Stapylton, “for he died some
+months ago.”
+
+“No; he is alive at this hour. He was on board the Indiaman that was run
+down by the transport. He was saved and carried on board the 'Regulus'
+by the intrepidity of young Dill. He is now recovering rapidly from the
+injuries he received, and at the date of the letter which I hold here,
+was able to be in daily communication with Colonel Hunter, who is the
+writer of this.”
+
+“I wish the gallant Colonel honester company. Are you aware, Mr.
+Barrington, that you are speaking of one of the greatest rascals of a
+country not famed for its integrity?”
+
+“He lays no claim to such for the past; but he would seem desirous to
+make some reparation for a long course of iniquity.”
+
+“Charmed for his sake, and that of his well-wishers, if he have any.
+But, once again, sir, and at all the risk of appearing very impatient,
+what concern has all this for me?”
+
+“A great deal, sir. The Moonshee declares that he has been for years
+back in close correspondence with a man we long since believed dead,
+and that this man was known to have communicated constantly with the
+law advisers of the India Board in a manner adverse to us, he being
+none other than the son of the notorious Sam Edwardes, whom he always
+addressed under cover to Captain Horace Stapylton, Prince's Hussars.”
+
+“This is--strange enough, when one thinks of the quarter it comes
+from--perfectly true. I came to know Edwardes when on my voyage home,
+invalided. He took immense trouble about me, nursed and tended me,
+and, in return, asked as a favor to have some letters he was expecting
+addressed to my care. I neither knew who he was, nor cared. He got
+his letters, and I suppose read them; but of their contents, I, it is
+needless to say, know nothing. I am speaking of a dozen years ago, or,
+at least, eight or ten, for since that time I have never heard of either
+Edwardes or his friend.”
+
+“He tells a different story. He asserts that to his letters, forwarded
+to the same address up to the period of last March, he regularly
+received replies; but at last finding that the writer was disposed to
+get rid of him, he obtained means to circulate a report of his death,
+and sailed for Europe to prefer his claims, whatever they be, in
+person.”
+
+“And if every word of this were true, Mr. Barrington, which I don't
+suspect it is, how, in the name of common sense, does it concern me? I
+don't suppose I ever took my own letters at a post-office twice in my
+life. My servant, who has lived with me fourteen years, may, for aught I
+know, have been bribed to abstract these letters on their arrival; they
+would be easily recognized by the very superscription. This is one way
+the thing might have been done. There may have been fifty more, for
+aught I know or care.”
+
+“But you don't deny that you knew Edwardes, and had a close intimacy
+with him?--a circumstance which you never revealed to Withering or
+myself.”
+
+“It is not at all improbable I may have known half a dozen of that name.
+It is by no means an uncommon one, not to say that I have a singularly
+infelicitous memory for people's names. But for the last time, sir, I
+must protest against this conversation going any further. You have taken
+upon you, I would hope without intending it, the tone of a French _Juge
+d'Instruction_ in the interrogation of a prisoner. You have questioned
+and cross-questioned me, asking how I can account for this, or explain
+that. Now, I am ready to concede a great deal to your position as my
+host, and to your years, but really I must entreat of you not to push my
+deference for these beyond the limits of the respect I owe myself. You
+very properly warned me at the opening of this conversation that it
+ought not to have the sanction of your roof-tree. I have only to beg
+that if it is to go any further, that it be conducted in such a shape
+as is usual between gentlemen who have an explanation to ask, or a
+satisfaction to demand.”
+
+There was consummate craft in giving the discussion this turn. Stapylton
+well knew the nature of the man he was addressing, and that after the
+passing allusion to his character as a host, he only needed to hint at
+the possibility of a meeting to recall him to a degree of respect only
+short of deference for his opponent.
+
+“I defer to you at once, Major Stapylton,” said the old man, with a
+bland courtesy, as he uncovered and bowed. “There was a time when I
+should scarcely have required the admonition you have given me.”
+
+“I am glad to perceive that you understand me so readily,” said
+Stapylton, who could scarcely repress the joy he felt at the success of
+his diversion; “and that nothing may mar our future understanding, this
+is my address in London, where I shall wait your orders for a week.”
+
+Though the stroke was shrewdly intended, and meant to throw upon
+Barrington all the onus of the provocation, the Major little suspected
+that it was the one solitary subject of which his opponent was a master.
+On the “duello” Barrington was an authority beyond appeal, and no
+subtlety, however well contrived, could embarrass or involve him.
+
+“I have no satisfaction to claim at your hands, Major Stapylton,” said
+he, calmly. “My friend, Mr. Withering, when he sent me these letters,
+knew you were my guest, and he said, 'Read them to Major Stapylton. Let
+him know what is said of him, and who says it.'”
+
+“And, perhaps, you ought to add, sir, who gives it the sanction of his
+belief,” broke in Stapylton, angrily. “You never took the trouble to
+recite these charges till they obtained your credence.”
+
+“You have said nothing to disprove them,” said the old man, quickly.
+
+“That is enough,--quite enough, sir; we understand each other perfectly.
+You allege certain things against me as injuries done you, and you wait
+for _me_ to resent the imputation. I 'll not balk you, be assured of it.
+The address I have given you in London will enable you to communicate
+with me when you arrive there; for I presume this matter had better be
+settled in France or Holland.”
+
+“I think so,” said Barrington, with the air of a man thoroughly at his
+ease.
+
+“I need not say, Mr. Barrington, the regret it gives me that it was not
+one of my detractors himself, and not their dupe, that should occupy
+this place.”
+
+“The dupe, sir, is very much at your service.”
+
+“Till we meet again,” said Stapylton, raising his hat as he turned away.
+In his haste and the confusion of the moment, he took the path that
+led towards the cottage; nor did he discover his mistake till he heard
+Barrington's voice calling out to Darby,--
+
+“Get the boat ready to take Major Stapylton to Inistioge.”
+
+“You forget none of the precepts of hospitality,” said Stapylton,
+wheeling hastily around, and directing his steps towards the river.
+
+Barrington looked after him as he went, and probably in his long and
+varied life, crossed with many a care and many troubles, he had never
+felt the pain of such severe self-reproach as in that moment. To see his
+guest, the man who had sat at his board and eaten his salt, going out
+into the dreary night without one hospitable effort to detain him,
+without a pledge to his health, without a warm shake of his hand, or one
+hearty wish for his return.
+
+“Dear, dear!” muttered he, to himself, “what is the world come to! I
+thought I had no more experiences to learn of suffering; but here is
+a new one. Who would have thought to see the day that Peter Barrington
+would treat his guest this fashion?”
+
+“Are you coming in to tea, grandpapa?” cried Josephine, from the garden.
+
+“Here I am, my dear!”
+
+“And your guest, Peter, what has become of him?” said Dinah.
+
+“He had some very urgent business at Kilkenny; something that could not
+admit of delay, I opine.”
+
+“But you have not let him go without his letters, surely. Here are all
+these formidable-looking despatches, on his Majesty's service, on the
+chimney-piece.”
+
+“How forgetful of me!” cried he, as, snatching them up, he hastened down
+to the river-side. The boat, however, had just gone; and although he
+shouted and called at the top of his voice, no answer came, and he
+turned back at last, vexed and disappointed.
+
+“I shall have to start for Dublin to-morrow, Dinah,” said he, as he
+walked thoughtfully up and down the room. “I must have Withering's
+advice on these letters. There are very pressing matters to be thought
+of here, and I can take Major Stapylton's despatches with me. I am
+certain to hear of him somewhere.”
+
+Miss Barrington turned her eyes full upon him, and watched him narrowly.
+She was a keen detector of motives, and she scanned her brother's
+face with no common keenness, and yet she could see nothing beyond the
+preoccupation she had often seen. There was no impatience, no anxiety. A
+shade more thoughtful, perhaps, and even that passed off, as he sat down
+to his tea, and asked Fifine what commissions she had for the capital.
+
+“You will leave by the evening mail, I suppose?” said Miss Barrington.
+
+“No, Dinah, night travelling wearies me. I will take the coach as it
+passes the gate to-morrow at five; this will bring me in time to catch
+Withering at his late dinner, and a pleasanter way to finish a day's
+travel no man need ask for.”
+
+Nothing could be more easily spoken than these words, and Miss Dinah
+felt reassured by them, and left the room to give some orders about his
+journey.
+
+“Fifine, darling,” said Barrington, after a pause, “do you like your
+life here?”
+
+“Of course I do, grandpapa. How could I wish for one more happy?”
+
+“But it is somewhat dull for one so young,--somewhat solitary for a
+fair, bright creature, who might reasonably enough care for pleasure and
+the world.”
+
+“To me it is a round of gayety, grandpapa; so that I almost felt
+inclined yesterday to wish for some quiet davs with aunt and
+yourself,--some of those dreamy days like what we had in Germany.”
+
+“I fear me much, darling, that I contribute but little to the pleasure.
+My head is so full of one care or another, I am but sorry company,
+Fifine.”
+
+“If you only knew how dull we are without you! How heavily the day drags
+on even with the occupations you take no share in; how we miss your
+steps on the stairs and your voice in the garden, and that merry laugh
+that sets ourselves a-laughing just by its own ring.”
+
+“And you would miss me, then?” said he, as he pushed the hair from her
+temples, and stared steadfastly at her face,--“you would miss me?”
+
+“It would only be half life without you,” cried she, passionately.
+
+“So much the worse,--so much the worse!” muttered he; and he turned
+away, and drew his hand across his eyes. “This life of ours, Fifine, is
+a huge battle-field; and though the comrades fall fast around him, the
+brave soldier will fight on to the last.”
+
+“You don't want a dress-coat, brother Peter, to dine with Withering,
+so I have just put up what will serve you for three days, or four, at
+furthest,” said Dinah, entering. “What will be the extent of your stay?”
+
+“Let me have a black coat, Dinah; there 's no saying what great man may
+not ask for my company; and it might be a week before I get back again.”
+
+“There's no necessity it should be anything of the kind, Peter; and with
+your habits an hotel life is scarcely an economy. Come, Fifine, get to
+bed, child. You'll have to be up at daybreak. Your grandpapa won't think
+his coffee drinkable, if it is not made by your hands.”
+
+And with this remark, beautifully balanced between a reproof and
+a flattery, she proceeded to blow out the candles, which was her
+accustomed mode of sending her company to their rooms.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE OLD LEAVEN
+
+Withering arrived at his own door just as Barrington drove up to it. “I
+knew my letter would bring you up to town, Barrington,” said he; “and I
+was so sure of it that I ordered a saddle of mutton for your dinner, and
+refused an invitation to the Chancellor's.”
+
+“And quite right too. Iam far better company, Tom. Are we to be all
+alone?”
+
+“All alone.”
+
+“That was exactly what I wanted. Now, as I need a long evening with you,
+the sooner they serve the soup the better; and be sure you give your
+orders that nobody be admitted.”
+
+If Mr. Withering's venerable butler, an official long versed in the
+mysteries of his office, were to have been questioned on the subject,
+it is not improbable he would have declared that he never assisted at a
+pleasanter tête-â tête than that day's dinner. They enjoyed their good
+dinner and their good wine like men who bring to the enjoyment a ripe
+experience of such pleasures, and they talked with the rare zest of good
+talkers and old friends.
+
+“We are in favor with Nicholas,” said Withering, as the butler withdrew,
+and left them alone, “or he would never have given us that bottle of
+port. Do you mark, Barrington, it's the green seal that John Bushe
+begged so hard for one night, and all unsuccessfully.”
+
+“It is rare stuff!” said Barrington, looking at it between him and the
+light.
+
+“And it was that story of yours of the Kerry election that won it. The
+old fellow had to rush out of the room to have his laugh out.”
+
+“Do you know, Tom,” said Barrington, as he sipped his wine, “I believe,
+in another generation, nobody will laugh at all. Since you and I were
+boys, the world has taken a very serious turn. Not that it is much
+wiser, or better, or more moral, or more cultivated, but it is graver.
+The old jollity would be now set down simply for vulgarity, and with
+many people a joke is only short of an insult.”
+
+“Shall I tell you why, Peter? We got our reputation for wit, just as we
+made our name for manufacture, and there sprung up a mass of impostors
+in consequence,--fellows who made poor jokes and rotten calicoes, that
+so disgusted the world that people have gone to France for their fun,
+and to Germany for their furniture. That is, to my taking, the reason of
+all this social reaction.”
+
+“Perhaps you are right, Tom. Old Joe Millers are not unlike cloth made
+out of devil's dust. One can't expect much wear out of either.”
+
+“We must secure another bottle from that bin before Nicholas changes his
+mind,” said Withering, rising to ring the bell.
+
+“No, Tom, not for me. I want all the calm and all the judgment I can
+muster, and don't ask me to take more wine. I have much to say to you.”
+
+“Of course you have. I knew well that packet of letters would bring you
+up to town; but you have had scarcely time to read them.”
+
+“Very hurriedly, I confess. They reached me yesterday afternoon; and
+when I had run my eyes hastily over them, I said, 'Stapylton must see
+this at once.' The man was my guest,--he was under my roof,--there could
+not be a question about how to deal with him. He was out, however, when
+the packet reached my hands; and while the pony was being harnessed, I
+took another look over that letter from Colonel Hunter. It shocked
+me, Tom, I confess; because there flashed upon me quite suddenly the
+recollection of the promptitude with which the India Board at home here
+were provided with an answer to each demand we made. It was not merely
+that when we advanced a step they met us; but we could scarcely meditate
+a move that they were not in activity to repel it.”
+
+“I saw that, too, and was struck by it,” said Withering.
+
+“True enough, Tom. I remember a remark of yours one day. 'These people,'
+said you, 'have our range so accurately, one would suspect they
+had stepped the ground.'” The lawyer smiled at the compliment to
+his acuteness, and the other went on: “As I read further, I thought
+Stapylton had been betrayed,--his correspondent in India had shown
+his letters. 'Our enemies,' said I, 'have seen our despatches, and are
+playing with our cards on the table.' No thought of distrust,--not a
+suspicion against his loyalty had ever crossed me till I met him. I came
+unexpectedly upon him, however, before the door, and there was a ring
+and resonance in his voice as I came up that startled me! Passion
+forgets to shut the door sometimes, and one can see in an angry mind
+what you never suspected in the calm one. I took him up at once, without
+suffering him to recover his composure, and read him a part of Hunter's
+letter. He was ready enough with his reply; he knew the Moonshee by
+reputation as a man of the worst character, but had suffered him to
+address certain letters under cover to him, as a convenience to the
+person they were meant for, and who was no other than the son of the
+notorious Sam Edwardes. 'Whom you have known all this while,' said I,
+'without ever acknowledging to us?'
+
+“'Whom I did know some years back,' replied he, 'but never thought of
+connecting with the name of Colonel Barrington's enemy.' All this was
+possible enough, Tom; besides, his manner was frank and open in
+the extreme. It was only at last, as I dwelt, what he deemed too
+pertinaciously, on this point, that he suddenly lost control of
+himself, and said, 'I will have no more of this'--or, 'This must go no
+further'--or some words to that effect.”
+
+“Ha! the probe had touched the sore spot, eh?” cried Withering. “Go on!”
+
+“'And if you desire further explanations from me, you must ask for them
+at the price men pay for inflicting unmerited insult.'”
+
+“Cleverly turned, cleverly done,” said Withering; “but you were not to
+be deceived and drawn off by that feint, eh?”
+
+“Feint or not, it succeeded, Tom. He made me feel that I had injured
+him; and as he would not accept of my excuses,--as, in fact, he did not
+give me time to make them--”
+
+“He got you into a quarrel, is n't that the truth?” asked Withering,
+hotly.
+
+“Come, come, Tom, be reasonable; he had perfect right on his side. There
+was what he felt as a very grave imputation upon him; that is, I had
+made a charge, and his explanation had not satisfied me,--or, at all
+events, I had not said I was satisfied,--and we each of us, I take it,
+were somewhat warmer than we need have been.”
+
+“And you are going to meet him,--going to fight a duel?”
+
+“Well, if I am, it will not be the first time.”
+
+“And can you tell for what? Will you be able to make any man of common
+intelligence understand for what you are going out?”
+
+“I hope so. I have the man in my eye. No, no, don't make a wry face,
+Tom. It's another old friend I was thinking of to help me through this
+affair, and I sincerely trust he will not be so hard to instruct as you
+imagine.”
+
+“How old are you, Barrington?”
+
+“Dinah says eighty-one; but I suspect she cheats me. I think I am
+eighty-three.”
+
+“And is it at eighty-three that men fight duels?”
+
+“' Not if they can help it, Tom, certainly. I have never been out since
+I shot Tom Connelly in the knee, which was a matter of forty years ago,
+and I had good hopes it was to be my last exploit of this kind. But what
+is to be done if a man tells you that your age is your protection; that
+if it had not been for your white hairs and your shaking ankles, that
+he 'd have resented your conduct or your words to him? Faith, I think it
+puts a fellow on his mettle to show that his heart is all right, though
+his hand may tremble.”
+
+“I 'll not take any share in such a folly. I tell you, Barrington, the
+world for whom you are doing this will be the very first to scout its
+absurdity. Just remember for a moment we are not living in the old days
+before the Union, and we have not the right, if we had the power, to
+throw our age back into the barbarism it has escaped from.”
+
+“Barbarism! The days of poor Yelverton, and Ponsonby, and Harry Grattan,
+and Parsons, and Ned Lysaght, barbarism! Ah! my dear Tom, I wish we had
+a few of such barbarians here now, and I 'd ask for another bottle or
+two of that port.”
+
+“I'll not give it a milder word; and what's more, I'll not suffer you to
+tarnish a time-honored name by a folly which even a boy would be blamed
+for. My dear old friend, just grant me a little patience.”
+
+“This is cool, certainly,” said Barrington, laughing. “You have said all
+manner of outrageous things to me for half an hour unopposed, and now
+you cry have patience.”
+
+“Give me your honor now that this shall not go further.”
+
+“I cannot, Tom,--I assure you, I cannot.”
+
+“What do you mean by 'you cannot'?” cried Withering, angrily.
+
+“I mean just what I said. If you had accepted a man's brief, Tom
+Withering, there is a professional etiquette which would prevent your
+giving it up and abandoning him; and so there are situations between
+men of the world which claim exactly as rigid an observance. I told
+Stapylton I would be at his orders, and I mean to keep my word.”
+
+“Not if you had no right to pledge it; not if I can prove to you that
+this quarrel was a mere got-up altercation to turn you from an inquiry
+which this man dare not face.”
+
+“This is too subtle for me, Withering,--far too subtle.”
+
+“No such thing, Barrington; but I will make it plainer. How if the man
+you are going to meet had no right to the name he bears?”
+
+“What do I care for his name?”
+
+“Don't you care for the falsehood by which he has assumed one that is
+not his own?”
+
+“I may be sorry that he is not more clean-handed; but I tell you again,
+Tom, they never indulged such punctilios in our young days, and I 'm too
+old to go to school again!”
+
+“I declare, Barrington, you provoke me,” said the lawyer, rising, and
+pacing the room with hasty strides. “After years and years of weary
+toil, almost disheartened by defeat and failure, we at last see the
+outline of land; a few more days--or it may be hours--of perseverance
+may accomplish our task. Since I arose this morning I have learned more
+of our case, seen my way more clearly through matters which have long
+puzzled me, than the cost of years has taught me. I have passed four
+hours with one who would give his life to serve you, but whose name
+I was not at liberty to divulge, save in the last necessity, and the
+reasons for which reserve I heartily concur in; and now, by a rash and
+foolish altercation, you would jeopardy everything. Do you wonder if I
+lose temper?”
+
+“You have got me into such a state of bewilderment, Tom, that I don't
+know what I am asked to agree to. But who is your friend,--is n't it a
+woman?”
+
+“It is not a woman.”
+
+“I'd have bet five pounds it was! When as sharp a fellow as you takes
+the wrong line of country, it's generally a woman is leading the way
+over the fences.”
+
+“This time your clever theory is at fault.”
+
+“Well, who is it? Out with him, Tom. I have not so many stanch friends
+in the world that I can afford to ignore them.”
+
+“I will tell you his name on one condition.”
+
+“I agree. What is the condition?”
+
+“It is this: that when you hear it you will dismiss from your
+mind--though it be only for a brief space--all the prejudices that years
+may have heaped against him, and suffer me to show you that _you_, with
+all your belief in your own fairness, are not just; and with a firm
+conviction in your own generosity, might be more generous. There 's my
+condition!”
+
+“Well, it must be owned I am going to pay pretty smartly for my
+information,” said Barrington, laughing. “And if you are about to
+preach to me, it will not be a 'charity' sermon; but, as I said before,
+I agree to everything.”
+
+Withering stopped his walk and resumed it again. It was evident he had
+not satisfied himself how he should proceed, and he looked agitated and
+undecided. “Barrington,” said he, at last, “you have had about as many
+reverses in life as most men, and must have met with fully your share of
+ingratitude and its treatment. Do you feel, now, in looking back, that
+there are certain fellows you cannot forgive?”
+
+“One or two, perhaps, push me harder than the rest; but if I have no
+gout flying about me, I don't think I bear them any malice.”
+
+“Well, you have no gouty symptoms now, I take it?”
+
+“Never felt better for the last twenty years.”
+
+“That is as it should be; for I want to talk to you of a man who, in all
+our friendship, you have never mentioned to me, but whose name I know
+will open an old wound,--Ormsby Conyers.”
+
+Barrington laid down the glass he was lifting to his lips, and covered
+his face with both his hands, nor for some moments did he speak a word.
+“Withering,” said he, and his voice trembled as he spoke, “even your
+friendship has scarcely the right to go this far. The injury the man you
+speak of did me meets me every morning as I open my eyes, and my first
+prayer each day is that I may forgive him, for every now and then, as my
+lone lot in life comes strongly before me, I have need to pray for this;
+but I have succeeded at last,--I have forgiven him from my heart; but,
+dear friend, let us not talk of what tears open wounds that bleed afresh
+at a touch. I beseech you, let all that be a bygone.”
+
+“That is more than I can do, Barrington; for it is not to me you must
+acknowledge you have forgiven this man,--you must tell it to himself.”
+
+“That is not needed, Tom. Thousands of long miles separate us, and will
+in all likelihood separate us to the last. What does he want with my
+forgiveness, which is less a question between him and me than between me
+and my own heart?”
+
+“And yet it is what he most desires on earth; he told me so within an
+hour!”
+
+“Told you so,--and within an hour?”
+
+“Yes, Barrington, he is here. Not in the house,” added he, hastily,
+for the suddenness of the announcement had startled the old man, and
+agitated him greatly. “Be calm, my dear friend,” said Withering, laying
+a hand on the other's shoulder. “He who is now come to claim your
+forgiveness has never injured you to the extent you believe. He asks it
+as the last tribute to one he loved only less than you loved him. He has
+told me everything; never sparing himself, nor seeking by any subtlety
+to excuse a particle of his conduct. Let me tell you that story as I
+heard it. It will be some solace to you to know that your noble-hearted
+son inspired a friendship which, after the long lapse of years, extracts
+such an atonement as one act of disloyalty to it could demand. This
+was Ormsby Conyers's one and only treason to the love that bound them.
+Listen to it!”
+
+Barrington tried to speak, but could not; so he nodded an assent, and
+Withering continued. His story was that which the reader has already
+heard from the lips of Conyers himself, and the old lawyer told it well.
+If he did not attempt to extenuate the offence and wrong of Conyers, he
+showed the power and strength of an affection which could make one of
+the haughtiest of men come forward to accuse himself, and at every cost
+of humiliation vindicate the noble nature of his friend.
+
+“And why not have avowed all this before?--why not have spared himself
+years of self-accusing, and me years of aggravated misery?” cried
+Barrington.
+
+“He did make the attempt. He came to England about eighteen years ago,
+and his first care was to write to you. He asked to be allowed to see
+you, and sent you at the same time an admission that he had injured you,
+and was come to seek your forgiveness.”
+
+“That's true, Tom; all strictly true. I remember all about it. His
+letter was such a one as an enemy might have used to crush him. My own
+temper at the time was not to be trusted too far; sorrow was making
+me cruel, and might make me vindictive; so I sent it back to him, and
+hinted it was safer in _his_ hands than _mine_.”
+
+“And he has never forgotten your generosity. He said, 'It was what well
+became the father of George Barrington. '”
+
+“If he is here in this city, now, let me see him. Remember, Withering,
+when a man comes to my age his time is short. Cannot we go to him at
+once?”
+
+“Not feeling certain of your coming up to town to-day, I had arranged
+with Conyers to start for 'The Home' tomorrow; we were to await the post
+hour, and, if no letter came from you, to leave at ten o'clock. I was
+to take him up at Elvidge's Hotel. What say you if I drive him down to
+Reynolds's? You stop there, I know.”
+
+“With all my heart, Tom. I am fully as impatient as he can be to sign
+and seal our reconciliation. Indeed, I feel myself already less sinned
+against than sinning; and an act of forgiveness is only an exchange of
+prisoners between us. If you knew how young I feel again at all this,
+Withering,” said he, grasping his friend's hand. “What a happiness to
+know that poor George's memory is so revered that one who has failed
+towards him in fidelity should come to expiate the wrong thus openly! My
+fine noble-hearted boy deserved this tribute! And he told you how they
+loved each other; in what a brotherhood they lived; and what a glorious
+fellow George was? Did he tell you of his gentleness?--womanly softness
+it was, Tom. A careless observer might have said there was no stuff in
+him to make a soldier, and yet where was there his equal? You heard what
+he did at Naghapoor and Meerutan, where he held a mountain-pass with
+three squadrons against a whole army corps, and never owned to being
+wounded till he fell fainting from his horse on the retreat. Oh, let me
+not speak of these things, or my heart will burst I must leave you, old
+friend; this agitation will unfit me for much that is before me; let me
+go, I beseech you, and when you see me to-morrow, you 'll find I am all
+myself again.”
+
+It was in silence they grasped each other's hand, and parted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. A HAPPY MEETING
+
+Barrington scarcely closed his eyes that night after he had parted with
+Withering, so full was he of thinking over all he had heard. “It was,”
+ as he repeated to himself over and over again, “'such glorious news' to
+hear that it was no long-laid plot, no dark treachery, had brought poor
+George to his grave, and that the trusted friend had not turned out a
+secret enemy. How prone we are,” thought he, “to suffer our suspicions
+to grow into convictions, just by the mere force of time. Conyers was
+neither better nor worse than scores of young fellows entering on life,
+undisciplined in self-restraint, and untutored by converse with the
+world; and in his sorrow and repentance he is far and away above most
+men. It was fine of him to come thus, and become his own accuser, rather
+than suffer a shade of reproach to rest upon the fame of his friend. And
+this reparation he would have made years ago, but for my impatience. It
+was I that would not listen,--would not admit it.
+
+“I believe in my heart, then, this confession has a higher value for
+me than would the gain of our great suit. It is such a testimony to my
+brave boy as but one man living could offer. It is a declaration to the
+world that says, 'Here am I, high in station, covered with dignities
+and rich in rewards; yet there was a man whose fate has never interested
+you, over whose fall you never sorrowed; hundreds of times my superior.'
+What a reward is this for all my life of toil and struggle,--what a
+glorious victory, when the battle looked so doubtful! People will see at
+last it is not an old man's phantasy; it is not the headlong affection
+of a father for his son has made me pursue this reparation for him here.
+There is a witness 'come to judgment,' who will tell them what George
+Barrington was; how noble as a man, how glorious as a soldier.”
+
+While the old man revelled in the happiness of these thoughts, so
+absorbed was he by them that he utterly forgot the immediate object
+which had occasioned his journey,--forgot Stapylton and the meeting, and
+all that had led to it. Thus passed the hours of the night; and as the
+day broke, he arose, impatient to actual feverishness for the coming
+interview. He tried by some occupation to fill up the time. He sat down
+to write to his sister an account of all Withering had told him, leaving
+the rest to be added after the meeting; but he found, as he read it
+over, that after the mention of George's name, nothing dropped from
+his pen but praises of him. It was all about his generosity, his
+open-heartedness, and his bravery. “This would seem downright
+extravagant,” said he, as he crushed the paper in his hand, “till she
+hears it from the lips of Conyers himself.” He began another letter, but
+somehow again he glided into the self-same channel.
+
+“This will never do,” said he; “there's nothing for it but a brisk
+walk.” So saying he sallied out into the deserted streets, for few
+were about at that early hour. Barrington turned his steps towards the
+country, and soon gained one of those shady alleys which lead towards
+Finglas. It was a neighborhood he had once known well, and a favorite
+resort of those pleasant fellows who thought they compensated for a hard
+night at Daly's by sipping syllabub of a morning on a dewy meadow. He
+once had rented a little cottage there; a fancy of poor George's it
+was, that there were some trout in the stream beside it; and Barrington
+strolled along till he came to a little mound, from which he could see
+the place, sadly changed and dilapidated since he knew it. Instead of
+the rustic bridge that crossed the river, a single plank now spanned the
+stream, and in the disorder and neglect of all around, it was easy to
+see it had fallen to the lot of a peasant to live in it. As
+Barrington was about to turn away, he saw an old man--unmistakably a
+gentleman--ascending the hill, with a short telescope in his hand.
+As the path was a narrow one, he waited, therefore, for the other's
+arrival, before he began to descend himself. With a politeness which in
+his younger days Irish gentlemen derived from intercourse with France,
+Barring-ton touched his hat as he passed the stranger, and the other, as
+if encouraged by the show of courtesy, smiled as he returned the salute,
+and said,--
+
+“Might I take the liberty to ask you if you are acquainted with this
+locality?”
+
+“Few know it better, or, at least, knew it once,” said Barrington.
+
+“It was the classic ground of Ireland in days past,” said the stranger.
+“I have heard that Swift lived here.”
+
+“Yes; but you cannot see his house from this. It was nearer to Santry,
+where you see that wood yonder. There was, however, a celebrity once
+inhabited that small cottage before us. It was the home of Parnell.”
+
+“Is that Parnell's cottage?” asked the stranger, with eagerness; “that
+ruined spot, yonder?”
+
+“Yes. It was there he wrote some of his best poems. I knew the room well
+he lived in.”
+
+“How I would like to see it!” cried the other.
+
+“You are an admirer of Parnell, then?” said Barrington, with a smile of
+courteous meaning.
+
+“I will own to you, sir, it was less of Parnell I was thinking than of
+a dear friend who once talked to me of that cottage. He had lived there,
+and cherished the memory of that life when far away from it; and so
+well had he described every walk and path around it, each winding of the
+river, and every shady nook, that I had hoped to recognize it without a
+guide.”
+
+“Ah, it is sadly changed of late. Your friend had not probably seen it
+for some years?”
+
+“Let me see. It was in a memorable year he told me he lived there,--when
+some great demonstration was made by the Irish volunteers, with the
+Bishop of Down at their head. The Bishop dined there on that day.”
+
+“The Earl of Bristol dined that day with me, there,” said Barrington,
+pointing to the cottage.
+
+“May I ask with whom I have the honor to speak, sir?” said the stranger,
+bowing.
+
+“Was it George Barrington told you this?” said the old man, trembling
+with eagerness: “was it he who lived here? I may ask, sir, for I am his
+father!”
+
+“And I am Ormsby Conyers,” said the other; and his face became pale, and
+his knees trembled as he said it.
+
+“Give me your hand, Conyers,” cried Barrington,--“the hand that my dear
+boy has so often pressed in friendship. I know all that you were to each
+other, all that you would be to his memory.”
+
+“Can you forgive me?” said Conyers.
+
+“I have, for many a year. I forgave you when I thought you had been his
+enemy. I now know you had only been your own to sacrifice such love,
+such affection as he bore you.”
+
+“I never loved him more than I have hated myself for my conduct towards
+him.”
+
+“Let us talk of George,--he loved us both,” said Barrington, who still
+held Conyers by the hand. “It is a theme none but yourself can rival me
+in interest for.”
+
+It was not easy for Conyers to attain that calm which could enable him
+to answer the other's questions; but by degrees he grew to talk freely,
+assisted a good deal by the likeness of the old man to his son,--a
+resemblance in manner even as much as look,--and thus, before they
+reached town again, they had become like familiar friends.
+
+Barrington could never hear enough of George; even of the incidents he
+had heard of by letter, he liked to listen to the details again, and to
+mark how all the traits of that dear boy had been appreciated by others.
+
+“I must keep you my prisoner,” said Barrington, as they gained the door
+of his hotel. “The thirst I have is not easily slaked; remember that for
+more than thirty years I have had none to talk to me of my boy! I know
+all about your appointment with Withering; he was to have brought you
+here this morning to see me, and my old friend will rejoice when he
+comes and finds us here together.”
+
+“He was certain you would come up to town,” said Conyers, “when you got
+his letters. You would see at once that there were matters which should
+be promptly dealt with; and he said, 'Barrington will be my guest at
+dinner to-morrow.'”
+
+“Eh?--how?--what was it all about? George has driven all else out of my
+head, and I declare to you that I have not the very vaguest recollection
+of what Wither-ing's letters contained. Wait a moment; a light is
+breaking on me. I do remember something of it all now. To be sure! What
+a head I have! It was all about Stapylton. By the way, General, how you
+would have laughed had you heard the dressing Withering gave me last
+night, when I told him I was going to give Stapylton a meeting.”
+
+“A hostile meeting?”
+
+“Well, if you like to give it that new-fangled name, General, which I
+assure you was not in vogue when I was a young man. Withering rated me
+soundly for the notion, reminded me of my white hairs and such other
+disqualifications, and asked me indignantly, 'What the world would say
+when they came to hear of it?' 'What would the world say if they heard
+I declined it, Tom?' was my answer. Would they not exclaim, 'Here is one
+of that fire-eating school who are always rebuking us for our laxity in
+matters of honor; look at him and say, are these the principles of his
+sect?'”
+
+Conyers shook his head dissentingly, and smiled.
+
+“No, no!” said Barrington, replying to the other's look, “you are
+just of my own mind! A man who believes you to have injured him claims
+reparation as a matter of right. I could not say to Stapylton, 'I will
+not meet you!'”
+
+“I _did_ say so, and that within a fortnight.”
+
+“You said so, and under what provocation?”
+
+“He grossly insulted my son, who was his subaltern; he outraged him by
+offensive language, and he dared even to impugn his personal courage. It
+was in one of those late riots where the military were called out; and
+my boy, intrusted with the duty of dispersing an assemblage, stopped
+to remonstrate where he might have charged, and actually relieved
+the misery he had his orders to have trampled under the feet of
+his squadron. Major Stapylton could have reprimanded, he might have
+court-martialled him; he had no right to attempt to dishonor him. My son
+left the service,--I made him leave on the spot,--and we went over to
+France to meet this man. I sent for Proctor to be my boy's friend, and
+my letter found him at Sir Gilbert Stapylton's, at Hollowcliffe. To
+explain his hurried departure, Proctor told what called him away. 'And
+will you suffer your friend to meet that adventurer,' said Sir Gilbert,
+'who stole my nephew's name if he did not steal more?' To be brief, he
+told that this fellow had lived with Colonel Howard Stapylton, British
+Resident at Ghurtnapore, as a sort of humble private secretary. 'In
+the cholera that swept the district Howard died, and although his will,
+deposited at Calcutta, contained several legacies, the effects to redeem
+them were not to be discovered. Meanwhile this young fellow assumed the
+name of Stapylton, gave himself out for his heir, and even threatened
+to litigate some landed property in England with Howard's brother. An
+intimation that if he dared to put his menace in action a full inquiry
+into his conduct should be made, stopped him, and we heard no more of
+him,--at least, for a great many years. When an old Madras friend of
+Howard's who came down to spend his Christmas, said, “Who do you think
+I saw in town last week, but that young scamp Howard used to call his
+Kitmagar, and who goes by the name of Stapylton?” we were so indignant
+at first that we resolved on all manner of exposures; but learning that
+he had the reputation of a good officer, and had actually distinguished
+himself at Waterloo, we relented. Since that, other things have come to
+our knowledge to make us repent our lenity. In fact, he is an adventurer
+in its very worst sense, and has traded upon a certain amount of
+personal courage to cover a character of downright ignominy.' Proctor,
+on hearing all this, recalled me to England; and declared that he had
+traced enough to this man's charge to show he was one whom no gentleman
+could meet. It would appear that some recent discoveries had been made
+about him at the Horse Guards also; for when Proctor asked for a certain
+piece of information from one of his friends in office there, he heard,
+for answer, 'We hope to know that, and more, in a day or two.'”
+
+“Do you know that I 'm sorry for it,--heartily sorry?” said Barrington.
+“The fellow had that stamp of manliness about him that would seem the
+pledge of a bold, straightforward nature.”
+
+“I have a high value for courage, but it won't do everything.”
+
+“More 's the pity, for it renders all that it aids of tenfold more
+worth.”
+
+“And on the back of all this discovery comes Hunter's letter, which
+Withering has sent you, to show that this Stapylton has for years
+back been supplying the Indian Directors with materials to oppose your
+claims.”
+
+“Nothing ever puzzled us so much as the way every weak point of our
+case was at once seized upon, and every doubt we ourselves entertained
+exaggerated into an impassable barrier. Withering long suspected that
+some secret enemy was at work within our own lines, and repeatedly said
+that we were sold. The difficulty is, why this man should once have been
+our enemy, and now should strive so eagerly to be not alone our friend,
+but one of us. You have heard he proposed for my granddaughter?”
+
+“Fred suspected his intentions in that quarter, but we were not certain
+of them.”
+
+“And it is time I should ask after your noble-hearted boy. How is he,
+and where?”
+
+“He is here, at my hotel, impatiently waiting your permission to go down
+to 'The Home.' He has a question to ask there, whose answer will be his
+destiny.”
+
+“Has Josephine turned another head then?” said Barring-ton, laughing.
+
+“She has won a very honest heart; as true and as honorable a nature as
+ever lived,” said Conyers, with emotion. “Your granddaughter does not
+know, nor needs ever to know, the wrong I have done her father; and if
+you have forgiven me, you will not remember it against my boy.”
+
+“But what do you yourself say to all this? You have never seen the
+girl?”
+
+“Fred has.”
+
+“You know nothing about her tastes, her temper, her bringing up.”
+
+“Fred does.”
+
+“Nor are you aware that the claim we have so long relied on is almost
+certain to be disallowed. I have scarcely a hope now remaining with
+regard to it.”
+
+“I have more than I need; and if Fred will let me have a bungalow in his
+garden, I'll make it all over to him tomorrow.”
+
+“It is then with your entire consent he would make this offer?”
+
+“With my whole heart in it! I shall never feel I have repaired the
+injury I have done George Barrington till I have called his daughter my
+own.”
+
+Old Barrington arose, and walked up and down with slow and measured
+steps. At last he halted directly in front of General Conyers, and
+said,--
+
+“If you will do me one kindness, I will agree to everything. What am I
+saying? I agree already; and I would not make a bargain of my consent;
+but you will not refuse me a favor?”
+
+“Ask me anything, and I promise it on the faith of a gentleman.”
+
+“It is this, then; that you will stand by me in this affair of
+Stapylton's. I have gone too far for subtleties or niceties. It is no
+question of who was his father, or what was his own bringing up. I have
+told him I should be at his orders, and don't let me break my word.”
+
+“If you choose me for your friend, Barrington, you must not dictate how
+I am to act for you.”
+
+“That is quite true; you are perfectly correct there,” said the other,
+in some confusion.
+
+“On that condition, then, that I am free to do for you what I would
+agree to in my own case, I accept the charge.”
+
+“And there is to be no humbug of consideration for my age and my white
+hairs; none of that nonsense about a fellow with one leg in the grave.
+Mark you, Conyers, I will stand none of these; I have never taken a writ
+of ease not to serve on a jury, nor will I hear of one that exempts me
+from the rights of a gentleman.”
+
+“I have got your full powers to treat, and you must trust me. Where are
+we to find Stapylton's friend?”
+
+“He gave me an address which I never looked at. Here it is!” and he drew
+a card from his pocket.
+
+“Captain Duff Brown, late Fifth Fusiliers, Holt's Hotel, Charing Cross.”
+
+“Do you know him?” asked Barrington, as the other stood silently
+re-reading the address.
+
+“Yes, thoroughly,” said he, with a dry significance. “The man who
+selects Duff Brown to act for him in an affair of honor must be in a
+sore strait. It is a sorry indorsement to character. He had to leave the
+service from the imputation of foul play in a duel himself; and I took
+an active part against him.”
+
+“Will this make your position unpleasant to you,--would you rather not
+act for me?”
+
+“Quite the reverse. It is more than ever necessary you should have some
+one who not only knows the men he is to deal with, but is known himself
+to them. It is a preliminary will save a world of trouble.”
+
+“When can we set out?”
+
+“To-night by the eight-o'clock packet, we can sail for Liverpool; but
+let us first of all despatch Fred to 'The Home.' The poor boy will be
+half dead with anxiety till he knows I have your permission.”
+
+“I 'll accredit him with a letter to my sister; not that he needs
+it, for he is one of her prime favorites. And now for another point.
+Withering must be made believe that we are all off together for the
+country this evening. He is so opposed to this affair with Stapylton,
+that he is in a mood to do anything to prevent it.”
+
+“Well thought of; and here comes the man himself in search of us.”
+
+“I have been half over the town after you this morning, General,” said
+Withering, as he entered; “and your son, too, could make nothing of your
+absence. He is in the carriage at the door now, not knowing whether he
+ought to come up.”
+
+“I 'll soon reassure him on that score,” said Barrington, as he left the
+room, and hastened downstairs with the step of one that defied the march
+of time.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. MEET COMPANIONSHIP
+
+In a very modest chamber of a house in one of the streets which lead
+from the Strand to the Thames, two persons sat at supper. It is no time
+for lengthened introductions, and I must present Captain Duff Brown very
+hurriedly to my reader, as he confronted his friend Stapylton at table.
+The Captain was a jovial-looking, full-whiskered, somewhat corpulent
+man, with a ready reply, a ready laugh, and a hand readier than either,
+whether the weapon wielded was a billiard-cue or a pistol.
+
+The board before them was covered with oysters and oyster-shells, porter
+in its pewter, a square-shaped decanter of gin, and a bundle of cigars.
+The cloth was dirty, the knives unclean, and the candles ill-matched and
+of tallow; but the guests did not seem to have bestowed much attention
+to these demerits, but ate and drank like men who enjoyed their fare.
+
+“The best country in Europe,--the best in the world,--I call England
+for a fellow who knows life,” cried the Captain. “There is nothing you
+cannot do; nothing you cannot have in it.”
+
+“With eight thousand a year, perhaps,” said Stapylton, sarcastically.
+
+“No need of anything like it. Does any man want a better supper than
+we have had to-night? What better could he have? And the whole cost not
+over five, or at most six shillings for the pair of us.”
+
+“You may talk till you are hoarse, Duff, but I'll not stay in it When
+once I have settled these two or three matters I have told you of, I'll
+start for--I don't much care whither. I'll go to Persia, or perhaps to
+the Yankees.”
+
+“_I_ always keep America for the finish!” said the other. “It is to
+the rest of the world what the copper hell is to Crockford's,--the last
+refuge when one walks in broken boots and in low company. But tell me,
+what have you done to-day; where did you go after we parted?”
+
+“I went to the Horse Guards, and saw Blanchard,--pompous old humbug
+that he is. I told him that I had made up my mind to sell out; that I
+intended to take service in a foreign army,--he hates foreigners,--and
+begged he would expedite my affairs with his Royal Highness, as my
+arrangements could not admit of delay.”
+
+“And he told you that there was an official routine, out of which no
+officer need presume to expect his business could travel?”
+
+“He told me no such thing. He flatly said, 'Your case is already before
+the Commander-in-Chief, Major Stapylton, and you may rely on it there
+will be no needless delay in dealing with it.”
+
+“That was a threat, I take it.”
+
+“Of course it was a threat; and I only said, 'It will be the first
+instance of the kind, then, in the department,' and left him.”
+
+“Where to, after that?”
+
+“I next went to Gregory's, the magistrate of police. I wanted to see the
+informations the black fellow swore to; and as I knew a son of Gregory's
+in the Carbiniers, I thought I could manage it; but bad luck would have
+it that the old fellow should have in his hands some unsettled bills
+with my indorsements on them,--fact; Gregory and I used to do a little
+that way once,--and he almost got a fit when he heard my name.”
+
+“Tried back after that, eh?”
+
+“Went on to Renshaw's and won fifty pounds at hazard, took Blake's odds
+on Diadem, and booked myself for a berth in the Boulogne steamer, which
+leaves at two this morning.”
+
+“You secured a passport for me, did n't you?”
+
+“No. You'll have to come as my servant. The Embassy fellows were all
+strangers to me, and said they would not give a separate passport
+without seeing the bearer.”
+
+“All right. I don't dislike the second cabin, nor the ladies'-maids.
+What about the pistols?”
+
+[Illustration: 508]
+
+“They are yonder under the great-coat. Renshaw lent them. They are not
+very good, he says, and one of them hangs a little in the fire.”
+
+“They 'll be better than the old Irishman's, that's certain. You may
+swear that his tools were in use early in the last century.”
+
+“And himself, too; that's the worst of it all. I wish it was not a
+fellow that might be my grandfather.”
+
+“I don't know. I rather suspect, if I was given to compunctions, I'd
+have less of them for shaking down the rotten ripe fruit than the
+blossom.”
+
+“And he 's a fine old fellow, too,” said Stapylton, half sadly.
+
+“Why didn't you tell him to drop in this evening and have a little
+_écarté?_”
+
+For a while Stapylton leaned his head on his hand moodily, and said
+nothing.
+
+“Cheer up, man! Taste that Hollands. I never mixed better,” said Brown.
+
+“I begin to regret now, Duff, that I did n't take your advice.”
+
+“And run away with her?”
+
+“Yes, it would have been the right course, after all!”
+
+“I knew it. I always said it. I told you over and over again what would
+happen if you went to work in orderly fashion. They 'd at once say, 'Who
+are your people,--where are they,--what have they?' Now, let a man be as
+inventive as Daniel Defoe himself, there will always slip out some flaw
+or other about a name, or a date,--dates are the very devil! But when
+you have once carried her off, what can they do but compromise?”
+
+“She would never have consented.”
+
+“I 'd not have asked her. I 'd have given her the benefit of the
+customs of the land she lived in, and made it a regular abduction. Paddy
+somebody and Terence something else are always ready to risk their necks
+for a pint of whiskey and a breach of the laws.”
+
+“I don't think I could have brought myself to it.”
+
+“_I_ could, I promise you.”
+
+“And there 's an end of a man after such a thing.”
+
+“Yes, if he fails. If he's overtaken and thrashed, I grant you he not
+only loses the game, but gets the cards in his face, besides. But why
+fail? Nobody fails when he wants to win,--when he determines to win.
+When I shot De Courcy at Asterabad--”
+
+“Don't bring up that affair, at least, as one of precedent, Duff. I
+neither desire to be tried for a capital felony, nor to have committed
+one.”
+
+“Capital fiddlesticks! As if men did not fight duels every day of the
+week; the difference between guilt and innocence being that one fellow's
+hand shook, and the other's was steady. De Courcy would have 'dropped'
+me, if I'd have Jet him.”
+
+“And so _you_ would have carried her off, Master Duff?” said Stapylton,
+slowly.
+
+“Yes; if she had the pot of money you speak of, and no Lord Chancellor
+for a guardian. I 'd have made the thing sure at once.”
+
+“The money she will and must have; so much is certain.”
+
+“Then I 'd have made the remainder just as certain.”
+
+“It is a vulgar crime, Duff; it would be very hard to stoop to it.”
+
+“Fifty things are harder,--no cash, no credit are harder. The Fleet is
+harder. But what is that noise? Don't you hear a knock at the door? Yes,
+there's some one without who hasn't much patience.” So saying, he arose
+and walked to the door. As he opened it, he started back a little with
+surprise, for it was a police constable stood before him.
+
+“Not you, Captain, not _you_, sir! it's another gentleman I want. I
+see him at the table there,--Major Stapylton.” By this time the man
+had entered the room and stood in front of the fire. “I have a warrant
+against you, Major,” said he, quietly. “Informations have been sworn
+before Mr. Colt that you intend to fight a duel, and you must appear at
+the office to-morrow, to enter into your bond, and to give securities to
+keep the peace.”
+
+“Who swore the informations?” cried Brown.
+
+“What have we to do with that?” said Stapylton, impatiently. “Isn't the
+world full of meddling old women? Who wants to know the names?”
+
+“I 'll lay the odds it was old Conyers; the greatest humbug in that land
+of humbugs,--Bengal. It was he that insisted on my leaving the Fifth.
+Come, Sergeant, out with it. This was General Conyers's doing?”
+
+“I'm sorry to be obliged to declare you in custody, Major,” said
+the policeman; “but if you like to come over to Mr. Colt's private
+residence, I 'm sure he 'd settle the matter this evening.”
+
+“He'll do no such thing, by George!” cried Brown. “The sneaking dogs
+who have taken this shabby course shall be exposed in open court. We
+'ll have the names in full, and in every newspaper in England. Don't
+compromise the case, Stapylton; make them eat the mess they have cooked,
+to the last mouthful. We 'll show the world what the fighting Irishman
+and his gallant friend are made of. Major Stapylton is your prisoner,
+Sergeant?”
+
+The man smiled slightly at the passionate energy of the speaker, and
+turned to Stapylton. “There 's no objection to your going to your
+lodgings, Major. You 'll be at the chief office by ten to-morrow.”
+
+Stapylton nodded assent, and the other retired and closed the door.
+
+“What do you say now?” cried Brown, triumphantly. “Did n't I tell you
+this? Did n't I say that when old Con-yers heard my name, he 'd say,
+'Oh, there 'll be no squaring this business'?”
+
+“It's just as likely that he said, 'I 'll not confer with that man; he
+had to leave the service.'”
+
+“More fool you, then, not to have had a more respectable friend. Had you
+there, Stapylton,--eh?”
+
+“I acknowledge that. All I can say in extenuation is, that I hoped old
+Barrington, living so long out of the world, would have selected another
+old mummy like himself, who had never heard of Captain Duff Brown, nor
+his famous trial at Calcutta.”
+
+“There's not a man in the kingdom has not heard of me. I 'm as well
+known as the first Duke in the land.”
+
+“Don't boast of it, Duff; even notoriety is not always a cheap luxury.”
+
+“Who knows but you may divide it with me to-morrow or next day?”
+
+“What do you mean, sir?--what do you mean?” cried Stapylton, slapping
+the table with his clenched hand.
+
+“Only what I said,--that Major Stapylton may furnish the town with a
+nine-days wonder, _vice_ Captain Duff Brown, forgotten.”
+
+Evidently ashamed of his wrath, Stapylton tried to laugh off the
+occasion of it, and said, “I suppose neither of us would take the matter
+much to heart.”
+
+“I 'll not go to the office with you to-morrow, Stapylton,” added
+he, after a pause; “that old Sepoy General would certainly seize the
+opportunity to open some old scores that I'd as soon leave undisturbed.”
+
+“All right, I think you are prudent there.”
+
+“But I 'll be of use in another way. I 'll lay in wait for that fellow
+who reports for the 'Chronicle,' the only paper that cares for these
+things, and I 'll have him deep in the discussion of some devilled
+kidneys when your case is called on.”
+
+“I fancy it does not matter what publicity it obtains.”
+
+“Ah, I don't know that. Old Braddell, our major, used to say,
+'Reputation, after forty, is like an old wall. If you begin to break a
+hole in it, you never know how much will come away.'”
+
+“I tell you again, Duff, I'm past scandalizing; but have your way, if
+you will 'muzzle the ox,' and let us get away from this as soon as may
+be. I want a little rest after this excitement.”
+
+“Well, I 'm pretty much in the same boot myself, though I don't
+exactly know where to go. France is dangerous. In Prussia there are two
+sentences recorded against me. I 'm condemned to eight years' hard
+labor in Wurtemberg, and pronounced dead in Austria for my share in that
+Venetian disturbance.”
+
+“Don't tell me of these rascalities. Bad enough when a man is driven to
+them, but downright infamy to be proud of.”
+
+“Have you never thought of going into the Church? I 've a notion you 'd
+be a stunning preacher.”
+
+“Give up this bantering, Duff, and tell me how I shall get hold of
+young Conyers. I 'd rather put a ball in that fellow than be a
+Lieutenant-General. He has ever been my rock ahead. That silly coxcomb
+has done more to mar my destiny than scores of real enemies. To shoot
+him would be to throw a shell in the very midst of them.”
+
+“I 'd rather loot him, if I had the choice; the old General has lots of
+money. Stapylton, scuttle the ship, if you like, but first let _me_ land
+the cargo. Of all the vengeances a man can wreak on another the weakest
+is to kill him. For my part, I 'd cherish the fellow that injured me.
+I 'd set myself to study his tastes and learn his ambitions. I 'd
+watch over him and follow him, being, as it were, his dearest of all
+friends,--read backwards!”
+
+“This is tiresome scoundrelism. I'll to bed,” said Stapylton, taking a
+candle from the table.
+
+“Well, if you must shoot this fellow, wait till he's married; wait for
+the honeymoon.”
+
+“There's some sense in that. I 'll go and sleep over it.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. AUNT DOROTHEA.
+
+“You must come down with me for one day, Tom, to see an old aunt of mine
+at Bournemouth,” said Hunter to young Dill. “I never omitted going to
+see her the first thing whenever I landed in England, and she 'll not
+forgive me if I were to do so now.”
+
+“But why should I go, sir? My presence would only trouble the comfort of
+a family meeting.”
+
+“Quite the reverse. She 'll be delighted to see you. It will be such a
+triumph to her, amongst all her neighbors, to have had a visit from the
+hero of the day,--the fellow that all the print-shops are full of. Why,
+man, you are worth five hundred pounds to me. I 'm not sure I might not
+say double as much.”
+
+“In that case, sir, I 'm perfectly at your orders.”
+
+And down they went, and arrived late on the day after this conversation
+at an old-fashioned manor-house, where Miss Dorothy Hunter had passed
+some sixty-odd years of her life. Though to Tom she seemed to bear
+a great resemblance to old Miss Barrington, there was really little
+likeness between them, beyond an inordinate pride of birth, and an
+intense estimation for the claims of family. Miss Hunter's essential
+characteristic was a passion for celebrities; a taste somewhat difficult
+to cultivate in a very remote and little visited locality. The result
+was that she consoled herself by portraits, or private letters, or
+autographs of her heroes, who ranged over every imaginable career in
+life, and of whom, by mere dint of iteration, she had grown to believe
+herself the intimate friend or correspondent.
+
+No sooner had she learned that her nephew was to be accompanied by the
+gallant young soldier whose name was in every newspaper than she made
+what she deemed the most suitable preparations for his reception. Her
+bedroom was hung round with portraits of naval heroes, or pictures of
+sea-fights. Grim old admirals, telescope in hand, or with streaming
+hair, shouting out orders to board the enemy, were on every side; while,
+in the place of honor, over the fireplace, hung a vacant frame, destined
+one day to contain the hero of the hour, Tom Dill himself.
+
+Never was a poor fellow in this world less suited to adulation of this
+sort. He was either overwhelmed with the flattery, or oppressed by a
+terror of what some sensible spectator--if such there were--would think
+of the absurd position in which he was forced to stand. And when
+he found himself obliged to inscribe his name in a long column of
+illustrious autographs, the sight of his own scarce legible characters
+filled up the measure of his shame.
+
+“He writes like the great Turenne,” said Miss Dorothy; “he always wrote
+from above downwards, so that no other name than his own could figure on
+the page.”
+
+“I got many a thrashing for it at school, ma'am,” said Tom, apologizing,
+“and so I gave up writing altogether.”
+
+“Ah, yes! the men of action soon learn to despise the pen; they prefer
+to make history rather than record it.”
+
+It was not easy for Hunter to steer his bashful friend through all the
+shoals and quicksands of such flattery; but, on the plea of his broken
+health and strength, he hurried him early to his bed, and returned to
+the fireside, where his aunt awaited him.
+
+“He's charming, if he were only not so diffident. Why will he not be more
+confiding, more at his ease with me,--like Mungo Park, or Sir Sidney
+Smith?”
+
+“After a while, so he will, aunt. You 'll see what a change there will
+be in him at our next visit All these flatteries he meets with are too
+much for him; but when we come down again, you 'll see him without these
+distracting influences. Then bear in mind his anxieties,--he has not yet
+seen his family; he is eager to be at home again. I carried him off here
+positively in spite of himself, and on the strict pledge of only for one
+day.”
+
+“One day! And do you mean that you are to go tomorrow?”
+
+“No help for it, aunt. Tom is to be at Windsor on Saturday. But for
+that, he would already have been on his way to Ireland.”
+
+“Then there's no time to be lost. What can we do for him? He'snot rich?”
+
+“Hasn't a shilling; but would reject the very shadow of such
+assistance.”
+
+“Not if a step were purchased for him; without his knowledge, I mean.”
+
+“It would be impossible that he should not know it.”
+
+“But surely there is some way of doing it A handsome sum to commemorate
+his achievement might be subscribed. I would begin it with a thousand
+pounds.”
+
+“He'd not accept it. I know him thoroughly. There's only one road to him
+through which he would not deem a favor a burden.”
+
+“And what of that?”
+
+“A kindness to his sister. I wish you saw her, aunt!”
+
+“Is she like him?”
+
+“Like him? Yes; but very much better-looking. She's singularly handsome,
+and such a girl! so straightforward and so downright It is a positive
+luxury to meet her after all the tiresome conventionalities of the
+every-day young lady.”
+
+“Shall I ask her here?”
+
+“Oh, if you would, aunt!--if you only would!”
+
+“That you may fall in love with her, I suppose?”
+
+“No, aunt, that is done already.”
+
+“I think, sir, I might have been apprised of this attachment!” said she,
+bridling.
+
+“I didn't know it myself, aunt, till I was close to the Cape. I thought
+it a mere fancy as we dropped down Channel; grew more thoughtful over it
+in the Bay of Biscay; began to believe it as we discovered St. Helena;
+and came back to England resolved to tell you the whole truth, and ask
+you, at least, to see her and know her.”
+
+“So I will, then. I 'll write and invite her here.”
+
+“You 're the best and kindest aunt in Christendom!” said he, rushing
+over and kissing her.
+
+“I'm not going to let you read it, sir,” said she, with a smile. “If she
+show it to you, she may. Otherwise it is a matter between ourselves.”
+
+“Be it entirely as you wish, aunt.”
+
+“And if all this goes hopefully on,” said she, after a pause, “is Aunt
+Dorothea to be utterly forgotten? No more visits here,--no happy summer
+evenings,--no more merry Christmases?”
+
+“Nay, aunt, I mean to be your neighbor. That cottage you have often
+offered me, near the rocks, I 'll not refuse it again,--that is, if you
+tempt me once more.”
+
+“It is yours, and the farm along with it. Go to bed now, and leave me to
+write my note, which will require-some thought and reflection.”
+
+“I know you 'll do it well. I know none who could equal you in such a
+task.”
+
+“I 'll try and acquit myself with credit,” said she, as she sat down to
+the writing-desk.
+
+“And what is all this about,--a letter from Miss Dorothea to Polly,”
+ said Tom, as they drove along the road back to town. “Surely they never
+met?”
+
+“Never; but my aunt intends that they shall. She writes to ask your
+sister to come on a visit here.”
+
+“But why not have told her the thing was impossible? You know us. You
+have seen the humble way we live,--how many a care it costs to keep up
+that little show of respectability that gets us sufferance in the world,
+and how one little attempt beyond this is quite out of our reach. Why
+not have told her frankly, sir, 'These people are not in our station'?”
+
+“Just because I acknowledge no such distinction as you want to draw,
+my good fellow. If my aunt has asked your sister to come three hundred
+miles to see her, she has thought over her request with more foresight
+than you or I could have given it, take my word for it. When she means
+kindly, she plans thoughtfully. And now I will tell you what I never
+meant to have spoken of, that it was only last night she asked me how
+could she be of use to you?”
+
+“To _me!_” said he, blushing, “and why to _me?_”
+
+“Can you never be brought to see that you are a hero, Tom,--that all the
+world is talking of you just now, and people feel a pride in being even
+passingly mixed up with your name?”
+
+“If they only knew how much I have to be ashamed of before I can
+begin to feel vain, they 'd not be so ready with their praise or their
+flattery.”
+
+“I 'll talk over all that with your sister Polly,” said Hunter, gayly;
+for he saw the serious spirit that was gaining over the poor fellow.
+
+“Do so, sir; and you'll soon see, if there's anything good or hopeful
+about me, where it comes from and who gave it.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. FROM GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON
+
+Beddwys, N. Wales.
+
+My dear Fred,--How happy I am that you are enjoying yourself; short of
+being with you, nothing could have given me greater pleasure than your
+letter. I like your portrait of the old lady, whose eccentricities
+are never inconsistent with some charming traits of disposition, and
+a nature eminently high-minded and honorable; but why not more about
+Josephine? She is surely oftener in your thoughts than your one brief
+paragraph would bespeak, and has her due share in making the cottage the
+delightful home you describe it to be. I entreat you to be more open and
+more explicit on this theme, for it may yet be many days before I can
+explore the matter for myself; since, instead of the brief absence
+I calculated on, we may, for aught I know, be detained here for some
+weeks.
+
+It is clear to me, from your last, a note of mine from Liverpool to you
+must have miscarried. You ask me where you are to address me next, and
+what is the nature of the business which has called me away so suddenly?
+I gave you in that letter all the information that I was myself
+possessed of, and which, in three words, amounted to this: Old
+Barrington, having involved himself in a serious personal quarrel with
+Stapylton, felt, or believed, that he ought to give him a meeting.
+Seeing how useless all attempt at dissuasion proved, and greatly
+fearing what hands he might fall into, I agreed to be his friend on
+the occasion; trusting, besides, that by a little exercise of tact and
+temper, extreme measures might be avoided, and the affair arranged. You
+may well believe, without my insisting further upon it, that I felt
+very painfully how we should both figure before the world,--a man of
+eighty-three or four, accompanied to the ground by another of sixty-odd!
+I know well how, in the changed temper of the age, such acts are
+criticised, and acquiesce, besides, in the wiser spirit that now
+prevails. However, as I said before, if Barrington must go on, it were
+better he should do so under the guidance of a sincere friend than of
+one casually elevated to act as such, in a moment of emergency.
+
+We left Dublin, by the mail-packet, on Wednesday; and after a rough
+passage of twenty-three hours, reached Liverpool too late to catch the
+evening coach. Thus detained, we only arrived here on Sunday night late.
+At my club I found a note from Stapylton, stating that he had daily
+called there to learn if we had come, but the boisterous state of the
+weather sufficiently explained our delay, and giving an address where he
+might be found, as well as that of “his friend.” Now, it so chanced that
+this friend was a very notorious person well known to me in India, where
+he had been tried for an unfair duel, and narrowly escaped--I should say
+unjustly escaped--being hanged. Though I had fully made up my mind not
+to be placed in any relations with such a man, I thought it would be
+as well that Barrington should know the character of his antagonist's
+friend from other sources, and so I invited an old Bengal companion of
+mine to dine with us the day after we arrived. Stamer was a judge of the
+criminal court, and tried Duff Brown, the man I speak of. As we sat over
+our wine together, we got upon this case, and Stamer declared that it
+was the only criminal cause in his whole life wherein he regretted the
+escape of the guilty party. “The fellow,” said he, “defended himself in
+a three hours' speech, ably and powerfully; but enunciated at times--as
+it were unconsciously--sentiments so abominable and so atrocious as
+to destroy the sympathy a part of his discourse excited. But somehow
+boldness has its fascination, and he was acquitted.”
+
+Barrington's old-fashioned notions were not, however, to be shocked
+even by this narrative, and he whispered to me, “Unpleasant for _you_,
+Conyers. Wish it might have been otherwise, but it can't be helped.” We
+next turned to discuss Duff Brown's friend, and Stamer exclaimed, “Why,
+that's the man they have been making all this fuss about in India. He
+was, or he said he was, the adopted son of Howard Stapylton; but the
+family never believed the adoption, nor consented to receive him, and at
+this moment a Moonshee, who acted as Persian secretary to old Stapylton,
+has turned up with some curious disclosures, which, if true, would
+show that this young fellow held a very humble position in Stapylton's
+household, and never was in his confidence. This Moonshee was at Malta a
+few weeks ago, and may be, for aught I know, in England now.”
+
+I asked and obtained Barrington's permission to tell how we were
+ourselves involved with this Major Stapylton, and he quickly declared
+that, while the man stood thus accused, there could be no thought of
+according him a satisfaction. The opinion was not the less stringent
+that Stamer was himself an Irishman and of a fighting family.
+
+I am not very sure that we made Barrington a convert to our opinions,
+but we at least, as we separated for the night, left him doubtful and
+hesitating. I had not been in bed above an hour, when Mr. Withering
+awoke me. He had followed us from Dublin as soon as he learned our
+departure, and, going straight to a magistrate, swore informations
+against both Barrington and Stapylton. “My old friend will never forgive
+me, I know,” said he; “but if I had not done this, I should never have
+forgiven myself.” It was arranged between us that I was to mention the
+fact of such informations having been sworn, without stating by whom, to
+Barrington, and then persuade him to get privately away from town before
+a warrant could be served. I leave you to imagine that my task was not
+without its difficulties, but, before the day broke, I succeeded in
+inducing him to leave, and travelling by post without halt, we arrived
+at this quiet spot yesterday evening. Barrington, with all his good
+temper, is marvellously put out and irritable, saying, “This is not the
+way such things were done once;” and peevishly muttered, “I wonder what
+poor Harry Beamish or Guy Hutchinson would say to it all?” One thing
+is quite clear, we had got into a wasps' nest; Stapylton and his friend
+were both fellows that no honorable man would like to deal with, and
+we must wait with a little patience to find some safe road out of this
+troublesome affair.
+
+A letter came to B. from the India House the evening before we left
+town, but he handed it to me before he finished reading it, merely
+remarking, “The old story, 'Yours of the ninth or nineteenth has duly
+been received,' &c.” But I found that it contained a distinct admission
+that his claim was not ill-founded, and that some arrangement ought to
+be come to.
+
+I now close my very lengthy epistle, promising, however, that as soon
+as I hear from town, either from Withering or Stamer, you shall have
+my news. We are, of course, close prisoners here for the present,
+for though the warrant would not extend to Ireland, Barrington's
+apprehensions of being “served” with such a writ at all would induce him
+to hide for six months to come.
+
+I scarcely ask you to write to me here, not knowing our probable stay;
+but to-morrow may, perhaps, tell us something on this head. Till when,
+believe me,
+
+Yours affectionately,
+
+Ormsby Conters.
+
+My most cordial greeting to Miss Barrington, and my love to her niece.
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO HIS SISTER MISS DINAH BARRINGTON.
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Dinah,--I hardly know how to tell you what has happened, or what
+is happening around me. I came over here to meet Major Stapylton, but
+find that there is no such person,--the man who calls himself so being a
+mere adventurer, who had taken the name, and, I believe, no small share
+of the goods, of its owner, got into the Bengal army, thence into our
+own service, and though not undistinguished for gallantry, seems to have
+led a life of ceaseless roguery and intrigue. He knew all about poor
+George's business, and was in correspondence with those we believe to be
+our friends in India, but who now turn out to be our inveterate enemies.
+This we have got at by the confession of one of those Oriental fellows
+they call Moonshees, who has revealed all their intercourse for years
+back, and even shown a document setting forth the number of rupees
+he was to receive when Stapylton had been married to Josephine. The
+Moonshee is very ill, and his examination can only be conducted at
+intervals; but he insists on a point of much importance to us, which is,
+that Stapylton induced him to tear out of the Rajah's Koran the page
+on which the adoption of George was written, and signed by the Meer
+himself. He received a large sum for this service, which, however, he
+evaded by a fraud, sending over to England not the real document itself,
+but a copy made by himself, and admirably counterfeited. It was the
+possession of this by Stapylton which enabled him to exercise a great
+control over our suit,--now averring that it was lost; now, under
+pledge of secrecy, submitting it to the inspection of some of the
+Indian authorities. Stapylton, in a word, saw himself in a position to
+establish our claim, whenever the time came that by making Josephine his
+wife, he could secure the fortune. This is all that we know up to
+this, but it is a great deal, and shows in what a maze of duplicity and
+treachery we have been involved for more than twenty years. The chief
+point, however, is that the real deed, written in the Meer's Koran, and
+torn out of it by the Moonshee, in his first impulse to forward it to
+Stapylton, is now extant, and the Koran itself is there to show the
+jagged margin of the torn-out leaf, and the corresponding page on the
+opposite side of the volume. Stapylton refuses to utter one word since
+the accusation against him has been made; and as the charges stand to
+falsifying documents, abstraction of funds, and other derelictions in
+India, he is now under a heavy bail to appear when called on.
+
+The whole business has made me so nervous and excitable that I cannot
+close my eyes at night, and I feel feverish and restless all day. It is
+very shocking to think of a man one has never injured, never heard of,
+animated with a spirit so inimical as to pass years of life in working
+ill to us. He would appear to have devoted himself to the task of
+blackening poor George's character and defaming him. It would seem that
+Mr. Howard Stapylton was one of those who took an active part against
+George. Whether this young fellow caught the contagion of this
+antipathy, or helped to feed it, I cannot tell; but it is certain that
+all the stories of cruelty and oppression the India Board used to trump
+up to us came from this one source; and at the end of all he seeks to be
+one of a family he has striven for years to ruin and to crush! I am lost
+in my efforts to understand this, though Stamer and Withering assure
+me they can read the man like print. Indeed, they see inferences and
+motives in fifty things which convey nothing to me; and whenever I feel
+myself stopped by some impassable barrier, to _them_ it is only a bridge
+that conducts to a fresh discovery.
+
+The Stapyltons are all in arms now that another sportsman has winged the
+bird for them; and each day increases the number of accusations against
+this unfortunate fellow. It is true, dear Dinah, that our own prospects
+brighten through all this. I am constantly receiving civil messages
+and hopeful assurances; and even some of the directors have called to
+express sympathy and good wishes. But how chilled is the happiness that
+comes dashed with the misfortune of another! What a terrible deal it
+detracts from our joy to know that every throb of pleasure to ourselves
+has cost a pang of misery elsewhere! I wish this fellow could have gone
+his way, never minding us; or, if that could n't be, that he 'd have
+grown tired of persecuting those who had never harmed him, and given us
+up!
+
+They are now assailing him on all sides. One has found that he forged a
+will; another that he falsified a signature; and a miserable creature--a
+native Indian, who happened to be in that Manchester riot the other
+day--has now been ferreted out to swear that Stapylton followed him
+through a suburb, down a lane, and into a brick-field, where he cut
+him down and left him for dead. There seems a great deal of venom
+and acrimony in all this; and though the man is unquestionably not my
+friend, and I see that this persecution continues, I find it very hard
+not to stand by him.
+
+As for Withering, it has made the veteran ten years younger. He is up
+every morning at five, and I hear that he never goes to his room till
+long past midnight. These are the pastimes that to such men replace
+the sports of the field and the accidents of the chase. They have
+their vacillations of hope and fear, their moments of depression and of
+triumph in them; and they run a fellow-creature to earth with all the
+zest of a hard rider after a fox.
+
+Tell my darling Fifine that I am longing to be at home again,--longing
+for the quiet roof, and the roses at the window, and the murmur of the
+river, and her own sweet voice better than them all. And what a deal of
+happiness is in our power if we would only consent to enjoy it, without
+running after some imaginary good, some fancied blessing, which is
+to crown our wishes! If I could but only have guessed at the life of
+anxiety, doubt, and vacillation the pursuit of this claim would have
+cost me,--the twenty years of fever,--
+
+I give you my word, Dinah, I 'd rather have earned my daily bread with a
+spade, or, when too old for that, taken to fishing for a livelihood.
+
+But why do I complain of anything at this moment? When have I been so
+truly happy for many a long year? Conyers never leaves me,--he talks of
+George from morning to night. And I now see that with all my affection
+for that dear boy, I only half knew his noble nature, his fine and
+generous character. If you only heard of the benevolent things he has
+done; the poor fellows he has sent home to their families at his own
+cost; the sums he has transmitted to wives and widows of soldiers in
+England; the children whose care and support he has provided for! These
+were the real drains on that fortune that the world thought wasted and
+squandered in extravagance. And do you know, Dinah, there is a vein of
+intense egotism in my heart that I never so much as suspected! I found
+it out by chance,--it was in marking how far less I was touched by the
+highest and best traits of my poor boy than by the signs of love to
+myself! and when Conyers said, “He was always talking about you; he
+never did anything important without the question, 'How would “Dad” like
+this, I wonder? would “Dad” say “God speed” in this case?' And his first
+glass of wine every day was to the health of that dear old father over
+the seas.”
+
+To you who loved him only a little less than myself, I have no shame
+in the confession of this weakness. I suppose Conyers, however, has hit
+upon it, for he harps on this theme continually, and, in sheer pride of
+heart, I feel ten years younger for it.
+
+Here comes Withering to say, “Some more wonderful news;” but I have
+begged him to keep it till I have sealed this letter, which if it grows
+any longer, I 'll never have courage to send to you. A dozen kisses to
+Fifine I can, however, transmit without any increase to the postage.
+Give my love to young Conyers; tell him I am charmed with his father,--I
+never met any one so companionable to me, and I only long for the day
+when the same roof shall cover all of us.
+
+Yours, my dearest sister, ever affectionately,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+
+FROM T. WITHERING, ESQ., TO MISS DINAH BARRINGTON, “THE HOME.”
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Miss Barrington,--If your brother has deputed me to write to
+you, it is not that he is ill, but simply that the excitement caused by
+some late events here has so completely mastered him that he can neither
+sit quiet a moment, nor address him steadily to any task. Nor am I
+surprised it should be so. Old, weather-beaten sailor on the ocean of
+life as I am, I feel an amount of feverishness and anxiety I am half
+ashamed of. Truth is, my dear Miss Dinah, we lawyers get so much
+habituated to certain routine rogueries that we are almost shocked when
+we hear of a wickedness not designated by a statute. But I must not
+occupy your time with such speculations, the more since I have only a
+brief space to give to that report of proceedings to which I want your
+attention. And, first of all, I will entreat you to forgive me for all
+want of sequence or connection in what I may say, since events have
+grown so jumbled together in my mind, that it is perfectly impossible
+for me to be certain whether what I relate should come before or after
+some other recorded fact In a word, I mean to give you an outline of our
+discoveries, without showing the track of our voyage on the map, or even
+saying how we came by our knowledge.
+
+You are aware, Barrington tells me, how Stapylton came by the name he
+bears. Aware that he was for some of his earlier years domesticated
+with old Howard Stapylton at Ghurtnapore, in some capacity between
+confidential valet and secretary,--a position that was at once one of
+subordination and trust,--it would now appear that a Moonshee, who
+had long served Colonel Barrington as Persian correspondent, came into
+Howard Stapylton's service in the same capacity: how introduced, or
+by whom, we know not. With this Moonshee, the young fellow I speak of
+became an intimate and close friend, and it is supposed obtained from
+him all that knowledge of your nephew's affairs which enabled him to see
+to what his claim pretended, and what were its prospects of success. It
+is now clear enough that he only regarded this knowledge at first as a
+means of obtaining favor from the Indian Government. It was, in fact,
+by ceding to them in detail certain documents, that he got his first
+commission in the Madras Fusiliers, and afterwards his promotion in the
+same regiment; and when, grown more ambitious, he determined to enter
+the King's service, the money for purchase came from the same source.
+Being, however, a fellow of extravagant habits, his demands grew at last
+to be deemed excessive and importunate; and though his debts had been
+paid three several times, he was again found involving himself as
+before, and again requiring assistance. This application was, however,
+resisted; and it was apparently on the strength of that refusal that
+he suddenly changed his tactics, turned his attention towards us, and
+bethought him that by forwarding your grandniece's claim,--if he could
+but win her affections in the mean while,--he would secure as a wife one
+of the richest heiresses in Europe. An examination of dates proves this,
+by showing that his last application to the Indian Board was only a few
+weeks before he exchanged into the regiment of Hussars he lately served
+with, and just then ordered to occupy Kilkenny. In one word, when it
+was no longer profitable to oppose Josephine's claim, he determined to
+support it and make it his own. The “Company,” however, fully assured
+that by the papers in their possession they could prove their own cause
+against Colonel Barrington, resisted all his menaces,--when, what does
+he do? It was what only a very daring and reckless fellow would ever
+have thought of,--one of those insolent feats of boldness that succeed
+by the very shock they create. He goes to the Secret Committee at the
+India House and says: “Of the eighteen documents I have given you,
+seven are false. I will not tell you which they are, but if you do not
+speedily compromise this claim and make a satisfactory settlement on
+Colonel Barrington's daughter, I'll denounce you, at all the peril it
+may be to myself.” At first they agree, then they hesitate, then they
+treat again, and so does the affair proceed, till suddenly--no one can
+guess why--they assume a tone of open defiance, and flatly declare
+they will hold no further intercourse with him, and even threaten with
+exposure any demand on his part.
+
+This rejection of him came at a critical moment. It was just when the
+press had begun to comment on the cruelty of his conduct at Peterloo,
+and when a sort of cry was got up through the country to have him
+dismissed from the service. We all saw, but never suspected, why he was
+so terribly cut up at this time. It was hard to believe that he could
+have taken mere newspaper censure so much to heart. We never guessed
+the real cause, never saw that he was driven to his last expedient,
+and obliged to prejudice all his hope of success by precipitancy. If he
+could not make Josephine his wife at once, on the very moment, all was
+lost. He made a bold effort at this. Who knows if he might not have
+succeeded but for you, as Josephine was very young, my old friend
+himself utterly unfit to cope with anything but open hostility? I say
+again, I 'd not have answered for the result if you had not been in
+command of the fortress. At all events, he failed; and in the failure
+lost his temper so far as to force a quarrel upon your brother. He
+failed, however; and no sooner was he down, than the world was atop
+of him: creditors, Jews, bill-discounters, and, last of all, the
+Stapyltons, who, so long as he bore their family name thousands of miles
+off, or associated it with deeds of gallantry, said nothing; now, that
+they saw it held up to attack and insult, came forward to declare that
+he never belonged to them, and at length appealed formally to the Horse
+Guards, to learn under what designation he had entered the service, and
+at what period taken the name he went by.
+
+Stapylton's application for leave to sell out had just been sent in;
+and once more the newspapers set up the cry that this man should not be
+permitted to carry away to Aix and Baden the proceeds of a sale which
+belonged to his “creditors.” You know the world, and I need not tell you
+all the pleasant things it told this fellow, for men are pretty nigh
+as pitiless as crows to their wounded. I thought the complication had
+reached its limit, when I learned yesterday evening that Stapylton had
+been summoned before a police magistrate for a case of assault committed
+by him when in command of his regiment at Manchester. The case had
+evidently been got up by a political party, who, seeing the casual
+unpopularity of the man, determined to profit by it. The celebrated
+radical barrister, Hesketh, was engaged for the plaintiff.
+
+When I arrived at the court, it was so full that it was with difficulty
+I got a passage to a seat behind the bench. There were crowds of
+fashionables present, the well-known men about town, and the idlers of
+the clubs, and a large sprinkling of military men, for the news of the
+case had got wind already.
+
+Stapylton, dressed in black, and looking pale and worn, but still
+dignified and like a gentleman, had not a single friend with him. I own
+to you, I felt ashamed to be there, and was right glad when he did not
+recognize me.
+
+Though the case opened by a declaration that this was no common assault
+case, wherein in a moment of passion a man had been betrayed into an
+excess, I knew the cant of my craft too well to lay any stress on such
+assertion, and received it as the ordinary exordium. As I listened,
+however, I was struck by hearing that the injured man was asserted to
+be one well known to Stapylton, with whom he had been for years in
+intimacy, and that the assault was in reality a deliberate attempt to
+kill, and not, as had been represented, a mere passing act of savage
+severity committed in hot blood. “My client,” said he, “will be brought
+before you; he is a Hindoo, but so long a resident of this country that
+he speaks our language fluently. You shall hear his story yourselves,
+and yourselves decide on its truthfulness. His wounds are, however, of
+so serious a nature that it will be advisable his statement should be
+a brief one.” As he said this, a dark-complexioned fellow, with a look
+half-frightened, half defiant, was carried forwards in a chair, and
+deposited, as he sat, on the table. He gave his name as Lai Adeen, his
+age as forty-eight, his birthplace Majamarha, near Agra. He came to this
+country twelve years ago, as servant to an officer who had died on the
+passage, and after many hardships in his endeavor to earn a livelihood,
+obtained employment at Manchester in the mill of Brandling and Bennett,
+where he was employed to sweep the corridors and the stairs; his wages
+were nine shillings a week. All this, and much more of the same kind,
+he told simply and collectedly. I tried to see Stapylton while this
+was going on, but a pillar of the gallery, against which he leaned,
+concealed him from my view.
+
+I omit a great deal, not without its interest, but reserving it for
+another time, and come to his account of the night on which he was
+wounded. He said that as the cavalry marched on that morning into
+Manchester, he was struck by seeing at the head of the regiment one he
+had never set his eyes on for years, but whose features he knew too well
+to be deceived in.
+
+“I tried to get near him, that he might recognize me,” said he; “but the
+crowd kept me back, and I could not. I thought, indeed, at one moment he
+had seen me, and knew me; but as he turned his head away, I supposed I
+was mistaken.
+
+“It was on the following evening, when the riot broke out in Mill
+Street, that I saw him next. I was standing at the door of a chemist's
+shop when the cavalry rode by at a walk. There was a small body of them
+in front, at about forty or fifty paces, and who, finding a sort of
+barricade across the street, returned to the main body, where they
+seemed to be reporting this. A cry arose that the troops had been
+blocked up at the rear, and at the same instant a shower of stones came
+from the side-streets and the house-tops. Thinking to do him a service,
+I made my way towards him I knew, in order to tell him by what way he
+could make his escape; and jostled and pushed, and half ridden down, I
+laid my hand on his horse's shoulder to keep myself from falling. 'Stand
+back, you scoundrel!' said he, striking me with the hilt of his sword in
+the face. 'Don't you know me, master?' cried I, in terror. He bent down
+in his saddle till his face was almost close to mine, and then, reining
+his horse back to give him room for a blow, he aimed a desperate cut at
+me. I saw it coming, and threw myself down; but I rose the next instant
+and ran. The street was already so clear by this time, I got into
+Cleever's Alley, down Grange Street, up the lane that leads to the
+brick-fields, and at last into the fields themselves. I was just
+thinking I was safe, when I saw a horseman behind me. He saw me, and
+dashed at me. I fell upon my knees to ask mercy, and he gave me this;”
+ and he pointed to the bandages which covered his forehead, stained as
+they were with clotted blood. “I fell on my face, and he tried to make
+his horse trample on me; but the beast would not, and he only touched
+me with his hoof as he sprang across me. He at last dismounted to see,
+perhaps, if I were dead; but a shout from some of the rioters warned him
+to mount again; and he rode away, and I lay there till morning. It is
+not true that I was in prison and escaped,--that I was taken to the
+hospital, and ran away from it. I was sheltered in one of the clay-huts
+of the brickmakers for several weeks, afraid to come abroad, for I knew
+that the Sahib was a great man and could take my life. It was only by
+the persuasions of others that I left my hiding-place and have come here
+to tell my story.”
+
+On being questioned why this officer could possibly desire to injure
+him, what grudge one in such a station could bear him, he owned he could
+not say; they had never been enemies, and, indeed, it was in the hope
+of a friendly recognition and assistance that he approached him in Mill
+Street.
+
+Stapylton's defence was very brief, given in an off-hand, frank manner,
+which disposed many in his favor. He believed the fellow meant to attack
+him; he certainly caught hold of his bridle. It was not his intention
+to give him more than a passing blow; but the utterance of a Hindoo
+curse--an expression of gross outrage in the East--recalled prejudices
+long dormant, and he gave the rascal chase, and cut him over the
+head,--not a severe cut, and totally unaccompanied by the other details
+narrated.
+
+“As for our former acquaintance I deny it altogether. I have seen
+thousands of his countrymen, and may have seen him; but, I repeat, I
+never knew him, nor can he presume to say he knew me!”
+
+The Hindoo smiled a faint, sickly smile, made a gesture of deep
+humility, and asked if he might put a few questions to the “Sahib.”
+
+“Were you in Naghapoor in the year of the floods?”
+
+“Yes,” said Stapylton, firmly, but evidently with an effort to appear
+calm.
+
+“In the service of the great Sahib, Howard Stapylton?”
+
+“In his service? Certainly not. I lived with him as his friend, and
+became his adopted heir.''
+
+“What office did you fill when you first came to the 'Residence'?”
+
+“I assisted my friend in the duties of his government; I was a good
+Oriental scholar, and could write and speak a dialect he knew nothing
+of. But I submit to the court that this examination, prompted and
+suborned by others, has no other object than to insult me, by leading to
+disclosures of matters essentially private in their nature.”
+
+“Let me ask but one question,” said the barrister. “What name did you
+bear before you took that of Stapylton?”
+
+“I refuse to submit to this insolence,” said Stapylton, rising, angrily.
+“If the laws of the country only can lend themselves to assist the
+persecutions of a rascally Press, the sooner a man of honor seeks
+another land the better. Adjudicate on this case, sirs; I will not stoop
+to bandy words with these men.”
+
+“I now, sir,” said Hesketh, opening his bag and taking out a roll of
+papers, “am here to demand a committal for forgery against the person
+before you, passing under the name of Horace Stapylton, but whose real
+designation is Samuel Scott Edwardes, son of Samuel Edwardes, a name
+notorious enough once.”
+
+I cannot go on, my dear friend; the emotions that overpowered me at the
+time, and compelled me to leave the court, are again threatening me,
+and my brain reels at the recollection of a scene which, even to my
+fast-fading senses, was the most trying of my life.
+
+To General Conyers I must refer you for what ensued after I left. I
+cannot even say who came home with me to the hotel, though I am aware
+I owed that kindness to some one. The face of that unhappy man is yet
+before me, and all the calm in which I have written up to this leaves
+me, as I think over one of the most terrible incidents of my life.
+
+Your brother, shocked of course, bears up bravely, and hopes to write to
+you to-morrow.
+
+One word of good cheer before I close this miserable record. The Indian
+directors have written to offer excellent terms--splendidly liberal
+terms, Conyers calls them, and I agree with him. We have had a very
+busy week of it here, but it will be well requited if all that I now
+anticipate be confirmed to us. Barrington begs you will tell your
+neighbors, the Dills, that Tom--I think that is the name--has just
+arrived at Southampton with General Hunter, and will be here to-morrow
+evening.
+
+I have cut out a short passage from the newspaper to finish my
+narrative. I will send the full report, as published, to-morrow.
+
+Your attached friend,
+
+T. Withering.
+
+“The chief police-office in Marlborough Street was yesterday the scene
+of a very shocking incident. The officer whose conduct at the head of
+his regiment in Manchester has of late called for the almost unanimous
+reprobation of the Press, was, while answering to a charge of aggravated
+assault, directly charged with forgery. Scarcely was the allegation
+made, than he drew a pistol from his pocket, and, placing the muzzle to
+his mouth, pulled the trigger. The direction of the weapon, however, was
+accidentally turned, and the ball, instead of proceeding upwards, passed
+through the lower jaw, fracturing the bone, and created a terrible
+wound. It is supposed that the large vessels are not injured, and that
+he may yet recover. All who witnessed the scene describe it as one of
+intense horror.
+
+“The unhappy man was at once removed to the Middlesex Hospital. He has
+not uttered a word since the event; and when asked if there were any
+relatives or friends whom he wished might be sent for, merely shook his
+head negatively. It is said that when the result of the consultation
+held on him was announced to him as favorable, he seemed rather grieved
+than otherwise at the tidings.”
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO DINAH, HIS SISTER.
+
+My dear Dinah,--How glad am I to tell you that we leave this to-morrow,
+and a large party of us, too, all for “The Home.” Put young Conyers in
+my dressing-room, so that the large green bedroom can be free for the
+General, at least for one of the generals--for we have another here,
+Hunter, who will also be our guest. Then there will be Withering. As for
+myself, I can be stowed away anywhere. What happiness would there be to
+us all at such a meeting, if it were not for that poor wretch who lies
+in all his agony a few streets off, and who is never out of my thoughts.
+I went twice to the hospital to see him. The first time I lost courage,
+and came away. The second, I sent up my name, and asked if he would wish
+to see me. The only answer I got was my visiting-card torn in two! How
+hard it is for an injurer to forgive him he has injured! I have arranged
+with the Stapyltons, however, who instigated the charge of forgery,
+not to press it; at least, they are to take bail, and the bail will
+be forfeited, so I understand it; but Withering will explain all more
+clearly.
+
+Our own affairs are all as bright and prosperous as our best wishes
+could desire. The Council have had all the evidence before them, and the
+Moonshee has produced his copy of the Koran, with the torn leaf fitting
+into the jagged margin, and George is vindicated at last in everything.
+His loyalty, his disinterestedness, his honesty, all established. The
+ceremony of his marriage has been fully recognized; and General Conyers
+tells me that the lowest estimate of our claim is a little short of a
+quarter of a million sterling. He counsels me not to be exigent in
+my terms; if he knew me better, perhaps, he would not have deemed the
+advice so necessary.
+
+What will Fifine say to all this wealth? Will she want to go back to
+India, and be a princess, and ride about on an elephant; or will she
+reconcile herself to such humble ways as ours? I am most eager to hear
+how she will take the tidings. Withering says it will not spoil her;
+that knowing nothing of life in its moneyed relations, she runs no
+risk of being carried away by any vulgar notions of her own importance
+through riches.
+
+Conyers has never once hinted at his son's pretensions since Fifine has
+become an heiress; and I fancy--it may be only fancy--is a shade or so
+cool towards me, so that I have not referred to them. But what can I do?
+I cannot offer him my granddaughter, nor--if what you tell me be true,
+that they are always quarrelling--would the proposal be a great kindness
+to either.
+
+Here is Tom Dill, too, and what a change! He is the image of Polly; and
+a fine, well-grown, straight-figured fellow, that looks you manfully in
+the face,--not the slouching, loutish, shamefaced creature you remember
+him. Hunter has had him gazetted to an Ensigncy in the 10th Foot, and
+he will, or I much mistake him, do honest credit to the recommendation.
+Hunter takes him about with him wherever he goes, telling all about
+the shipwreck and Tom's gallantry,--enough to turn the lad's head with
+vanity, but that he is a fine, simple-hearted creature, who thinks very
+little of himself or his achievement. He seems to have no other thought
+than what Polly, his sister, will say and think of him.
+
+He also will be one of our party; that is if I can persuade him to make
+“The Home” his headquarters while our friends are with us. What a strong
+muster we shall be; and how we 'll astonish that old bin of Madeira,
+Dinah! By the way, I have been rather boastful about it to Conyers, and
+let some bottles have the sun on them for a couple of hours every day.
+
+I should like to try my chance once more of seeing that poor fellow
+at the hospital, but Withering will not hear of it; he got positively
+ill-tempered at the bare mention of such a wish. Even Conyers says,
+“Better not,” with an air that may mean for the sick man's sake as much
+as my own.
+
+A little more of this life of noise, confusion, and excitement would
+finish me. This city existence, with its incessant events and its never
+ending anxieties, is like walking in a high wind with the chimney-pots
+falling and crashing on every side of one,--while I am pitying the
+fellow whose skull is just cracked, I am forced to remember that my own
+is in danger. And yet there are people who like it; who tell you
+that out of London there is no living; that the country is a grave,
+aggravated by the consciousness that one is dead and buried there!
+
+On Tuesday,--Wednesday, at farthest,--Dinah, look out for us. I do not
+believe there is that prize in the wheel that would tempt me again away
+from home! and till I reach it, believe, my dear Dinah,
+
+Your loving brother,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+I have just seen Conyers. He met Sir Harvey Hethrington, the Home
+Secretary, this morning, and they got into a talk over our business,
+and H. said how cruelly I had been treated all this time back, and how
+unfairly poor George's memory was dealt with. “We want,” said he, “to
+show your friend our respect and our sympathy, and we have thought of
+submitting his name to the King for a Baronetcy. How do you think Mr.
+Barrington himself would take our project?” “I 'll find out,” said
+Conyers, as he told me of the conversation. “If they don't let me
+off, Conyers,” said I, “ask them to commute it to Knighthood, for the
+heralds' fees will be smaller; but I'll try, meanwhile, if I can't
+escape either.” So that now, Dinah, you may expect me on Saturday. I
+told you what a place this was; you are never sure what may befall you
+from one moment to another!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. THE END
+
+Fortune had apparently ceased to persecute Peter Barrington.
+
+The Minister did not press honors upon him, and he was free to wait for
+his companions, and in their company he returned to Ireland.
+
+The news of his success--great as it was, magnified still more--had
+preceded him to his own country; and he was met, as all lucky men are
+met, and will be met to the end of time, by those who know the world and
+feelingly estimate that the truly profitable are the fortunate!
+
+Not that he remarked how many had suddenly grown so cordial; what
+troops of passing acquaintances had become in a moment warm friends,
+well-wishing and affectionate. He never so much as suspected that “Luck”
+ is a deity worshipped by thousands, who even in the remotest way are not
+to be benefited by it. He had always regarded the world as a far better
+thing than many moralists would allow it to be,--unsteady, wilful,
+capricious, if you like--but a well-intentioned, kindly minded world,
+that would at all times, where passion or prejudice stood aloof,
+infinitely rather do the generous thing than the cruel one.
+
+Little wonder, then, if he journeyed in a sort of ovation! At every
+change of horses in each village they passed, there was sure to be some
+one who wanted to shake his hand. People hobbled out on crutches and
+quitted sick-beds to say how “glad they were;” mere acquaintances most
+of them, who felt a strange mysterious sort of self-consequence in
+fancying themselves for the moment the friends of Peter Barrington, the
+millionnaire! This is all very curious, but it is a fact,--a fact which
+I make no pretence to explain, however.
+
+“And here comes the heartiest well-wisher of them all!” cried
+Barrington, as he saw his sister standing on the roadside, near the
+gate. With thoughtful delicacy, his companions lingered behind, while
+he went to meet and embraced her. “Was I not a true prophet, Dinah dear?
+Did I not often foretell this day to you?” said he, as he drew her arm,
+and led her along, forgetting all about his friends and companions.
+
+“Have they paid the money, Peter?” said she, sharply.
+
+“Of course they have not; such things are not settled like the fare of a
+hackney-coach. But our claim is acknowledged, and, fifty thousand
+times better, George Barrington's name absolved from every shadow of an
+imputation.”
+
+“What is the amount they agree to give?”
+
+“Upon my life, I don't know,--that is, I don't recollect, there were
+so many interviews and such discussions; but Withering can tell you
+everything. Withering knows it all. Without _him_ and Conyers I don't
+know how I could have got on. If you had heard how he spoke of George at
+the Council! 'You talk of _my_ services,' said he; 'they are no more
+fit to be compared with those of Colonel Barrington, than are _my_ petty
+grievances with the gross wrongs that lie on _his_ memory.' Withering
+was there; he heard the words, and described the effect of them as
+actually overwhelming.”
+
+“And Withering believes the whole thing to be settled?”
+
+“To be sure, he does! Why should he oppose his belief to that of the
+whole world? Why, my dear Dinah, it is not one, nor two, but some
+hundreds of people have come to wish me joy. They had a triumphal arch
+at Naas, with 'Welcome to Barrington' over it. At Carlow, Fishbourne
+came out with the corporation to offer me congratulations.”
+
+She gave a hasty, impatient shake of the head, but repressed the sharp
+reply that almost trembled on her lips.
+
+“By George!” cried he, “it does one's heart good to witness such a burst
+of generous sentiment. You 'd have thought some great national benefit
+had befallen, or that some one--his country's idol--had just reaped the
+recompense of his great services. They came flocking out of the towns as
+we whirled past, cheering lustily, and shouting, 'Barrington forever!'”
+
+“I detest a mob!” said she, pursing up her lips.
+
+“These were no mobs, Dinah; these were groups of honest fellows, with
+kind hearts and generous wishes.”
+
+Another, but more decisive, toss of the head warned Peter that the
+discussion had gone far enough; indeed she almost said so, by asking
+abruptly, “What is to be done about the boy Conyers? He is madly in love
+with Josephine.”
+
+“Marry her, I should say!”
+
+“As a cure for the complaint, I suppose. But what if she will not have
+him? What if she declares that she 'd like to go back to the convent
+again,--that she hates the world, and is sorry she ever came out into
+it,--that she was happier with the sisters--”
+
+“Has she said all this to you, sister?”
+
+“Certainly not, Peter,” said Dinah, bridling up. “These were confidences
+imparted to the young man himself. It was he told me of them: he came
+to me last night in a state bordering on distraction. He was hesitating
+whether he would not throw himself into the river or go into a marching
+regiment.”
+
+“This is only a laughing matter, then, Dinah?” said Peter, smiling.
+
+“Nothing of the kind, brother! He did not put the alternatives so much
+in juxtaposition as I have; but they lay certainly in that manner on his
+thoughts. But when do your friends arrive? I thought they were to have
+come with you?”
+
+“What a head I have, Dinah! They are all here; two carriages of them. I
+left them on the road when I rushed on to meet you. Oh, here they come!
+here they are!”
+
+“My brother's good fortune, gentlemen, has made him seem to forget what
+adversity never did; but I believe you all know how welcome you are
+here? Your son, General Conyers, thought to meet you earlier, by taking
+boat down to the village, and the girls went with him. Your friend,
+Polly Dill, is one of them, General Hunter.”
+
+Having thus, with one sweep of the scythe, cut down a little of all
+around her, she led the way towards the cottage, accepting the arm of
+General Conyers with an antiquated grace that sorely tried Hunter's good
+manners not to smile at.
+
+“I know what you are looking at, what you are thinking of, Barrington,”
+ said Withering, as he saw the other stand a moment gazing at the
+landscape on the opposite side of the river.
+
+“I don't think you do, Tom,” said he, smiling.
+
+“You were thinking of buying that mountain yonder. You were saying to
+yourself, 'I 'll be the owner of that beech wood before I'm a month
+older!'”
+
+“Upon my life, you 're right! though I have n't the remotest notion of
+how you guessed it. The old fellow that owns it shall name his own terms
+to-morrow morning. Here come the girls, and they 've got Tom Dill with
+them. How the fellow rows! and Fifine is laughing away at Conyers's
+attempt to keep the boat straight. Look at Hunter, too; he 's off to
+meet them. Is he 'going in' for the great heiress prize, eh, Tom?” said
+he, with a knowing smile.
+
+Though Hunter assisted the ladies to land with becoming gallantry, he
+did not offer his arm to Josephine, but dropped behind, where Tom Dill
+brought up the rear with his sister.
+
+“We have no confidences that you may not listen to,” said Polly, as she
+saw that he hesitated as to joining them. “Tom, indeed, has been telling
+of yourself, and you may not care to hear your own praises.”
+
+“If they come from _you_, I 'm all ears for them.”
+
+“Isn't that pretty, Tom? Did you ever hear any one ask more candidly
+for--no, not flattery--what is it to be called?”
+
+Tom, however, could not answer, for he had stopped to shake hands with
+Darby, whose “May I never!” had just arrested him.
+
+“What an honest, fine-hearted fellow it is!” said Hunter, as they moved
+on, leaving Tom behind.
+
+“But if _you_ had n't found it out, who would have known, or who
+acknowledged it? _I_ know--for he has told me--all you have been to
+him.”
+
+“Pooh, pooh! nothing; less than nothing. He owes all that he is to
+himself. He is one of those fellows who, once they get into the right
+groove in life, are sure to go ahead. Not even _you_ could make a doctor
+of him. Nature made him a soldier.”
+
+Polly blushed slightly at the compliment to those teachings she believed
+a secret, and he went on,--
+
+“What has the world been doing here since I left?”
+
+“Pretty much what it did while you were here. It looked after its
+turnips and asparagus, took care of its young calves, fattened its
+chickens, grumbled at the dear-ness of everything, and wondered when Dr.
+Buck would preach a new sermon.”
+
+“No deaths,--no marriages?”
+
+“None. There was only one candidate for both, and he has done
+neither,--Major M'Cormick.”
+
+“Confound that old fellow! I had forgotten him. Do you remember the
+last day I saw you here? We were in the garden, talking, as we believed,
+without witnesses. Well, _he_ overheard us. He heard every word we said,
+and a good deal more that we did not say.”
+
+“Yes; so he informed me, a few days after.”
+
+“You don't mean to say that he had the impertinence--”
+
+“The frankness, General,--the charming candor,--to tell me that I was a
+very clever girl, and not to be discouraged by one failure or two; that
+with time and perseverance--I think he said perseverance--some one was
+sure to take a fancy to me: he might not, perhaps, be handsome, possibly
+not very young; his temper, too, might chance to be more tart than
+was pleasant; in a word, he drew such a picture that I had to stop him
+short, and ask was he making me a proposal? He has never spoken to me
+since!”
+
+“I feel as if I could break his neck,” muttered Hunter, below his
+breath; then added, “Do you remember that I asked leave to write to you
+once,--only once?”
+
+“Yes, I remember it.”
+
+“And you would not answer me. You shook your head, as though to say the
+permission would be of no service to me; that I might write, but, you
+understand, that it would only be to indulge in a delusion--”
+
+“What an expressive shake of the head that meant all that!”
+
+“Ah! there it is again; never serious, never grave! And now I want
+you to be both. Since I landed in England, I ran down for a day to
+Devonshire. I saw an old aunt of mine, who, besides being very rich,
+has retained no small share of the romance of her life. She always had
+a dash of hero-worship about her, and so I took down Tom with me to show
+her the gallant fellow whose name was in all the newspapers, and of whom
+all the world was talking. She was charmed with him,--with his honest,
+manly simplicity, his utter want of all affectation. She asked me ten
+times a day, 'Can I not be of service to him? Is there no step he wishes
+to purchase? Is there nothing we can do for him?' 'Nothing,' said I; 'he
+is quite equal to his own fortune.' 'He may have brothers,' said she.
+'He has a sister,' said I,--'a sister who has made him all that he is,
+and it was to repay her love and affection that he has shown himself
+to be the gallant fellow we have seen him.' 'Tell her to come and see
+me.--that is,' said she, correcting herself, 'give her a letter I shall
+write, and persuade her, if you can, to oblige me by doing what I ask.'
+Here is the letter; don't say no till you have read it. Nay, don't shake
+your head so deploringly; things may be hard without being impossible.
+At all events, read her note carefully. It's a droll old hand, but clear
+as print.”
+
+“I'll read it,” said she, looking at the letter; but the sorrowful tone
+revealed how hopelessly she regarded the task.
+
+“Ask Tom about her; and make Tom tell you what she is like. By Jove! he
+has such an admiration for the old damsel, I was half afraid he meant to
+be my uncle.”
+
+They reached the cottage laughing pleasantly over this conceit, and
+Polly hurried up to her room to read the letter. To her surprise,
+Josephine was there already, her eyes very red with crying, and her
+cheeks flushed and feverish-looking.
+
+“My dearest Fifine, what is all this for, on the happiest day of your
+life?” said she, drawing her arm around her.
+
+“It's all _your_ fault,--all _your_ doing,” said the other, averting her
+head, as she tried to disengage herself from the embrace.
+
+“My fault,--my doing? What do you mean, dearest, what can I have done to
+deserve this?”
+
+“You know very well what you have done. You knew all the time how it
+would turn out.”
+
+Polly protested firmly that she could not imagine what was attributed to
+her, and only after a considerable time obtained the explanation of the
+charge. Indeed it was not at first easy to comprehend it, given, as
+it was, in the midst of tears, and broken at every word by sobs. The
+substance was this: that Fifine, in an attempted imitation of Polly's
+manner,--an effort to copy the coquetting which she fancied to be so
+captivating,--had ventured to trifle so far with young Conyers, that,
+after submitting to every alternative of hope and fear for weeks
+long, he at last gave way, and determined to leave the house, quit the
+country, and never meet her more. “It was to be like you I did it,”
+ cried she, sobbing bitterly, “and see what it has led me to.”
+
+“Well, dearest, be really like me for half an hour; that is, be very
+patient and very quiet. Sit down here, and don't leave this till I come
+back to you.”
+
+Polly kissed her hot cheek as she spoke; and the other sat down where
+she was bade, with the half-obedient sulkiness of a naughty child.
+
+“Tell young Mr. Conyers to come and speak to me. I shall be in the
+garden,” said she to his servant; and before she had gone many paces he
+was beside her.
+
+“Oh, Polly dearest! have you any hope for me?” cried he, in agony. “If
+you knew the misery I am enduring.”
+
+“Come and take a walk with me,” said she, passing her arm within his. “I
+think you will like to hear what I have to tell you.”
+
+The revelation was not a very long one; and as they passed beneath the
+room where Josephine sat, Polly called out, “Come down here, Fifine, we
+are making a bouquet; try if you can find 'heart's-ease.'”
+
+What a happy party met that day at dinner! All were in their best
+spirits, each contented with the other. “Have you read my aunt's note?”
+ whispered Hunter to Polly, as they passed into the drawing-room.
+
+“Yes. I showed it also to Miss Dinah. I asked her advice.”
+
+“And what did she say,--what did she advise?”
+
+“She said she 'd think over it and tell me to-morrow.”
+
+“To-morrow! Why not now,--why not at once?” cried he, impatiently. “I
+'ll speak to her myself;” and he hurried to the little room where Miss
+Dinah was making tea.
+
+It was not a very long interview; and Hunter returned, fond, radiant,
+and triumphant. “She's the cleverest old woman I ever met in my life,”
+ said he; “and the best, besides, after my Aunt Dorothy. She said that
+such an invitation as that was too cordial to be coldly declined; that
+it meant more--far more--than a politeness; that you ought to go, yes,
+by all means; and if there was any difficulty about the journey, or any
+awkwardness in travelling so far, why, there was an easy remedy for it,
+as well as for meeting my aunt a perfect stranger.”
+
+“And what was that?”
+
+“To go as her niece, dearest Polly,--to be the wife of a man who loves
+you.”
+
+“Is it possible that you have so much to say to each other that you
+won't take tea?” cried Aunt Dinah; while she whispered to Withering, “I
+declare we shall never have a sociable moment till they're all married
+off, and learn to conduct themselves like reasonable creatures.”
+
+Is it not the best testimony we can give to happiness, that it is a
+thing to feel and not describe,--to be enjoyed, but not pictured? It is
+like a debt that I owe to my reader, to show him “The Home” as it was
+when blissful hearts were gathered under its roof; and yet, for the life
+of me, I cannot acquit myself of it. To say that there were old people
+with their memories of the past, and young ones with their hopes of the
+future; that there were bygones to sigh over, and vistas to gaze at,
+conveys but little of the kindliness by which heart opened to heart,
+and sorrow grew lighter by mutual endurance, and joys became brighter as
+they were imparted to another.
+
+“So I find,” said Barrington, as they sat at breakfast together, “that
+Josephine insists on going back to the convent, and Fred is resolved on
+an exchange into the Infantry, and is off for Canada immediately.”
+
+“Not a bit of it!” broke in Hunter, who remarked nothing of the roguish
+drollery of old Peter's eye, nor even suspected that the speech was made
+in mockery. “Master Fred is coming with me into Kilkenny this morning,
+for a visit to the Dean, or whatever he is, who dispenses those social
+handcuffs they call licenses.”
+
+“Why, they were quarrelling all the morning,” repeated Harrington.
+
+“So we were, sir, and so we mean to do for many a year,” said Josephine;
+“and to keep us in countenance, I hear that General Hunter and Polly
+have determined to follow our example.”
+
+“What do I hear, Miss Dill?” said Miss Barrington, with an affected
+severity.
+
+“I'm afraid, madam, it is true; there has been what my father calls 'a
+contagious endemic' here lately, and we have both caught it; but ours
+are mild cases, and we hope soon to recover.”
+
+“What's this I see here?” cried Fred, who, to conceal his shame, had
+taken up the newspaper. “Listen to this: 'The notorious Stapylton,
+_alias_ Edwardes, whose case up to yesterday was reported all but
+hopeless, made his escape from the hospital, and has not since been
+heard of. It would appear that some of the officials had been bribed to
+assist his evasion, and a strict inquiry will be immediately set on foot
+into the affair.'”
+
+“Do you think he has got over to France?” whispered Peter to Withering.
+
+“Of course he has; the way was all open, and everything ready for him!”
+
+“Then I am thoroughly happy!” cried Barrington, “and there's not even
+the shadow of a cloud over our present sunshine.”
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+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: Barrington
+ Volume II (of II)
+
+Author: Charles James Lever
+
+Illustrator: Phiz.
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34883]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+BARRINGTON
+
+Volume II.
+
+By Charles James Lever
+
+With Illustrations By Phiz.
+
+Boston: Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+1907.
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. FIFINE AND POLLY
+
+There are a few days in our autumnal season--very few and rare!--when we
+draw the curtain against the glare of the sun at breakfast, and yet in
+the evening are glad to gather around the cheerful glow of the fire.
+These are days of varied skies, with fleecy clouds lying low beneath a
+broad expanse of blue, with massive shadows on the mountains, and here
+and there over the landscape tips of sunlight that make the meanest
+objects pictures; and, with all these, a breezy wind that scatters the
+yellow leaves and shakes the tree-tops, while it curls the current of
+the bright river into mimic waves. The sportsman will tell you that on
+such days the birds are somewhat wild, and the angler will vow that no
+fish will rise to the fly, nor is it a scent-lying day for the harriers;
+and yet, with all this, there is a spring and elasticity in the air that
+impart themselves to the temperament, so that the active grow energetic,
+and even the indolent feel no touch of lassitude.
+
+It was on the morning of such a day that Barrington, with his sister
+and granddaughter, drew nigh the Home. Conyers had parted with them at
+Dublin, where his regiment was now stationed, but was to follow in a day
+or two. All the descriptions--descriptions which had taken the shape
+of warnings--which they had given Josephine of the cottage could not
+prevent her asking at each turn of the road if that large house yonder,
+if that sombre tower over the trees, if that massive gate-lodge were
+not theirs. "I know this is it, grandpapa," said she, clapping her
+hands with delight as they came opposite a low wall within which lay the
+spacious lawn of Cobham Park, a portion of the house itself being just
+visible through the trees; "don't tell me, aunt," cried she, "but let me
+guess it."
+
+"It is the seat of Sir Charles Cobham, child, one of the richest
+baronets in the kingdom."
+
+"There it is at last,--there it is!" cried she, straining oat of the
+carriage to see the handsome portico of a very large building, to which
+a straight avenue of oaks led up from the high-road. "My heart tells me,
+aunt, that this is ours!"
+
+"It was once on a time, Fifiue," said the old man, with a quivering
+voice, and a glassy film over his eyes; "it was once, but it is so no
+longer."
+
+"Barrington Hall has long ceased to belong to us," said Miss Dinah; "and
+after all the pains I have taken in description, I cannot see how you
+could possibly confound it with our little cottage."
+
+The young girl sat back without a word, and, whether from disappointment
+or the rebuke, looked forth no more.
+
+"We are drawing very near now, Fifine," said the old man, after a long
+silence, which lasted fully two miles of the way. "Where you see the
+tall larches yonder--not there--lower down, at the bend of the stream;
+those are the trees. I declare, Dinah, I fancy they have grown since we
+saw them last."
+
+"I have no doubt you do, Peter; not that you will find the cottage far
+more commodious and comfortable than you remembered it."
+
+"Ah, they've repaired that stile, I see," cried he; "and very well
+they've done it, without cutting away the ivy. Here we are, darling;
+here we are!" and he grasped the young girl's hand in one of his, while
+he drew the other across his eyes.
+
+"They 're not very attentive, I must say, brother Peter, or they would
+not leave us standing, with our own gate locked against us."
+
+"I see Darby running as fast as he can. Here he comes!"
+
+"Oh, by the powers, ye're welcome home, your honor's reverence, and the
+mistresses!" cried Darby, as he fumbled at the lock, and then failing in
+all his efforts,--not very wonderful, seeing that he had taken a wrong
+key,--he seized a huge stone, and, smashing the padlock at a blow, threw
+wide the gate to admit them.
+
+"You are initiated at once into our Irish ways, Fifine," said Miss
+Barrington. "All that you will see here is in the same style. Let that
+be repaired this evening, sir, and at your own cost," whispered she to
+Darby, into whose hand at the same moment Peter was pressing a crown
+piece.
+
+"'T is the light of my eyes to see your honors home again! 'Tis like
+rain to the new potatoes what I feel in my heart, and looking so fresh
+and well too! And the young lady, she isn't--"
+
+From what dread anticipation Darby's sudden halt saved him the
+expression is not for me to say, but that Peter Barrington guessed it is
+probable, for he lay back in the carriage and shook with laughter.
+
+"Drive on, sir," said Miss Dinah to the postilion, "and pull up at the
+stone cross."
+
+"You can drive to the door now, ma'am," said Darby, "the whole way; Miss
+Polly had the road made while you were away."
+
+"What a clever girl! Who could have thought it?" said Barrington.
+
+"I opine that we might have been consulted as to the change. On a matter
+as important as this, Peter, I think our voices might have been asked."
+
+"And how well she has done it too!" muttered he, half aloud; "never
+touched one of those copper beeches, and given us a peep of the bright
+river through the meadows."
+
+As the carriage rolled briskly along, Darby, who trotted alongside, kept
+up a current narrative of the changes effected during their absence.
+
+"The ould pigeon-house is tuck down, and an iligant new one put up in
+the island; and the calves' paddock is thrown into the flower-garden,
+and there's a beautiful flight of steps down to the river, paved with
+white stones,--sorrow one is n't white as snow."
+
+"It is a mercy we had not a sign over the door, brother Peter,"
+whispered Miss Dinah, "or this young lady's zeal would have had it
+emblazoned like a shield in heraldry."
+
+"Oh, how lovely, how beautiful, how exquisite!" cried Josephine, as they
+came suddenly round the angle of a copse and directly in front of the
+cottage.
+
+Nor was the praise exaggerated. It was all that she had said. Over
+a light trellis-work, carried along under the thatch, the roses and
+jessamine blended with the clematis and the passion-flower, forming
+a deep eave of flowers, drooping in heavy festoons across the spaces
+between the windows, and meeting the geraniums which grew below. Through
+the open sashes the rooms might be seen, looking more like beautifnl
+bowers than the chambers of a dwelling-house. And over all, in sombre
+grandeur, bent the great ilex-trees, throwing their grand and tranquil
+shade over the cottage and the little grass-plot and even the river
+itself, as it swept smoothly by. There was in the stillness of that
+perfumed air, loaded with the sweet-brier and the rose, a something of
+calm and tranquillity; while in the isolation of the spot there was a
+sense of security that seemed to fill op the measure of the young
+girl's hopes, and made her exclaim with rapture, "Oh, this, indeed, is
+beautiful!"
+
+"Yes, my darling Fifine!" said the old man, as he pressed her to his
+heart; "your home, your own home! I told you, my dear child, it was not
+a great castle, no fine chteau, like those on the Meuse and the Sambre,
+but a lowly cottage with a thatched roof and a rustic porch."
+
+"In all this ardor for decoration and smartness," broke in Miss Dinah,
+"it would not surprise me to find that the peacock's tail had been
+picked out in fresh colors and varnished."
+
+"Faix! your honor is not far wrong," interposed Darby, who had an Irish
+tendency to side with the majority. "She made us curry and wash ould
+Sheela, the ass, as if she was a race-horse."
+
+"I hope poor Wowsky escaped," said Barrington, laughing.
+
+"That's what he didn't! He has to be scrubbed with soap and water
+every morning, and his hair divided all the way down his back, like a
+Christian's, and his tail looks like a bunch of switch grass."
+
+"That 's the reason he has n't come out to meet me; the poor fellow
+is like his betters,--he's not quite sure that his altered condition
+improves him."
+
+"You have at least one satisfaction, brother Peter," said Miss Dinah,
+sharply; "you find Darby just as dirty and uncared for as you left him."
+
+"By my conscience, there 's another of us is n't much changed since we
+met last," muttered Darby, but in a voice only audible to himself.
+
+"Oh, what a sweet cottage! What a pretty summer-house!" cried Josephine,
+as the carriage swept round the copse, and drew short up at the door.
+
+"This summer-house is your home, Fifine," said Miss Barrington, tartly.
+
+"Home! home! Do you mean that we live here,--live here always, aunt?"
+
+"Most distinctly I do," said she, descending and addressing herself to
+other cares. "Where's Jane? Take these trunks round by the back door.
+Carry this box to the green-room,--to Miss Josephine's room," said she,
+with a stronger stress on the words.
+
+"Well, darling, it is a very humble, it is a very lowly," said
+Barrington, "but let us see if we cannot make it a very happy home;" but
+as he turned to embrace her, she was gone.
+
+"I told you so, brother Peter,--I told you so, more than once; but, of
+course, you have your usual answer, 'We must do the best we can!' which
+simply means, doing worse than we need do."
+
+Barrington was in no mood for a discussion; he was too happy to be once
+more at home to be ruffled by any provocation his sister could give him.
+Wherever he turned, some old familiar object met his eye and seemed
+to greet him, and he bustled in and out from his little study to the
+garden, and then to the stable, where he patted old Roger; and across
+to the cow-house, where Maggie knew him, and bent her great lazy eyes
+softly on him; and then down to the liver-side, where, in gilt letters,
+"Josephine" shone on the trim row-boat he had last seen half rotten on
+the bank; for Polly had been there too, and her thoughtful good-nature,
+forgetting nothing which might glad them on their coming.
+
+Meanwhile, Josephine had reached her chamber, and, locking the door,
+sat down and leaned her head on the table. Though no tears fell from
+her eyes, her bosom heaved and fell heavily, and more than one deep sigh
+escaped her. Was it disappointment that had so overcome her? Had she
+fancied something grander and more pretentious than this lonely
+cottage? Was it that Aunt Dinah's welcome was wanting in affection? What
+revulsion could it be that so suddenly overwhelmed her? Who can tell
+these things, who can explain how it is that, without any definite
+picture of an unexpected joy, imagination will so work upon us that
+reality will bring nothing but a blank? It is not that the object is
+less attractive than is hoped for, it is simply that a dark shadow has
+passed over our own hearts; the sense of enjoyment has been dulled, and
+we are sad without a reason. If we underrate sorrows of our youth,--and
+this is essentially one of them,--it is because our mature age leaves us
+nothing of that temperament on which such afflictions preyed.
+
+Josephine, without knowing why, without even a reason, wished herself
+back in the convent. There, if there was a life of sombre monotony and
+quietude, there was at least companionship; she had associates of her
+own age. They had pursuits in common, shared the same hopes and wishes
+and fears; but here--but here--Just as her thoughts had carried her so
+far, a tap--a very gentle tap--came to the door. Josephine heard it, but
+made no answer. It was repeated a little louder, and then a low pleasing
+voice she had never heard before said, "May I come in?"
+
+"No," said Josephine,--"yes--that is--who are you?"
+
+"Polly Dill," was the answer; and Josephine arose and unlocked the door.
+
+"Miss Barrington told me I might take this liberty," said Polly, with a
+faint smile. "She said, 'Go and make acquaintance for yourself; I never
+play master of the ceremonies.'"
+
+"And you are Polly,--the Polly Dill I have heard so much of?" said
+Josephine, regarding her steadily and fixedly.
+
+"How stranded your friends must have been for a topic when they talked
+of _me!_" said Polly, laughing.
+
+"It is quite true you have beautiful teeth,--I never saw such beautiful
+teeth," said Josephine to herself, while she still gazed earnestly at
+her.
+
+"And you," said Polly, "are so like what I had pictured you,--what I
+hoped you would be. I find it hard to believe I see you for the first
+time."
+
+"So, then, _you_ did not think the Rajah's daughter should be a
+Moor?" said Josephine, half haughtily. "It is very sad to see what
+disappointments I had caused." Neither the saucy toss of the head, nor
+the tone that accompanied these words, were lost upon Polly, who began
+to feel at once that she understood the speaker.
+
+"And your brother," continued Josephine, "is the famous Tom Dill I have
+heard such stories about?"
+
+"Poor Tom! he is anything rather than famous."
+
+"Well, he is remarkable; he is odd, original, or whatever you would call
+it. Fred told me he never met any one like him."
+
+"Tom might say as much of Mr. Conyers, for, in truth, no one ever showed
+him such kindness."
+
+"Fred told me nothing of that; but perhaps," added she, with a flashing
+eye, "you were more in his confidence than I was."
+
+"I knew very little of Mr. Conyers; I believe I could count on the
+fingers of one hand every time I met him."
+
+"How strange that you should have made so deep an impression, Miss
+Dill!"
+
+"I am flattered to hear it, but more surprised than flattered."
+
+"But I don't wonder at it in the least," said Josephine, boldly. "You
+are very handsome, you are very graceful, and then--" She hesitated and
+grew confused, and stammered, and at last said, "and then there is that
+about you which seems to say, 'I have only to wish, and I can do it.'"
+
+"I have no such gift, I assure you," said Polly, with a half-sad smile.
+
+"Oh, I know you are very clever; I have heard how accomplished you were,
+how beautifully you rode, how charmingly you sang. I wish he had not
+told me of it all--for if--for if--"
+
+"If what? Say on!"
+
+"If you were not so superior to me, I feel that I could love you;" and
+then with a bound she threw her arms around Polly's neck, and clasped
+her affectionately to her bosom.
+
+Sympathy, like a fashionable physician, is wonderfully successful where
+there is little the matter. In the great ills of life, when the
+real afflictions come down to crush, to wound, or to stun us, we are
+comparatively removed from even the kindest of our comforters. Great
+sorrows are very selfish things. In the lighter maladies, however, in
+the smaller casualties of fortune, sympathy is a great remedy, and we
+are certain to find that, however various our temperaments, it has a
+sort of specific for each. Now Josephine Barrington had not any great
+cares upon her heart; if the balance were to be struck between them,
+Polly Dill could have numbered ten, ay, twenty, for her one, but
+she thought hers was a case for much commiseration, and she liked
+commiseration, for there are moral hypochondrias as well as physical
+ones. And so she told Polly how she had neither father nor mother, nor
+any other belongings than "dear old grandpapa and austere Aunt Dinah;"
+that she had been brought up in a convent, never knowing one of the
+pleasures of youth, or her mind being permitted to stray beyond the
+dreary routine of prayer and penance. Of music she knew nothing but the
+solemn chants of the organ, and even flowers were to her eyes but the
+festal decorations of the high altar; and, lastly, she vaguely balanced
+between going back to the dismal existence of the cloister, or entering
+upon the troubled sea of life, so full of perils to one unpractised
+and unskilled as she was. Now Polly was a very pretty comforter through
+these afflictions; her own home experiences were not all rose-colored,
+but the physician who whispers honeyed consolations to the patient has
+often the painful consciousness of a deeper malady within than that for
+which he ministers. Polly knew something of a life of struggle and small
+fortune, with its daily incident of debt and dun. She knew what it was
+to see money mix itself with every phase of existence, throwing its
+damper over joy, arresting the hand of benevolence, even denying to the
+sick-bed the little comforts that help to cheat misery. She knew how
+penury can eat its canker into the heart till all things take the color
+of thrift, and life becomes at last the terrible struggle of a swimmer
+storm-tossed and weary; and yet, with all this experience in her heart,
+she could whisper cheerful counsels to Josephine, and tell her that
+the world had a great many pleasant paths through it, though one was
+occasionally footsore before reaching them; and in this way they talked
+till they grew very fond of each other, and Josephine was ready to
+confess that the sorrow nearest to her heart was parting with her. "But
+must you go, dearest Polly,--must you really go?"
+
+"I must, indeed," said she, laughing; "for if I did not, two little
+sisters of mine would go supperless to bed, not to speak of a small boy
+who is waiting for me with a Latin grammar before him; and the cook
+must get her orders for to-morrow; and papa must have his tea; and this
+short, stumpy little key that you see here unlocks the oat-bin, without
+which an honest old pony would share in the family fast: so that, all
+things considered, my absence would be far from advisable."
+
+"And when shall we meet again, Polly?"
+
+"Not to-morrow, dear; for to-morrow is our fair at Inistioge, and I have
+yarn to buy, and some lambs to sell."
+
+"And could you sell lambs, Polly?" said Josephine, with an expression of
+blank disappointment in her face.
+
+Polly smiled, but not without a certain sadness, as she said, "There are
+some sentimentalities which, to one in my condition, would just be as
+unsuitable as Brussels lace or diamonds. They are born of luxury and
+indolence, and pertain to those whose existence is assured to them; and
+my own opinion is, they are a poor privilege. At all events," added she,
+rapidly, "they are not for me, and I do not wish for them."
+
+"The day after to-morrow, then, you will come here,--promise me that."
+
+"It will be late, then, towards evening, for I have made an engagement
+to put a young horse in harness,--a three-year-old, and a sprightly one,
+they tell me,--so that I may look on the morning as filled. I see, my
+dear child, how shocked you are with all these unladylike cares and
+duties; but poor Tom and I used to weld our lives together, and while
+I took my share of boat-building one day, he helped me in the dairy the
+day after; but now that he is gone, our double functions devolve upon
+me."
+
+"How happy you must be!"
+
+"I think I am; at least, I have no time to spare for unhappiness."
+
+"If I could but change with you, Polly!"
+
+"Change what, my dear child?"
+
+"Condition, fortune, belongings,--everything."
+
+"Take my word for it, you are just as well as you are; but I suppose
+it's very natural for one to fancy he could carry another's burden
+easier than his own, for it was only a few moments back I thought how I
+should like to be you."
+
+"To be me,--to be me!"
+
+"Of course I was wrong, dearest. It was only a passing, fleeting
+thought, and I now see how absurd I was to wish to be very beautiful,
+dearly loved, and affectionately cared for, with a beautiful home to
+live in, and every hour free to be happy. Oh, what a sigh, dearest, what
+a sigh! but I assure you I have my calamities too; the mice have got at
+the seeds in my onion-bed, and I don't expect to see one come up."
+
+If Josephine's first impulse was to feel angry, her next was to laugh
+out, which she did heartily; and passing her arm fondly round Polly's
+waist, she said, "I 'll get used to your raillery, Polly, and not feel
+sore at it; but remember, too, it's a spirit I never knew before."
+
+"How good and generous, then, to bear it so well!" said Polly,
+affectionately; "your friend Mr. Conyers did not show the same
+patience."
+
+"You tried him, then?" said Josephine, with a half-eager glance.
+
+"Of course; I talked to him as I do to every one. But there goes your
+dinner-bell." Checking herself on a reflection over the pretension of
+this summons of three people to a family meal in a cottage, Polly tied
+on her bonnet and said "Good-bye."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. AT HOME AGAIN
+
+The Barringtons had not been quite a fortnight settled in their home,
+when a note came from Conyers, lamenting, in most feeling terms, that he
+could not pay them his promised visit. If the epistle was not very long,
+it was a grumble from beginning to end. "Nobody would know," wrote he,
+"it was the same regiment poor Colonel Hunter commanded. Our Major is
+now in command,--the same Stapylton you have heard me speak of; and if
+we never looked on him too favorably, we now especially detest him.
+His first step was to tell us we were disorderly, ill-dressed, and
+ill-disciplined; but we were even less prepared to hear that we could
+not ride. The result of all this is, we have gone to school again,--even
+old captains, who have served with distinction in the field, have been
+consigned to the riding-house; and we poor subs are treated as if we
+were the last refuse of all the regiments of the army, sent here to
+be reformed and corrected. We have incessant drills, parades, and
+inspections, and, worse again, all leave is stopped. If I was not in the
+best of temper with the service before, you may judge how I feel towards
+it now. In fact, if it were not that I expect my father back in England
+by the middle of May, I 'd send in my papers and leave at once. How I
+fall back now in memory to the happy days of my ramble with you, and
+wonder if I shall ever see the like again. And how I hate myself for not
+having felt at the time how immeasurably delightful they were! Trust me
+never to repeat the mistake if I have the opportunity given me. I asked
+this morning for three days--only three--to run down and see you once
+more before we leave,--for we are ordered to Honnslow,--and I was
+refused. But this was not all: not content with rejecting my request,
+he added what he called an expression of astonishment that an officer
+so deficient in his duties should care to absent himself from regimental
+discipline."
+
+"Poor boy!--this is, indeed, too bad," said Miss Dinah, as she had read
+thus far; "only think, Peter, how this young fellow, spoiled and petted
+as he was as a child,--denied nothing, pampered as though he were a
+prince,--should find himself the mark of so insulting a tyranny. Are you
+listening to me, Peter Barrington?"
+
+"Eh,--what? No, thank you, Dinah; I have made an excellent breakfast,"
+said Barrington, hurriedly, and again addressed himself to the letter he
+was reading. "That's what I call a Trump, Dinah,--a regular Trump."
+
+"Who is the especial favorite that has called for the very choice
+eulogy?" said she, bridling up.
+
+"Gone into the thing, too, with heart and soul,--a noble fellow!"
+continued Barrington.
+
+"Pray enlighten us as to the name that calls forth such enthusiasm."
+
+"Stapylton, my dear Dinah,--Major Stapylton. In all my life I do not
+remember one instance to parallel with this generous and disinterested
+conduct. Listen to what Withering says,--not a man given to take up rash
+impressions in favor of a stranger. Listen to this: 'Stapylton has been
+very active,--written to friends, both at Calcutta and Agra, and shown,
+besides, an amount of acuteness in pursuit of what is really important,
+that satisfies me a right good common lawyer has been lost by his being
+a soldier.' And here, again he recurs to him: it is with reference to
+certain documents: 'S. persists in believing that with proper diligence
+these may be recovered; he says that it is a common practice with the
+Moonshees to retain papers, in the hope of their being one day deemed
+of value; and he is fully persuaded that they have not been destroyed.
+There is that about the man's manner of examining a question,--his
+patience, his instinctive seizure of what is of moment, and his
+invariable rejection of whatever is immaterial; and, lastly, his
+thorough appreciation of the character of that evidence which would have
+most weight with the Indian Board, which dispose me to regard him as an
+invaluable ally to our cause.'"
+
+"Do me the favor to regard this picture of your friend now," said Miss
+Barrington, as she handed the letter from Conyers across the table.
+
+Barrington read it over attentively. "And what does this prove, my dear
+sister?" said he. "This is the sort of stereotyped complaint of every
+young fellow who has been refused a leave. I have no doubt Hunter was
+too easy-tempered to have been strict in discipline, and the chances
+are these young dogs had everything their own way till Stapylton
+came amongst them. I find it hard to believe that any man likes
+unpopularity."
+
+"Perhaps not, Peter Barrington; but he may like tyranny more than he
+hates unpopularity; and, for my own part, this man is odious to me."
+
+"Don't say so, Dinah,--don't say so, I entreat of you, for he will be
+our guest here this very day."
+
+"Our guest!--why, is not the regiment under orders to leave?"
+
+"So it is; but Withering says it would be a great matter if we could
+have a sort of consultation together before the Major leaves Ireland.
+There are innumerable little details which he sees ought to be discussed
+between us; and so he has persuaded him to give us a day,--perhaps two
+days,--no small boon, Dinah, from one so fully occupied as he is."
+
+"I wish he would not make the sacrifice, Peter."
+
+"My dear sister, are we so befriended by Fortune that we can afford to
+reject the kindness of our fellows?"
+
+"I'm no believer in chance friendships, Peter Barrington; neither you
+nor I are such interesting orphans as to inspire sympathy at first
+sight."
+
+Josephine could not help a laugh at Miss Dinah's illustration, and old
+Barriqgton himself heartily joined in the merriment, not sorry the while
+to draw the discussion into a less stern field. "Come, come, Dinah,"
+said he, gayly, "let us put out a few bottles of that old Madeira in
+the sun; and if Darby can find us a salmon-trout, we 'll do our best to
+entertain our visitors."
+
+"It never occurred to me to doubt the probability of their enjoying
+themselves, Peter; my anxieties were quite on another score."
+
+"Now, Fifine," continued Barrington, "we shall see if Polly Dill has
+really made you the perfect housekeeper she boasted. The next day or two
+will put your talents to the test."
+
+"Oh, if we could only have Polly herself here!"
+
+"What for?--on what pretext, Miss Barrington?" said Dinah, haughtily.
+"I have not, so far as I am aware, been accounted very ignorant of
+household cares."
+
+"Withering declares that your equal is not in Europe, Dinah."
+
+"Mr. Withering's suffrage can always be bought by a mock-turtle soup,
+and a glass of Roman punch after it."
+
+"How he likes it,--how he relishes it! He says that he comes back to the
+rest of the dinner with the freshness of a man at an assize case."
+
+"So like him!" said Dinah, scornfully; "he has never an illustration
+that is not taken from the Four Courts. I remember one day, when asking
+for the bill of fare, he said, 'Will you kindly let me look at the cause
+list.' Prepare yourself, Josephine, for an avalanche of law anecdotes
+and Old Bailey stories, for I assure you you will hear nothing for the
+next three days but drolleries that have been engrossed on parchment and
+paid stamp duty to the Crown."
+
+Barrington gave a smile, as though in protest against the speech, and
+left the room. In truth, he was very anxious to be alone, and to think
+over, at his leisure, a short passage in his letter which he had not
+summoned courage to read aloud. It was Withering's opinion that to
+institute the inquiries in India a considerable sum of money would be
+required, and he had left it for Barrington's consideration whether it
+were wiser to risk the great peril of this further involvement, or once
+more to try what chance there might be of a compromise. Who knows what
+success might have attended the suggestion if the old lawyer had but
+employed any other word! Compromise, however, sounded to his ears like
+an unworthy concession,--a surrender of George's honor. Compromise might
+mean money for his granddaughter, and shame to her father's memory. Not,
+indeed, that Withering was, as a man, one to counsel such a course, but
+Withering was a lawyer, and in the same spirit that he would have
+taken a verdict for half his claim if he saw an adverse feeling in the
+jury-box, so he would bow to circumstances that were stronger than him,
+and accept the best he could, if he might not have all that he ought But
+could Barrington take this view? He thought not. His conviction was that
+the main question to establish was the fair fame and honor of his son;
+his guide was, how George himself would have acted--would have felt--in
+the same contingency; and he muttered, "He'd have been a hardy fellow
+who would have hinted at compromise to _him_."
+
+The next point was how the means for the coming campaign were to be
+provided. He had already raised a small sum by way of mortgage on the
+"Home," and nothing remained but to see what further advance could be
+made on the same security. When Barrington was a great estated gentleman
+with a vast fortune at his command, it cost him wonderfully little
+thought to contract a loan, or even to sell a farm. A costly election,
+a few weeks of unusual splendor, an unfortunate night at play, had made
+such sacrifices nothing very unusual, and he would give his orders on
+this score as unconcernedly as he would bid his servant replenish his
+glass at table. Indeed, he had no more fear of exhausting his fortune
+than he felt as to out-drinking his cellar. There was enough there,
+as he often said, for those who should come after him. And now, what a
+change! He stood actually appalled at the thought of a mortgage for less
+than a thousand pounds. But so it is; the cockboat may be more to a man
+than was once the three-decker. The cottage was his all now; that lost,
+and they were houseless. Was it not a bold thing to risk everything on
+one more throw? There was the point over which he now pondered as he
+walked slowly along in the little shady alley between the laurel hedges.
+He had no friend nearer his heart than Withering, no one to whom he
+could unbosom himself so frankly and so freely, and yet this was a
+case on which he could not ask his counsel. All his life long he had
+strenuously avoided suffering a question of the kind to intervene
+between them. Of his means, his resources, his straits, or his demands,
+Withering knew positively nothing. It was with Barrington a point of
+delicacy to maintain this reserve towards one who was always his lawyer,
+and often his guest. The very circumstance of his turning innkeeper was
+regarded by Withering as savoring far more of caprice than necessity,
+and Barrington took care to strengthen this impression.
+
+If, then, Withering's good sense and worldly knowledge would have been
+invaluable aids to him in this conjunction, he saw he could not have
+them. The same delicacy which debarred him heretofore, would still
+interpose against his appeal to that authority. And then he thought
+how he had once troops of friends to whom he could address himself for
+counsel. There is nothing more true, indeed, than the oft-uttered scoff
+on the hollowness of those friendships which attach to the days of
+prosperous fortune, and the world is very prone to point to the utter
+loneliness of him who has been shipwrecked by Fate; but let us be just
+in our severity, and let us own that a man's belongings, his associates,
+his--what common parlance calls--friends, are the mere accidents of his
+station, and they no more accompany him in his fall than do the luxuries
+he has forfeited. From the level from which he has lapsed they have not
+descended. They are there, living to-day as they lived yesterday.
+If their sympathy is not with him, it is because neither are they
+themselves; they cross each other no more. Such friendships are like the
+contracts made with a crew for a particular voyage,--they end with the
+cruise. No man ever understood this better than Barrington; no man ever
+bore the world less of ill will for its part towards himself. If now
+and then a sense of sadness would cloud him at some mark of passing
+forgetfulness, he would not own to the gloomy feeling; while to any show
+of recognition, to any sign of a grateful remembrance of the past, he
+would grow boastful to very vanity. "Look there, Dinah," he would say,
+"what a noble-hearted fellow that is! I scarcely was more than commonly
+civil to him formerly, and you saw how courteous he was in making a
+place for us, how heartily he hoped I was in good health."
+
+"I'll send over to Dill and have a talk with him," was Barrington's last
+resolve, as he turned the subject over and over in his mind. "Dill 's a
+shrewd fellow, and I 'm not sure that he has not laid by a little
+money; he might feel no objection to a good investment for it, with such
+security." And he looked around as he spoke on the trees, some of which
+he planted, every one of which he knew, and sighed heavily. "He 'll
+scarce love the spot more than I did," muttered he, and walked along
+with his head down. After a while he took out Withering's letter from
+his pocket and re-read it. Somehow, it was hard to say why, it did not
+read so promisingly as at first. The difficulties to be encountered were
+very stubborn ones, so much so that he very palpably hinted how much
+better some amicable settlement would be than an open contest wherein
+legal subtlety and craft should be evoked. There was so much of that
+matter always taken for granted, to be proved, to be demonstrated true
+on evidence, that it actually looked appalling. "Of the searches and
+inquiries instituted in India," wrote Withering, "I can speak but
+vaguely; but I own the very distance magnifies them immensely to my
+eyes." "Tom is growing old, not a doubt of it," muttered Barrington;
+"these were not the sort of obstacles that could have terrified him once
+on a time. He 'd have said, 'If there 's evidence, we 'll have it; if
+there's a document, we 'll find it.' It's India, that far-away land,
+that has frightened him. These lawyers, like certain sportsmen, lose
+their nerve if you take them out of their own country. It 's the new
+style of fences they can't face. Well, thanks to him who gave it, I have
+my stout heart still, and I 'll go on."
+
+"Going on" was, however, not the easy task it first seemed, nor was
+the pleasantest part of it the necessity of keeping the secret from his
+sister. Miss Dinah had from the first discouraged the whole suit. The
+adversary was too powerful, the odds against them were too great; the
+India Board had only to protract and prolong the case and _they_ must
+be beaten from sheer exhaustion. How, then, should he reconcile her to
+mortgaging the last remnant of all their fortune for "one more throw on
+the table"? "No chance of persuading a woman that this would be wise,"
+said he. And he thought, when he had laid the prejudice of sex as the
+ground of error, he had completed his argument.
+
+"Going on" had its fine generous side about it, also, that cheered and
+elevated him. It was for George he was doing it, and that dear girl,
+whose every trait recalled her father; for let those explain it who can,
+she, who had never seen nor even heard of her father since her infancy,
+inherited all his peculiar ways and habits, and every trick of his
+manner. Let me own that these, even more than any qualities of sterling
+worth, endeared her to her grandfather; and just as he had often
+declared no rank or position that could befall George would have been
+above his deserts, so he averred that if Josephine were to be the
+greatest heiress in England to-morrow, she would be a grace and an
+ornament to the station. If Aunt Dinah would occasionally attempt to
+curb this spirit, or even limit its extravagance, his invariable answer
+was, "It may be all as you say, sister, but for the life of me I cannot
+think my swans to be geese."
+
+As he thus mused and meditated, he heard the wicket of the garden open
+and shut, and shortly afterwards a half-shambling shuffling step on the
+gravel. Before he had time to speculate on whose it should be, he saw
+Major M'Cormick limping laboriously towards him.
+
+"How is this, Major?" cried he; "has the change of weather disagreed
+with your rheumatism?"
+
+"It's the wound; it's always worse in the fall of the year," croaked the
+other. "I'd have been up to see you before but for the pains, and that
+old fool Dill--a greater fool myself for trusting him--made me put on
+a blister down what he calls the course of the nerve, and I never knew
+torture till I tried it."
+
+"My sister Dinah has, I verily believe, the most sovereign remedy for
+these pains."
+
+"Is it the green draught? Oh, don't I know it," burst out the Major.
+"You might hear my shouts the day I took it down at Inistioge. There was
+n't a bit of skin left on my lips, and when I wiped the perspiration off
+my head my hair came off too. Aquafortis is like egg-flip compared
+to that blessed draught; and I remember well how I crawled to my
+writing-desk and wrote, 'Have me opened,' for I knew I was poisoned."
+
+"Did you tell my sister of your sufferings?"
+
+"To be sure I did, and she only smiled and said that I took it when I
+was fasting, or when I was full, I forget which; and that I ought to
+have taken a brisk walk, and I only able to creep; and only one spoonful
+at a time, and it was the whole bottle I swallowed. In fact, she owned
+afterwards that nothing but the strength of a horse could have saved
+me."
+
+Peter found it very hard to maintain a decent gravity at the play of
+the Major's features, which during the narrative recalled every dire
+experience of his medicine.
+
+"Well, come into the house and we'll give you something better," said
+Barrington, at last.
+
+"I think I saw your granddaughter at the window as I came by,--a
+good-looking young woman, and not so dark as I suspected she 'd be."
+
+"There's not a handsomer girl in Ireland; and as to skin, she 's not as
+brown as her father."
+
+"It wouldn't be easy to be that; he was about three shades deeper than a
+Portuguese."
+
+"George Barrington was confessedly the finest-looking fellow in the
+King's army, and as English-looking a gentleman as any man in it."
+
+The tone of this speech was so palpably that of one who would not stand
+the very shadow of a rejoinder, that the Major held his peace, and
+shuffled along without a word. The thought, however, of administering a
+rebuke to any one within the precincts of his home was so repugnant to
+Barrington's nature, that he had scarcely uttered the words than he was
+eager to repair them, and with a most embarrassed humility he stammered
+out something about their recent tour abroad and all the enjoyment it
+had given them.
+
+"Maybe so," rejoined the other, dryly; "but I never saw any pleasure in
+spending money you could keep."
+
+"My dear Major, that is precisely the very money that does procure
+pleasure."
+
+"Wasn't that a post-chaise I saw through the trees? There it is again;
+it's making straight for the 'Home,'" said M'Cormick, pointing with his
+stick.
+
+"Yes," said Peter; "I was expecting a couple of friends to pass a day or
+so with me here. Will you excuse me if I hurry forward to welcome them?"
+
+"Don't make a stranger of me; I'll saunter along at my leisure," said
+the Major, as Barrington walked briskly on towards the cottage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. A SMALL DINNER-PARTY
+
+Withering and Stapylton had arrived fully two hoars earlier than they
+were expected, and Miss Dinah was too deeply engaged in the household
+cares that were to do them honor to receive them. Josephine, too, was
+not less busily occupied, for her conventual education had made her
+wonderfully skilful in all sorts of confectionery, and she was mistress
+of devices in spun sugar and preserved fruits, which rose in Aunt
+Dinah's eyes to the dignity of high art. Barrington, however, was there
+to meet them, and with a cordial welcome which no man could express more
+gracefully. The luncheon hour passed pleasantly over, for all were in
+good humor and good spirits. Withering's holiday always found him ready
+to enjoy it, and when could old Peter feel so happy as when he had
+a guest beneath his roof who thoroughly appreciated the cottage, and
+entered into the full charm of its lovely scenery! Such was Stapylton;
+he blended a fair liking for the picturesque with a natural instinct for
+comfort and homeliness, and he saw in this spot what precisely embraced
+both elements. It was very beautiful; but, better still, it was very
+lovable. "It was so rare"--so, at least, he told Barrington--"to find
+a cottage wherein internal comfort had not been sacrificed to some
+requirement of outward show. There was only one way of doing this,"
+said he, as Barrington led him through the little flower-garden,
+giving glimpses of the rooms within as they passed,--"only one way, Mr.
+Barrington; a man must have consummate taste, and strong credit at his
+banker's." Barrington's cheek grew a thought redder, and he smiled that
+faint sad smile which now and then will break from one who feels that he
+could rebut what he has just heard, if it were but right or fitting he
+should do so. Of course, amongst really distressing sensations this has
+no place; but yet there is a peculiar pain in being complimented by your
+friend on the well-to-do condition of your fortune when your conscience
+is full of the long watching hours of the night, or, worse still, the
+first awaking thought of difficulties to which you open your eyes of
+a morning. It is not often, nor are there many to whom you can say, "I
+cannot tell the day or the hour when all this shall pass away from
+me; my head is racked with care, and my heart heavy with anxiety." How
+jarring to be told of all the things you ought to do! You who could
+so well afford it! And how trying to have to take shelter from your
+necessity under the shadow of a seeming stinginess, and to bear every
+reflection on your supposed thrift rather than own to your poverty!
+
+If Withering had been with them as they strolled, this, perhaps, might
+have been avoided; he had all a lawyer's technical skill to change a
+topic; but Withering had gone to take his accustomed midday nap, the
+greatest of all the luxuries his time of idleness bestowed upon him.
+
+Now, although Stapylton's alludings--and they were no more--to
+Barrington's gifts of fortune were such as perfectly consisted with
+good taste and good breeding, Barring-ton felt them all painfully, and
+probably nothing restrained him from an open disclaimer of their
+fitness save the thought that from a host such an avowal would sound
+ungracefully. "It is my duty now," reasoned he, "to make my guest feel
+that all the attentions he receives exact no sacrifice, and that the
+pleasure his presence affords is unalloyed by a single embarrassment.
+If he must hear of my difficulties, let it be when he is not beneath my
+roof." And so he let Stapylton talk away about the blessings of tranquil
+affluence, and the happiness of him whose only care was to find time
+for the enjoyments that were secured to him. He let him quote Pope and
+Wharton and Edmund Burke, and smiled the blandest concurrence with what
+was irritating him almost to fever.
+
+"This is Withering's favorite spot," said Peter, as they gained the
+shade of a huge ilex-tree, from which two distinct reaches of the river
+were visible.
+
+"And it shall be mine, too," said Stapylton, throwing himself down in
+the deep grass; "and as I know you have scores of things which claim
+your attention, let me release you, while I add a cigar--the only
+possible enhancement--to the delight of this glorious nook."
+
+"Well, it shall be as you wish. We dine at six. I 'll go and look after
+a fish for our entertainment;" and Barrington turned away into the
+copse, not sorry to release his heart by a heavy sigh, and to feel he
+was alone with his cares.
+
+Let us turn for a moment to M'Cormick, who continued to saunter slowly
+about the garden, in the expectation of Barrington's return. Wearied
+at length with waiting, and resolved that his patience should not go
+entirely unrequited, he turned into a little shady walk on which the
+windows of the kitchen opened. Stationing himself there, in a position
+to see without being seen, he took what he called an observation of all
+within. The sight was interesting, even if he did not bring to it the
+appreciation of a painter. There, upon a spacious kitchen table, lay a
+lordly sirloin, richly and variously colored, flanked by a pair of plump
+guinea-hens and a fresh salmon of fully twenty pounds' weight. Luscious
+fruit and vegetables were heaped and mingled in a wild profusion, and
+the speckled plumage of game was half hidden under the massive bunches
+of great hot-house grapes. It is doubtful if Sneyders himself could have
+looked upon the display with a higher sense of enjoyment It is, indeed,
+a question between the relative merits of two senses, and the issue lies
+between the eye and the palate.
+
+Wisely reasoning that such preparations were not made for common guests,
+M'Cormick ran over in his mind all the possible and impossible names he
+could think of, ending at last with the conviction it was some "Nob" he
+must have met abroad, and whom in a moment of his expansive hospitality
+he had invited to visit him. "Isn't it like them!" muttered he. "It
+would be long before they'd think of such an entertainment to an
+old neighbor like myself; but here they are spending--who knows how
+much?--for somebody that to-morrow or next day won't remember their
+names, or maybe, perhaps, laugh when they think of the funny old woman
+they saw,--the 'Fright' with the yellow shawl and the orange bonnet. Oh,
+the world, the world!"
+
+It is not for me to speculate on what sort of thing the world had been,
+if the Major himself had been intrusted with the control and fashion of
+it; but I have my doubts that we are just as well off as we are. "Well,
+though they haven't the manners to say 'M'Cormick; will you stop and
+dine?' they haven't done with me yet; not a bit!" And with this resolve
+he entered the cottage, and found his way to the drawing-room. It was
+unoccupied; so he sat himself down in a comfortable armchair, to await
+events and their issue. There were books and journals and newspapers
+about; but the Major was not a reader, and so he sat musing and
+meditating, while the time went by. Just as the clock struck five, Miss
+Dinah, whose various cares of housewifery had given her a very busy day,
+was about to have a look at the drawing-room before she went to dress,
+and being fully aware that one of her guests was asleep, and the other
+full stretched beside the river, she felt she could go her "rounds"
+without fear of being observed. Now, whatever had been the peculiar
+functions she was lately engaged in, they had exacted from her certain
+changes in costume more picturesque than flattering. In the first place,
+the sleeves of her dress were rolled up above the elbows, displaying
+arms more remarkable for bone than beauty. A similar curtailment of her
+petticoats exhibited feet and ankles which--not to be ungallant--might
+be called massive rather than elegant; and lastly, her two long curls
+of auburn hair--curls which, in the splendor of her full toilette,
+were supposed to be no mean aids to her captivating powers--were now
+tastefully festooned and fastened to the back of her head, pretty
+much as a pair of hawsers are occasionally disposed on the bow of a
+merchantman! Thus costumed, she had advanced into the middle of the room
+before she saw the Major.
+
+"A pleasure quite unexpected, sir, is this," said she, with a vigorous
+effort to shake out what sailors would call her "lower courses." "I was
+not aware that you were here."
+
+"Indeed, then, I came in myself, just like old times. I said this
+morning, if it 's fine to-day, I 'll just go over to the 'Fisherman's
+Home.'"
+
+"'The Home,' sir, if you please. We retain so much of the former name."
+But just as she uttered the correction, a chance look at the glass
+conveyed the condition of her head-gear,--a startling fact which made
+her cheeks perfectly crimson. "I lay stress upon the change of name,
+sir," continued she, "as intimating that we are no longer innkeepers,
+and expect something, at least, of the deference rendered to those who
+call their house their own."
+
+"To be sure, and why not?" croaked out the Major, with a malicious grin.
+"And I forgot all about it, little thinking, indeed, to surprise you in
+'dishabille,' as they call it."
+
+"_You_ surprise me, sir, every time we meet," said she, with flashing
+eyes. "And you make me feel surprised with myself for my endurance!"
+And so saying, she retired towards the door, covering her retreat as
+she went by every object of furniture that presented itself, and, like
+a skilful general, defending her rear by every artifice of the ground.
+Thus did she exit, and with a bang of the door--as eloquent as any
+speech--close the colloquy.
+
+"Faix! and the Swiss costume doesn't become you at all!" said the Major,
+as he sat back in his chair, and cackled over the scene.
+
+As Miss Barrington, boiling with passion, passed her brother's door, she
+stopped to knock.
+
+"Peter!" cried she. "Peter Barrington, I say!" The words were, however,
+not well out, when she heard a step ascending the stair. She could not
+risk another discovery like the last; so, opening the door, she said,
+"That hateful M'Cormick is below. Peter, take care that on no account--"
+
+There was no time to finish, and she had barely an instant to gain her
+own room, when Stapylton reached the corridor.
+
+Peter Barrington had, however, heard enough to inform him of his
+sister's high behest. Indeed, he was as quick at interpreting brief
+messages as people have grown in these latter days of telegraphic
+communication. Oracular utterings had been more than once in his life
+his only instructors, and he now knew that he had been peremptorily
+ordered not to ask the Major to dinner.
+
+There are, doubtless, people in this world--I almost fancy I have met
+one or two such myself--who would not have felt peculiar difficulty in
+obeying this command; who would have gone down to the drawing-room
+and talked coolly to the visitor, discussing commonplaces, easily and
+carelessly, noting the while how at every pause of the conversation each
+was dwelling on the self-same point, and yet, with a quiet abstinence,
+never touching it, till with a sigh, that was half a malediction, the
+uninvited would rise to take leave. Barrington was not of this number.
+The man who sat under his roof was sacred. He could have no faults; and
+to such a pitch had this punctilio carried him, that had an actual enemy
+gained the inside of his threshold, he would have spared nothing to
+treat him with honor and respect.
+
+"Well, well," muttered he, as he slowly descended the stairs, "it will
+be the first time in my life I ever did it, and I don't know how to go
+about it now."
+
+When a frank and generous man is about to do something he is ashamed
+of, how readily will a crafty and less scrupulous observer detect it!
+M'Cormick read Barrington's secret before he was a minute in the room.
+It was in vain Peter affected an off-hand easy manner, incidentally
+dropping a hint that the Attorney-General and another friend had just
+arrived,--a visit, a mere business visit it was, to be passed with
+law papers and parchments. "Poor fun when the partridges were in the
+stubble, but there was no help for it. Who knew, however, if he could
+not induce them to give him an extra day, and if I can, Major, you must
+promise to come over and meet them. You 'll be charmed with Withering,
+he has such a fund of agreeability. One of the old school, but not the
+less delightful to you and me. Come, now, give me your word--for--shall
+we say Saturday?--Yes, Saturday!"
+
+"I 've nothing to say against it," grumbled out M'Cormick, whose assent
+was given, as attorneys say, without prejudice to any other claim.
+
+"You shall hear from me in the morning, then," said Peter. "I 'll send
+you a line to say what success I have had with my friends."
+
+"Any time in the day will do," said the Major, unconcernedly; for, in
+truth, the future never had in his estimation the same interest as the
+present. As for the birds in the bush, he simply did not believe in them
+at all.
+
+"No, no," said Barrington, hurriedly. "You shall hear from me early,
+for I am anxious you should meet Withering and his companion, too,--a
+brother-soldier."
+
+"Who may he be?" asked M'Cormick.
+
+"That's my secret, Major,--that's my secret," said Peter, with a forced
+laugh, for it now wanted but ten minutes to six; "but you shall know all
+on Saturday."
+
+Had he said on the day of judgment, the assurance would have been as
+palatable to M'Cormick. Talking to him of Saturday on a Monday was
+asking him to speculate on the infinite. Meanwhile he sat on, as only
+they sit who understand the deep and high mystery of that process. Oh,
+if you who have your fortunes to make in life, without any assignable
+mode for so doing, without a craft, a calling, or a trade, knew what
+success there was to be achieved merely by sitting--by simply being
+"there," eternally "there"--a warning, an example, an illustration, a
+what you will, of boredom or infliction; but still "there." The butt
+of this man, the terror of that,--hated, feared, trembled at,--but yet
+recognized as a thing that must be, an institution that was, and is, and
+shall be, when we are all dead and buried.
+
+Long and dreary may be the days of the sitter, but the hour of his
+reward will come at last. There will come the time when some one--any
+one--will be wanted to pair off with some other bore, to listen to his
+stories and make up his whist-table; and then he will be "there." I knew
+a man who, merely by sitting on patiently for years, was at last chosen
+to be sent as a Minister and special Envoy to a foreign Court just
+to get rid of him. And for the women sitters,--the well-dressed
+and prettily got-up simperers, who have sat their husbands into
+Commissionerships, Colonial Secretaryships, and such like,--are they not
+written of in the Book of Beauty?
+
+"Here 's M'Cormick, Dinah," said Barrington, with a voice shaking with
+agitation and anxiety, "whom I want to pledge himself to us for Saturday
+next. Will you add your persuasions to mine, and see what can be done?"
+
+"Don't you think you can depend upon me?" cackled out the Major.
+
+"I am certain of it, sir; I feel your word like your bond on such a
+matter," said Miss Dinah. "My grandniece, Miss Josephine Barrington,"
+said she, presenting that young lady, who courtesied formally to the
+unprepossessing stranger.
+
+"I'm proud of the honor, ma'am," said M'Cormick, with a deep bow, and
+resumed his seat; to rise again, however, as Withering entered the room
+and was introduced to him.
+
+"This is intolerable, Peter," whispered Miss Barrington, while the
+lawyer and the Major were talking together. "You are certain you have
+not asked him?"
+
+"On my honor, Dinah! on my honor!"
+
+"I hope I am not late?" cried Stapylton, entering; then turning hastily
+to Barrington, said, "Pray present me to your niece."
+
+"This is my sister, Major Stapylton; this is my granddaughter;" and the
+ladies courtesied, each with a degree of satisfaction which the reader
+shall be left to assign them.
+
+After a few words of commonplace civility, uttered, however, with
+a courtesy and tact which won their way for the speaker, Stapylton
+recognized and shook hands with M'Cormick.
+
+"You know my neighbor, then?" said Barrington, in some surprise.
+
+"I am charmed to say I do; he owes me the _denouement_ of a most amusing
+story, which was suddenly broken off when we last parted, but which I
+shall certainly claim after dinner."
+
+"He has been kind enough to engage himself to us for Saturday," began
+Dinah. But M'Cormick, who saw the moment critical, stepped in,--
+
+"You shall hear every word of it before you sleep. It's all about
+Walcheren, though they think Waterloo more the fashion now."
+
+"Just as this young lady might fancy Major Stapylton a more interesting
+event than one of us," said Withering, laughing. "But what 's become of
+your boasted punctuality, Barrington? A quarter past,--are you waiting
+for any one?"
+
+"Are we, Dinah?" asked Barrington, with a look of sheepishness.
+
+"Not that I am aware of, Peter. There is no one to _come_;" and she
+laid such an emphasis on the word as made the significance palpable.
+
+To Barrington it was painful as well as palpable; so painful, indeed,
+that he hurriedly rang the bell, saying, in a sharp voice, "Of course,
+we are all here,--there are six of us. Dinner, Darby!"
+
+The Major had won, but he was too crafty to show any triumph at his
+victory, and he did not dare even to look towards where Miss Barrington
+stood, lest he should chance to catch her eye. Dinner was at length
+announced. Withering gave his arm to Miss Barrington, Stapylton took
+charge of Josephine, and old Peter, pleasantly drawing his arm within
+M'Cormick's, said, "I hope you 've got a good appetite, Major, for I
+have a rare fish for you to-day, and your favorite sauce, too,--smelt,
+not lobster."
+
+Poor Barrington! it was a trying moment for him, that short walk into
+the dinner-room, and he felt very grateful to M'Cormick that he said
+nothing peevish or sarcastic to him on the way. Many a dinner begins in
+awkwardness, but warms as it proceeds into a pleasant geniality. Such
+was the case here. Amongst those, besides, who have not the ties of
+old friendship between them, or have not as yet warmed into that genial
+good-fellowship which is, so to say, its foster-brother, a character of
+the M'Cormick class is not so damaging an element as might be imagined,
+and at times there is a positive advantage in having one of whose
+merits, by a tacit understanding, all are quite agreed. Withering
+and Stapylton both read the man at once, and drew out his salient
+points--his parsimony, his malice, and his prying curiosity--in various
+ways, but so neatly and so advisedly as to make him fancy he was the
+attacking party, and very successful, too, in his assaults upon the
+enemy. Even Barrington, in the honest simplicity of his nature, was
+taken in, and more than once thought that the old Major was too severe
+upon the others, and sat in wondering admiration of their self-command
+and good temper. No deception of this sort prevailed with Miss
+Barrington, who enjoyed to the fullest extent the subtle raillery with
+which they induced him to betray every meanness of his nature, and yet
+never suffered the disclosure to soar above the region of the ludicrous.
+
+"You have been rather hard upon them, Major," said Barrington, as they
+strolled about on the greensward after dinner to enjoy their coffee and
+a cigar. "Don't you think you have been a shade too severe?"
+
+"It will do them good. They wanted to turn me out like a bagged fox, and
+show the ladies some sport; but I taught them a thing or two."
+
+"No, no, M'Cormick, you wrong them there; they had no such intentions,
+believe me."
+
+"I know that _you_ did n't see it," said he, with emphasis, "but your
+sister did, and liked it well, besides; ay, and the young one joined in
+the fun. And, after all, I don't see that they got much by the victory,
+for Withering was not pleased at my little hit about the days when he
+used to be a Whig and spout liberal politics; and the other liked just
+as little my remark about the fellows in the Company's service, and how
+nobody knew who they were or where they came from. He was in the Madras
+army himself, but I pretended not to know it; but I found his name
+written on the leaf of an old book he gave me, and the regiment he was
+in: and did you see how he looked when I touched on it? But here he
+comes now."
+
+"Make your peace with him, M'Cormick, make your peace!" said Barrington,
+as he moved away, not sorry, as he went, to mark the easy familiarity
+with which Stapylton drew his arm within the other's, and walked along
+at his side.
+
+"Wasn't that a wonderful dinner we had to-day, from a man that hasn't a
+cross in his pocket?" croaked out M'Cormick to Stapylton.
+
+"Is it possible?"
+
+"Sherry and Madeira after your soup, then Sauterne,--a thing I don't
+care for any more than the oyster patties it came with; champagne next,
+and in tumblers too! Do you ever see it better done at your mess? Or
+where did you ever taste a finer glass of claret?"
+
+"It was all admirable."
+
+"There was only one thing forgotten,--not that it signifies to me."
+
+"And what might that be?"
+
+"It was n't paid for! No, nor will it ever be!"
+
+"You amaze me, Major. My impression was that our friend here was,
+without being rich, in very comfortable circumstances; able to live
+handsomely, while he carried on a somewhat costly suit."
+
+"That 's the greatest folly of all," broke out M'Cormick; "and it's to
+get money for that now that he's going to mortgage this place here,--ay,
+the very ground under our feet!" And this he said with a sort of
+tremulous indignation, as though the atrocity bore especially hard upon
+_them_. "Kinshela, the attorney from Kilkenny, was up with me about it
+yesterday. 'It's an elegant investment, Major,' says he, 'and you 're
+very likely to get the place into your hands for all the chance old
+Peter has of paying off the charge. His heart is in that suit, and he
+'ll not stop as long as he has a guinea to go on with it.'
+
+"I said, 'I 'd think of it: I 'd turn it over in my mind;' for there's
+various ways of looking at it."
+
+"I fancy I apprehend one of them," said Stapylton, with a half-jocular
+glance at his companion. "You have been reflecting over another
+investment, eh? Am I not right? I remarked you at dinner. I saw how the
+young brunette had struck you, and I said to myself, 'She has made a
+conquest already!'"
+
+"Not a bit of it; nothing of the kind," said M'Cormick, awkwardly. "I 'm
+too 'cute to be caught that way."
+
+"Yes, but remember it might be a very good catch. I don't speak of the
+suit, because I agree with you, the chances in that direction are very
+small, indeed, and I cannot understand the hopeful feeling with which
+he prosecutes it; but she is a fine, handsome girl, very attractive in
+manner, and equal to any station."
+
+"And what's the good of all that to me? Wouldn't it be better if she
+could make a pease-pudding, like Polly Dill, or know how to fatten a
+turkey, or salt down a side of bacon?"
+
+"I don't think so; I declare, I don't think so," said Stapylton, as he
+lighted a fresh cigar. "These are household cares, and to be bought with
+money, and not expensively, either. What a man like you or I wants is
+one who should give a sort of tone,--impart a degree of elegance to his
+daily life. We old bachelors grow into self-indulgence, which is only
+another name for barbarism. With a mistaken idea of comfort we neglect
+scores of little observances which constitute the small currency of
+civilization, and without which all intercourse is unpleasing and
+ungraceful."
+
+"I'm not quite sure that I understand you aright, but there's one thing
+I know, I 'd think twice of it before I 'd ask that young woman to be
+Mrs. M'Cormick. And, besides," added he, with a sly side-look, "if it's
+so good a thing, why don't you think of it for yourself?"
+
+"I need not tell an old soldier like _you_ that full pay and a wife are
+incompatible. Every wise man's experience shows it; and when a fellow
+goes to the bishop for a license, he should send in his papers to the
+Horse Guards. Now, I 'm too poor to give up my career. I have not, like
+you, a charming cottage on a river's bank, and a swelling lawn dotted
+over with my own sheep before my door. I cannot put off the harness."
+
+"Who talks of putting off the harness?" cried Withering, gayly, as he
+joined them. "Who ever dreamed of doing anything so ill-judging and so
+mistaken? Why, if it were only to hide the spots where the collar has
+galled you, you ought to wear the trappings to the last. No man ever
+knew how to idle, who had n't passed all his life at it! Some go so far
+as to say that for real success a man's father and grandfather should
+have been idlers before him. But have you seen Barrington? He has been
+looking for you all over the grounds."
+
+"No," said Stapylton; "my old brother-officer and myself got into
+pipeclay and barrack talk, and strolled away down here unconsciously."
+
+"Well, we 'd better not be late for tea," broke in the Major, "or we
+'ll hear of it from Miss Dinah!" And there was something so comic in
+the seriousness of his tone, that they laughed heartily as they turned
+towards the house.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. A MOVE IN ADVANCE
+
+How pleasantly did the next day break on the "Home"! Polly Dill arrived
+in the best of possible spirits. A few lines from Tom had just reached
+them. They were written at sea; but the poor fellow's notions of
+latitude and longitude were so confused that it was not easy to say from
+whence. They were cheery, however, he was in good health, his comrades
+were kind-hearted creatures, and evidently recognized in him one of
+a station above their own. He said that he could have been appointed
+hospital sergeant-if he liked, but that whatever reminded him of his old
+calling was so distasteful that he preferred remaining as he was, the
+rather as he was given to believe he should soon be a corporal.
+
+"Not that I mean to stop there, Polly; and now that I have n't got to
+study for it, I feel a courage as to the future I never knew before.
+Give my love to Mr. Conyers, and say that I 'm never tired of thinking
+over the last night I saw him, and of all his good nature to me, and
+that I hope I 'll see his father some day or other to thank him. I
+suppose father does n't miss me? I 'm sure mother does n't; and it
+'s only yourself, Polly, will ever feel a heavy heart for the poor
+castaway! But cheer up! for as sure as my name is Tom, I 'll not bring
+discredit on you, and you 'll not be ashamed to take my arm down the
+main street when we meet. I must close now, for the boat is going.
+
+"P. S. I dreamed last night you rode Sid Davis's brown mare over the
+Millrace at Graigue. Would n't it be strange if it came true? I wish I
+could know it."
+
+"May I show this to my friend here, Polly?" said Barrington, pointing
+to Withering. "It's a letter he 'd like to read; and as she nodded
+assent, he handed it across the breakfast-table.
+
+"What is your brother's regiment, Miss Dill?" said Stapylton, who had
+just caught a stray word or two of what passed.
+
+"The Forty-ninth."
+
+"The Forty-ninth," said he, repeating the words once or twice. "Let me
+see,--don't I know some Forty-ninth men? To be sure I do. There's Rep
+ton and Hare. Your brother will be delighted with Hare."
+
+"My brother is in the ranks, Major Stapylton," said she, flushing a deep
+scarlet; and Barrington quickly interposed,--
+
+"It was the wild frolic of a young man to escape a profession he had no
+mind for."
+
+"But in foreign armies every one does it," broke in Stapylton,
+hurriedly. "No matter what a man's rank may be, he must carry the
+musket; and I own I like the practice,--if for nothing else for that
+fine spirit of _camaraderie_ which it engenders."
+
+Fifine's eyes sparkled with pleasure at what she deemed the well-bred
+readiness of this speech, while Polly became deadly pale, and seemed
+with difficulty to repress the repartee that rose to her mind. Not so
+Miss Dinah, who promptly said, "No foreign customs can palliate a breach
+of our habits. We are English, and we don't desire to be Frenchmen or
+Germans."
+
+"Might we not occasionally borrow from our neighbors with advantage?"
+asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+"I agree with Miss Barrington," said Withering,--"I agree with Miss
+Barrington, whose very prejudices are always right. An army formed by a
+conscription which exempts no man is on a totally different footing from
+one derived from voluntary enlistment."
+
+"A practice that some say should be reserved for marriage," said
+Barrington, whose happy tact it was to relieve a discussion by a ready
+joke.
+
+They arose from table soon after,--Polly to accompany Miss Barrington
+over the garden and the shrubberies, and show all that had been done
+in their absence, and all that she yet intended to do, if approved of;
+Withering adjourned to Barrington's study to pore over parchments; and
+Stapylton, after vainly seeking to find Josephine in the drawing-room,
+the flower-garden, or the lawn, betook himself with a book, the first he
+could find on the table, to the river's side, and lay down, less to read
+than to meditate and reflect.
+
+A breezy morning of a fine day in early autumn, with slow sailing clouds
+above and a flickering sunlight on the grass below, besides a rippling
+river, whose banks are glowing with blue and purple heath-bells,--all
+these and a Waverley novel were not enough to distract Stapylton from
+the cares that pressed upon his mind; for so it is, look where we may on
+those whom Fortune would seem to have made her especial favorites, and
+we shall find some unsatisfied ambition, some craving wish doomed to
+disappointment, some hope deferred till the heart that held it has
+ceased to care for its accomplishment. To the world's eyes, here was a
+man eminently fortunate: already high up in the service, with health,
+vigor, and good looks, a reputation established for personal gallantry
+in the field, and an amount of capacity that had already won for him
+more than one distinction, and yet all these, great and solid advantages
+as they are, were not sufficient to give the ease of mind we call
+happiness.
+
+He had debts, some of them heavy debts, but these sat lightly on him.
+He was one of those men creditors never crush, some secret consciousness
+seeming to whisper that, however ill the world may go with them for a
+while, in the long run they must triumph; and thus Mr. Hirman Davis, to
+whom he owed thousands, would have cashed him another bill to-morrow,
+all on the faith of that future which Stapylton talked about with the
+careless confidence of a mind assured.
+
+He had enemies, too,--powerful and determined enemies,--who opposed his
+advancement for many a year, and were still adverse to him; but, like
+the creditors, they felt he was not a man to be crushed, and so he and
+his ill-wishers smiled blandly when they met, exchanged the most
+cordial greetings, and even imparted little confidences of their
+several fortunes with all that well-bred duplicity which so simulates
+friendship.
+
+He had been crossed,--no, not in love, but in his ambition to marry one
+greatly above him in station; but her subsequent marriage had been so
+unfortunate that he felt in part recompensed for the slight she passed
+upon him; so that, taking it all and all, fate had never been cruel to
+him without a compensation.
+
+There are men who feel their whole existence to be a hand-to-hand
+struggle with the world, who regard the world as an adversary to be
+worsted, and all whose efforts are devoted to reach that point upon
+which they can turn round and say, "You see that I have won the game.
+I was unknown, and I am famous; I was poor, and I am rich; I was passed
+over and ignored, and now the very highest are proud to recognize me!"
+Stapylton was one of these. All the egotism of his nature took this
+form, and it was far more in a spirit against his fellows than in any
+indulgence of himself he fought and struggled with Fortune. Intrusted by
+Withering with much of the secret history of Barring-ton's claim against
+the India Company, he had learned considerably more through inquiries
+instituted by himself, and at length arrived at the conclusion that if
+old Barring-ton could be persuaded to limit his demands within moderate
+bounds, and not insist upon the details of that personal reparation
+which he assumed so essential to his son's honor, a very ample
+recompense would not be refused him. It was to induce Barrington to take
+this course Stapylton had consented to come down with Withering,--so, at
+least, he said, and so Withering believed. Old lawyer that he was,
+with a hundred instincts of distrust about him, he had conceived a real
+liking for Stapylton, and a great confidence in his judgment. "We shall
+have to divide our labors here, Major," said he, as they travelled along
+together; "I will leave the ladies to your care. Barrington shall be
+mine." A very brief acquaintance with Miss Dinah satisfied Stapylton
+that she was one to require nice treatment, and what he called "a
+very light hand." The two or three little baits he had thrown out
+took nothing; the stray bits of sentimentality, or chance scraps of
+high-toned principle he had addressed to her, had failed. It was
+only when he had with some sharpness hit off some small meanness
+in M'Cormick's nature that she had even vouchsafed him so much as
+a half-smile of approval, and he saw that even then she watched him
+closely.
+
+"No," said he, half aloud to himself, "that old woman is not one easily
+to be dealt with; and the younger one, too, would have a will of her own
+if she had but the way to use it. If Polly had been in her place,--the
+clever, quickwitted Polly,--she would have gone with me in my plans,
+associated herself in all my projects, and assured their success. Oh for
+a good colleague just to keep the boat's head straight when one is weary
+of rowing!"
+
+"Would I do?" said a low voice near. And, on looking up, he saw
+Josephine standing over him, with an arch smile on her face as though
+she had surprised him in a confession.
+
+"How long have you been there?" asked he, hurriedly.
+
+"A few seconds.''
+
+"And what have you heard me say?"
+
+"That you wanted a colleague, or a companion of some sort; and as I was
+the only useless person here, I offered myself."
+
+"In good faith?"
+
+"In good faith!--why not? I am more likely to gain by the association
+than you are; at least, if you can only be as pleasant of a morning as
+you were yesterday at dinner."
+
+"I 'll try," said he, springing to his feet; "and as a success in these
+efforts is mainly owing to the amount of zeal that animates them, I am
+hopeful."
+
+"Which means a flattery at the outset," said she, smiling.
+
+"Only as much as your friend Mr. Withering would throw out to dispose
+the court in his favor; and now, which way shall we walk? Are you to be
+the guide, or I?"
+
+"You, by all means, since you know nothing of the locality."
+
+"Agreed. Well, here is my plan. We cross the river in this boat, and
+take that path yonder that leads up by the waterfall. I know, from the
+dark shadow of the mountain, that there is a deep glen, very wild, very
+romantic, and very solemn, through which I mean to conduct you."
+
+"All this means a very long excursion, does it not?"
+
+"You have just told me that you were free from all engagement."
+
+"Yes; but not from all control. I must ask Aunt Dinah's leave before I
+set out on this notable expedition."
+
+"Do nothing of the kind. It would be to make a caprice seem a plan. Let
+us go where you will,--here, along the river's side; anywhere, so that
+we may affect to think that we are free agents, and not merely good
+children sent out for a walk."
+
+"What a rebel against authority you are for one so despotic yourself!"
+
+"I despotic! Who ever called me so?"
+
+"Your officers say as much."
+
+"I know from what quarter that came," said he; and his bronzed face grew
+a shade deeper. "That dilettante soldier, young Conyers, has given me
+this character; but I 'd rather talk of you than myself. Tell me all
+about your life. Is it as delightful as everything around would bespeak
+it? Are these trees and flowers, this sunny bank, this perfumed sward,
+true emblems of the existence they embellish, or is Paradise only a
+cheat?"
+
+"I don't think so. I think Paradise is very like what it looks, not but
+I own that the garden is pleasanter with guests in it than when only
+Adam and Eve were there. Mr. Withering is charming, and you can be very
+agreeable."
+
+"I would I knew how to be so," said he, seriously, "just at this moment;
+for I am going away from Ireland, and I am very desirous of leaving a
+good impression behind me."
+
+"What could it signify to you how you were thought of in this lonely
+spot?"
+
+"More than you suspect,--more than you would, perhaps, credit," said he,
+feelingly.
+
+There was a little pause, during which they walked along side by side.
+
+"What are you thinking of?" said she, at last
+
+"I was thinking of a strange thing,--it was this: About a week ago there
+was no effort I was not making to obtain the command of my regiment. I
+wanted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; and so bent was I on gaining my object,
+that if giving away three or four years of that life that I may hope for
+would have done it, I 'd have closed the bargain; and now the ambition
+is gone, and I am speculating whether I 'll not take the cottage of your
+friend Major M'Cormick,--he offered it to me last night,--and become
+your neighbor. What say _you_ to the project?"
+
+"For us the exchange will be all a gain."
+
+"I want your opinion,--your own," said he, with a voice reduced to a
+mere whisper.
+
+"I'd like it of all things; although, if I were your sister or your
+daughter, I'd not counsel it."
+
+"And why not, if you were my sister?" said he, with a certain constraint
+in his manner.
+
+"I'd say it was inglorious to change from the noble activity of a
+soldier's life to come and dream away existence here."
+
+"But what if I have done enough for this same thing men call fame?
+I have had my share of campaigning, and as the world looks there is
+wondrous little prospect of any renewal of it. These peace achievements
+suit your friend Conyers better than me."
+
+"I think you are not just to him. If I read him aright, he is burning
+for an occasion to distinguish himself."
+
+A cold shrug of the shoulders was his only acknowledgment of this
+speech, and again a silence fell between them.
+
+"I would rather talk of _you_, if you would let me," said he, with much
+significance of voice and manner. "Say would you like to have me for
+your neighbor?"
+
+"It would be a pleasant exchange for Major M'Cormick," said she,
+laughing.
+
+"I want you to be serious now. What I am asking you interests me too
+deeply to jest over."
+
+"First of all, is the project a serious one?"
+
+"It is."
+
+"Next, why ask advice from one as inexperienced as I am?"
+
+"Because it is not counsel I ask,--it is something more. Don't look
+surprised, and, above all, don't look angry, but listen to me. What I
+have said now, and what more I would say, might more properly have been
+uttered when we had known each other longer; but there are emergencies
+in life which give no time for slow approaches, and there are men,
+too, that they suit not. Imagine such now before you,--I mean, both the
+moment and the man. Imagine one who has gone through a great deal in
+life, seen, heard, and felt much, and yet never till now, never till
+this very morning, understood what it was to know one whose least word
+or passing look was more to him than ambition, higher than all the
+rewards of glory."
+
+"We never met till yesterday," said she, calmly.
+
+"True; and if we part to-morrow, it will be forever. I feel too
+painfully," added he, with more eagerness, "how I compromise all that I
+value by an avowal abrupt and rash as this is; but I have had no choice.
+I have been offered the command of a native force in India, and must
+give my answer at once. With hope--the very faintest, so that it be
+hope--I will refuse. Remember I want no pledge, no promise; all I
+entreat is that you will regard me as one who seeks to win your favor.
+Let time do the rest."
+
+"I do not think I ought to do this--I do not know if you should ask it."
+
+"May I speak to your grandfather--may I tell him what I have told
+you--may I say, 'It is with Josephine's permission--'"
+
+"I am called Miss Barrington, sir, by all but those of my own family."
+
+"Forgive me, I entreat you," said he, with a deep humility in his tone.
+"I had never so far forgotten myself if calm reason had not deserted me.
+I will not transgress again."
+
+"This is the shortest way back to the cottage," said she, turning into a
+narrow path in the wood.
+
+"It does not lead to my hope," said he, despondingly; and no more was
+uttered between them for some paces.
+
+"Do not walk so very fast, Miss Barrington," said he, in a tone which
+trembled slightly. "In the few minutes--the seconds you could accord
+me--I might build the whole fortune of my life. I have already
+endangered my hopes by rashness; let me own that it is the fault I have
+struggled against in vain. This scar"--and he showed the deep mark of a
+sabre-wound on the temple--"was the price of one of my offendings; but
+it was light in suffering to what I am now enduring."
+
+"Can we not talk of what will exact no such sacrifice?" said she,
+calmly.
+
+"Not now, not now!" said he, with emotion; "if you pass that porch
+without giving me an answer, life has no longer a tie for me. You
+know that I ask for no pledge, no promise, merely time,--no more than
+time,--a few more of those moments of which you now would seem eager to
+deny me. Linger an instant here, I beseech you, and remember that what
+to _you_ may be a caprice may to _me_ be a destiny."
+
+"I will not hear more of this," said she, half angrily. "If it were not
+for my own foolish trustfulness, you never would have dared to address
+such words to one whom you met yesterday for the first time."
+
+"It is true your generous frankness, the nature they told me you
+inherited, gives me boldness, but it might teach you to have some pity
+for a disposition akin to it. One word,--only one word more."
+
+"Not one, sir! The lesson my frankness has taught me is, never to incur
+this peril again."
+
+"Do you part from me in anger?"
+
+"Not with _you_; but I will not answer for myself if you press me
+further."
+
+"Even this much is better than despair," said he, mournfully; and
+she passed into the cottage, while he stood in the porch and bowed
+respectfully as she went by. "Better than I looked for, better than
+I could have hoped," muttered he to himself, as he strolled away and
+disappeared in the wood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. A CABINET COUNCIL
+
+"What do you think of it, Dinah?" said Barrington, as they sat in
+conclave the next morning in her own sitting-room.
+
+She laid down a letter she had just finished reading on the table,
+carefully folding it, like one trying to gain time before she spoke:
+"He's a clever man, and writes well, Peter; there can be no second
+opinion upon that."
+
+"But his proposal, Dinah,--his proposal?"
+
+"Pleases me less the more I think of it. There is great disparity of
+age,--a wide discrepancy in character. A certain gravity of demeanor
+would not be undesirable, perhaps, in a husband for Josephine, who has
+her moments of capricious fancy; but if I mistake not, this man's nature
+is stern and unbending."
+
+"There will be time enough to consider all that, Dinah. It is, in fact,
+to weigh well the chances of his fitness to secure her happiness that he
+pleads; he asks permission to make himself known to her, rather than to
+make his court."
+
+"I used to fancy that they meant the same thing,--I know that they did
+in my day, Peter," said she, bridling; "but come to the plain question
+before us. So far as I understand him, his position is this: 'If I
+satisfy you that my rank and fortune are satisfactory to you, have I
+your permission to come back here as your granddaughter's suitor?'"
+
+"Not precisely, Dinah,--not exactly this. Here are his words: 'I am well
+aware that I am much older than Miss Barrington, and it is simply to
+ascertain from herself if, in that disparity of years, there exists that
+disparity of tastes and temper which would indispose her to regard me as
+one to whom she would intrust her happiness. I hope to do this without
+any offence to her delicacy, though not without peril to my own
+self-love. Have I your leave for this experiment?'"
+
+"Who is he? Who are his friends, connections, belongings? What is his
+station independently of his military rank, and what are his means? Can
+you answer these questions?"
+
+"Not one of them. I never found myself till to-day in a position to
+inquire after them."
+
+"Let us begin, then, by that investigation, Peter. There is no such
+test of a man as to make him talk of himself. With you alone the matter,
+perhaps, would not present much difficulty to him, but I intend that Mr.
+Withering's name and my own shall be on the committee; and, take _my_
+word for it, we shall sift the evidence carefully."
+
+"Bear in mind, sister Dinah, that this gentleman is, first of all, our
+guest."
+
+"The first of all that I mean to bear in mind is, that he desires to be
+your grandson."
+
+"Of course,--of course. I would only observe on the reserve that should
+be maintained towards one who honors us with his presence."
+
+"Peter Barrington, the Arabs, from whom you seem to borrow your notions
+on hospitality, seldom scruple about cutting a guest's head off when he
+passes the threshold; therefore I would advise you to adopt habits that
+may be more suited to the land we live in."
+
+"All I know is," said Barrington, rising and pacing the room, "that I
+could no more put a gentleman under my roof to the question as to his
+father and mother and his fortune, than I could rifle his writing-desk
+and read his letters."
+
+"Brother Peter, the weakness of your disposition has cost you one of
+the finest estates in your country, and if it could be restored to you
+to-morrow, the same imbecility would forfeit it again. I will, however,
+take the matter into my own hands."
+
+"With Withering, I suppose, to assist you?"
+
+"Certainly not. I am perfectly competent to make any inquiry I deem
+requisite without a legal adviser. Perhaps, were I to be so accompanied,
+Major Stapylton would suppose that he, too, should appear with his
+lawyer."
+
+Barrington smiled faintly at the dry jest, but said nothing.
+
+"I see," resumed she, "that you are very much afraid about my want of
+tact and delicacy in this investigation. It is a somewhat common belief
+amongst men that in all matters of business women err on the score of
+hardness and persistence. I have listened to some edifying homilies from
+your friend Withering on female incredulity and so forth,--reproaches
+which will cease to apply when men shall condescend to treat us as
+creatures accessible to reason, and not as mere dupes. See who is
+knocking at the door, Peter," added she, sharply. "I declare it recalls
+the old days of our innkeeping, and Darby asking for the bill of the
+lame gentleman in No. 4."
+
+"Upon my life, they were pleasant days, too," said Barrington, but in a
+tone so low as to be unheard by his sister.
+
+"May I come in?" said Withering, as he opened the door a few inches,
+and peeped inside. "I want to show you a note I have just had from
+Kinshela, in Kilkenny."
+
+"Yes, yes; come in," said Miss Barrington. "I only wish you had arrived
+a little earlier. What is your note about?"
+
+"It's very short and very purpose-like. The first of it is all about
+Brazier's costs, which it seems the taxing-officer thinks fair and
+reasonable,--all excepting that charge for the additional affidavits.
+But here is what I want to show you. 'Major M'Cormick, of M'Cormick's
+Grove, has just been here; and although I am not entitled to say as much
+officially on his part, I entertain no doubt whatever but that he is
+ready to advance the money we require. I spoke of fifteen hundred, but
+said twelve might possibly be taken, and twelve would be, I imagine, his
+limit, since he held to this amount in all our conversation afterwards.
+He appears to be a man of strange and eccentric habits, and these
+will probably be deemed a sufficient excuse for the singular turn
+our interview took towards its conclusion. I was speaking of Mr.
+Barrington's wish for the insertion in the deed of a definite period for
+redemption, and he stopped me hastily with, "What if we could strike out
+another arrangement? What if he was to make a settlement of the place
+on his granddaughter? I am not too old to marry, and I 'd give him
+the money at five per cent." I have been careful to give you the very
+expressions he employed, and of which I made a note when he left the
+office; for although fully aware how improper it would be in me to
+submit this proposal to Mr. Barrington, I have felt it my duty to put
+you in possession of all that has passed between us.'"
+
+"How can you laugh, Peter Barrington?--how is it possible you can laugh
+at such an insult,--such an outrage as this? Go on, sir," said she,
+turning to Withering; "let us hear it to the end, for nothing worse can
+remain behind."
+
+"There is no more; at least, there is not anything worth hearing.
+Kinshela winds up with many apologies, and hopes that I will only use
+his communication for my own guidance, and not permit it in any case to
+prejudice him in your estimation." As he spoke, he crumpled up the note
+in his hand in some confusion.
+
+"Who thinks of Mr. Kinshela, or wants to think of him, in the matter?"
+said she, angrily. "I wish, however, I were a man for a couple of hours,
+to show Major M'Cormick the estimate I take of the honor he intends us."
+
+"After all, Dinah, it is not that he holds us more cheaply, but rates
+himself higher."
+
+"Just so," broke in Withering; "and I know, for my own part, I have
+never been able to shake off the flattery of being chosen by the most
+nefarious rascal to defend him on his trial. Every man is a great
+creature in his own eyes."
+
+"Well, sir, be proud of your client," said she, trembling with anger.
+
+"No, no,--he 's no client of mine, nor is this a case I would plead for
+him. I read you Kinshela's note because I thought you were building too
+confidently on M'Cormick's readiness to advance this money."
+
+"I understood what that readiness meant, though my brother did not.
+M'Cormick looked forward to the day--and not a very distant day did he
+deem it--when he should step into possession of this place, and settle
+down here as its owner."
+
+Barrington's face grew pale, and a glassy film spread over his eyes,
+as his sister's words sunk into his heart. "I declare, Dinah," said he,
+falteringly, "that never did strike me before."
+
+"'It never rains but it pours,' says the Irish adage," resumed she. "My
+brother and I were just discussing another proposal of the same kind
+when you knocked. Read that letter. It is from a more adroit courtier
+than the other, and, at least, he does n't preface his intentions with a
+bargain." And she handed Stapylton's letter to Withering.
+
+"Ah!" said the lawyer, "this is another guess sort of man, and a very
+different sort of proposal."
+
+"I suspected that he was a favorite of yours," said Miss Dinah,
+significantly.
+
+"Well, I own to it. He is one of those men who have a great attraction
+for me,--men who come out of the conflict of life and its interests
+without any exaggerated notions of human perfectibility or the opposite,
+who recognize plenty of good and no small share of bad in the world,
+but, on the whole, are satisfied that, saving ill health, very few of
+our calamities are not of our own providing."
+
+"All of which is perfectly compatible with an odious egotism, sir," said
+she, warmly; "but I feel proud to say such characters find few admirers
+amongst women."
+
+"From which I opine that he is not fortunate enough to number Miss Dinah
+Barrington amongst his supporters?"
+
+"You are right there, sir. The prejudice I had against him before we met
+has been strengthened since I have seen him."
+
+"It is candid of you, however, to call it a prejudice," said he, with a
+smile.
+
+"Be it so, Mr. Withering; but prejudice is only another word for an
+instinct."
+
+"I 'm afraid if we get into ethics we 'll forget all about the
+proposal," said Barrington.
+
+"What a sarcasm!" cried Withering, "that if we talk of morals we shall
+ignore matrimony."
+
+"I like the man, and I like his letter," said Barrington.
+
+"I distrust both one and the other," said Miss Dinah.
+
+"I almost fancy I could hold a brief on either side," interposed
+Withering.
+
+"Of course you could, sir; and if the choice were open to you, it would
+be the defence of the guilty."
+
+"My dear Miss Barrington," said Withering, calmly, "when a great legal
+authority once said that he only needed three lines of any man's writing
+'to hang him,' it ought to make us very lenient in our construction of a
+letter. Now, so far as I can see in this one before us, he neither asks
+nor protests too much. He begs simply for time, he entreats leave to
+draw a bill on your affections, and he promises to meet it."
+
+"No, sir, he wishes to draw at sight, though he has never shown us the
+letter of credit."
+
+"I vow to Heaven it is hopeless to expect anything practical when you
+two stand up together for a sparring-match," cried Barrington.
+
+"Be practical, then, brother Peter, and ask this gentleman to give you a
+quarter of an hour in your study. Find out who he is; I don't expect you
+to learn what he is, but what he has. With his fortune we shall get the
+clew to himself."
+
+"Yes," chimed in Withering, "all that is very businesslike and
+reasonable."
+
+"And it pledges us to nothing," added she. "We take soundings, but we
+don't promise to anchor."
+
+"If you go off again with your figures of speech, Dinah, there is an
+end of me, for I have one of those unhappy memories that retain the
+illustration and forget what it typified. Besides this, here is a man
+who, out of pure good nature and respect for poor George's memory, has
+been doing us most important services, written letters innumerable, and
+taken the most active measures for our benefit. What sort of a figure
+shall I present if I bring him to book about his rental and the state of
+his bank account?"
+
+"With the exercise of a little tact, Barrington,--a little management--"
+
+"Ask a man with a club-foot to walk gingerly! I have no more notion of
+getting at anything by address than I have of tying the femoral artery."
+
+"The more blunt the better, Peter Barrington. You may tumble into the
+truth, though you'd never pick your way into it. Meanwhile, leave me to
+deal with Major M'Cor-mick."
+
+"You'll do it courteously, Dinah; you'll bear in mind that he is a
+neighbor of some twenty years' standing?" said Barrington, in a voice
+of anxiety.
+
+"I 'll do it in a manner that shall satisfy _my_ conscience and _his_
+presumption."
+
+She seated herself at the table as she said this, and dashed off a few
+hasty lines. Indeed, so hurried was the action, that it looked far more
+like one of those instances of correspondence we see on the stage than
+an event of real life.
+
+"Will that do?" said she, showing the lines to Withering.
+
+The old lawyer read them over to himself, a faint twitching of the mouth
+being the only sign his face presented of any emotion. "I should say
+admirably,--nothing better."
+
+"May I see it, Dinah?" asked Peter.
+
+"You shall hear it, brother," said she, taking the paper and reading,--
+
+"'Miss Barrington informs Mr. Kinshela that if he does not at once
+retract his epistle of this morning's date, she will place it in the
+hands of her legal adviser, and proceed against it as a threatening
+letter.'"
+
+"Oh, sister, you will not send this?"
+
+"As sure as my name is Dinah Barrington."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. AN EXPRESS
+
+In the times before telegraphs,--and it is of such I am writing,--a
+hurried express was a far more stirring event than in these our days
+of incessant oracles. While, therefore, Barrington and his sister and
+Withering sat in deep consultation on Josephine's fate and future, a
+hasty summons arrived from Dublin, requiring the instantaneous departure
+of Stapylton, whose regiment was urgently needed in the north of
+England, at that time agitated by those disturbances called the Bread
+Riots. They were very formidable troubles, and when we look back upon
+them now, with the light which the great events of later years on the
+Continent afford us, seem more terrible still. It was the fashion,
+however, then, to treat them lightly, and talk of them contemptuously;
+and as Stapylton was eating a hasty luncheon before departure, he
+sneered at the rabble, and scoffed at the insolent pretension of their
+demands. Neither Barrington nor Withering sympathized with the spirit
+of the revolt, and yet each felt shocked at the tone of haughty contempt
+Stapylton assumed towards the people. "You'll see," cried he, rising,
+"how a couple of brisk charges from our fellows will do more to bring
+these rascals to reason than all the fine pledges of your Parliament
+folk; and I promise you, for my own part, if I chance upon one of their
+leaders, I mean to lay my mark on him."
+
+"I fear, sir, it is your instinctive dislike to the plebeian that moves
+you here," said Miss Dinah. "You will not entertain the question whether
+these people may not have some wrongs to complain of."
+
+"Perhaps so, madam," said he; and his swarthy face grew darker as he
+spoke. "I suppose this is the case where the blood of a gentleman boils
+indignantly at the challenge of the _canaille_."
+
+"I will not have a French word applied to our own people, sir," said
+she, angrily.
+
+"Well said," chimed in Withering. "It is wonderful how a phrase can seem
+to carry an argument along with it."
+
+And old Peter smiled, and nodded his concurrence with this speech.
+
+"What a sad minority do I stand in!" said Stapylton, with an effort to
+smile very far from successful. "Will not Miss Josephine Barrington have
+generosity enough to aid the weaker side?"
+
+"Not if it be the worst cause," interposed Dinah. "My niece needs not to
+be told she must be just before she is generous."
+
+"Then it is to your own generosity I will appeal," said Stapylton,
+turning to her; "and I will ask you to ascribe some, at least, of my
+bitterness to the sorrow I feel at being thus summoned away. Believe me
+it is no light matter to leave this place and its company."
+
+"But only for a season, and a very brief season too, I trust," said
+Barrington. "You are going away in our debt, remember."
+
+"It is a loser's privilege, all the world over, to withdraw when he has
+lost enough," said Stapylton, with a sad smile towards Miss Dinah; and
+though the speech was made in the hope it might elicit a contradiction,
+none came, and a very awkward silence ensued.
+
+"You will reach Dublin to-night, I suppose?" said Withering, to relieve
+the painful pause in the conversation.
+
+"It will be late,--after midnight, perhaps."
+
+"And embark the next morning?"
+
+"Two of our squadrons have sailed already; the others will, of course,
+follow to-morrow."
+
+"And young Conyers," broke in Miss Dinah,--"he will, I suppose,
+accompany this--what shall I call it?--this raid?"
+
+"Yes, madam. Am I to convey to him your compliments upon the first
+opportunity to flesh his maiden sword?"
+
+"You are to do nothing of the kind, sir; but tell him from me not to
+forget that the angry passions of a starving multitude are not to be
+confounded with the vindictive hate of our natural enemies."
+
+"Natural enemies, my dear Miss Barrington! I hope you cannot mean that
+there exists anything so monstrous in humanity as a natural enemy?"
+
+"I do, sir; and I mean all those whose jealousy of us ripens into
+hatred, and who would spill their heart's blood to see us humbled. When
+there exists a people like this, and who at every fresh outbreak of a
+war with us have carried into the new contest all the bitter animosities
+of long past struggles as debts to be liquidated, I call these
+natural enemies; and, if you prefer a shorter word for it, I call them
+Frenchmen."
+
+"Dinah, Dinah!"
+
+"Peter, Peter! don't interrupt me. Major Stapylton has thought to tax me
+with a blunder, but I accept it as a boast!"
+
+"Madam, I am proud to be vanquished by you," said Stapylton, bowing low.
+
+"And I trust, sir," said she, continuing her speech, and as if heedless
+of his interruption, "that no similarity of name will make you behave at
+Peterloo--if that be the name--as though you were at Waterloo."
+
+"Upon my life!" cried he, with a saucy laugh, "I don't know how I am
+to win your good opinion, except it be by tearing off my epaulettes, and
+putting myself at the head of the mob."
+
+"You know very little of my sister, Major Stapylton," said Barrington,
+"or you would scarcely have selected that mode of cultivating her
+favor."
+
+"There is a popular belief that ladies always side with the winning
+cause," said Stapylton, affecting a light and easy manner; "so I must
+do my best to be successful. May I hope I carry your _good_ wishes away
+with me?" said he, in a lower tone to Josephine.
+
+"I hope that nobody will hurt you, and you hurt nobody," said she,
+laughingly.
+
+"And this, I take it, is about as much sympathy as ever attends a man
+on such a campaign. Mr. Barrington, will you grant me two minutes
+of conversation in your own room?" And, with a bow of acquiescence,
+Barrington led the way to his study.
+
+"I ought to have anticipated your request, Major Stapyl-ton," said
+Barrington, when they found themselves alone. "I owe you a reply to your
+letter, but the simple fact is, I do not know what answer to give it;
+for while most sensible of the honor you intend us, I feel still there
+is much to be explained on both sides. We know scarcely anything of each
+other, and though I am conscious of the generosity which prompts a
+man with _your_ prospects and in _your_ position to ally himself with
+persons in _ours_, yet I owe it to myself to say, it hangs upon a
+contingency to restore us to wealth and station. Even a portion of what
+I claim from the East India Company would make my granddaughter one of
+the richest heiresses in England."
+
+Stapylton gave a cold, a very cold smile, in reply to this speech. It
+might mean that he was incredulous or indifferent, or it might imply
+that the issue was one which need not have been introduced into the
+case at all. Whatever its signification, Barrington felt hurt by it, and
+hastily said,--
+
+"Not that I have any need to trouble you with these details: it is
+rather my province to ask for information regarding _your_ circumstances
+than to enter upon a discussion of _ours_."
+
+"I am quite ready to give you the very fullest and clearest,--I mean
+to yourself personally, or to your sister; for, except where the lawyer
+intervenes of necessity and _de droit_, I own that I resent his
+presence as an insult. I suppose few of us are devoid of certain
+family circumstances which it would be more agreeable to deal with in
+confidence; and though, perhaps, I am as fortunate as most men in this
+respect, there are one or two small matters on which I would ask your
+attention. These, however, are neither important nor pressing. My first
+care is to know,--and I hope I am not peremptory in asking it,--have I
+your consent to the proposition contained in my letter; am I at liberty
+to address Miss Barrington?"
+
+Barrington flushed deeply and fidgeted; he arose and sat down
+again,--all his excitement only aggravated by the well-bred composure
+of the other, who seemed utterly unconscious of the uneasiness he was
+causing.
+
+"Don't you think, Major, that this is a case for a little time to
+reflect,--that in a matter so momentous as this, a few days at least are
+requisite for consideration? We ought to ascertain something at least of
+my granddaughter's own sentiments,--I mean, of course, in a general way.
+It might be, too, that a day or two might give us some better insight
+into her future prospects."
+
+"Pardon my interrupting you; but, on the last point, I am perfectly
+indifferent. Miss Barrington with half a province for her dower, would
+be no more in my eyes than Miss Barrington as she sat at breakfast
+this morning. Nor is there anything of high-flown sentiment in this
+declaration, as my means are sufficiently ample for all that I want or
+care."
+
+"There, at least, is one difficulty disposed of. You are an eldest son?"
+said he; and he blushed at his own boldness in making the inquiry.
+
+"I am an only son."
+
+"Easier again," said Barrington, trying to laugh off the awkward moment.
+"No cutting down one's old timber to pay off the provisions for younger
+brothers."
+
+"In my case there is no need of this."
+
+"And your father. Is he still living, Major Stapylton?"
+
+"My father has been dead some years."
+
+Barrington fidgeted again, fumbled with his watch-chain and his
+eye-glass, and would have given more than he could afford for any
+casualty that should cut short the interview. He wanted to say, "What is
+the amount of your fortune? What is it? Where is it? Are you Wiltshire
+or Staffordshire? Who are your uncles and aunts, and your good friends
+that you pray for, and where do you pray for them?" A thousand questions
+of this sort arose in his mind, one only more prying and impertinent
+than another. He knew he ought to ask them; he knew Dinah would have
+asked them. Ay, and would have the answers to them as plain and palpable
+as the replies to a life assurance circular; but he could n't do it. No;
+not if his life depended on it.
+
+He had already gone further in his transgression of good manners than it
+ever occurred to him before to do, and he felt something between a holy
+inquisitor and a spy of the police.
+
+Stapylton looked at his watch, and gave a slight start.
+
+"Later than you thought, eh?" cried Peter, overjoyed at the diversion.
+
+Stapylton smiled a cold assent, and put up his watch without a word. He
+saw all the confusion and embarrassment of the other, and made no effort
+to relieve him. At last, but not until after a considerable pause,
+he said,--"I believe, Mr. Barrington,--I hope, at least,--I have
+satisfactorily answered the questions which, with every right on your
+part, you have deemed proper to put to me. I cannot but feel how painful
+the task has been to you, and I regret it the more, since probably
+it has set a limit to inquiries which you are perfectly justified in
+making, but which closer relations between us may make a matter far less
+formidable one of these days."
+
+"Yes, yes,--just so; of course," said Barrington, hurriedly assenting to
+he knew not what.
+
+"And I trust I take my leave of you with the understanding that when
+we meet again, it shall be as in the commencement of these pleasanter
+relations. I own to you I am the more eager on this point, that
+I perceive your sister, Miss Barrington, scarcely regards me very
+favorably, and I stand the more in need of your alliance."
+
+"I don't think it possible, Major Stapylton," said Barrington, boldly,
+"that my sister and I could have two opinions upon anything or anybody."
+
+"Then I only ask that she may partake of yours on this occasion," said
+Stapylton, bowing. "But I must start; as it is, I shall be very late in
+Dublin. Will you present my most respectful adieux to the ladies, and
+say also a goodbye for me to Mr. Withering?"
+
+"You'll come in for a moment to the drawing-room, won't you?" cried
+Barrington.
+
+"I think not. I opine it would be better not. There would be a certain
+awkwardness about it,--that is, until you have informed Miss Dinah
+Barrington of the extent to which you have accorded me your confidence,
+and how completely I have opened every detail of my circumstances.
+I believe it would be in better taste not to present myself. Tell
+Withering that if he writes, Manchester will find me. I don't suspect
+he need give himself any more trouble about establishing the proofs of
+marriage. They will scarcely contest that point. The great question will
+and must be, to ascertain if the Company will cease to oppose the claim
+on being fully convinced that the letter to the Meer Busherat was a
+forgery, and that no menace ever came from Colonel Barrington's hand as
+to the consequences of opposing his rule. Get them to admit this,--let
+the issue rest upon this,--and it will narrow the whole suit within
+manageable limits."
+
+"Would you not say this much to him before you go? It would come with so
+much more force and clearness from yourself."
+
+"I have done so till I was wearied. Like a true lawyer, he insists upon
+proving each step as he goes, and will not condescend to a hypothetical
+conclusion, though I have told him over and over again we want a
+settlement, not a victory. Good-bye, good-bye! If I once launch out into
+the cause, I cannot tear myself away again."
+
+"Has your guest gone, Peter?" said Miss Dinah, as her brother re-entered
+the drawing-room.
+
+"Yes; it was a hurried departure, and he had no great heart for it,
+either. By the way, Withering, while it is fresh in my head, let me tell
+you the message he has sent you."
+
+"Was there none for _me_, Peter?" said she, scofflngly.
+
+"Ay, but there was, Dinah! He left with me I know not how many polite
+and charming things to say for him."
+
+"And am I alone forgotten in this wide dispensation of favors?" asked
+Josephine, smiling.
+
+"Of course not, dear," chimed in Miss Dinah. "Your grandpapa has been
+charged with them all. You could not expect a gentleman so naturally
+timid and bashful as our late guest to utter them by his own lips."
+
+"I see," said Withering, laughing, "that you have not forgiven the
+haughty aristocrat for his insolent estimate of the people!"
+
+"He an aristocrat! Such bitter words as his never fell from any man who
+had a grandfather!"
+
+"Wrong for once, Dinah," broke in Barrington. "I can answer for it that
+you are unjust to him."
+
+"We shall see," said she. "Come, Josephine, I have a whole morning's
+work before me in the flower-garden, and I want your help. Don't forget,
+Peter, that Major M'Cormick's butler, or boatman, or bailiff, whichever
+he be, has been up here with a present of seakale this morning. Give him
+something as you pass the kitchen; and you, Mr. Withering, whose trade
+it is to read and unravel mysteries, explain if you can the meaning of
+this unwonted generosity."
+
+"I suppose we can all guess it," said he, laughing. "It's a custom that
+begins in the East and goes round the whole world till it reaches the
+vast prairie in the Far West."
+
+"And what can that custom be, Aunt Dinah?" asked Josephine, innocently.
+
+"It's an ancient rite Mr. Withering speaks, of, child, pertaining to the
+days when men offered sacrifices. Come along; I 'm going!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. CROSS-EXAMININGS.
+
+While Barrington and his lawyer sat in conclave over the details of the
+great suit, Stapylton hurried along his road with all the speed he could
+summon. The way, which for some miles led along the river-side, brought
+into view M'Cormick's cottage, and the Major himself, as he stood
+listlessly at his door.'
+
+Halting his carriage for a moment, Stapylton jumped out and drew nigh
+the little quickset hedge which flanked the road.
+
+"What can I do for you in the neighborhood of Manchester, Major? We are
+just ordered off there to ride down the Radicals."
+
+"I wish it was nearer home you were going to do it," said he, crankily.
+"Look here,"--and he pointed to some fresh-turned earth,--"they were
+stealing my turnips last night."
+
+"It would appear that these fellows in the North are growing dangerous,"
+said Stapylton.
+
+"'T is little matter to us," said M'Cormick, sulkily. "I'd care more
+about a blight in the potatoes than for all the politics in Europe."
+
+"A genuine philosopher! How snug you are here, to be sure! A man in a
+pleasant nook like this can well afford to smile at the busy ambitions
+of the outer world. I take it you are about the very happiest fellow I
+know?"
+
+"Maybe I am, maybe I'm not," said he, peevishly.
+
+"This spot only wants what I hinted to you t'other evening, to be
+perfection."
+
+"Ay!" said the other, dryly.
+
+"And you agree with me heartily, if you had the candor to say it. Come,
+out with it, man, at once. I saw your gardener this morning with a great
+basketful of greenery, and a large bouquet on the top of it,--are not
+these significant signs of a projected campaign? You are wrong, Major,
+upon my life you are wrong, not to be frank with me. I could, by a
+strange hazard, as the newspapers say, 'tell you something to your
+advantage.'"
+
+"About what?"
+
+"About the very matter you were thinking of as I drove up. Come, I will
+be more generous than you deserve." And, laying his arm on M'Cormick's
+shoulder, he halt whispered in his ear; "It is a good thing,--a deuced
+good thing! and I promise you, if I were a marrying man, you 'd have a
+competitor. I won't say she 'll have one of the great fortunes people
+rave about, but it will be considerable,--very considerable."
+
+"How do you know, or what do you know?"
+
+"I 'll tell you in three words. How I know is, because I have been the
+channel for certain inquiries they made in India. What I know is, the
+Directors are sick of the case, they are sorely ashamed of it, and not a
+little uneasy lest it should come before the public, perhaps before the
+Parliament. Old Barrington has made all negotiation difficult by the
+extravagant pretensions he puts forward about his son's honor, and so
+forth. If, however, the girl were married, her husband would be
+the person to treat with, and I am assured with him they would deal
+handsomely, even generously."
+
+"And why would n't all this make a marrying man of you, though you were
+n't before?"
+
+"There's a slight canonical objection, if you must know," said
+Stapylton, with a smile.
+
+"Oh, I perceive,--a wife already! In India, perhaps?"
+
+"I have no time just now for a long story, M'Cormick," said he,
+familiarly, "nor am I quite certain I 'd tell it if I had. However, you
+know enough for all practical purposes, and I repeat to you this is a
+stake I can't enter for,--you understand me?"
+
+"There's another thing, now," said M'Cormick; "and as we are talking so
+freely together, there's no harm in mentioning it. It 's only the other
+day, as I may call it, that we met for the first time?"
+
+"Very true: when I was down here at Cobham."
+
+"And never heard of each other before?"
+
+"Not to my knowledge, certainly."
+
+"That being the case, I 'm curious to hear how you took this wonderful
+interest in me. It wasn't anything in my appearance, I 'm sure, nor my
+manner; and as to what you 'd hear about me among those blackguards down
+here, there's nothing too bad to say of me."
+
+"I'll be as frank as yourself," said Stapylton, boldly; "you ask for
+candor, and you shall have it. I had n't talked ten minutes with you
+till I saw that you were a thorough man of the world; the true old
+soldier, who had seen enough of life to know that whatever one gets for
+nothing in this world is just worth nothing, and so I said to myself,
+'If it ever occurs to me to chance upon a good opportunity of which I
+cannot from circumstances avail myself, there's my man. I'll go to him
+and say, "M'Cormick, that's open to you, there's a safe thing!" And when
+in return he 'd say, "Stapylton, what can I do for you?" my answer would
+be, "Wait till you are satisfied that I have done you a good turn; be
+perfectly assured that I have really served you." And then, if I
+wanted a loan of a thousand or fifteen hundred to lodge for the
+Lieutenant-Colonelcy, I 'd not be ashamed to say, "M'Cormick, let me
+have so much."'"
+
+"That's _it_, is it?" said M'Cormick, with a leer of intense cunning.
+"Not a bad bargain for _you_, anyhow. It is not every day that a man can
+sell what is n't his own."
+
+"I might say, it's not every day that a man regards a possible loan as
+a gift, but I 'm quite ready to reassure all your fears on that score;
+I'll even pledge myself never to borrow a shilling from you."
+
+"Oh, I don't mean that; you took me up so quick," said the old fellow,
+reddening with a sense of shame he had not felt for many a year. "I may
+be as stingy as they call me, but for all that I 'd stand to a man who
+stands to _me_."
+
+"Between gentlemen and men of the world these things are better left
+to a sense of an honorable understanding than made matters of compact.
+There is no need of another word on the matter. I shall be curious,
+however, to know how your project speeds. Write to me,--you have plenty
+of time,--and write often. I 'm not unlikely to learn something about
+the Indian claim, and if I do, you shall hear of it."
+
+"I'm not over good at pen and ink work; indeed, I haven't much practice,
+but I'll do my best."
+
+"Do, by all means. Tell me how you get on with Aunt Dinah, who, I
+suspect, has no strong affection for either of us. Don't be precipitate;
+hazard nothing by a rash step; secure your way by intimacy, mere
+intimacy: avoid particular attentions strictly; be always there, and on
+some pretext or other--But why do I say all this to an old soldier, who
+has made such sieges scores of times?"
+
+"Well, I think I see my way clear enough," said the old fellow, with a
+grin. "I wish I was as sure I knew why you take such an interest in me."
+
+"I believe I have told you already; I hope there is nothing so strange
+in the assurance as to require corroboration. Come, I must say
+good-bye; I meant to have said five words to you, and I have stayed here
+five-and-twenty minutes."
+
+"Would n't you take something?--could n't I offer you anything?" said
+M'Cormick, hesitatingly.
+
+"Nothing, thanks. I lunched before I started; and although old Dinah
+made several assaults upon me while I ate, I managed to secure two
+cutlets and part of a grouse-pie, and a rare glass of Madeira to wash
+them down."
+
+"That old woman is dreadful, and I'll take her down a peg yet, as sure
+as my name is Dan."
+
+"No, don't, Major; don't do anything of the kind. The people who tame
+tigers are sure to get scratched at last, and nobody thanks them for
+their pains. Regard her as the sailors do a fire-ship; give her a wide
+berth, and steer away from her."
+
+"Ay, but she sometimes gives chase."
+
+"Strike your flag, then, if it must be; for, trust me, you 'll not
+conquer _her_."
+
+"We 'll see, we 'll see," muttered the old fellow, as he waved his
+adieux, and then turned back into the house again.
+
+As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering
+a malediction on the "dear friend" he had just parted with. When the
+_bourgeois gentilhomme_ objected to his adversary pushing him _en
+tierce_ while he attacked him _en quarte_, he was expressing a great
+social want, applicable to those people who in conversation will persist
+in saying many things which ought not to be uttered, and expressing
+doubts and distrusts which, however it be reasonable to feel, are an
+outrage to avow.
+
+"The old fox," said Stapylton, aloud, "taunted me with selling what did
+not belong to me; but he never suspects that I have bought something
+without paying for it, and that something himself! Yes, the mock siege
+he will lay to the fortress will occupy the garrison till it suits me
+to open the real attack, and I will make use of him, besides, to learn
+whatever goes on in my absence. How the old fellow swallowed the bait!
+What self-esteem there must be in such a rugged nature, to make him
+imagine he could be successful in a cause like this! He is, after all,
+a clumsy agent to trust one's interest to. If the choice had been given
+me, I'd far rather have had a woman to watch over them. Polly Dill, for
+instance, the very girl to understand such a mission well. How adroitly
+would she have played the game, and how clearly would her letters have
+shown me the exact state of events!"
+
+Such were the texts of his musings as he drove along, and deep as were
+his thoughts, they never withdrew him, when the emergency called,
+from attention to every detail of the journey, and he scrutinized the
+post-horses as they were led out, and apportioned the rewards to the
+postilions as though no heavier care lay on his heart than the road and
+its belongings. While he rolled thus smoothly along, Peter Barrington
+had been summoned to his sister's presence, to narrate in full all that
+he had asked, and all that he had learned of Stapylton and his fortunes.
+
+Miss Dinah was seated in a deep armchair, behind a formidable
+embroidery-frame,--a thing so complex and mysterious in form as to
+suggest an implement of torture. At a short distance off sat Withering,
+with pen, ink, and paper before him, as if to set down any details of
+unusual importance; and into this imposing presence poor Barrington
+entered with a woful sense of misgiving and humiliation.
+
+"We have got a quiet moment at last, Peter," said Miss Barrington. "I
+have sent the girls over to Brown's Barn for the tulip-roots, and I have
+told Darby that if any visitors came they were to be informed we were
+particularly occupied by business, and could see no one."
+
+"Just so," added Withering; "it is a case before the Judge in Chamber."
+
+"But what have we got to hear?" asked Barrington, with an air of
+innocence.
+
+"We have got to hear your report, brother Peter; the narrative of your
+late conversation with Major Stapylton; given, as nearly as your memory
+will serve, in the exact words and in the precise order everything
+occurred."
+
+"October the twenty-third," said Withering, writing as he spoke; "minute
+of interview between P. B. and Major S. Taken on the same morning it
+occurred, with remarks and observations explanatory."
+
+"Begin," said Dinah, imperiously, while she worked away without lifting
+her head. "And avoid, so far as possible, anything beyond the precise
+expression employed."
+
+"But you don't suppose I took notes in shorthand of what we said to each
+other, do you?"
+
+"I certainly suppose you can have retained in your memory a conversation
+that took place two hours ago," said Miss Dinah, sternly.
+
+"And can relate it circumstantially and clearly," added Withering.
+
+"Then I 'm very sorry to disappoint you, but I can do nothing of the
+kind."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you had no interview with Major Stapylton,
+Peter?"
+
+"Or that you have forgotten all about it?" said Withering.
+
+"Or is it that you have taken a pledge of secrecy, brother Peter?"
+
+"No, no, no! It is simply this, that though I retain a pretty fair
+general impression of what I said myself, and what he said afterwards,
+I could no more pretend to recount it accurately than I could say off by
+heart a scene in 'Romeo and Juliet.'"
+
+"Why don't you take the 'Comedy of Errors' for your illustration, Peter
+Barrington? I ask you, Mr. Withering, have you in all your experience
+met anything like this?"
+
+"It would go hard with a man in the witness-box to make such a
+declaration, I must say."
+
+"What would a jury think of, what would a judge say to him?" said she,
+using the most formidable of all penalties to her brother's imagination.
+"Wouldn't the court tell him that he would be compelled to speak out?"
+
+"They'd have it out on the cross-examination, at all events, if not on
+the direct."
+
+"In the name of confusion, what do you want with me?" exclaimed Peter,
+in despair.
+
+"We want everything,--everything that you heard about this man. Who he
+is, what he is; what by the father's side, what by the mother's; what
+are his means, and where; who knows him, who are his associates. Bear in
+mind that to us, here, he has dropped out of the clouds."
+
+"And gone back there too," added Withering.
+
+"I wish to Heaven he had taken me with him!" sighed Peter, drearily.
+
+"I think in this case, Miss Barrington," said Withering, with a
+well-affected gravity, "we had better withdraw a juror, and accept a
+nonsuit."
+
+"I have done with it altogether," said she, gathering up her worsted and
+her needles, and preparing to leave the room.
+
+"My dear Dinah," said Barrington, entreatingly, "imagine a man as
+wanting in tact as I am,--and as timid, too, about giving casual
+offence,--conducting such an inquiry as you committed to my hands. Fancy
+how, at every attempt to obtain information, his own boldness, I might
+call it rudeness, stared him in the face, till at last, rather than
+push his investigations, he grew puzzled how to apologize for his prying
+curiosity."
+
+"Brother, brother, this is too bad! It had been better to have thought
+more of your granddaughter's fate and less of your own feelings." And
+with this she flounced out of the room, upsetting a spider-table, and a
+case of stuffed birds that stood on it, as she passed.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+"I don't doubt but she 's right, Tom," said Peter, when the door closed.
+
+"Did he not tell you who he was, and what his fortune? Did you really
+learn nothing from him?"
+
+"He told me everything; and if I had not been so cruelly badgered, I
+could have repeated every word of it; but you never made a hound true to
+the scent by flogging him, Tom,--is n't that a fact, eh?" And consoled
+by an illustration that seemed so pat to his case, he took his hat and
+strolled out into the garden.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. GENERAL CONYERS
+
+In a snug little room of the Old Ship Hotel, at Dover, a large, heavy
+man, with snow-white hair, and moustaches,--the latter less common in
+those days than the present,--sat at table with a younger one, so like
+him that no doubt could have existed as to their being father and son.
+They had dined, and were sitting over their wine, talking occasionally,
+but oftener looking fondly and affectionately at each other; and once,
+by an instinct of sudden love, grasping each other's hand, and sitting
+thus several minutes without a word on either side.
+
+"You did not expect me before to-morrow, Fred," said the old man, at
+last.
+
+"No, father," replied young Conyers. "I saw by the newspapers that you
+were to dine at the Tuileries on Tuesday, and I thought you would not
+quit Paris the same evening."
+
+"Yes; I started the moment I took off my uniform. I wanted to be with
+you, my boy; and the royal politeness that detained me was anything but
+a favor. How you have grown, Fred,--almost my own height, I believe."
+
+"The more like you the better," said the youth, as his eyes ran over,
+and the old man turned away to hide his emotion.
+
+After a moment he said: "How strange you should not have got my letters,
+Fred; but, after all, it is just as well as it is. I wrote in a very
+angry spirit, and was less just than a little cool reflection might have
+made me. They made no charges against me, though I thought they had.
+There were grumblings and discontents, and such-like. They called me a
+Rajah, and raked up all the old stories they used to circulate once on a
+time about a far better fellow--"
+
+"You mean Colonel Barrington, don't you?" said Fred.
+
+"Where or how did you hear of that name?" said the old man, almost
+sternly.
+
+"An accident made me the guest of his family, at a little cottage they
+live in on an hish river. I passed weeks there, and, through the favor
+of the name I bore, I received more kindness than I ever before met in
+life."
+
+"And they knew you to be a Conyers, and to be my son?"
+
+"It was Colonel Barrington's aunt was my hostess, and she it was who,
+on hearing my name, admitted me at once to all the privileges of old
+friendship. She told me of the close companionship which once subsisted
+between you and her nephew, and gave me rolls of his letters to read
+wherein every line spoke of you."
+
+"And Mr. Barrington, the father of George, how did he receive you?"
+
+"At first with such coolness that I could n't bring myself to recross
+his threshold. He had been away from home when I arrived, and the day
+of his return I was unexpectedly presented to him by his sister, who
+evidently was as unprepared as myself for the reception I met with."
+
+"And what was that reception,--how was it? Tell me all as it happened."
+
+"It was the affair of a moment. Miss Barrington introduced me, saying,
+'This is the son of poor George's dearest friend,--this is a Conyers;'
+and the old man faltered, and seemed like to faint, and after a moment
+stammered out something about an honor he had never counted upon,--a
+visit he scarcely could have hoped for; and, indeed, so overcome was he
+that he staggered into the house only to take to his bed, where he lay
+seriously ill for several days after."
+
+"Poor fellow! It was hard to forgive,--very hard."
+
+"Ay, but he has forgiven it--whatever it was--heartily, and wholly
+forgiven it. We met afterwards by a chance in Germany, and while I was
+hesitating how to avoid a repetition of the painful scene which marked
+our first meeting, he came manfully towards me with his hand out, and
+said, 'I have a forgiveness to beg of you; and if you only know how I
+long to obtain it, you would scarce say me no.'"
+
+"The worthy father of poor George! I think I hear him speak the very
+words himself. Go on, Fred,--go on, and tell me further."
+
+"There is no more to tell, sir, unless I speak of all the affectionate
+kindness he has shown,--the trustfulness and honor with which he has
+treated me. I have been in his house like his own son."
+
+"Ah! if you had known that son! If you had seen what a type of a soldier
+he was! The most intrepid, the boldest fellow that ever breathed; but
+with a heart of childlike simplicity and gentleness. I could tell
+you traits of him, of his forbearance, his forgiveness, his generous
+devotion to friendship, that would seem to bespeak a nature that had no
+room for other than soft and tender emotion; and yet, if ever there was
+a lion's heart within a man's bosom it was his." For a moment or two
+the old man seemed overcome by his recollections, and then, as if by an
+effort, rallying himself, he went on: "You have often heard the adage,
+Fred, that enjoins watching one's pennies and leaving the pounds to take
+care of themselves; and yet, trust me, the maxim is truer as applied
+to our morals than our money. It is by the smaller, finer, and least
+important traits of a man that his fate in life is fashioned. The
+caprices we take no pains to curb, the tempers we leave unchecked, the
+petty indulgences we extend to our vanity and self-love,--these are the
+great sands that wreck us far oftener than the more stern and formidable
+features of our character. I ought to know this truth; I myself lost the
+best and truest and the noblest friend that ever man had, just from the
+exercise of a spirit of bantering and ridicule which amused those about
+me, and gave me that pre-eminence which a sarcastic and witty spirit
+is sure to assert. You know already how George Barrington and I lived
+together like brothers. I do not believe two men ever existed more
+thoroughly and sincerely attached to each other. All the contrarieties
+of our dispositions served but to heighten the interest that linked us
+together. As for myself, I was never wearied in exploring the strange
+recesses of that great nature that seemed to unite all that could be
+daring and dashing in man with the tenderness of a woman. I believe I
+knew him far better than he knew himself. But to come to what I wanted
+to tell you, and which is an agony to me to dwell on. Though for a long
+while our close friendship was known in the regiment, and spoken of as a
+thing incapable of change, a sort of rumor--no, not even a rumor, but an
+impression--seemed to gain, that the ties between us were looser on my
+side than his; that George looked up to _me_, and that I, with the pride
+of a certain superiority, rather lorded it over _him_. This feeling
+became painfully strengthened when it got about that Barrington had lent
+me the greater part of the purchase-money for my troop,--a promotion, by
+the way, which barred his own advancement,--and it was whispered, so
+at least I heard, that Barrington was a mere child in my hands, whom I
+rebuked or rewarded at pleasure. If I could have traced these rumors to
+any direct source, I could have known how to deal with them. As it was,
+they were vague, shadowy, and unreal; and their very unsubstantiality
+maddened me the more. To have told George of them would have been rasher
+still. The thought of a wrong done to _me_ would have driven him beyond
+all reason, and he would infallibly have compromised himself beyond
+recall. It was the very first time in my life I had a secret from him,
+and it eat into my heart like a virulent disease. The consciousness that
+I was watched, the feeling that eyes were upon me marking all I did, and
+tongues were commenting on all I said, exasperated me, and at one moment
+I would parade my friendship for Barrington in a sort of spirit of
+defiance, and at another, as though to give the lie to my slanderers,
+treat him with indifference and carelessness, as it were, to show that I
+was not bound to him by the weight of a direct obligation, and that our
+relations involved nothing of dependence. It was when, by some cruel
+mischance, I had been pursuing this spirit to its extreme, that the
+conversation one night at mess turned upon sport and tiger-hunting.
+Many stories were told, of course, and we had the usual narratives of
+hairbreadth escapes and perils of the most appalling kind; till, at
+length, some one--I forget exactly who it was--narrated a single-handed
+encounter with a jaguar, which in horror exceeded anything we had heard
+before. The details were alone not so terrible, but the circumstances so
+marvellous, that one and all who listened cried out, 'Who did it?'
+
+"'The man who told me the tale,' replied the narrator, 'and who will
+probably be back to relate it here to you in a few days,--Colonel
+Barrington.'
+
+"I have told you the devilish spirit which had me in possession. I have
+already said that I was in one of those moods of insolent mockery in
+which nothing was sacred to me. No sooner, then, did I hear Barrington's
+name than I burst into a hearty laugh, and said, 'Oh! if it was one of
+George Barrington's tigers, you ought to have mentioned that fact at the
+outset. You have been exciting our feelings unfairly.'
+
+"'I assume that his statement was true,' said the other, gravely.
+
+"'Doubtless; just as battle-pieces are true, that is, pic-torially
+true. The tiger did nothing that a tiger ought not to do, nor did George
+transgress any of those "unities" which such combats require. At the
+same time, Barring-ton's stories have always a something about them that
+stamps the authorship, and you recognize this trait just as you do a
+white horse in a picture by Wouvermans.'
+
+"In this strain I went on, heated by my own warmed imagination, and the
+approving laughter of those around me. I recounted more than one feat
+of Barrington's,--things which I knew he had done, some of them almost
+incredible in boldness. These I told with many a humorous addition and
+many an absurd commentary, convulsing the listeners with laughter, and
+rendering my friend ridiculous.
+
+"He came back from the hills within the week, and before he was two
+hours in his quarters he had heard the whole story. We were at luncheon
+in the mess-room when he entered, flushed and excited, but far more
+moved by emotion than resentment.
+
+"'Ormsby,' said he, 'you may laugh at me to your heart's content and
+I'll never grumble at it; but there are some young officers here who,
+not knowing the ties that attach us, may fancy that these quizzings
+pass the limits of mere drollery, and even jeopardize something of my
+truthfulness. _You_, I know, never meant this any more than I have felt
+it, but others might, and might, besides, on leaving this and sitting at
+other tables, repeat what they had heard here. Tell them that you spoke
+of me as you have a free right to do, in jest, and that your ridicule
+was the good-humored banter of a friend,--of a friend who never did,
+never could, impugn my honor.'
+
+"His eyes were swimming over, and his lips trembling, as he uttered the
+last words. I see him now, as he stood there, his very cheek shaking
+in agitation. That brave, bold fellow, who would have marched up to a
+battery without quailing, shook like a sickly girl.
+
+"'Am I to say that you never draw the long-bow, George?' asked I, half
+insolently.
+
+"'You are to say, sir, that I never told a lie,' cried he, dark with
+passion.
+
+"'Oh, this discussion will be better carried on elsewhere,' said I, as I
+arose and left the room.
+
+"As I was in the wrong, totally in the wrong, I was passionate and
+headstrong. I sat down and wrote a most insolent letter to Barrington. I
+turned all the self-hate that was consuming _me_ against my friend, and
+said I know not what of outrage and insult. I did worse; I took a copy
+of my letter, and declared that I would read it to the officers in the
+mess-room. He sent a friend to me to beg I would not take this course of
+open insult. My answer was, 'Colonel Barrington knows his remedy.' When
+I sent this message, I prepared for what I felt certain would follow. I
+knew Barrington so well that I thought even the delay of an hour, then
+two hours, strange. At length evening drew nigh, and, though I sat
+waiting in my quarters, no one came from him,--not a letter nor a line
+apprised me what course he meant to take.
+
+"Not caring to meet the mess at such a moment, I ordered my horses and
+drove up to a small station about twenty miles off, leaving word where
+I was to be found. I passed three days there in a state of fevered
+expectancy. Barrington made no sign, and, at length, racked and
+distressed by the conflict with myself,--now summoning up an insolent
+spirit of defiance to the whole world, now humbling myself in a
+consciousness of the evil line I had adopted,--I returned one night to
+my quarters. The first news that greeted me was that Barrington had left
+us. He had accepted the offer of a Native command which had been made to
+him some months before, and of which we had often canvassed together
+all the advantages and disadvantages. I heard that he had written
+two letters to me before he started, and torn them up after they were
+sealed. I never heard from him, never saw him more, till I saw his dead
+body carried into camp the morning he fell.
+
+"I must get to the end of this quickly, Fred, and I will tell you all at
+once, for it is a theme I will never go back on. I came to England with
+despatches about two years after Barrington's death. It was a hurried
+visit, for I was ordered to hold myself in readiness to return almost
+as soon as I arrived. I was greatly occupied, going about from place
+to place, and person to person, so many great people desired to have a
+verbal account of what was doing in India, and to hear confidentially
+what I thought of matters there. In the midst of the mass of letters
+which the post brought me every morning, and through which, without the
+aid of an officer on the staff, I could never have got through, there
+came one whose singular address struck me. It was to 'Captain Ormsby
+Conyers, 22d Light Dragoons,' a rank I had held fourteen years before
+that time in that same regiment. I opined at once that my correspondent
+must have been one who had known me at that time and not followed me
+in the interval. I was right. It was from old Mr. Barrington,--George
+Barrington's father. What version of my quarrel with his son could have
+reached him, I cannot even guess, nor by what light he read my conduct
+in the affair; but such a letter I never read in my life. It was a
+challenge to meet him anywhere, and with any weapon, but couched in
+language so insulting as to impugn my courage, and hint that I would
+probably shelter myself behind the pretext of his advanced age. 'But
+remember,' said he, 'if God has permitted me to be an old man, it is
+_you_ who have made me a childless one!'"
+
+For a few seconds he paused, overcome by emotion, and then went on:
+"I sat down and wrote him a letter of contrition, almost abject in its
+terms. I entreated him to believe that for every wrong I had done his
+noble-hearted son, my own conscience had repaid me in misery ten times
+told; that if he deemed my self-condemnation insufficient, it was open
+to him to add to it whatever he wished of obloquy or shame; that if he
+proclaimed me a coward before the world, and degraded me in the eyes of
+men, I would not offer one word in my defence. I cannot repeat all that
+I said in my deep humiliation. His answer came at last, one single line,
+re-enclosing my own letter to me: 'Lest I should be tempted to make use
+of this letter, I send it back to you; there is no need of more between
+us.'
+
+"With this our intercourse ceased. When a correspondence was published
+in the 'Barrington Inquiry,' as it was called, I half hoped he would
+have noticed some letters of mine about George; but he never did, and in
+his silence I thought I read his continued unforgiveness."
+
+"I hope, father, that you never believed the charges that were made
+against Captain Barrington?"
+
+"Not one of them; disloyalty was no more his than cowardice. I never
+knew the Englishman with such a pride of country as he had, nor could
+you have held out a greater bribe to him, for any achievement of peril,
+than to say, 'What a gain it would be for England!'"
+
+"How was it that such a man should have had a host of enemies?"
+
+"Nothing so natural. Barrington was the most diffident of men; his
+bashfulness amounted to actual pain. With strangers, this made him
+cold to very sternness, or, as is often seen in the effort to conquer
+a natural defect, gave him a manner of over-easy confidence that looked
+like impertinence. And thus the man who would not have wounded the
+self-love of the meanest beggar, got the reputation of being haughty,
+insolent, and oppressive. Besides this, when he was in the right, and
+felt himself so, he took no pains to convince others of the fact. His
+maxim was,--have I not heard it from his lips scores of times,--'The end
+will show.'"
+
+"And yet the end will not show, father; his fame has not been
+vindicated, nor his character cleared."
+
+"In some measure the fault of those who took up his cause. They seemed
+less to insist on reparation than punishment. They did not say, 'Do
+justice to this man's memory;' but, 'Come forward and own you wronged
+him, and broke his heart.' Now, the accusation brought against George
+Barrington of assuming sovereign power was not settled by his death;
+his relatives forgot this, or merged it in their own charge against the
+Company. They mismanaged everything."
+
+"Is it too late to put them on the right track, father; or could you do
+it?" asked the youth, eagerly.
+
+"It is not too late, boy! There is time for it yet. There is, however,
+one condition necessary, and I do not see how that is to be secured."
+
+"And what is that?"
+
+"I should see Mr. Barrington and confer with him alone; he must admit me
+to his confidence, and I own to you, I scarcely deem that possible."
+
+"May I try--may I attempt this?"
+
+"I do not like to refuse you, Fred: but if I say Yes, it will be to
+include you in my own defeated hopes. For many a year Mr. Barrington
+has refused to give one sign of his forgiveness; for in his treatment of
+you I only recognize the honorable feeling of exempting the son from
+the penalty due to the father. But perhaps defeat is better than
+self-reproach, and as I have a strong conviction I could serve him, I am
+ready to risk a failure."
+
+"I may make the attempt, then?" said Fred, eagerly. "I will write to
+Miss Barrington to-day."
+
+"And now of yourself. What of your career? How do you like soldiering,
+boy?"
+
+"Less than ever, sir; it is only within the last week or two that we
+have seen anything beyond barrack or parade duty. Now, however, we have
+been called to repress what are called risings in the northern shires;
+and our task has been to ride at large unarmed mobs and charge down
+masses, whose grape-shot are brickbats. Not a very glorious campaign!"
+
+The old man smiled, but said nothing for a moment.
+
+"Your colonel is on leave, is he not?" asked he.
+
+"Yes. We are commanded by that Major Stapylton I told you of."
+
+"A smart officer, but no friend of yours, Fred," said the General,
+smiling.
+
+"No, sir; certainly no friend of mine," said the young man, resolutely.
+"To refuse me a week's leave to go and meet my father, whom I have not
+seen for years, and, when pressed, to accord me four days, is to disgust
+me with himself and the service together."
+
+"Well, as you cannot be my guest, Fred, I will be yours. I 'll go back
+with you to headquarters. Stapylton is a name I used to be familiar with
+long ago. It may turn out that I know his family; but let us talk of
+Barrington. I have been thinking it would be better not to link any
+question of his own interests with my desire to meet him, but simply to
+say I 'm in England, and wish to know if he would receive me."
+
+"It shall be as you wish, sir. I will write to his sister by this post."
+
+"And after one day in town, Fred, I am ready to accompany you anywhere."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. MAJOR M'CORMICK'S LETTER
+
+As it was not often that Major M'Cormick performed the part of a
+letter-writer, perhaps my reader will pardon me if I place him before
+him on one of these rare occasions. If success would always respond to
+labor, his would have been a real triumph; for the effort cost him many
+days, two sleepless nights, a headache, and half a quire of paper.
+
+Had not Stapylton retained him by an admirably selected hamper of good
+things from a celebrated Italian warehouse in the Strand, I am
+afraid that M'Cormick's zeal might have cooled down to the zero of
+forgetfulness; but the reindeer hams and the Yarmouth bloaters, the
+potted shrimps and the preserved guavas, were an appeal that addressed
+themselves to that organ which with him paid the double debt of
+digestion and emotion. He felt that such a correspondent was worth a
+sacrifice, and he made it That my reader may appreciate the cost of the
+achievement, I would have him imagine how a mason about to build a wall
+should be obliged to examine each stone before he laid it, test its
+constituent qualities, its shape and its size,--for it was thus that
+almost every word occasioned the Major a reference to the dictionary,
+spelling not having been cultivated in his youth, nor much practised in
+his riper years. Graces of style, however, troubled him little; and,
+to recur to my figure of the stone-mason, if he was embarrassed in
+his search for the materials, he cared wonderfully little for the
+architecture. His letter ran thus, and the reader will perceive that it
+must have been written some weeks after the events recorded in the last
+chapter:--
+
+"Mac's Nest, October, Thursday.
+
+"Dear S.,--A touch of my old Walcheren complaint has laid me up since
+Tuesday, and if the shakes make me illegible now, that's the reason
+why. Besides this the weather is dreadful; cold east winds and rains,
+sometimes sleet, every day; and the turf so wet, it 's only smoke, not
+fire. I believe it is the worst climate in Europe, and it gets wetter
+every year.
+
+"The hamper came to hand, but though it was marked 'Carriage paid, this
+side up,' they upset it and broke two bottles, and charged seven and
+fourpence-halfpenny for the bringing it, which is, I think, enormous; at
+least, Tim Hacket got over a thrashing-machine from Scotland last spring
+for twelve and four, and there 's no comparison between the two. Thanks
+to you, however, all the same; but if you can get any of this charge
+reduced, so much the better, not to speak of the bottles,--both mixed
+pickles--which they ought to make good.
+
+"I am glad to see you are touching up the Radicals in the North;
+powder and ball will do more to bring them to reason than spouting
+in Parliament. The papers say there was nine killed and twenty-three
+wounded; and one fellow, the 'Stockport Bee,' says, that 'if the Butcher
+that led the dragoons is n't turned out of the service with disgrace no
+gentleman will degrade himself by entering the army.' Isn't the Butcher
+yourself? Miss Barrington, always your friend, says it is; and that if
+the account of another paper, called the 'gis,' be true, you 'll have
+to go to a court-martial. I stood stoutly to you through it all, and
+declared that when the niggers was up at Jamaica, we had n't time to
+take the names of the prisoners, and we always cut one of their ears off
+to know them again. Old Peter laughed till the tears ran down his face,
+but Dinah said, 'If I did not suppose, sir, that you were inventing a
+very graceless joke, I'd insist on your leaving this room and this house
+on the instant.' It was ten o'clock at night, and raining hard; so you
+may guess I gave in. Bad as she is, the young one is her equal, and
+I gave up all thoughts of what you call 'prosecuting my suit' in that
+quarter. She isn't even commonly civil to me, and when I ask her for,
+maybe, the mustard at dinner, she turns away her head, and says, 'Darby,
+give Major M'Cormick the salt.' That's French politeness, perhaps; but
+I'll pay them all off yet, for they can't get sixpence on the mortgage,
+and I 'm only drinking out that bin of old Madeira before I tell them
+that I won't advance the money. Why should I? The women treat me worse
+than a dog, and old B. is neither more nor less than a fool. Dill, the
+doctor, however he got it, says it's all up about the suit with the
+India Company; that there's no proof of the Colonel's marriage at all,
+that the charges against him were never cleared up, and that nothing can
+come out of it but more disgrace and more exposure.
+
+"I wish you 'd send me the correct account of what took place between
+you and one of your subalterns, for old Dinah keeps harping on it in a
+sort of mysterious and mischievous way of her own, that provokes me. Was
+it that he refused to obey orders, or that _you_, as _she_ says, used
+such language towards him that he wrote to report you? Give it to me
+in black and white, and maybe I won't try her temper with it. At
+all events, make out some sort of a case, for the old woman is now
+intolerable. She said yesterday, 'Major Stapylton, to whom I write
+by this post, will see that his visit here must be preceded by an
+explanation.' There's her words for you, and I hope you like them!
+
+"I think you are right to be in no hurry about purchasing, for many
+say the whole system will be changed soon, and the money would be clean
+thrown away. Besides this, I have been looking over my bauk-book, and
+I find I could n't help you just now. Two bad harvests, and the smut in
+the wheat last year, are running me mighty close. I won't finish this
+till to-morrow, for I 'm going to dine at 'The Home' to-day. It is the
+granddaughter's birthday, and there was a regular shindy about who was
+going to be asked. Old Peter was for a grand celebration, and inviting
+the Admiral, and the Gores, and God knows who besides; and Dinah was for
+what she called a family party, consisting, I suppose, of herself and
+Darby. I 'll be able, before I close this, to tell you how it was ended;
+for I only know now that Dill and his daughter are to be there.
+
+"Wednesday.--I sit down with a murdering headache to finish this letter.
+Maybe it was the pickled lobster, or the ice punch, or the other drink
+they called champagne-cup that did it. But I never passed such a night
+since I was in the trenches, and I am shaking still, so that I can
+scarce hold the pen. It was a grand dinner, to be sure, for ruined
+people to give. Venison from Carrick Woods, and game of every kind, with
+all kinds of wine; and my Lord Car-rickmore talking to Miss Dinah, and
+the Admiral following up with the niece, and Tom Brabazon, and Dean of
+Deanspark, and the devil knows who besides, bringing up the rear, with
+Dill and your obedient servant. Every dish that came in, and every
+bottle that was uncorked, I said to myself, 'There goes another strap on
+the property;' and I felt as if we were eating the trees and the timber
+and the meadows all the time at table.
+
+"It 's little of the same sympathy troubled the others. My Lord was as
+jolly as if he was dining with the King; and old Cobham called for more
+of the Madeira, as if it was an inn; and Peter himself--the heartless
+old fool--when he got up to thank the company for drinking his
+granddaughter's health, said, 'May I trust that even at my advanced age
+this may not be the last time I may have to speak my gratitude to you
+all for the generous warmth with which you have pledged this toast; but
+even should it be so, I shall carry away with me from this evening's
+happiness a glow of pleasure that will animate me to the last. It
+was only this morning I learned what I know you will all hear with
+satisfaction, that there is every probability of a speedy arrangement of
+my long-pending suit with the Company, and that my child here will
+soon have her own again.' Grand applause and huzzas, with a noise that
+drowned 'Bother!' from myself, and in the middle of the row up jumps the
+Admiral, and cries out, 'Three cheers more for the Rajah's daughter!' I
+thought the old roof would come down; and the blackguards in the kitchen
+took up the cry and shouted like mad, and then we yelled again, and this
+went on for maybe five minutes. 'What does it all mean,' says I, 'but
+a cheer for the Court of Bankruptcy, and Hip, hip, hurray! for
+the Marshalsea Prison!' After that, he had half an hour or more of
+flatteries and compliments. My Lord was so happy, and Peter Barrington
+so proud, and the Admiral so delighted, and the rest of us so much
+honored, that I could n't stand it any longer, but stole away, and got
+into the garden, to taste a little fresh air and quietness. I had n't
+gone ten paces, when I came plump upon Miss Dinah, taking her coffee
+under a tree. 'You are a deserter, I fear, sir,' said she, in her own
+snappish way; so I thought I 'd pay her off, and I said, 'To tell you
+the truth, Miss Barrington, at our time of life these sort of things are
+more full of sadness than pleasure. We know how hollow they are, and how
+little heart there is in the cheers of the people that are so jolly
+over your wine, but would n't stop to talk to you when you came down to
+water!'
+
+"'The worse we think of the world, Major M'Cormick,' says she, 'the more
+risk we run of making ourselves mean enough to suit it.'
+
+"'I don't suspect, ma'am,' says I, 'that when people have known it so
+long as you and I, that they are greatly in love with it.'
+
+"'They may, however, be mannerly in their dealings with it, sir,' said
+she, fiercely; and so we drew the game, and settled the men for another
+battle.
+
+"'Is there anything new, ma'am?' says I, after a while.
+
+"'I believe not, sir. The bread riots still continue in the North, where
+what would seem the needless severity of some of the military commanders
+has only exasperated the people. You have heard, I suppose, of Major
+Stapylton's business?'
+
+"'Not a word, ma'am,' says I; 'for I never see a paper.'
+
+"'I know very little of the matter myself,' says she. 'It was, it would
+appear, at some night assemblage at a place called Lund's Common. A
+young officer sent forward by Major Stapylton to disperse the people,
+was so struck by the destitution and misery he witnessed, and the
+respectful attitude they exhibited, that he hesitated about employing
+force, and restricted himself to counsels of quietness and submission.
+He did more,--not perhaps very prudently, as some would say,--he
+actually emptied his pockets of all the money he had, giving even his
+watch to aid the starving horde before him. What precise version of
+his conduct reached his superior, I cannot say; but certainly Major
+Stapylton commented on it in terms of the harshest severity, and he even
+hinted at a reason for the forbearance too offensive for any soldier to
+endure.'
+
+"She did not seem exactly to know what followed after this, but some
+sort of inquiry appeared to take place, and witnesses were examined as
+to what really occurred at Lund's Common; and amongst others, a Lascar,
+who was one of the factory hands,--having come to England a great many
+years before with an officer from India. This fellow's evidence was
+greatly in favor of young Conyers, and was subjected to a very severe
+cross-examination from yourself, in the middle of which he said
+something in Hindostanee that nobody in the court understood but you;
+and after this he was soon dismissed and the case closed for that day.
+
+"'What do you think, Major M'Cormick,' said she, 'but when the court of
+inquiry opened the next morning, Lal-Adeen, the Lascar, was not to be
+found high or low. The court have suspended their sittings to search for
+him; but only one opinion prevails,--that Major Stapylton knows more of
+this man's escape than he is likely to tell.' I have taken great pains
+to give you her own very words in all this business, and I wrote them
+down the moment I got home, for I thought to myself you 'd maybe write
+about the matter to old Peter, and you ought to be prepared for the
+way they look at it; the more because Miss Dinah has a liking for young
+Conyers,--what she calls a motherly affection; but I don't believe in
+the motherly part of it! But of course you care very little what the
+people here say about you at all. At least, I know it would n't trouble
+_me_ much, if I was in your place. At all events, whatever you do,
+do with a high hand, and the Horse Guards is sure to stand to you.
+Moderation may be an elegant thing in civil life, but I never knew it
+succeed in the army. There's the rain coming on again, and I just sent
+out six cars to the bog for turf; so I must conclude, and remain, yours
+sincerely,
+
+"Daniel T. M'Cormick.
+
+"I 'm thinking of foreclosing the small mortgage I hold on 'The Home,'
+but as they pay the interest regularly, five per cent, I would n't do it
+if I knew things were going on reasonably well with them; send me a line
+about what is doing regarding the 'claim,' and it will guide me."
+
+While Major M'Cormick awaited the answer to his postscript, which to
+him--as to a lady--was the important part of his letter, a short note
+arrived at 'The Home' from Mr. Withering, enclosing a letter he had just
+received from Major Stapylton. Withering's communication was in answer
+to one from Barrington, and ran thus:--
+
+"Dear B.,--All things considered, I believe you are right in not
+receiving General Conyers at this moment. It would probably, as you
+suspect, enable calumnious people to say that you could make your
+resentments play second when they came in the way of your interests.
+If matters go on well, as I have every hope they will, you can make
+the _amende_ to him more satisfactorily and more gracefully hereafter.
+Buxton has at length consented to bring the case before the House;
+of course it will not go to a division, nor, if it did, could it be
+carried; but the discussion will excite interest, the Press will take
+it up, and after a few regretful and half-civil expressions from the
+Ministry, the India Board will see the necessity of an arrangement.
+
+"It is somewhat unfortunate and _mal propos_ that Stapylton should at
+this moment have got into an angry collision with young Conyers. I have
+not followed the case closely, but, as usual in such things, they seem
+each of them in the wrong,--the young sub wanting to make his generous
+sympathy supply the place of military obedience, and the old officer
+enforcing discipline at the cost of very harsh language. I learn this
+morning that Conyers has sold out, intending to demand a personal
+satisfaction. You will see by S.'s letter that he scarcely alludes to
+this part of the transaction at all. S. feels very painfully the attacks
+of the Press, and sees, perhaps, more forcibly than I should in his
+place, the necessity of an exchange. Read attentively the portion I have
+underlined."
+
+It is to this alone I have to direct my readers' attention, the first
+two sides of the letter being entirely filled with details about the
+"claim":--
+
+"'The newspapers have kept me before you for some days back, much more,
+I doubt not, to their readers' amusement than to my own gratification. I
+could, if I pleased, have told these slanderers that I did not charge a
+crowd of women and children,--that I did not cut down an elderly man
+at his own door-sill,--that I did not use language "offensive and
+unbecoming" to one of my officers, for his having remonstrated in the
+name of humanity against the cruelty of my orders. In a word, I might
+have shown the contemptible scribblers that I knew how to temper duty
+with discretion, as I shall know how, when the occasion offers, to make
+the punishment of a calumniator a terror to his colleagues. However,
+there is a very absurd story going about of a fellow whose insolence I
+certainly _did_ reply to with the flat of my sabre, and whom I should
+be but too happy to punish legally, if he could be apprehended. That he
+made his escape after being captured, and that I connived at or assisted
+in it,--I forget which,--you have probably heard. In fact, there is
+nothing too incredible to say of me for the moment; and what is worse,
+I begin to suspect that the Home Secretary, having rather burned his
+fingers in the business, will not be very sorry to make an Admiral
+Byng of a Major of Hussars. For each and all these reasons I mean to
+exchange, and, if possible, into a regiment in India. This will, of
+course, take some time; meanwhile, I have asked for and obtained some
+months' leave. You will be surprised at my troubling you with so much
+of purely personal matters, but they are the necessary preface to what
+I now come. You are aware of the letter I wrote some time back to Mr.
+Barrington, and the request it preferred. If the reply I received was
+not discouraging, neither was it conclusive. The ordinary commonplaces
+as to the shortness of our acquaintance, the want of sufficient
+knowledge of each other's tastes, characters, &c, were duly dwelt upon;
+but I could not at the end say, was I an accepted or a rejected suitor.
+Now that the critical moment of my life draws nigh,--for such I feel
+the present emergency,--an act of confidence in me would have more than
+double value. Can you tell me that this is the sentiment felt towards
+me, or am I to learn that the yells of a rabble have drowned the voices
+of my friends? In plain words, will Miss Josephine Barrington accept
+my offer? Will she intrust her happiness to my keeping, and change
+the darkest shadow that ever lowered over my life into a gleam of
+unspeakable brightness? You have given me too many proofs of a friendly
+disposition towards me, not to make me feel that you are the best fitted
+to bring this negotiation to a good issue. If I do not mistake you much,
+you look with favor on my suit and wish it success. I am ashamed to say
+how deeply my hopes have jeopardized my future happiness, but I tell you
+frankly life has no such prize to my ambition, nor, in fact, any such
+alternative of despair before me.'
+
+"Now, my dear Barrington," continued Withering's letter, "there is a
+great deal in this that I like, and something with which I am not so
+much pleased. If, however, I am not the Major's advocate to the extent
+he asks, or expects me, it is because I feel that to be unjustly dealt
+with is a stronger claim on _your_ heart than that of any other man I
+ever met with, and the real danger here would be that you should
+suffer that feeling to predominate over all others. Consult your
+granddaughter's interests, if you can, independently of this; reflect
+well if the plan be one likely to promise her happiness. Take your
+sensible, clear-headed sister into your counsels; but, above all,
+ascertain Josephine's own sentiments, and do nothing in direct
+opposition to them."
+
+"There, Dinah," said Barrington, placing the letter in her hands, "this
+is as much to your address as to mine. Read it over carefully, and
+you'll find me in the garden when you have done."
+
+Miss Barrington laid down her great roll of worsted work, and began
+her task without a word. She had not proceeded very far, however, when
+Josephine entered in search of a book. "I beg pardon, aunt, if I derange
+you."
+
+"We say disturb, or inconvenience, in English, Miss Barrington. What is
+it you are looking for?"
+
+"The 'Legend of Montrose,' aunt. I am so much amused by that Major
+Dalgetty that I can think of nothing but him."
+
+"Umph!" muttered the old lady. "It was of a character not altogether
+dissimilar I was thinking myself at that moment. Sit down here, child,
+and let me talk to you. This letter that I hold here, Josephine,
+concerns you."
+
+"Me, aunt--concerns _me?_ And who on earth could have written a letter
+in which I am interested?"
+
+"You shall hear it." She coughed only once or twice, and then went on:
+"It's a proposal of marriage,--no less. That gallant soldier who left
+us so lately has fallen in love with you,--so he says, and of course he
+knows best. He seems fully aware that, being older than you, and graver
+in temperament, his offer must come heralded with certain expressions
+almost apologetic; but he deals with the matter skillfully, and tells
+us that being well off as regards fortune, of good blood, and with fair
+prospects before him, he does not wish to regard his suit as hopeless.
+Your grandfather was minded to learn how you might feel disposed to
+accept his addresses by observing your demeanor, by watching what
+emotion mention of him might occasion, by seeing how far you felt
+interested in his good or ill repute. I did not agree with him. I am
+never for the long road when there is a short one, and therefore I mean
+to let you hear his letter. This is what he writes." While Miss Dinah
+read the extract which the reader has just seen, she never noticed, or,
+if noticed, never attended to, the agitation in her niece's manner, or
+seemed to remark that from a deep-crimson at first her cheeks grew pale
+as death, and her lips-tremulous. "There, child," said Miss Dinah, as
+she finished--"there are his own words; very ardent words, but withal
+respectful. What do you think of them,--of them and of him?"
+
+Josephine hung down her head, and with her hands firmly clasped
+together, she sat for a few moments so motionless that she seemed
+scarcely to breathe.
+
+"Would you like to think over this before you speak of it, Josephine?
+Would you like to take this letter to your room and ponder over it
+alone?" No answer came but a low, half-subdued sigh.
+
+"If you do not wish to make a confidante of me, Josephine, I am sorry
+for it, but not offended."
+
+"No, no, aunt, it is not that," burst she in; "it is to _you_ and you
+alone, I wish to speak, and I will be as candid as yourself. I am not
+surprised at the contents of this letter. I mean, I was in a measure
+prepared for them."
+
+"That is to say, child, that he paid you certain attentions?"
+
+She nodded assent.
+
+"And how did you receive them? Did you let him understand that you were
+not indifferent to him,--that his addresses were agreeable to you?"
+
+Another, but shorter, nod replied to this question.
+
+"I must confess," said the old lady, bridling up, "all this amazes me
+greatly. Why, child, it is but the other day you met each other for the
+first time. How, when, and where you found time for such relations as
+you speak of, I cannot imagine. Do you mean to tell me, Josephine, that
+you ever talked alone together?"
+
+"Constantly, aunt!"
+
+"Constantly!"
+
+"Yes, aunt. We talked a great deal together."
+
+"But how, child,--where?"
+
+"Here, aunt, as we used to stroll together every morning through
+the wood or in the garden; then as we went on the river or to the
+waterfall."
+
+"I can comprehend nothing of all this, Josephine. I know you mean to
+deal openly with me; so say at once, how did this intimacy begin?"
+
+"I can scarcely say how, aunt, because I believe we drifted into it. We
+used to talk a great deal of ourselves, and at length we grew to talk of
+each other,--of our likings and dislikings, our tastes and our tempers.
+And these did not always agree!"
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"No, aunt," said she, with a heavy sigh. "We quarrelled very often; and
+once,--I shall not easily forget it,--once seriously."
+
+"What was it about?"
+
+"It was about India, aunt; and he was in the wrong, and had to own it
+afterwards and ask pardon."
+
+"He must know much more of that country than you, child. How came it
+that you presumed to set up your opinion against his?"
+
+"The presumption was his," said she, haughtily. "He spoke of _his_
+father's position as something the same as _my_ father's. He talked of
+him as a Rajah!"
+
+"I did not know that he spoke of his father," said Miss Dinah,
+thoughtfully.
+
+"Oh, he spoke much of him. He told me, amongst other things, how he had
+been a dear friend of papa's; that as young men they lived together
+like brothers, and never were separate till the fortune of life divided
+them."
+
+"What is all this I am listening to? Of whom are you telling me,
+Josephine?"
+
+"Of Fred, Aunt Dinah; of Fred, of course."
+
+"Do you mean young Conyers, child?"
+
+"Yes. How could I mean any other?"
+
+"Ta, ta, ta!" said the old lady, drumming with her heel on the floor
+and her fingers on the table. "It has all turned out as I said it would!
+Peter, Peter, will you never be taught wisdom? Listen to me, child!"
+said she, turning almost sternly towards Josephine. "We have been at
+cross-purposes with each other all this time. This letter which I have
+just read for you--" She stopped suddenly as she reached thus far,
+and after a second's pause, said, "Wait for me here; I will be back
+presently. I have a word to say to your grandfather."
+
+Leaving poor Josephine in a state of trepidation and
+bewilderment,--ashamed at the confession she had just made, and
+trembling with a vague sense of some danger that impended over
+her,--Miss Dinah hurried away to the garden.
+
+"Here's a new sort of worm got into the celery, Dinah," said he, as
+she came up, "and a most destructive fellow he is. He looks like a mere
+ruffling of the leaf, and you 'd never suspect him."
+
+"It is your peculiarity never to suspect anything, brother Peter, even
+after you have had warning of peril. Do you remember my telling you,
+when we were up the Rhine, what would come of that intimacy between
+Conyers and Josephine?"
+
+"I think I do," said he, making what seemed an effort of memory.
+
+"And can you recall the indolent slipshod answer you made me about it?
+But of course you cannot. It was an old-maid's apprehensions, and you
+forgot the whole thing. Well, Peter, I was right and you were wrong."
+
+"Not the first time that the double event has come off so!" said he,
+smiling.
+
+"You are too fond of that cloak of humility, Peter Barrington. The plea
+of Guilty never saved any one from transportation!" Waiting a moment to
+recover her breath after this burst of passion, she went on: "After I
+had read that letter you gave me, I spoke to Josephine; I told her in a
+few words how it referred to her, and frankly asked her what she thought
+of it. She was very candid and very open, and, I must say, also very
+collected and composed. Young ladies of the present day possess that
+inestimable advantage over their predecessors. Their emotions do not
+overpower them." This was the second time of "blowing off the steam,"
+and she had to wait a moment to rally. "She told me, frankly, that she
+was not unprepared for such an offer; that tender passages had already
+been exchanged between them. The usual tomfoolery, I conclude,--that
+supreme effort of selfishness people call love,--in a word, Peter, she
+was in no wise disinclined to the proposal; the only misfortune was, she
+believed it came from young Conyers."
+
+Barrington would have laughed, and laughed heartily, if he dared. As it
+was, the effort to restrain himself sent the blood to his head, and made
+his eyes run over.
+
+"You may well blush, Peter Barrington," said she, shaking her finger at
+him. "It's all your own doing."
+
+"And when you undeceived her, Dinah, what did she say?"
+
+"I have not done so yet; but my impression is that so susceptible
+a young lady should find no great difficulty in transferring her
+affections. For the present I mean to limit myself to declaring that
+this offer is not from Conyers; if she has curiosity to know the writer,
+she shall learn it. I always had my doubts about these convents Bread
+and water diet makes more epicures than abstinents!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. INTERCHANGED CONFESSIONS
+
+Miss Barrington, with Josephine at one side and Polly Dill on the other,
+sat at work in her little room that opened on the garden. Each was
+engaged in some peculiar task, and each seemed bent upon her labor in
+that preoccupied way which would imply that the cares of needlework make
+no mean call upon human faculties. A close observer would, however, have
+remarked that though Miss Barrington stitched vigorously away at the
+background for a fierce tiger with measly spots over him, Polly seemed
+oftener to contemplate than continue her handiwork; while Josephine's
+looks strayed constantly from the delicate tracery she was following, to
+the garden, where the roses blended with the jasmine, and the drooping
+honeysuckles hung listlessly over the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+"If your work wearies you, Fifine," said Miss Dinah, "you had better
+read for us."
+
+"Oh no, not at all, aunt; I like it immensely. I was only wondering why
+one should devise such impossible foliage, when we have the real thing
+before us, in all its grace and beauty."
+
+"Humph!" said the old lady; "the sight of a real tiger would not put me
+out of countenance with my own."
+
+"It certainly ought not, ma'am," said Polly; while she added, in a faint
+whisper, "for there is assuredly no rivalry in the case."
+
+"Perhaps Miss Dill is not too absorbed in her study of nature, as
+applied to needlework, to read out the newspaper."
+
+"I will do it with pleasure, ma'am. Where shall I begin?"
+
+"Deaths and marriages first, of course, child. Then fashion and
+varieties; take the accidents afterwards, and close with anything
+remarkable in politics, or any disastrous occurrence in high life."
+
+Polly obeyed to the letter; once only straying into an animated account
+of a run with the Springfield fox-hounds, where three riders out of a
+large field came in at the death; when Miss Dinah stopped her abruptly,
+saying, "I don't care for the obituary of a fox, young lady. Go on with
+something else."
+
+"Will you have the recent tragedy at Ring's End, ma'am?"
+
+"I know it by heart Is there nothing new in the fashions,--how are
+bonnets worn? What's the latest sleeve? What's the color in vogue?"
+
+"A delicate blue, ma'am; a little off the sky, and on the hyacinth."
+
+"Very becoming to fair people," said Miss Dinah, with a shake of her
+blond ringlets.
+
+"'The Prince's Hussars!' Would you like to hear about _them_, ma'am?"
+
+"By all means."
+
+"It's a very short paragraph. 'The internal troubles of this unhappy
+regiment would seem to be never ending. We last week informed our
+readers that a young subaltern of the corps, the son of one of our most
+distinguished generals, had thrown up his commission and repaired to
+the Continent, to enable him to demand a personal satisfaction from
+his commanding officer, and we now learn that the Major in question is
+precluded from accepting the gage of battle by something stronger than
+military etiquette.'"
+
+"Read it again, child; that vile newspaper slang always puzzles me."
+
+Polly recited the passage in a clear and distinct voice.
+
+"What do you understand by it, Polly?"
+
+"I take it to mean nothing, madam. One of those stirring pieces of
+intelligence which excites curiosity, and are no more expected to be
+explained than a bad riddle."
+
+"It cannot surely be that he shelters himself under his position towards
+us? That I conclude is hardly possible!"
+
+Though Miss Barrington said this as a reflection, she addressed herself
+almost directly to Josephine.
+
+"As far as I am concerned, aunt," answered Josephine, promptly, "the
+Major may fight the monster of the Drachenfels to-morrow, if he wishes
+it."
+
+"Oh, here is another mystery apparently on the same subject. 'The
+Lascar, Lal-Adeen, whom our readers will remember as having figured in a
+police-court a few days back, and was remanded till the condition of
+his wound--a severe sabre-cut on the scalp--should permit his further
+examination, and on the same night made his escape from the hospital,
+has once again, and very unexpectedly, turned up at Boulogne-sur-Mer.
+His arrival in this country--some say voluntarily, others under a
+warrant issued for his apprehension--will probably take place to-day or
+to-morrow, and, if report speak truly, be followed by some of the most
+singular confessions which the public has heard for a long time back.'
+'The Post' contradicts the statement, and declares 'no such person has
+ever been examined before the magistrate, if he even have any existence
+at all.'"
+
+"And what interest has all this for us?" asked Miss Dinah, sharply.
+
+"You do not forget, ma'am, that this is the same man Major Stapylton was
+said to have wounded; and whose escape scandal hinted he had connived
+at, and who now 'does not exist.'"
+
+"I declare Miss Dill, I remember no such thing; but it appears to me
+that Major Stapylton occupies a very considerable space in your own
+thoughts."
+
+"I fancy Polly likes him, aunt," said Josephine, with a slight smile.
+
+"Well, I will own he interests me; there is about him a mysterious
+something that says, 'I have more in my head and on my heart than you
+think of, and more, perhaps, than you could carry if the burden were
+yours.'"
+
+"A galley-slave might say the same, Miss Dill."
+
+"No doubt of it, ma'am; and if there be men who mix in the great world,
+and dine at grand houses, with something of the galley-slave on their
+conscience, they assuredly impress us with an amount of fear that is
+half a homage. One dreads them as he does a tiger, but the terror is
+mingled with admiration."
+
+"This is nonsense, young lady, and baneful nonsense, too, begotten of
+French novels and a sickly sentimentality. I hope Fifine despises it as
+heartily as I do." The passionate wrath which she displayed extended to
+the materials of her work-basket, and while rolls of worsted were
+upset here, needles were thrown there; and at last, pushing her
+embroidery-frame rudely away, she arose and left the room.
+
+"Dearest Polly, how could you be so indiscreet! You know, far better
+than I do, how little patience she has with a paradox."
+
+"My sweet Fifine," said the other, in a low whisper, "I was dying to get
+rid of her, and I knew there was only one way of effecting it. You
+may remark that whenever she gets into a rage, she rushes out into the
+flower-garden, and walks round and round till she's ready to drop. There
+she is already; you may gauge her anger by the number of her revolutions
+in a minute."
+
+"But why did you wish her away, Polly?"
+
+"I'll tell you why; that is, there is a charming French word for what
+I mean, the verb 'agacer,' all untranslatable as it is. Now there
+are moments when a person working in the same room--reading, writing,
+looking out of the window--becomes an insupportable infliction. You
+reason, and say, 'How absurd, how childish, how ungenerous,' and so
+forth. It won't do; for as you look round he is there still, and by his
+mere presence keeps up the ferment in your thoughts. You fancy, at last,
+that he stands between you and your inner self, a witness that won't let
+your own conscience whisper to you, and you come in the end to hate him.
+Your dear aunt was on the high-road to this goal, when I bethought me of
+my expedient! And now we are all alone, dearest, make me a confession."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"You do not like Major Stapylton?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And you do like somebody else?"
+
+"Perhaps," said she, slowly, and dividing the syllables as she spoke
+them.
+
+"That being the case, and seeing, as you do, that your aunt is entirely
+of your own mind, at least as to the man you do not care for, why don't
+you declare as much frankly to your grandfather, and break off the
+negotiation at once?"
+
+"Just because that dear old grandpapa asked me not to be precipitate,
+not to be rash. He did not tell me that I must love Major Stapylton, or
+must marry him; but he said, 'If you only knew, Fifine, what a change in
+our fortune would come of a change in _your_ feelings; if you could but
+imagine, child, how the whole journey of life might be rendered easier,
+all because you took the right-hand road instead of the left; if you
+could guess these things, and what might follow them--'" She stopped.
+
+"Well, go on."
+
+"No. I have said all that he said; he kissed my cheek as he got thus
+far, and hurried away from the room."
+
+"And you, like a sweet, obedient child, hastened away to yours; wrote a
+farewell, a heart-broken farewell, to Fred Conyers; and solemnly swore
+to your own conscience you 'd marry a man you disliked. These are the
+sort of sacrifices the world has a high admiration for; but do you know,
+Fifine, the world limps a little in its morality sometimes, and is not
+one-half the fine creature it thinks itself. For instance, in the midst
+of all its enthusiasm for you, it has forgotten that in accepting for
+your husband a man you do not love, you are doing a dishonesty; and
+that, besides this, you really love another. It is what the French call
+the aggravating circumstance."
+
+"I mean to do nothing of the kind!" broke in Fifine, boldly. "Your
+lecture does not address itself to _me_."
+
+"Do not be angry, Fifine," said the other, calmly.
+
+"It is rather too hard to be rebuked for the faults one might have, but
+has not committed. It's like saying how wet you 'd have been had you
+fallen into that pool!"
+
+"Well, it also means, don't fall into the pool!"
+
+"Do you know, Polly," said Josephine, archly, "I have a sort of
+suspicion that you don't dislike this Major yourself! Am I right?"
+
+"I'm not say you were altogether wrong; that is, he interests me, or,
+rather, he puzzles me, and it piques my ingenuity to read him, just as
+it would to make out a cipher to which I had only one-half the key."
+
+"Such a feeling as that would never inspire a tender interest, at least,
+with _me_."
+
+"Nor did I say it was, Fifine. I have read in some book of my father's
+how certain physicians inoculated themselves with plague, the better
+to note the phenomena, and trace the course; and I own I can understand
+their zeal, and I 'd risk something to decipher this man."
+
+"This may be very nice in medicine, Polly, but very bad in morals! At
+all events, don't catch the plague for the sake of saving _me?_"
+
+"Oh! I assure you any step I take shall be done in the interests of
+science solely; not but that I have a small debt to acquit towards the
+gallant Major."
+
+"You have! What can it possibly be?"
+
+"Well, it was this wise," said she, with a half-sigh. "We met at
+a country-house here, and he paid me certain attentions, made me
+compliments on my riding, which I knew to be good, and my singing, which
+was just tolerable; said the usual things which mean nothing, and a few
+of those more serious ones which are supposed to be more significant;
+and then he asked my father's leave to come and visit him, and actually
+fixed a day and an hour. And we, poor people, all delighted with the
+flattery of such high notice, and thinking of the effect upon our
+neighbors so splendid a visitor would produce, made the most magnificent
+preparations to receive him,--papa in a black satin waistcoat, mamma in
+her lilac ribbons. I myself,--having put the roof on a pigeon-pie,
+and given the last finishing touch to a pagoda of ruby jelly,--I, in a
+charming figured muslin and a blush rose in my hair, awaited the hour of
+attack! And, after all, he never came. No, Fifine, never came! He forgot
+us, or he changed his mind, or something else turned up that he liked
+better; or--which is just as likely as any of the three--he thought
+it would be a charming piece of impertinence to pass off on such small
+folk, who presumed to fancy themselves company for him. At all events,
+Fifine, we saw him no more. He went his way somewhere, and we were left
+lamenting."
+
+"And you really liked him, Polly?"
+
+"No, of the two, I disliked him; but I wished very much that he might
+like _me!_ I saw him very overbearing and very insolent to those
+who were certainly his equals, assuming a most offensive superiority
+everywhere and to any one, and I thought what an awful humiliation it
+would be if so great a personage were to be snubbed by the doctor's
+daughter. I wanted to give a lesson which could only be severe if it
+came from one humble as myself; but he defeated me, Fifine, and I am
+still his debtor! If I did not like him before, you may believe that
+I hate him now; and I came off here this morning, in hot haste, for no
+other purpose than to set you against him, and induce you to regard him
+as I do."
+
+"There was little need," said Fifine, calmly; "but here comes my aunt
+back again. Make your submission quickly, Polly, or it will be too late
+to expect mercy."
+
+"I 'll do better," said Polly, rising. "I 'll let my trial go on in my
+absence;" and with this she stepped out of the window as Miss Barrington
+entered by the door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. STAPYLTON'S VISIT AT "THE HOME"
+
+So secretly had Barrington managed, that he negotiated the loan of five
+hundred pounds on a mortgage of the cottage without ever letting his
+sister hear of it; and when she heard on a particular day that her
+brother expected Mr. Kinshela, the attorney, from Kilkenny, on business,
+she made the occasion the pretext of a visit to Dr. Dill, taking
+Josephine with her, to pass the day there.
+
+Barrington was therefore free to receive his lawyer at his ease, and
+confer with him alone. Not that he cared much for his company; he
+felt towards the attorney pretty much as an ardent soldier feels to
+a non-combatant, the commissary, or the paymaster. Had he been a
+barrister, indeed, old Peter would have welcomed him with the zest of
+true companionship; he would have ransacked his memory for anecdotes,
+and prepared for the meeting as for an encounter of sharp wits. Now it
+is no part of my task to present Mr. Kinshela more than passingly to
+my reader, and I will merely say that he was a shrewd, commonplace
+man, whose practice rarely introduced him to the higher classes of his
+county, and who recognized Barrington, even in his decline, as a person
+of some consideration.
+
+They had dined well, and sat over their wine in the little dining-room
+over the river, a favorite spot of Barrington's when he wished to be
+confidential, for it was apart from the rest of the cottage, and removed
+from all intrusion.
+
+"So, you won't tell me, Kinshela, who lent us this money?" said the old
+man, as he passed the decanter across the table.
+
+"It is not that I won't, sir, but I can't. It was in answer to an
+advertisement I inserted in the 'Times,' that I got an application from
+Granger and Wood to supply particulars; and I must say there was
+no unnecessary security on their part. It was as speedily settled a
+transaction as I ever conducted, and I believe in my heart we might have
+had a thousand pounds on it just as easily as five hundred."
+
+"As well as it is, Kinshela. When the day of repayment comes round, I'll
+perhaps find it heavy enough;" and he sighed deeply as he spoke.
+
+"Who knows, sir? There never was a time that capital expended on land
+was more remunerative than the present."
+
+Now, Mr. Kinshela well knew that the destination of the money they
+spoke of was not in this direction, and that it had as little to say to
+subsoil drainage or top dressing as to the conversion of the heathen;
+but he was angling for a confidence, and he did not see how to attain
+it.
+
+Barrington smiled before he answered,--one of those sad, melancholy
+smiles which reveal a sorrow a man is not able to suppress,--and then he
+said, "I 'm afraid, Kinshela, I 'll not test the problem this time."
+
+"It will be better employed, perhaps, sir. You mean, probably, to take
+your granddaughter up to the drawing-room at the Castle?"
+
+"I never so much as thought of it, Joe Kinshela; the fact is, that money
+is going where I have sent many a hundred before it,--in law! I have had
+a long, wearisome, costly suit, that has well-nigh beggared me; and of
+that sum you raised for me I don't expect to have a shilling by this day
+week."
+
+"I heard something about that, sir," said the other, cautiously.
+
+"And what was it you heard?"
+
+"Nothing, of course, worth repeating; nothing from any one that knew the
+matter himself; just the gossip that goes about, and no more."
+
+"Well, let us hear the gossip that goes about, and I'll promise to tell
+you if it's true."
+
+"Well, indeed," said Kinshela, drawing a long breath, "they say that
+your claim is against the India Board."
+
+Barring ton nodded.
+
+"And that it is a matter little short of a million is in dispute."
+
+He nodded again twice.
+
+"And they say, too,--of course, on very insufficient knowledge,--that
+if you would have abated your demands once on a time, you might readily
+have got a hundred thousand pounds, or even more."
+
+"That's not impossible," muttered Barrington.
+
+"But that, now--" he stammered for an instant, and then stopped.
+
+"But now? Go on."
+
+"Sure, sir, they can know nothing about it; it's just idle talk, and no
+more."
+
+"Go on, and tell me what they say _now_," said Barrington, with a strong
+force on the last word.
+
+"They say you 'll be beaten, sir," said he, with an effort.
+
+"And do they say why, Kinshela?"
+
+"Yes, sir; they say you won't take advice; and no matter what Mr.
+Withering counsels, or is settled in consultation, you go your own way
+and won't mind them; and that you have been heard to declare you 'll
+have all, or nothing."
+
+"They give me more credit than I deserve, Kinshela. It is, perhaps, what
+I ought to have said, for I have often _thought it_. But in return for
+all the kind interest my neighbors take about me, let them know that
+matters look better for us than they once did. Perhaps," added he, with
+a laugh,--"perhaps I have overcome my obstinacy, or perhaps my opponents
+have yielded to it. At all events, Joe, I believe I see land at last,
+and it was a long 'lookout' and many a fog-bank I mistook for it."
+
+"And what makes you think now you'll win?" said the other, growing
+bolder by the confidence reposed in him.
+
+Barrington half started at the presumption of the question; but
+he suddenly remembered how it was he himself who had invited the
+discussion, so he said calmly,--
+
+"My hope is not without a foundation. I expect by the mail to-night a
+friend who may be able to tell me that I have won, or as good as won."
+
+Kinshela was dying to ask who the friend was, but even his curiosity had
+its prudential limits; so he merely took out his watch, and, looking at
+it, remarked that the mail would pass in about twenty minutes or so.
+
+"By the way, I must n't forget to send a servant to wait on the
+roadside;" and he rang the bell and said, "Let Darby go up to the road
+and take Major Stapylton's luggage when he arrives."
+
+"Is that the Major Stapylton is going to be broke for the doings at
+Manchester, sir?" asked Kinshela.
+
+"He is the same Major Stapylton that a rascally press is now libelling
+and calumniating," said Barrington, hotly. "As to being broke, I
+don't believe that we have come yet to that pass in England that
+the discipline of our army is administered by every scribbler in a
+newspaper."
+
+"I humbly crave your pardon, sir, if I have said the slightest thing
+to offend; but I only meant to ask, was he the officer they were making
+such a fuss about?" "He is an officer of the highest distinction, and a
+wellborn gentleman to boot,--two admirable reasons for the assaults of a
+contemptible party. Look you, Kinshela; you and I are neither of us very
+young or inexperienced men, but I would ask you, have we learned
+any wiser lesson from our intercourse with life than to withhold our
+judgment on the case of one who rejects the sentence of a mob, and
+appeals to the verdict of his equals?"
+
+"But if he cut the people down in cold blood,--if it be true that he
+laid open that poor black fellow's cheek from the temple to the chin--"
+
+"If he did no such thing," broke in Barrington; "that is to say, if
+there is no evidence whatever that he did so, what will your legal mind
+say then, Joe Kinshela?"
+
+"Just this, sir. I'd say--what all the newspapers are saying--that he
+got the man out of the way,--bribed and sent him off."
+
+"Why not hint that he murdered him, and buried him within the precincts
+of the jail? I declare I wonder at your moderation."
+
+"I am sure, sir, that if I suspected he was an old friend of yours--"
+
+"Nothing of the kind,--a friend of very short standing; but what has
+that to say to it? Is he less entitled to fair play whether he knew me
+or not?"
+
+"All I know of the case is from the newspapers; and as I scarcely see
+one word in his favor, I take it there is not much to be said in his
+defence."
+
+"Well, if my ears don't deceive me, that was the guard's horn I heard
+then. The man himself will be here in five minutes or so. You shall
+conduct the prosecution, Kinshela, and I 'll be judge between you."
+
+"Heaven forbid, sir; on no account whatever!" said Kinshela, trembling
+all over. "I'm sure, Mr. Barrington, you couldn't think of repeating
+what I said to you in confidence--"
+
+"No, no, Kinshela. You shall do it yourself; and it's only fair to tell
+you that he is a right clever fellow, and fully equal to the task of
+defending himself." Peter arose as he spoke, and walked out upon the
+lawn, affectedly to meet his coming guest, but in reality to cover a
+laugh that was half smothering him, so comical was the misery expressed
+in the attorney's face, and so ludicrous was his look of terror.
+
+Of course I need not say that it never occurred to Barrington to realize
+his threat, which he merely uttered in the spirit of that quizzing habit
+that was familiar to him. "Yes, Kinshela," cried he, "here he comes.
+I recognize his voice already;" and Barrington now walked forward to
+welcome his friend.
+
+It was not till after some minutes of conversation, and when the light
+fell strongly on Stapylton's features, that Barrington saw how changed
+a few weeks of care had made him. He looked at the least ten years older
+than before. His eyes had lost their bold and daring expression, too,
+and were deep sunk, and almost furtive in their glance.
+
+"You are tired, I fear," said Barrington, as the other moved his hand
+across his forehead, and, with a slight sigh, sank down upon a sofa.
+
+"Less tired than worried,--harassed," said he, faintly. "Just as at a
+gaming-table a man may lose more in half an hour's high play than years
+of hard labor could acquire, there are times of life when we dissipate
+more strength and vigor than we ever regain. I have had rough usage
+since I saw you last," said he, with a very sickly smile. "How are the
+ladies,--well, I hope?"
+
+"Perfectly well. They have gone to pass the day with a neighbor, and
+will be home presently. By the way, I left a friend here a few moments
+ago. What can have become of him?" and he rang the bell hastily.
+"Where's Mr. Kinshela, Darby?"
+
+"Gone to bed, sir. He said he 'd a murthering headache, and hoped your
+honor would excuse him."
+
+Though Barrington laughed heartily at this message, Stapylton never
+asked the reason, but sat immersed in thought and unmindful of all
+around him.
+
+"I half suspect you ought to follow his good example, Major," said
+Peter. "A mug of mulled claret for a nightcap, and a good sleep, will
+set you all right."
+
+"It will take more than that to do it," said the Major, sadly. Then
+suddenly rising, and pacing the room with quick, impatient steps, he
+said, "What could have induced you to let them bring your claim before
+the House? They are going to do so, ain't they?"
+
+"Yes. Tom Withering says that nothing will be so effectual, and I
+thought you agreed with him."
+
+"Never. Nothing of the kind. I said, threaten it; insist that if they
+continue the opposition, that you will,--that you must do so; but I
+never was the fool to imagine that it could really be a wise step. What
+'s the fate of all such motions? I ask you. There's a speech--sometimes
+an able one--setting forth a long catalogue of unmerited injuries and
+long suffering. There's a claim made out that none can find a flaw in,
+and a story that, if Parliament was given to softness, might move men
+almost to tears, and at the end of it up rises a Minister to say how
+deeply he sympathizes with the calamity of the case, but that this
+house is, after all, not the fitting locality for a discussion which is
+essentially a question of law, and that, even if it were, and if all
+the allegations were established,--a point to which he by no means gave
+adhesion,--there was really no available fund at the disposal of the
+Crown to make reparation for such losses. Have you not seen this,
+or something like this, scores of times? Can you tell me of one that
+succeeded?"
+
+"A case of such wrong as this cannot go without reparation," said Peter,
+with emotion. "The whole country will demand it."
+
+"The country will do no such thing. If it were a question of penalty
+or punishment,--yes! the country would demand it. Fine, imprison,
+transport, hang him! are easy words to utter, and cheap ones; but
+pay him, reinstate him, reward him! have a very different sound and
+significance. They figure in the budget, and are formidable on the
+hustings. Depend on it, Mr. Barrington, the step will be a false one."
+
+"It has been my fate never to have got the same advice for two weeks
+together since the day I entered on this weary suit," said Barrington,
+with a peevishness not natural to him.
+
+"I may as well tell you the whole truth at once," said Stapylton. "The
+Board have gone back of all their good intentions towards us; some
+recent arrivals from India, it is said, have kindled again the old
+fire of opposition, and we are to be met by a resistance bold and
+uncompromising. They are prepared to deny everything we assert; in fact,
+they have resolved to sweep all the pieces off the board and begin the
+whole game again, and all because you have taken this unfortunate course
+of appeal to Parliament."
+
+"Have you told Withering this?"
+
+"Yes; I have talked the matter over for nearly four hours with him.
+Like a lawyer, he was most eager to know from what source came the new
+evidence so damaging to us. I could only guess at this."
+
+"And your guess was--"
+
+"I scarcely like to own to you that I take a less favorable view of
+mankind than you do, who know it better; but in this case my suspicion
+attaches to a man who was once your son's dearest friend, but grew to be
+afterwards his deadliest enemy."
+
+"I will not have this said, Major Stapylton. I know whom you mean, and I
+don't believe a word of it."
+
+Stapylton simply shrugged his shoulders, and continued to pace the room
+without speaking, while Barrington went on muttering, half aloud: "No,
+no, impossible; quite impossible. These things are not in nature. I
+don't credit them."
+
+"You like to think very well of the world, sir!" said the Major, with a
+faint scorn, so faint as scarcely to color his words.
+
+"Think very badly of it, and you 'll soon come down to the level you
+assign it," said Peter, boldly.
+
+"I 'm afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best
+suffrages. You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I
+have met with from the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous
+usage,--not very just. Well! what will you say when I tell you that I
+have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester; that the
+Government is of opinion that such an investigation might at the
+moment be prejudicial to the public peace, without any counterbalancing
+advantage on the score of a personal vindication; that they do not deem
+the time favorable for the calm and unbiassed judgment of the country;
+in one short word, sir, they 'd rather ruin a Major of Hussars than risk
+a Cabinet. I am to exchange into any corps or any service I can;
+and they are to tide over these troubles on the assumption of having
+degraded me."
+
+"I hope you wrong them,--I do hope you wrong them!" cried Barrington,
+passionately.
+
+"You shall see if I do," said he, taking several letters from his
+pocket, and searching for one in particular. "Yes, here it is. This is
+from Aldridge, the private secretary of the Commander-in-chief. It is
+very brief, and strictly secret:--
+
+"'Dear S.,--The "Chief" does not like your scrape at all. You did rather
+too much, or too little,--a fatal mistake dealing with a mob. You must
+consent--there's no help for it--to be badly used, and an injured man.
+If you don't like the half-pay list,--which would, in my mind, be the
+best step,--there 's the Seventeenth ordered to Baroda, and Maidstone
+refuses to go. This, or the Second West India, are the only things open.
+Above all, don't show fight; don't rally a party round you, for there
+is not a man in England whose influence is sufficiently great to stand
+between you and the public. A conple of years' patience and a hot
+climate will set all right, and reinstate you everywhere. Come over here
+at once and I 'll do my best for you.
+
+"'Yours ever,
+
+"'St. George Aldridge.'
+
+"This is a friend's letter," said Stapylton, with a sneer; "and he
+has no better counsel to give me than to plead guilty, and ask for a
+mitigated punishment."
+
+Harrington was silenced; he would not by any expression of indignation
+add to the great anger of the other, and he said nothing. At last he
+said, "I wish from my heart--I wish I could be of any service to you."
+
+"You are the only man living who can," was the prompt answer.
+
+"How so--in what way? Let me hear."
+
+"When I addressed a certain letter to you some time back, I was in a
+position both of fortune and prospect to take at least something from
+the presumption of my offer. Now, though my fortune remains, my future
+is more than clouded, and if I ask you to look favorably on my cause
+now, it is to your generosity I must appeal; I am, in fact, asking you
+to stand by a fallen man."
+
+This speech, uttered in a voice slightly shaken by agitation, went to
+Barrington's heart. There was not a sentiment in his nature so certain
+to respond to a call upon it as this one of sympathy with the beaten
+man; the weaker side was always certain of his adherence. With a nice
+tact Stapylton said no more, but, pushing open the window, walked out
+upon the smooth sward, on which a faint moonlight flickered. He had shot
+his bolt, and saw it as it quivered in his victim's flesh. Barrington
+was after him in an instant, and, drawing an arm within his he said in
+a low voice, "You may count upon me."
+
+Stapylton wrung his hand warmly, without speaking. After walking for
+a few moments, side by side, he said: "I must be frank with you, Mr.
+Barrington. I have little time and no taste for circumlocution; I cannot
+conceal from myself that I am no favorite with your sister. I was not
+as eager as I ought to have been to cultivate her good opinion; I was
+a little piqued at what I thought mere injustices on her part,--small
+ones, to be sure, but they wounded me, and with a temper that always
+revolted against a wrong, I resented them, and I fear me, in doing so,
+I jeopardized her esteem. If she is as generous as her brother, she will
+not remember these to me in my day of defeat. Women, however, have their
+own ideas of mercy, as they have of everything, and she may not choose
+to regard me as you have done."
+
+"I suspect you are wrong about this," said Harrington, breaking in.
+
+"Well, I wish I may be; at all events, I must put the feeling to
+the test at once, for I have formed my plan, and mean to begin it
+immediately."
+
+"And what is it?"
+
+"Very few words will tell it. I intend to go on half-pay, or sell out if
+that be refused me; set out for India by the next mail, and, with what
+energy remains to me, vindicate your son's claim. I have qualifications
+that will make me better than a better man. I am well versed in
+Hindostanee, and a fair Persian scholar; I have a wide acquaintance with
+natives of every rank, and I know how and where to look for information.
+It is not my disposition to feel over-sanguine, but I would stake all I
+possess on my success, for I see exactly the flaws in the chain, and I
+know where to go to repair them. You have witnessed with what ardor I
+adopted the suit before; but you cannot estimate the zeal with which I
+throw myself into it now--_now_ that, like George Barring-ton himself,
+I am a man wronged, outraged, and insulted." For a few seconds be seemed
+overcome by passion and unable to continue; then he went on: "If your
+granddaughter will accept me, it is my intention to settle on her all I
+possess. Our marriage can be private, and she shall be free to accompany
+me or to remain here, as she likes."
+
+"But how can all this be done so hurriedly? You talk of starting at
+once."
+
+"I must, if I would save your son's cause. The India Board are sending
+out their emissaries to Calcutta, and I must anticipate them--if I
+cannot do more, by gaining them over to us on the voyage out. It is a
+case for energy and activity, and I want to employ both."
+
+"The time is very short for all this," said Barrington, again.
+
+"So it is, sir, and so are the few seconds which may rescue a man from
+drowning! It is in the crisis of my fate that I ask you to stand by me."
+
+"But have you any reason to believe that my granddaughter will hear you
+favorably? You are almost strangers to each other?"
+
+"If she will not give me the legal right to make her my heir, I mean to
+usurp the privilege. I have already been with a lawyer for that purpose.
+My dear sir," added he, passionately, "I want to break with the past
+forever! When the world sets up its howl against a man, the odds are too
+great! To stand and defy it he must succumb or retreat. Now, I mean to
+retire, but with the honors of war, mark you."
+
+"My sister will never consent to it," muttered Barrington.
+
+"Will you? Have I the assurance of _your_ support?"
+
+"I can scarcely venture to say 'yes,' and yet I can't bear to say 'no'
+to you!"
+
+"This is less than I looked for from you," said Stapylton, mournfully.
+
+"I know Dinah so well. I know how hopeless it would be to ask her
+concurrence to this plan."
+
+"She may not take the generous view of it; but there is a worldly one
+worth considering," said Stapylton, bitterly.
+
+"Then, sir, if you count on _that_, I would not give a copper half-penny
+for your chance of success!" cried Barrington, passionately.
+
+"You have quite misconceived me; you have wronged me altogether," broke
+in Stapylton, in a tone of apology; for he saw the mistake he had made,
+and hastened to repair it. "My meaning was this--"
+
+"So much the better. I'm glad I misunderstood you. But here come the
+ladies. Let us go and meet them."
+
+"One word,--only one word. Will you befriend me?"
+
+"I will do all that I can,--that is, all that I ought," said Barrington,
+as he led him away, and re-entered the cottage.
+
+"I will not meet them to-night," said Stapylton, hurriedly. "I am
+nervous and agitated. I will say good-night now."
+
+This was the second time within a few days that Stapylton had shown an
+unwillingness to confront Miss Barrington, and Peter thought over it
+long and anxiously. "What can he mean by it?" said he, to himself. "Why
+should he be so frank and outspoken with me, and so reserved with her?
+What can Dinah know of him? What can she suspect, that is not known
+to me? It is true they never did like each other,--never 'hit it off'
+together; but that is scarcely _his_ fault. My excellent sister throws
+away little love on strangers, and opens every fresh acquaintance with
+a very fortifying prejudice against the newly presented. However it
+happens," muttered he, with a sigh, "_she_ is not often wrong, and _I_
+am very seldom right;" and, with this reflection, he turned once again
+to resume his walk in the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT
+
+Stapylton did not make his appearance at breakfast; he sent down a
+message that he had passed a feverish night, and begged that Dr. Dill
+might be sent for. Though Barrington made two attempts to see his
+guest, the quietness of the room on each occasion implied that he was
+asleep, and, fearing to disturb him, he went downstairs again on tiptoe.
+
+"This is what the persecution has done, Dinah," said he. "They have
+brought that stout-hearted fellow so low that he may be the victim of a
+fever to-morrow."
+
+"Nonsense, Peter. Men of courage don't fall sick because the newspapers
+calumniate them. They have other things on their minds than such puny
+attacks."
+
+"So he may, likely enough, too. He is bent heart and soul on what I
+told you last night, and I 'm not surprised if he never closed his eyes
+thinking of it."
+
+"Neither did I!" said she, curtly, and left the room.
+
+The doctor was not long in arriving, and, after a word or two with
+Barrington, hastened to the patient's room.
+
+"Are we alone?" asked Stapylton, cutting short the bland speech with
+which Dill was making his approaches. "Draw that curtain a bit, and take
+a good look at me. Are my eyes bloodshot? Are the pupils dilated? I had
+a bad sunstroke once; see if there be any signs of congestion about me."
+
+"No, I see none. A little flushed; your pulse, too, is accelerated, and
+the heart's action is labored--"
+
+"Never mind the heart; if the head be well, it will take care of it.
+Reach me that pocket-book; I want to acquit one debt to you before I
+incur another. No humbug between us;" and he pressed some notes into the
+other's palm as he spoke. "Let us understand each other fully, and at
+once. I 'm not very ill; but I want _you_."
+
+"And I am at your orders."
+
+"Faithfully,--loyally?"
+
+"Faithfully,--loyally!" repeated the other after him.
+
+[Illustration: 454]
+
+"You've read the papers lately,--you've seen these attacks on me?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, what do they say and think here--I mean in this house--about
+them? How do they discuss them? Remember, I want candor and frankness;
+no humbug. I'll not stand humbug."
+
+"The women are against you."
+
+"Both of them?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"How comes that?--on what grounds?"
+
+"The papers accused you of cruelty; they affirmed that there was no
+cause for the measures of severity you adopted; and they argued--"
+
+"Don't bore me with all that balderdash. I asked you how was it that
+these women assumed I was in the wrong?"
+
+"And I was about to tell you, if you had not interrupted me."
+
+"That is, they believed what they read in the newspapers?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And, of course, swallowed that fine story about the Hindoo fellow that
+I first cut down, and afterwards bribed to make his escape from the
+hospital?"
+
+"I suspect they half believed it."
+
+"Or rather, believed half of it, the cutting down part! Can you tell me
+physiologically,--for I think it comes into that category,--why it is
+that women not otherwise ill-natured, in nine cases out of ten take the
+worst alternative as the credible one? But never mind that. They condemn
+me. Is n't it so?"
+
+"Yes; and while old Barrington insists--"
+
+"Who cares what he insists? Such advocacy as his only provokes attack,
+and invites persecution. I 'd rather have no such allies!"
+
+"I believe you are right."
+
+"I want fellows like yourself, doctor,--sly, cautious, subtle
+fellows,--accustomed to stealing strong medicines into the system in
+small doses; putting the patient, as you call it in your slang, 'under
+the influence' of this, that, and t'other,--eh?"
+
+Dill smiled blandly at the compliment to his art, and Stapylton went
+on:--
+
+"Not that I have time just now for this sort of chronic treatment. I
+need a heroic remedy, doctor. I 'm in love."
+
+"Indeed!" said Dill, with an accent nicely balanced between interest and
+incredulity.
+
+"Yes, and I want to marry!
+
+"Miss Barrington?"
+
+"The granddaughter. There is no need, I hope, to make the distinction,
+for I don't wish to be thought insane. Now you have the case. What 's
+your prescription?"
+
+"Propose for her!"
+
+"So I have, but they hesitate. The old man is not unfavorable; he is,
+perhaps, more: he is, in a measure, friendly; but what avails such
+advocacy? I want another guess sort of aid,--a clever man; or, what is
+better still, a clever woman, to befriend me."
+
+He waited some seconds for a reply, but Dill did not speak; so he went
+on: "A clever woman, to take a woman's view of the case, balancing this
+against that, never ignoring an obstacle, but inquiring what there may
+be to compensate for it Do you know such a one, doctor?"
+
+"Perhaps I may; but I have my doubts about securing her services."
+
+"Even with a retainer?"
+
+"Even with a retainer. You see, Major,"--here Dill dropped his voice to
+a most confidential whisper,--"my daughter Polly,--for I know we both
+have her in mind,--Polly is a strange sort of girl, and very hard to
+understand; for while, if the case were her own, she 'd no more think
+of romance than she would of giving ten guineas for a dress, if she was
+advising another whose position and prospects were higher than hers,
+it's the romantic part of it she'd lay all the stress on."
+
+"From which I gather that my suit will not stand this test!" said
+Stapylton, with a peculiar smile. "Eh, is n't that your meaning?"
+
+"You are certainly some years older than the lady," said Dill, blandly.
+
+"Not old enough to be, as the world would surely say, 'her father,' but
+fully old enough to give license for sarcasm."
+
+"Then, as she will be a great fortune--"
+
+"Not a sixpence,--she'll not have sixpence, doctor. That bubble has
+burst at last, and can never be blown again. The whole claim has been
+rejected, refused, thrown out, and there 's an end of it. It amuses
+the old man to sit on the wreck and fancy he can repair the shattered
+timbers and make them seaworthy; and, for the time he is likely to
+last, it is only kindness to leave him to his delusion; but he is
+ruined,--ruined beyond recall, and as I have told you, the girl will
+have nothing."
+
+"Do they know this,--has Barrington heard it?"
+
+"Yes, I broke it to him last night, but I don't think he fully realized
+the tidings; he has certain reserves--certain little conceits of his
+own--which are to supply him with a sort of hope; but let us talk of
+something more practical. How can we secure Miss Dill's services?"
+
+"A few days ago, the easiest way would have been to offer to befriend
+her brother, but this morning brings us news that this is not
+needed,--he is coming home."
+
+"How so?"
+
+"It is a great event in its way; at least, it may be for Tom. It seems
+there was a collision at sea, somewhere near the Cape, between the ship
+'St. Helen's,' that carried out General Hunter and his staff, and
+the 'Regulus,' with the Forty-ninth on board. It was at night, and a
+terrible sea on at the time. In the shock the 'St. Helen's' took fire;
+and as the two ships were inextricably locked together, the danger was
+common to each. While the boats were being lowered and manned,--for it
+was soon seen the vessel could not be saved,--a cry was raised that the
+fire was gaining on the fore-hold, and would soon reach the magazine.
+The woful news spread at once, and many jumped overboard in their
+terror. Just then Tom heard that there was a means of drowning the
+powder by opening a certain sluice, and, without waiting for more, he
+clambered across into the sinking vessel, made his way through smoke and
+fire, gained the spot, and succeeded, just as the very ladder itself
+had caught the flames. How he got back he cannot tell, for the vessel
+foundered in a few minutes, and he was so burned--face, cheek, and
+one shoulder--that he was unconscious of everything; and even when the
+account came, was still in bed, and not able to see."
+
+"He was a wild sort of lad, was he not,--a scamp, in short?"
+
+"No, not exactly that; idle--careless--kept bad company at times."
+
+"These are the fellows who do this kind of thing once in their
+lives,--mark you, never twice. They never have more than one shot in
+their locker, but it will suffice in this case."
+
+Though the worthy doctor was very far from enthusiastic about his son's
+gallantry, there was a degree of coolness in the Major's estimate of
+it that almost shocked him; and he sat staring steadily at the stern
+bronzed face, and the hard lineaments of the man, and wondering of what
+strange stuff such natures were fashioned.
+
+"It's quite clear, then, that for Master Tom we can do nothing half
+so good as chance has done for him," said Stapylton, after a short
+interval.
+
+"Chance and himself too," added the doctor.
+
+Stapylton made no answer, but, covering his eyes with his hand, lay deep
+in thought.
+
+"If you only had the Attorney-General, Mr. Withering, on your side,"
+said Dill. "There is no man has the same influence over this family."
+
+"It is not what _you_ call influence I want, my good sir. It is a far
+more subtle and more delicate agent. I require the sort of aid, in fact,
+which your daughter could supply, if she would. An appointment awaits
+me in India, but I must occupy it at once. I have no time for a long
+courtship. I 'm just as hurried as that boy of yours was when he swamped
+the powder-magazine. It's a skirmish where I can't wait for the heavy
+artillery, but must do my best with the light field-guns,--do you
+understand me?"
+
+Dill nodded, and Stapylton resumed: "The thing can be done just by the
+very road that you have pronounced impossible,--that is, by the romantic
+side of it,--making it a case of violent love at first sight, the
+passion of a man past the heyday of youth, but yet young enough to
+feel a most ardent affection. I am, besides," said he, laughing with a
+strange blending of levity and sarcasm, "a sort of Brummagem hero; have
+been wounded, led assaults, and that kind of thing, to a degree that
+puffery can take the benefit of. And, last of all, doctor, I am rich
+enough to satisfy greater ambitions than ought to live under such a roof
+as this. Do you see the part your daughter can take in this drama?"
+
+"Perhaps I do."
+
+"And could you induce her to accept it?"
+
+"I'm not very certain,--I'd be slow to pledge myself to it."
+
+"Certainly," said Stapylton, mockingly; "the passing glimpses we
+bachelors obtain of the working of that vaunted institution, The Family,
+fail to impress us with all its imputed excellence; you are, it seems to
+me, just as powerless within your own doors as I am regarding what goes
+on in a neighbor's house. I take it, however, that it can't be helped.
+Children, like colonies, are only governable when helpless."
+
+"I suspect you are wrong, sir; at least, I fancy I have as much of the
+sort of influence you speak of as others; but still, I think, here, in
+this particular case, you would yourself be your best ambassador, if you
+were strong enough to come down with me in the boat to-day."
+
+"Of course I am!" cried Stapylton, starting up to a sitting posture;
+"and what then?"
+
+"You would be better in my house than this," said Dill, mysteriously.
+
+"Speak out, and speak clearly, doctor; I have very little the matter
+with me, and am in no want of change of air. What I need is the
+assistance of one dexterous enough to advocate my plans with persons
+and in places to which I have no access. Your daughter is just such a
+one,--will she do it?"
+
+"We can ask her."
+
+"Well, how will you explain my absence to these people here? What will
+you say for my not appearing at breakfast, and yet being able to take an
+airing with you?"
+
+"I will put it on hygienic grounds," said Dill, smiling acutely. "My
+profession has a number of sanctuaries the profane vulgar can never
+enter. I 'll just step down now and ask Barrington to lend me his boat,
+and I 'll throw out a dark hint that I 'd like to manage a consultation
+on your case without alarming you, for which purpose I 'd ask Dr. Tobin
+to be at my house, when we arrive there, by mere accident, so that a
+conference would follow as a matter of course."
+
+"Very wily,--very subtle all this, doctor. Do you know, I 'm half
+frightened at the thought of trusting myself to such a master of
+intrigue and mystification."
+
+"Have no fears; I reserve all my craft for my clients." And with this he
+left the room, but only for a few minutes; for he met Barrington on the
+stairs, and speedily obtained permission to take his boat to Inistioge,
+having first pledged himself to come back with Stapylton to dinner.
+
+"We shall see, we shall see," muttered Stapylton to himself. "Your
+daughter must decide where I am to dine today."
+
+By the way--that is, as they glided along the bright river--Dill tried
+to prepare Stapylton for the task before him, by sundry hints as to
+Polly's temper and disposition, with warnings against this, and cautions
+about that. "Above all," said he, "don't try to overreach her."
+
+"Perfect frankness--candor itself--is my device. Won't that do?"
+
+"You must first see will she believe it," said the doctor, slyly; and
+for the remainder of the way there was a silence between them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. CROSS-PURPOSES
+
+"Where 's Miss Polly?" said Dill, hastily, as he passed his threshold.
+
+"She's making the confusion of roses in the kitchen, sir," said the
+maid, whose chemistry had been a neglected study.
+
+"Tell her that I have come back, and that there is a gentleman along
+with me," said he, imperiously, as he led the way into his study. "I
+have brought you into this den of mine, Major, because I would just say
+one word more by way of caution before you see Polly. You may imagine,
+from the small range of her intercourse with the world, and her village
+life, that her acuteness will not go very far; don't be too sure of
+that,--don't reckon too much on her want of experience."
+
+"I suppose I have encountered as sharp wits as hers before this time
+o' day," replied he, half peevishly; and then, with an air of better
+temper, added, "I have no secrets to hide, no mystery to cloak. If
+I want her alliance, she shall herself dictate the terms that shall
+requite it."
+
+The doctor shook his head dubiously, but was silent.
+
+"I half suspect, my good doctor," said Stapylton, laughing, "that your
+charming daughter is a little, a very little, of a domestic despot; you
+are all afraid of her; never very sure of what she will say or do or
+think on any given circumstances, and nervously alive to the risk of her
+displeasure."
+
+"There is something in what you say," remarked Dill, with a sigh; "but
+it was always my mistake to bring up my children with too much liberty
+of action. From the time they were so high"--and he held his hand out
+about a yard above the floor--"they were their own masters."
+
+Just as the words had fallen from him, a little chubby, shock-headed
+fellow, about five years old, burst into the room, which he believed
+unoccupied, and then, suddenly seeing his papa, set up a howl of terror
+that made the house ring.
+
+"What is it, Jimmy,--what is it, my poor man?" said Polly, rushing with
+tucked-up sleeves to the spot; and, catching him up in her arms, she
+kissed him affectionately.
+
+"Will you take him away?--will you take him out of that?" hissed out
+Dill between his teeth. "Don't you see Major Stapylton here?"
+
+"Oh, Major Stapylton will excuse a toilette that was never intended for
+his presence."
+
+"I will certainly say there could not be a more becoming one, nor a more
+charming tableau to display it in!"
+
+"There, Jimmy," said she, laughing; "you must have some bread and jam
+for getting me such a nice compliment."
+
+And she bore away the still sobbing urchin, who, burying his head in her
+bosom, could never summon courage to meet his father's eye.
+
+"What a spacious garden you appear to have here!" said Stapylton, who
+saw all the importance of a diversion to the conversation.
+
+"It is a very much neglected one," said Dill, pathetically. "My poor
+dear boy Tom used to take care of it when he was here; he had a perfect
+passion for flowers."
+
+Whether that Tom was associated in the Major's mind with some other very
+different tastes or not, Stapylton smiled slightly, and after a moment
+said, "If you permit me, I 'll take a stroll through your garden, and
+think over what we have been talking of."
+
+"Make yourself at home in every respect," said Dill. "I have a few
+professional calls to make in the village, but we 'll meet at luncheon."
+
+"He's in the garden, Polly," said Dill, as he passed his daughter on the
+stairs; "he came over here this morning to have a talk with you."
+
+"Indeed, sir!"
+
+"Yes; he has got it into his head that you can be of service to him."
+
+"It is not impossible, sir; I think I might."
+
+"I'm glad to bear it, Polly; I'm delighted to see you take a good
+sensible view of things. I need not tell you he's a knowing one."
+
+"No, sir. But, as I have heard you card-players say, 'he shows his
+hand.'"
+
+"So he does, Polly; but I have known fellows do that just to mislead the
+adversary."
+
+"Sorry adversaries that could be taken in so easily." And with a saucy
+toss of her head she passed on, scarcely noticing the warning gesture of
+her father's finger as she went.
+
+When she had found her work-basket and supplied herself with the means
+of occupying her fingers for an hour or so, she repaired to the garden
+and took her seat under a large elm, around whose massive trunk a mossy
+bench ran, divided by rustic-work into a series of separate places.
+
+"What a churlish idea it was to erect these barricades, Miss Dill!" said
+Stapylton as he seated himself at her side; "how unpicturesque and how
+prudish!"
+
+"It was a simple notion of my brother Tom's," said she, smiling, "who
+thought people would not be less agreeable by being reminded that
+they had a place of their own, and ought not to invade that of their
+neighbor."
+
+"What an unsocial thought!"
+
+"Poor Tom! A strange reproach to make against _you_," said she, laughing
+out.
+
+"By the way, has n't he turned out a hero,--saved a ship and all she
+carried from the flames,--and all at the hazard of his own life?"
+
+"He has done a very gallant thing; and, what's more, I 'll venture to
+say there is not a man who saw it thinks so little of it as himself."
+
+"I suppose that every brave man has more or less of that feeling."
+
+"I'm glad to learn this fact from such good authority," said she, with a
+slight bend of the head.
+
+"A prettily turned compliment, Miss Dill. Are you habitually given to
+flattery?"
+
+"No? I rather think not. I believe the world is pleased to call me more
+candid than courteous."
+
+"Will you let me take you at the world's estimate,--that is, will you
+do me the inestimable favor to bestow a little of this same candor upon
+_me?_"
+
+"Willingly. What is to be the subject of it?"
+
+"The subject is a very humble one,--myself!"
+
+"How can I possibly adjudicate on such a theme?"
+
+"Better than you think for, perhaps!" And for a moment he appeared
+awkward and ill at ease. "Miss Dill," said he, after a pause, "fortune
+has been using me roughly of late; and, like all men who deem themselves
+hardly treated, I fly at once to any quarter where I fancy I have found
+a more kindly disposition towards me. Am I indulging a self-delusion in
+believing that such sentiments are yours?"
+
+Polly Dill, with her own keen tact, had guessed what was the real object
+of Stapylton's visit. She had even read in her father's manner how he
+himself was a shareholder in the scheme, and she had made up her mind
+for a great frankness on each side; but now, seeing the diplomatic
+mys-teriousness with which the Major opened his attack, that love of
+mischievous drollery which entered into her nature suggested a very
+different line. She determined, in fact, to seem to accept the Major's
+speech as the preliminary to an offer of his hand. She therefore merely
+turned her head slightly, and in a low voice said, "Continue!"
+
+"I have not deceived myself, then," said he, with more warmth of manner.
+"I have secured one kind heart in my interest?"
+
+"You must own," said she, with a half-coquettish look of pique, "that
+you scarcely deserve it."
+
+"How,--in what way?" asked he, in astonishment.
+
+"What a very short memory you are blessed with! Must I, then, remind you
+of a certain evening at Cobham? Must I recall what I thought at the time
+very particular, as they certainly were very pleasant, attentions on
+your part? Must I, also, bring to mind a certain promised visit from
+you, the day and hour all named by yourself,--a visit which never came
+off? And after all this, Major, are you not really a bold man to come
+down and take up your negotiation where you dropped it? Is there not
+in this a strong conviction of the greatness of Major Stapylton and the
+littleness of the doctor's daughter?"
+
+Stapylton was struck dumb. When a general sees that what he meant as
+a feint has been converted into a real attack, the situation is often
+imminent; but what comparison in difficulty is there between that
+mistake and that of him who assails what he never desired to conquer?
+How he inwardly cursed the stupidity with which he had opened his
+negotiation!
+
+"I perceive," said she, triumphing over his confusion, "that your calmer
+judgment does not reassure you. You feel that there is a certain levity
+in this conduct not quite excusable! Own it frankly, and at once!"
+
+"I will own, if you like, that I was never in a situation of greater
+embarrassment!"
+
+"Shall I tell you why?"
+
+"You couldn't; it would be totally impossible."
+
+"I will try, however, if you permit me. You do! Then here goes. You no
+more intended anything to come of your little flirtation at Cobham than
+you now do of a more serious blunder. You never came here this morning
+to make your court to _me_, You are much pained at the awkwardness of
+a situation so naturally wounding to me, and for the life of you, you
+cannot imagine what escape there is out of such a difficulty."
+
+"You are wonderfully clever, Miss Dill," said he; and there was an
+honest admiration in his look that gave the words a full significance.
+
+"No," said she, "but I am wonderfully good-natured. I forgive you what
+is the hardest thing in the world to forgive!"
+
+"Oh! if you would but be my friend," cried he, warmly.
+
+"What a want of tact there was in that speech, Major Stapylton!" said
+she, with a laugh; "but perhaps you wanted to reverse the line of our
+dear little poet, who tells of some one 'that came but for Friendship,
+and took away Love'!"
+
+"How cruel you are in all this mockery of me!"
+
+"Does not the charge of cruelty come rather ill from _you?--you_, who
+can afford to sport with the affections of poor village maidens. From
+the time of that 'Major bold of Halifax' the song tells of, I never
+heard your equal."
+
+"Could you prevail upon yourself to be serious for a few minutes?" said
+he, gravely.
+
+"I think not,--at least not just now; but why should I make the
+attempt?"
+
+"Because I would wish your aid in a serious contingency,--a matter in
+which I am deeply interested, and which involves probably my future
+happiness."
+
+"Ah, Major! is it possible that you are going to trifle with my feelings
+once more?"
+
+"My dear Miss Dill, must I plead once more for a little mercy?"
+
+"No, don't do any such thing; it would seem ungenerous to refuse, and
+yet I could not accord it."
+
+"Fairly beaten," said he, with a sigh; "there is no help for it. You are
+the victor!"
+
+"How did you leave our friends at 'The Home'?" said she, with an easy
+indifference in her tone.
+
+"All well, perfectly well; that is to say, I believe so, for I only saw
+my host himself."
+
+"What a pleasant house; how well they understand receiving their
+friends!"
+
+"It is so peaceful and so quiet!" said he, with an effort to seem at
+ease.
+
+"And the garden is charming!"
+
+"And all this is perfectly intolerable," said he, rising, and speaking
+in a voice thick with suppressed anger. "I never came here to play a
+part in a vaudeville! Your father led me to believe, Miss Dill, that you
+might not be indisposed to lend me your favoring aid in a suit which
+I am interested in. He told me I should at least find you frank and
+outspoken; that if you felt inclined to assist me, you'd never enhance
+the service by a seeming doubt or hesitation--"
+
+"And if I should not feel so inclined, what did he then give you to
+expect?"
+
+"That you'd say so!"
+
+"So I do, then, clearly and distinctly tell you, if my counsels offer a
+bar to your wishes, they are all enlisted against you."
+
+"This is the acme of candor. You can only equal it by saying how I could
+have incurred your disfavor."
+
+"There is nothing of disfavor in the matter. I think you charming. You
+are a hero,--very clever, very fascinating, very accomplished; but
+I believe it would be a great mistake for Fifine to marry you. Your
+tempers have that sort of resemblance that leave no reliefs in their
+mutual play. You are each of you hot and hasty, and a little imperious;
+and if she were not very much in love, and consequently disposed to
+think a great deal of you and very little of herself, these traits that
+I speak of would work ill. But if every one of them were otherwise,
+there would still be one obstacle worse than all!"
+
+"And that is--"
+
+"Can you not guess what I mean, Major Stapylton? You do not, surely,
+want confidences from me that are more than candor!"
+
+"Do I understand you aright?" said he, growing red and pale by turns, as
+passion worked within him; "do I apprehend you correctly? These people
+here are credulous enough to be influenced by the shadowy slanders of
+the newspapers, and they listen to the half-muttered accusations of a
+hireling press?"
+
+"They do say very awkward things in the daily press, certainly," said
+she, dryly; "and your friends marvel at the silence with which you treat
+them."
+
+"Then I _have_ divined your meaning," said he. "It is by these cowardly
+assailants I am supposed to be vanquished. I suspect, however, that
+Colonel Barrington himself was, once on a time, indulged with the same
+sort of flattery. They said that he had usurped a sovereignty, falsified
+documents, purloined jewels of immense value. I don't know what they did
+not charge him with. And what do they say of me? That I exhibited great
+severity--cruelty, if you will--towards a mob in a state of rebellion;
+that I reprimanded a very silly subaltern for a misplaced act of
+humanity. That I have been cashiered, too, they assert, in face of the
+'Gazette,' which announces my appointment to an unattached majority. In
+a word, the enormity of the falsehood has never stayed their hand, and
+they write of me whatever their unthinking malevolence can suggest to
+them. You have, perhaps, seen some of these paragraphs?"
+
+"Like every one else, I have read them occasionally; not very
+attentively, indeed. But, in truth, I'm not a reader of newspapers.
+Here, for instance, is this morning's as it came from Dublin, still
+unopened;" and she handed it as she spoke.
+
+"Let us see if I be still honored with their notice," said he, unfolding
+the paper, and running his eyes hastily over it. "Debate on the Sugar
+Bill--Prison Reforms--China--Reinforcements for Canada--Mail Service to
+the Colonies--Bankruptcy Court. Oh, here we have it--here it is!" and he
+crushed the paper while he folded down one part of it. "Shall I read it
+for you? The heading is very tempting: 'Late Military Scandal.--A very
+curious report is now going through our West-end Clubs, and especially
+such as are the resort of military officers. It is to the purport that a
+certain Field-officer of Cavalry--whose conduct has been the subject of
+severe strictures from the Press--will speedily be called to answer for
+a much graver offence than the transgression of regimental discipline.
+The story which has reached us is a very strange one, and we should call
+it incredible, if we were not informed, on author-ity, that one of our
+most distinguished Indian generals has declared himself fully satisfied
+of its truth in every particular.' Can you fancy anything worse than
+that, Miss Dill? An unknown somebody is alleged to be convinced of an
+unknown something that attaches to me; for, of course, I am designated
+as the 'Field-officer of Cavalry,' and the public is graciously pleased
+to hold me in abhorrence till I have found out my calumniator and
+refuted him!"
+
+"It seems very hard. Who do you suspect is the Indian General alluded
+to?"
+
+"Tell me, first of all,--does he exist?" "And this, too, you will not
+reply to, nor notice?" "Not, certainly, through such a channel as it
+reaches me. If the slanderer will stand forth and avow himself, I may
+know how to deal with him. But what has led us into this digression? I
+am sure it is as little to your taste as to mine. I have failed in my
+mission, and if I were able to justify every act of my life, what would
+it avail me? You have pronounced against me; at least, you will not take
+my brief."
+
+"What if I were retained by the other side?" said she, smiling.
+
+"I never suspected that there was another side," said he, with an air of
+extreme indifference. "Who is my formidable rival?"
+
+"I might have told you if I saw you were really anxious on the subject."
+
+"It would be but hypocrisy in me to pretend it. If, for example, Major
+McCormick--"
+
+"Oh, that is too bad!" cried Polly, interrupting. "This would mean an
+impertinence to Miss Barrington."
+
+"How pleasant we must have been! Almost five o'clock, and I scarcely
+thought it could be three!" said he, with an affected languor.
+
+"'Time's foot is not heard when he treads upon flowers,'" said she,
+smiling.
+
+"Where shall I find your father, Miss Dill? I want to tell him what a
+charming creature his daughter is, and how wretched I feel at not being
+able to win her favor."
+
+"Pray don't; or he might fall into my own mistake, and imagine that you
+wanted a lease of it for life."
+
+"Still cruel, still inexorable!" said he, with a mockery of affliction
+in his tone. "Will you say all the proper things--the regrets, and
+such like--I feel at not meeting him again; and if he has asked me to
+dinner--which I really forget--will you make the fitting apology?"
+
+"And what is it, in the present case?"
+
+"I 'm not exactly sure whether I am engaged to dine elsewhere, or too
+ill to dine at all."
+
+"Why not say it is the despair at being rejected renders you unequal to
+the effort? I mean, of course, by myself, Major Stapylton."
+
+"I have no objection; say so, if you like," said he, with an insulting
+indifference. "Good-day, Miss Dill. This is the way to the road, I
+believe;" and, with a low bow, very deferential but very distant, he
+turned away to leave the garden. He had not, however, gone many
+paces, when he stopped and seemed to ponder. He looked up at the sky,
+singularly clear and cloudless as it was, without a breath of wind in
+the air; he gazed around him on every side, as if in search of an object
+he wanted; and then, taking out his purse, he drew forth a shilling and
+examined it. "Yes," muttered he, "Chance has been my only counsellor for
+many a year, and the only one that never takes a bribe! And yet, is it
+not taking to the raft before the ship has foundered? True; but shall
+I be sure of the raft if I wait for the shipwreck? She is intensely
+crafty. She has that sort of head that loves a hard knot to unravel!
+Here goes! Let Destiny take all the consequences!" and as he flung up
+the piece of money in the air, he cried, "Head!" It was some minutes
+ere he could discover where it had fallen, amongst the close leaves of a
+border of strawberries. He bent down to look, and exclaimed, "Head! she
+has won!" Just as he arose from his stooping attitude he perceived that
+Polly was engaged in the adjoining walk, making a bouquet of roses. He
+sprang across the space, and stood beside her.
+
+"I thought you had been a mile off by this time, at least," said she,
+calmly.
+
+"So I meant, and so I intended; but just as I parted from you, a thought
+struck me--one of those thoughts which come from no process of reasoning
+or reflection, but seem impelled by a force out of our own natures--that
+I would come back and tell you something that was passing in my mind.
+Can you guess it?"
+
+"No; except it be that you are sorry for having trifled so unfeelingly
+with my hopes, and have come back to make the best reparation in your
+power, asking me to forgive and accept you."
+
+"You have guessed aright; it was for that I returned."
+
+"What a clever guess I made! Confess I am very ready-witted!"
+
+"You are; and it is to engage those ready wits in my behalf that I am
+now before you."
+
+"'At my feet,' sir, is the appropriate expression. I wonder how a
+gentleman so suited to be the hero of a story could forget the language
+of the novel."
+
+"I want you to be serious," said he, almost sternly.
+
+"And why should that provoke seriousness from _me_ which only costs
+_you_ levity?"
+
+"Levity!--where is the levity?"
+
+"Is it not this instant that you flung a shilling in the air, and cried
+out, as you looked on it, 'She has won'? Is it not that you asked Chance
+to decide for you what most men are led to by their affections, or at
+least their interests; and if so, is levity not the name for this?"
+
+"True in part, but not in whole; for I felt it was _I_ who had won when
+'head' came uppermost."
+
+"And yet you have lost."
+
+"How so! You refuse me?"
+
+"I forgive your astonishment. It is really strange, but I do refuse
+you."
+
+"But why? Are you piqued with me for anything that occurred this
+morning? Have I offended you by anything that dropped from me in that
+conversation? Tell me frankly, that I may, if in my power, rectify it."
+
+"No; I rather felt flattered at the notion of being consulted. I thought
+it a great tribute to my clear-headedness and my tact."
+
+"Then tell me what it was."
+
+"You really wish it?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Insist upon it?"
+
+"I insist upon it."
+
+"Well, it was this. Seeing that you were intrusting your future fortune
+to chance, I thought that I would do the same, and so I tossed up
+whether, opportunity serving, I should accept you or a certain other,
+and the other won!"
+
+"May I ask for the name of my fortunate rival?"
+
+"I don't think it is very fair, perhaps not altogether delicate of you;
+and the more since he has not proposed, nor possibly ever may. But no
+matter, you shall hear his name. It was Major McCormick."
+
+"McCormick! You mean this for an insult to me, Miss Dill?"
+
+[Illustration: 472]
+
+"Well, it certainly is open to that objection," said she, with a very
+slight closure of her eyes, and a look of steady, resolute defiance.
+
+"And in this way," continued he, "to throw ridicule over the offer I
+have made you?"
+
+"Scarcely that; the proposition was in itself too ridiculous to require
+any such aid from me."
+
+For a moment Stapylton lost his self-possession, and he turned on her
+with a look of savage malignity.
+
+"An insult, and an intentional insult!" said he; "a bold thing to avow."
+
+"I don't think so, Major Stapylton. We have been playing a very rough
+game with each other, and it is not very wonderful if each of us should
+have to complain of hard treatment."
+
+"Could not so very clever a person as Miss Dill perceive that I was only
+jesting?" said he, with a cutting insolence in his tone.
+
+"I assure you that I did not," said she, calmly; "had I known or even
+suspected it was a jest, I never should have been angry. That the
+distinguished Major Stapylton should mock and quiz--or whatever be the
+name for it--the doctor's daughter, however questionable the good taste,
+was, after all, only a passing slight. The thought of asking her to
+marry him was different,--that was an outrage!"
+
+"You shall pay for this one day, perhaps," said he, biting his lip.
+
+"No, Major Stapylton," said she, laughing; "this is not a debt of honor;
+you can afford to ignore it."
+
+"I tell you again, you shall pay for it."
+
+"Till then, sir!" said she, with a courtesy; and without giving him
+time for another word, she turned and re-entered the house.
+
+Scarcely had Stapylton gained the road when he was joined by McCormick.
+"Faith, you didn't get the best of that brush, anyhow," said he, with a
+grin.
+
+"What do you mean, sir?" replied Stapylton, savagely.
+
+"I mean that I heard every word that passed between you, and I would n't
+have been standing in your shoes for a fifty-pound note."
+
+"How is your rheumatism this morning?" asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+"Pretty much as it always is," croaked out the other.
+
+"Be thankful to it, then; for if you were not a cripple, I 'd throw you
+into that river as sure as I stand here to say it."
+
+Major McCormick did not wait for a less merciful moment, but hobbled
+away from the spot with all the speed he could muster.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. STORMS
+
+When Stapylton stepped out of his boat and landed at "The Home," the
+first person he saw was certainly the last in his wishes. It was Miss
+Dinah who stood at the jetty, as though awaiting him. Scarcely deigning
+to notice, beyond a faint smile of acquiescence, the somewhat bungling
+explanation he gave of his absence, she asked if he had met her brother.
+
+"No," said he. "I left the village a couple of hours ago; rather
+loitering, as I came along, to enjoy the river scenery."
+
+"He took the road, and in this way missed you," said she, dryly.
+
+"How unfortunate!--for me, I mean, of course. I own to you, Miss
+Barrington, wide as the difference between our ages, I never yet met any
+one so thoroughly companionable to me as your brother. To meet a man
+so consummately acquainted with the world, and yet not soured by his
+knowledge; to see the ripe wisdom of age blended with the generous
+warmth of youth; to find one whose experiences only make him more
+patient, more forgiving, more trustful--"
+
+"Too trustful, Major Stapylton, far too trustful." And her bold gray
+eyes were turned upon him as she spoke, with a significance that could
+not be mistaken.
+
+"It is a noble feeling, madam," said he, haughtily.
+
+"It is a great misfortune to its possessor, sir."
+
+"Can we deem that misfortune, Miss Barrington, which enlarges the
+charity of our natures, and teaches us to be slow to think ill?"
+
+Not paying the slightest attention to his question, she said,--
+
+"My brother went in search of you, sir, to place in your hands some
+very urgent letters from the Horse Guards, and which a special messenger
+brought here this morning."
+
+"Truly kind of him. They relate, I have no doubt, to my Indian
+appointment. They told me I should have news by to-day or to-morrow."
+
+"He received a letter also for himself, sir, which he desired to show
+you."
+
+"About his lawsuit, of course? It is alike a pleasure and a duty to me
+to serve him in that affair."
+
+"It more nearly concerns yourself, sir," said she, in the same cold,
+stern tone; "though it has certainly its bearing on the case you speak
+of."
+
+"More nearly concerns myself!" said he, repeating her words slowly. "I
+am about the worst guesser of a riddle in the world, Miss Barrington.
+Would you kindly relieve my curiosity? Is this letter a continuation of
+those cowardly attacks which, in the want of a worthier theme, the Press
+have amused themselves by making upon me? Is it possible that some enemy
+has had the malice to attack me through my friends?"
+
+"The writer of the letter in question is a sufficient guarantee for its
+honor, Mr. Withering."
+
+"Mr. Withering!" repeated he, with a start, and then, as suddenly
+assuming an easy smile, added: "I am perfectly tranquil to find myself
+in such hands as Mr. Withering's. And what, pray, does _he_ say of me?"
+
+"Will you excuse me, Major Stapylton, if I do not enter upon a subject
+on which I am not merely very imperfectly informed, but on which so
+humble a judgment as mine would be valueless? My brother showed me the
+letter very hurriedly; I had but time to see to what it referred, and to
+be aware that it was his duty to let you see it at once,--if possible,
+indeed, before you were again under his roof."
+
+"What a grave significance your words have, Miss Barrington!" said he,
+with a cold smile. "They actually set me to think over all my faults and
+failings, and wonder for which of them I am now arraigned."
+
+"We do not profess to judge you, sir."
+
+By this time they had sauntered up to the little garden in front of
+the cottage, within the paling of which Josephine was busily engaged
+in training a japonica. She arose as she heard the voices, and in her
+accustomed tone wished Stapylton good-evening. "_She_, at least, has
+heard nothing of all this," muttered he to himself, as he saluted
+her. He then opened the little wicket; and Miss Barrington passed
+in, acknowledging his attention by a short nod, as she walked hastily
+forward and entered the cottage. Instead of following her, Stapylton
+closed the wicket again, remaining on the outside, and leaning his arm
+on the upper rail.
+
+"Why do you perform sentry? Are you not free to enter the fortress?"
+said Fifine.
+
+"I half suspect not," said he, in a low tone, and to hear which she was
+obliged to draw nigher to where he stood.
+
+"What do you mean? I don't understand you!"
+
+"No great wonder, for I don't understand myself. Your aunt has, however,
+in her own most mysterious way, given me to believe that somebody has
+written something about me to somebody else, and until I clear up what
+in all probability I shall never hear, that I had better keep to what
+the Scotch call the 'back o' the gate.'"
+
+"This is quite unintelligible."
+
+"I hope it is, for it is almost unendurable. I am sorely afraid," added
+he, after a minute, "that I am not so patient as I ought to be under
+Miss Barrington's strictures. I am so much more in the habit of command
+than of obedience, that I may forget myself now and then. To _you_,
+however, I am ready to submit all my past life and conduct. By you I am
+willing to be judged. If these cruel calumnies which are going the round
+of the papers on me have lowered me in your estimation, my case is a
+lost one; but if, as I love to think, your woman's heart resents an
+injustice,--if, taking counsel of your courage and your generosity,
+you feel it is not the time to withdraw esteem when the dark hour of
+adversity looms over a man,--then, I care no more for these slanders
+than for the veriest trifles which cross one's every-day life. In one
+word,--your verdict is life or death to me."
+
+"In that case," said she, with an effort to dispel the seriousness of
+his manner, "I must have time to consider my sentence."
+
+"But that is exactly what you cannot have, Josephine," said he; and
+there was a certain earnestness in his voice and look, which made her
+hear him call her by her name without any sense of being off ended.
+"First relieve the suffering; there will be ample leisure to question
+the sufferer afterwards. The Good Samaritan wasted few words, and asked
+for no time. The noblest services are those of which the cost is never
+calculated. Your own heart can tell you: can you befriend me, and will
+you?"
+
+"I do not know what it is you ask of me," said she, with a frank
+boldness which actually disconcerted him. "Tell me distinctly, what is
+it?"
+
+"I will tell you," said he, taking her hand, but so gently, so
+respectfully withal, that she did not at first withdraw it,--"I will
+tell you. It is that you will share that fate on which fortune is now
+frowning; that you will add your own high-couraged heart to that of one
+who never knew a fear till now; that you will accept my lot in this the
+day of my reverse, and enable me to turn upon my pursuers and scatter
+them. To-morrow or next day will be too late. It is now, at this hour,
+that friends hold back, that one more than friend is needed. Can you be
+that, Josephine?"
+
+"No!" said she, firmly. "If I read your meaning aright, I cannot."
+
+"You cannot love me, Josephine," said he, in a voice of intense emotion;
+and though he waited some time for her to speak, she was silent. "It
+is true, then," said he, passionately, "the slanderers have done their
+work!"
+
+"I know nothing of these calumnies. When my grandfather told me that
+they accused you falsely, and condemned you unfairly, I believed him.
+I am as ready as ever to say so. I do not understand your cause; but I
+believe you to be a true and gallant gentleman!"
+
+"But yet, not one to love!" whispered he, faintly.
+
+Again she was silent, and for some time he did not speak.
+
+"A true and gallant gentleman!" said he, slowly repeating her own words;
+"and if so, is it an unsafe keeping to which to intrust your happiness?
+It is no graceful task to have oneself for a theme; but I cannot help
+it. I have no witnesses to call to character; a few brief lines in an
+army list, and some scars--old reminders of French sabres--are poor
+certificates, and yet I have no others."
+
+There was something which touched her in the sadness of his tone as he
+said these words, and if she knew how, she would have spoken to him in
+kindliness. He mistook the struggle for a change of purpose, and with
+greater eagerness continued: "After all I am scarcely more alone in the
+world than you are! The dear friends who now surround you cannot be long
+spared, and what isolation will be your fate then! Think of this, and
+think, too, how, in assuring your own future, you rescue mine."
+
+Very differently from his former speech did the present affect her;
+and her cheeks glowed and her eyes flashed as she said, "I have never
+intrusted my fate to your keeping, sir; and you may spare yourself all
+anxiety about it."
+
+"You mistake me. You wrong me, Josephine--"
+
+"You wrong yourself when you call me by my Christian name; and you arm
+me with distrust of one who would presume upon an interest he has not
+created."
+
+"You refuse me, then?" said he, slowly and calmly.
+
+"Once, and forever!"
+
+"It may be that you are mistaken, Miss Barrington. It may be that this
+other affection, which you prefer to mine, is but the sickly sentiment
+of a foolish boy, whose life up to this has not given one single
+guarantee, nor shown one single trait of those which make 'true and
+gallant gentlemen.' But you have made your choice."
+
+"I have," said she, with a low but firm voice.
+
+"You acknowledge, then, that I was right," cried he, suddenly; "there is
+a prior attachment? Your heart is not your own to give?"
+
+"And by what right do you presume to question me? Who are you, that
+dares to do this?"
+
+"Who am I?" cried he, and for once his voice rose to the discordant ring
+of passion.
+
+"Yes, that was my question," repeated she, firmly.
+
+"So, then, you have had your lesson, young lady," said he; and the words
+came from him with a hissing sound, that indicated intense anger. "Who
+am I? You want my birth, my parentage, my bringing up! Had you no friend
+who could have asked this in your stead? Or were all those around you
+so bereft of courage that they deputed to a young girl what should have
+been the office of a man?"
+
+Though the savage earnestness of his manner startled, it did not
+affright her; and it was with a cold quietness she said, "If you had
+known my father, Major Stapylton, I suspect you would not have accused
+his daughter of cowardice!"
+
+"Was he so very terrible?" said he, with a smile that was half a sneer.
+
+"He would have been, to a man like you."
+
+"To a man like me,--a man like me! Do you know, young lady, that either
+your words are very idle words or very offensive ones?"
+
+"And yet I have no wish to recall them, sir."
+
+"It would be better you could find some one to sustain them.
+Unfortunately, however, you cannot ask that gallant gentleman we were
+just talking of; for it is only the other day, and after passing over
+to Calais to meet me, his friends pretend that there is some obstacle
+to our meeting. I owe my tailor or my bootmaker something; or I have
+not paid my subscription to a club; or I have left an unsettled bill ar
+Baden. I really forget the precise pretext; but it was one which to them
+seemed quite sufficient to balk me of a redress, and at the same time to
+shelter their friend."
+
+"I will not believe one word of it, sir!"
+
+"Well, we have at least arrived at a perfect frankness in our
+intercourse. May I ask you, young lady, which of your relatives has
+suggested your present course! Is it to your aunt or to your grandfather
+I must go for an explanation?"
+
+"I suspect it is to me, Major Stapylton," said Barrington, as he came
+from behind Josephine. "It is to me you must address yourself. Fifine,
+my dear, your aunt is looking for you; go and tell her, too, that I am
+quite ready for tea, and you will find me here when it is ready. Major
+Stapylton and I will take a stroll along the river-side." Now this last
+was less an invitation than a sort of significant hint to Stapylton that
+his host had no intention to ask him to cross his threshold, at least
+for the present; and, indeed, as Barrington passed out and closed the
+wicket after him, he seemed as though closing the entrance forever.
+
+With a manner far more assured thau his wont, Barrington said: "I have
+been in pursuit of you, Major Stapylton, since four o'clock. I missed
+you by having taken the road instead of the river; and am much grieved
+that the communication I have to make you should not take place anywhere
+rather than near my roof or within my own gates."
+
+"I am to suppose from your words, sir, that what you are about to say
+can scarcely be said to a friend; and if so, cannot you hit upon a more
+convenient mode of making your communication?"
+
+"I think not. I believe that I shall be dealing more fairly with you by
+saying what I have to say in person."
+
+"Go on," said Stapylton, calmly, as the other paused.
+
+"You are aware," continued Barrington, "that the chief obstacle to a
+settlement of the claims I have long preferred against the India Company
+has been a certain document which they possess, declaring that a
+large portion of the territory held by the Rajah of Luckerabad was not
+amenable to the laws that regulate succession, being what is called
+'Lurkar-teea,'--conquered country,--over which, under no circumstances,
+could the Rajah exercise prospective rights. To this deed, for their
+better protection, the Company obtained the signature and seal of the
+Rajah himself, by means which, of course, we could never discover; but
+they held it, and always declared that no portion of my son's claim
+could extend to these lands. Now, as they denied that he could
+succeed to what are called the 'Turban lands,' meaning the right of
+sovereignty--being a British subject--on the one hand, and rejected
+his claim to these conquered countries on the other,--they excluded him
+altogether."
+
+"My dear sir," said Stapylton, mildly, "I'm shocked to interrupt you,
+but I am forced to ask, what is the intimate bearing of all this upon
+me, or on your position towards me?"
+
+"Have a little patience, sir, and suffer me to proceed. If it should
+turn out that this document--I mean that which bears the signature and
+seal of the Rajah--should be a forgery; if, I say, it could be shown
+that what the India Board have long relied on to sustain their case and
+corroborate their own view could be proved false, a great point would be
+gained towards the establishment of our claim."
+
+"Doubtless," said Stapylton, with the half-peevish indifference of one
+listening against his will.
+
+"Well, there is a good prospect of this," said Barring-ton, boldly.
+"Nay, more, it is a certainty."
+
+"Mr. Barrington," said Stapylton, drawing himself haughtily up, "a few
+hours ago this history would have had a very great interest for me. My
+hopes pointed to a very close relationship with your family; the last
+hour has sufficed to dispel those hopes. Your granddaughter has rejected
+me so decidedly that I cannot presume to suppose a change in her opinion
+possible. Let me not then, obtain any share in your confidence to which
+I have no right whatever."
+
+"What I am about to say will have more interest for you, sir," continued
+Barrington. "I am about to mention a name that you will recognize,--the
+Moonshee, Ali Gohur."
+
+Stapylton started, and dropped the cigar he was smoking. To take out
+another and light it, however, sufficed to employ him, as he murmured
+between his teeth, "Go on."
+
+"This man says--" continued Barrington.
+
+"Said, perhaps, if you like," broke in Stapylton, "for he died some
+months ago."
+
+"No; he is alive at this hour. He was on board the Indiaman that was run
+down by the transport. He was saved and carried on board the 'Regulus'
+by the intrepidity of young Dill. He is now recovering rapidly from the
+injuries he received, and at the date of the letter which I hold here,
+was able to be in daily communication with Colonel Hunter, who is the
+writer of this."
+
+"I wish the gallant Colonel honester company. Are you aware, Mr.
+Barrington, that you are speaking of one of the greatest rascals of a
+country not famed for its integrity?"
+
+"He lays no claim to such for the past; but he would seem desirous to
+make some reparation for a long course of iniquity."
+
+"Charmed for his sake, and that of his well-wishers, if he have any.
+But, once again, sir, and at all the risk of appearing very impatient,
+what concern has all this for me?"
+
+"A great deal, sir. The Moonshee declares that he has been for years
+back in close correspondence with a man we long since believed dead,
+and that this man was known to have communicated constantly with the
+law advisers of the India Board in a manner adverse to us, he being
+none other than the son of the notorious Sam Edwardes, whom he always
+addressed under cover to Captain Horace Stapylton, Prince's Hussars."
+
+"This is--strange enough, when one thinks of the quarter it comes
+from--perfectly true. I came to know Edwardes when on my voyage home,
+invalided. He took immense trouble about me, nursed and tended me,
+and, in return, asked as a favor to have some letters he was expecting
+addressed to my care. I neither knew who he was, nor cared. He got
+his letters, and I suppose read them; but of their contents, I, it is
+needless to say, know nothing. I am speaking of a dozen years ago, or,
+at least, eight or ten, for since that time I have never heard of either
+Edwardes or his friend."
+
+"He tells a different story. He asserts that to his letters, forwarded
+to the same address up to the period of last March, he regularly
+received replies; but at last finding that the writer was disposed to
+get rid of him, he obtained means to circulate a report of his death,
+and sailed for Europe to prefer his claims, whatever they be, in
+person."
+
+"And if every word of this were true, Mr. Barrington, which I don't
+suspect it is, how, in the name of common sense, does it concern me? I
+don't suppose I ever took my own letters at a post-office twice in my
+life. My servant, who has lived with me fourteen years, may, for aught I
+know, have been bribed to abstract these letters on their arrival; they
+would be easily recognized by the very superscription. This is one way
+the thing might have been done. There may have been fifty more, for
+aught I know or care."
+
+"But you don't deny that you knew Edwardes, and had a close intimacy
+with him?--a circumstance which you never revealed to Withering or
+myself."
+
+"It is not at all improbable I may have known half a dozen of that name.
+It is by no means an uncommon one, not to say that I have a singularly
+infelicitous memory for people's names. But for the last time, sir, I
+must protest against this conversation going any further. You have taken
+upon you, I would hope without intending it, the tone of a French _Juge
+d'Instruction_ in the interrogation of a prisoner. You have questioned
+and cross-questioned me, asking how I can account for this, or explain
+that. Now, I am ready to concede a great deal to your position as my
+host, and to your years, but really I must entreat of you not to push my
+deference for these beyond the limits of the respect I owe myself. You
+very properly warned me at the opening of this conversation that it
+ought not to have the sanction of your roof-tree. I have only to beg
+that if it is to go any further, that it be conducted in such a shape
+as is usual between gentlemen who have an explanation to ask, or a
+satisfaction to demand."
+
+There was consummate craft in giving the discussion this turn. Stapylton
+well knew the nature of the man he was addressing, and that after the
+passing allusion to his character as a host, he only needed to hint at
+the possibility of a meeting to recall him to a degree of respect only
+short of deference for his opponent.
+
+"I defer to you at once, Major Stapylton," said the old man, with a
+bland courtesy, as he uncovered and bowed. "There was a time when I
+should scarcely have required the admonition you have given me."
+
+"I am glad to perceive that you understand me so readily," said
+Stapylton, who could scarcely repress the joy he felt at the success of
+his diversion; "and that nothing may mar our future understanding, this
+is my address in London, where I shall wait your orders for a week."
+
+Though the stroke was shrewdly intended, and meant to throw upon
+Barrington all the onus of the provocation, the Major little suspected
+that it was the one solitary subject of which his opponent was a master.
+On the "duello" Barrington was an authority beyond appeal, and no
+subtlety, however well contrived, could embarrass or involve him.
+
+"I have no satisfaction to claim at your hands, Major Stapylton," said
+he, calmly. "My friend, Mr. Withering, when he sent me these letters,
+knew you were my guest, and he said, 'Read them to Major Stapylton. Let
+him know what is said of him, and who says it.'"
+
+"And, perhaps, you ought to add, sir, who gives it the sanction of his
+belief," broke in Stapylton, angrily. "You never took the trouble to
+recite these charges till they obtained your credence."
+
+"You have said nothing to disprove them," said the old man, quickly.
+
+"That is enough,--quite enough, sir; we understand each other perfectly.
+You allege certain things against me as injuries done you, and you wait
+for _me_ to resent the imputation. I 'll not balk you, be assured of it.
+The address I have given you in London will enable you to communicate
+with me when you arrive there; for I presume this matter had better be
+settled in France or Holland."
+
+"I think so," said Barrington, with the air of a man thoroughly at his
+ease.
+
+"I need not say, Mr. Barrington, the regret it gives me that it was not
+one of my detractors himself, and not their dupe, that should occupy
+this place."
+
+"The dupe, sir, is very much at your service."
+
+"Till we meet again," said Stapylton, raising his hat as he turned away.
+In his haste and the confusion of the moment, he took the path that
+led towards the cottage; nor did he discover his mistake till he heard
+Barrington's voice calling out to Darby,--
+
+"Get the boat ready to take Major Stapylton to Inistioge."
+
+"You forget none of the precepts of hospitality," said Stapylton,
+wheeling hastily around, and directing his steps towards the river.
+
+Barrington looked after him as he went, and probably in his long and
+varied life, crossed with many a care and many troubles, he had never
+felt the pain of such severe self-reproach as in that moment. To see his
+guest, the man who had sat at his board and eaten his salt, going out
+into the dreary night without one hospitable effort to detain him,
+without a pledge to his health, without a warm shake of his hand, or one
+hearty wish for his return.
+
+"Dear, dear!" muttered he, to himself, "what is the world come to! I
+thought I had no more experiences to learn of suffering; but here is
+a new one. Who would have thought to see the day that Peter Barrington
+would treat his guest this fashion?"
+
+"Are you coming in to tea, grandpapa?" cried Josephine, from the garden.
+
+"Here I am, my dear!"
+
+"And your guest, Peter, what has become of him?" said Dinah.
+
+"He had some very urgent business at Kilkenny; something that could not
+admit of delay, I opine."
+
+"But you have not let him go without his letters, surely. Here are all
+these formidable-looking despatches, on his Majesty's service, on the
+chimney-piece."
+
+"How forgetful of me!" cried he, as, snatching them up, he hastened down
+to the river-side. The boat, however, had just gone; and although he
+shouted and called at the top of his voice, no answer came, and he
+turned back at last, vexed and disappointed.
+
+"I shall have to start for Dublin to-morrow, Dinah," said he, as he
+walked thoughtfully up and down the room. "I must have Withering's
+advice on these letters. There are very pressing matters to be thought
+of here, and I can take Major Stapylton's despatches with me. I am
+certain to hear of him somewhere."
+
+Miss Barrington turned her eyes full upon him, and watched him narrowly.
+She was a keen detector of motives, and she scanned her brother's
+face with no common keenness, and yet she could see nothing beyond the
+preoccupation she had often seen. There was no impatience, no anxiety. A
+shade more thoughtful, perhaps, and even that passed off, as he sat down
+to his tea, and asked Fifine what commissions she had for the capital.
+
+"You will leave by the evening mail, I suppose?" said Miss Barrington.
+
+"No, Dinah, night travelling wearies me. I will take the coach as it
+passes the gate to-morrow at five; this will bring me in time to catch
+Withering at his late dinner, and a pleasanter way to finish a day's
+travel no man need ask for."
+
+Nothing could be more easily spoken than these words, and Miss Dinah
+felt reassured by them, and left the room to give some orders about his
+journey.
+
+"Fifine, darling," said Barrington, after a pause, "do you like your
+life here?"
+
+"Of course I do, grandpapa. How could I wish for one more happy?"
+
+"But it is somewhat dull for one so young,--somewhat solitary for a
+fair, bright creature, who might reasonably enough care for pleasure and
+the world."
+
+"To me it is a round of gayety, grandpapa; so that I almost felt
+inclined yesterday to wish for some quiet davs with aunt and
+yourself,--some of those dreamy days like what we had in Germany."
+
+"I fear me much, darling, that I contribute but little to the pleasure.
+My head is so full of one care or another, I am but sorry company,
+Fifine."
+
+"If you only knew how dull we are without you! How heavily the day drags
+on even with the occupations you take no share in; how we miss your
+steps on the stairs and your voice in the garden, and that merry laugh
+that sets ourselves a-laughing just by its own ring."
+
+"And you would miss me, then?" said he, as he pushed the hair from her
+temples, and stared steadfastly at her face,--"you would miss me?"
+
+"It would only be half life without you," cried she, passionately.
+
+"So much the worse,--so much the worse!" muttered he; and he turned
+away, and drew his hand across his eyes. "This life of ours, Fifine, is
+a huge battle-field; and though the comrades fall fast around him, the
+brave soldier will fight on to the last."
+
+"You don't want a dress-coat, brother Peter, to dine with Withering,
+so I have just put up what will serve you for three days, or four, at
+furthest," said Dinah, entering. "What will be the extent of your stay?"
+
+"Let me have a black coat, Dinah; there 's no saying what great man may
+not ask for my company; and it might be a week before I get back again."
+
+"There's no necessity it should be anything of the kind, Peter; and with
+your habits an hotel life is scarcely an economy. Come, Fifine, get to
+bed, child. You'll have to be up at daybreak. Your grandpapa won't think
+his coffee drinkable, if it is not made by your hands."
+
+And with this remark, beautifully balanced between a reproof and
+a flattery, she proceeded to blow out the candles, which was her
+accustomed mode of sending her company to their rooms.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE OLD LEAVEN
+
+Withering arrived at his own door just as Barrington drove up to it. "I
+knew my letter would bring you up to town, Barrington," said he; "and I
+was so sure of it that I ordered a saddle of mutton for your dinner, and
+refused an invitation to the Chancellor's."
+
+"And quite right too. Iam far better company, Tom. Are we to be all
+alone?"
+
+"All alone."
+
+"That was exactly what I wanted. Now, as I need a long evening with you,
+the sooner they serve the soup the better; and be sure you give your
+orders that nobody be admitted."
+
+If Mr. Withering's venerable butler, an official long versed in the
+mysteries of his office, were to have been questioned on the subject,
+it is not improbable he would have declared that he never assisted at a
+pleasanter tte- tte than that day's dinner. They enjoyed their good
+dinner and their good wine like men who bring to the enjoyment a ripe
+experience of such pleasures, and they talked with the rare zest of good
+talkers and old friends.
+
+"We are in favor with Nicholas," said Withering, as the butler withdrew,
+and left them alone, "or he would never have given us that bottle of
+port. Do you mark, Barrington, it's the green seal that John Bushe
+begged so hard for one night, and all unsuccessfully."
+
+"It is rare stuff!" said Barrington, looking at it between him and the
+light.
+
+"And it was that story of yours of the Kerry election that won it. The
+old fellow had to rush out of the room to have his laugh out."
+
+"Do you know, Tom," said Barrington, as he sipped his wine, "I believe,
+in another generation, nobody will laugh at all. Since you and I were
+boys, the world has taken a very serious turn. Not that it is much
+wiser, or better, or more moral, or more cultivated, but it is graver.
+The old jollity would be now set down simply for vulgarity, and with
+many people a joke is only short of an insult."
+
+"Shall I tell you why, Peter? We got our reputation for wit, just as we
+made our name for manufacture, and there sprung up a mass of impostors
+in consequence,--fellows who made poor jokes and rotten calicoes, that
+so disgusted the world that people have gone to France for their fun,
+and to Germany for their furniture. That is, to my taking, the reason of
+all this social reaction."
+
+"Perhaps you are right, Tom. Old Joe Millers are not unlike cloth made
+out of devil's dust. One can't expect much wear out of either."
+
+"We must secure another bottle from that bin before Nicholas changes his
+mind," said Withering, rising to ring the bell.
+
+"No, Tom, not for me. I want all the calm and all the judgment I can
+muster, and don't ask me to take more wine. I have much to say to you."
+
+"Of course you have. I knew well that packet of letters would bring you
+up to town; but you have had scarcely time to read them."
+
+"Very hurriedly, I confess. They reached me yesterday afternoon; and
+when I had run my eyes hastily over them, I said, 'Stapylton must see
+this at once.' The man was my guest,--he was under my roof,--there could
+not be a question about how to deal with him. He was out, however, when
+the packet reached my hands; and while the pony was being harnessed, I
+took another look over that letter from Colonel Hunter. It shocked
+me, Tom, I confess; because there flashed upon me quite suddenly the
+recollection of the promptitude with which the India Board at home here
+were provided with an answer to each demand we made. It was not merely
+that when we advanced a step they met us; but we could scarcely meditate
+a move that they were not in activity to repel it."
+
+"I saw that, too, and was struck by it," said Withering.
+
+"True enough, Tom. I remember a remark of yours one day. 'These people,'
+said you, 'have our range so accurately, one would suspect they
+had stepped the ground.'" The lawyer smiled at the compliment to
+his acuteness, and the other went on: "As I read further, I thought
+Stapylton had been betrayed,--his correspondent in India had shown
+his letters. 'Our enemies,' said I, 'have seen our despatches, and are
+playing with our cards on the table.' No thought of distrust,--not a
+suspicion against his loyalty had ever crossed me till I met him. I came
+unexpectedly upon him, however, before the door, and there was a ring
+and resonance in his voice as I came up that startled me! Passion
+forgets to shut the door sometimes, and one can see in an angry mind
+what you never suspected in the calm one. I took him up at once, without
+suffering him to recover his composure, and read him a part of Hunter's
+letter. He was ready enough with his reply; he knew the Moonshee by
+reputation as a man of the worst character, but had suffered him to
+address certain letters under cover to him, as a convenience to the
+person they were meant for, and who was no other than the son of the
+notorious Sam Edwardes. 'Whom you have known all this while,' said I,
+'without ever acknowledging to us?'
+
+"'Whom I did know some years back,' replied he, 'but never thought of
+connecting with the name of Colonel Barrington's enemy.' All this was
+possible enough, Tom; besides, his manner was frank and open in
+the extreme. It was only at last, as I dwelt, what he deemed too
+pertinaciously, on this point, that he suddenly lost control of
+himself, and said, 'I will have no more of this'--or, 'This must go no
+further'--or some words to that effect."
+
+"Ha! the probe had touched the sore spot, eh?" cried Withering. "Go on!"
+
+"'And if you desire further explanations from me, you must ask for them
+at the price men pay for inflicting unmerited insult.'"
+
+"Cleverly turned, cleverly done," said Withering; "but you were not to
+be deceived and drawn off by that feint, eh?"
+
+"Feint or not, it succeeded, Tom. He made me feel that I had injured
+him; and as he would not accept of my excuses,--as, in fact, he did not
+give me time to make them--"
+
+"He got you into a quarrel, is n't that the truth?" asked Withering,
+hotly.
+
+"Come, come, Tom, be reasonable; he had perfect right on his side. There
+was what he felt as a very grave imputation upon him; that is, I had
+made a charge, and his explanation had not satisfied me,--or, at all
+events, I had not said I was satisfied,--and we each of us, I take it,
+were somewhat warmer than we need have been."
+
+"And you are going to meet him,--going to fight a duel?"
+
+"Well, if I am, it will not be the first time."
+
+"And can you tell for what? Will you be able to make any man of common
+intelligence understand for what you are going out?"
+
+"I hope so. I have the man in my eye. No, no, don't make a wry face,
+Tom. It's another old friend I was thinking of to help me through this
+affair, and I sincerely trust he will not be so hard to instruct as you
+imagine."
+
+"How old are you, Barrington?"
+
+"Dinah says eighty-one; but I suspect she cheats me. I think I am
+eighty-three."
+
+"And is it at eighty-three that men fight duels?"
+
+"' Not if they can help it, Tom, certainly. I have never been out since
+I shot Tom Connelly in the knee, which was a matter of forty years ago,
+and I had good hopes it was to be my last exploit of this kind. But what
+is to be done if a man tells you that your age is your protection; that
+if it had not been for your white hairs and your shaking ankles, that
+he 'd have resented your conduct or your words to him? Faith, I think it
+puts a fellow on his mettle to show that his heart is all right, though
+his hand may tremble."
+
+"I 'll not take any share in such a folly. I tell you, Barrington, the
+world for whom you are doing this will be the very first to scout its
+absurdity. Just remember for a moment we are not living in the old days
+before the Union, and we have not the right, if we had the power, to
+throw our age back into the barbarism it has escaped from."
+
+"Barbarism! The days of poor Yelverton, and Ponsonby, and Harry Grattan,
+and Parsons, and Ned Lysaght, barbarism! Ah! my dear Tom, I wish we had
+a few of such barbarians here now, and I 'd ask for another bottle or
+two of that port."
+
+"I'll not give it a milder word; and what's more, I'll not suffer you to
+tarnish a time-honored name by a folly which even a boy would be blamed
+for. My dear old friend, just grant me a little patience."
+
+"This is cool, certainly," said Barrington, laughing. "You have said all
+manner of outrageous things to me for half an hour unopposed, and now
+you cry have patience."
+
+"Give me your honor now that this shall not go further."
+
+"I cannot, Tom,--I assure you, I cannot."
+
+"What do you mean by 'you cannot'?" cried Withering, angrily.
+
+"I mean just what I said. If you had accepted a man's brief, Tom
+Withering, there is a professional etiquette which would prevent your
+giving it up and abandoning him; and so there are situations between
+men of the world which claim exactly as rigid an observance. I told
+Stapylton I would be at his orders, and I mean to keep my word."
+
+"Not if you had no right to pledge it; not if I can prove to you that
+this quarrel was a mere got-up altercation to turn you from an inquiry
+which this man dare not face."
+
+"This is too subtle for me, Withering,--far too subtle."
+
+"No such thing, Barrington; but I will make it plainer. How if the man
+you are going to meet had no right to the name he bears?"
+
+"What do I care for his name?"
+
+"Don't you care for the falsehood by which he has assumed one that is
+not his own?"
+
+"I may be sorry that he is not more clean-handed; but I tell you again,
+Tom, they never indulged such punctilios in our young days, and I 'm too
+old to go to school again!"
+
+"I declare, Barrington, you provoke me," said the lawyer, rising, and
+pacing the room with hasty strides. "After years and years of weary
+toil, almost disheartened by defeat and failure, we at last see the
+outline of land; a few more days--or it may be hours--of perseverance
+may accomplish our task. Since I arose this morning I have learned more
+of our case, seen my way more clearly through matters which have long
+puzzled me, than the cost of years has taught me. I have passed four
+hours with one who would give his life to serve you, but whose name
+I was not at liberty to divulge, save in the last necessity, and the
+reasons for which reserve I heartily concur in; and now, by a rash and
+foolish altercation, you would jeopardy everything. Do you wonder if I
+lose temper?"
+
+"You have got me into such a state of bewilderment, Tom, that I don't
+know what I am asked to agree to. But who is your friend,--is n't it a
+woman?"
+
+"It is not a woman."
+
+"I'd have bet five pounds it was! When as sharp a fellow as you takes
+the wrong line of country, it's generally a woman is leading the way
+over the fences."
+
+"This time your clever theory is at fault."
+
+"Well, who is it? Out with him, Tom. I have not so many stanch friends
+in the world that I can afford to ignore them."
+
+"I will tell you his name on one condition."
+
+"I agree. What is the condition?"
+
+"It is this: that when you hear it you will dismiss from your
+mind--though it be only for a brief space--all the prejudices that years
+may have heaped against him, and suffer me to show you that _you_, with
+all your belief in your own fairness, are not just; and with a firm
+conviction in your own generosity, might be more generous. There 's my
+condition!"
+
+"Well, it must be owned I am going to pay pretty smartly for my
+information," said Barrington, laughing. "And if you are about to
+preach to me, it will not be a 'charity' sermon; but, as I said before,
+I agree to everything."
+
+Withering stopped his walk and resumed it again. It was evident he had
+not satisfied himself how he should proceed, and he looked agitated and
+undecided. "Barrington," said he, at last, "you have had about as many
+reverses in life as most men, and must have met with fully your share of
+ingratitude and its treatment. Do you feel, now, in looking back, that
+there are certain fellows you cannot forgive?"
+
+"One or two, perhaps, push me harder than the rest; but if I have no
+gout flying about me, I don't think I bear them any malice."
+
+"Well, you have no gouty symptoms now, I take it?"
+
+"Never felt better for the last twenty years."
+
+"That is as it should be; for I want to talk to you of a man who, in all
+our friendship, you have never mentioned to me, but whose name I know
+will open an old wound,--Ormsby Conyers."
+
+Barrington laid down the glass he was lifting to his lips, and covered
+his face with both his hands, nor for some moments did he speak a word.
+"Withering," said he, and his voice trembled as he spoke, "even your
+friendship has scarcely the right to go this far. The injury the man you
+speak of did me meets me every morning as I open my eyes, and my first
+prayer each day is that I may forgive him, for every now and then, as my
+lone lot in life comes strongly before me, I have need to pray for this;
+but I have succeeded at last,--I have forgiven him from my heart; but,
+dear friend, let us not talk of what tears open wounds that bleed afresh
+at a touch. I beseech you, let all that be a bygone."
+
+"That is more than I can do, Barrington; for it is not to me you must
+acknowledge you have forgiven this man,--you must tell it to himself."
+
+"That is not needed, Tom. Thousands of long miles separate us, and will
+in all likelihood separate us to the last. What does he want with my
+forgiveness, which is less a question between him and me than between me
+and my own heart?"
+
+"And yet it is what he most desires on earth; he told me so within an
+hour!"
+
+"Told you so,--and within an hour?"
+
+"Yes, Barrington, he is here. Not in the house," added he, hastily,
+for the suddenness of the announcement had startled the old man, and
+agitated him greatly. "Be calm, my dear friend," said Withering, laying
+a hand on the other's shoulder. "He who is now come to claim your
+forgiveness has never injured you to the extent you believe. He asks it
+as the last tribute to one he loved only less than you loved him. He has
+told me everything; never sparing himself, nor seeking by any subtlety
+to excuse a particle of his conduct. Let me tell you that story as I
+heard it. It will be some solace to you to know that your noble-hearted
+son inspired a friendship which, after the long lapse of years, extracts
+such an atonement as one act of disloyalty to it could demand. This
+was Ormsby Conyers's one and only treason to the love that bound them.
+Listen to it!"
+
+Barrington tried to speak, but could not; so he nodded an assent, and
+Withering continued. His story was that which the reader has already
+heard from the lips of Conyers himself, and the old lawyer told it well.
+If he did not attempt to extenuate the offence and wrong of Conyers, he
+showed the power and strength of an affection which could make one of
+the haughtiest of men come forward to accuse himself, and at every cost
+of humiliation vindicate the noble nature of his friend.
+
+"And why not have avowed all this before?--why not have spared himself
+years of self-accusing, and me years of aggravated misery?" cried
+Barrington.
+
+"He did make the attempt. He came to England about eighteen years ago,
+and his first care was to write to you. He asked to be allowed to see
+you, and sent you at the same time an admission that he had injured you,
+and was come to seek your forgiveness."
+
+"That's true, Tom; all strictly true. I remember all about it. His
+letter was such a one as an enemy might have used to crush him. My own
+temper at the time was not to be trusted too far; sorrow was making
+me cruel, and might make me vindictive; so I sent it back to him, and
+hinted it was safer in _his_ hands than _mine_."
+
+"And he has never forgotten your generosity. He said, 'It was what well
+became the father of George Barrington. '"
+
+"If he is here in this city, now, let me see him. Remember, Withering,
+when a man comes to my age his time is short. Cannot we go to him at
+once?"
+
+"Not feeling certain of your coming up to town to-day, I had arranged
+with Conyers to start for 'The Home' tomorrow; we were to await the post
+hour, and, if no letter came from you, to leave at ten o'clock. I was
+to take him up at Elvidge's Hotel. What say you if I drive him down to
+Reynolds's? You stop there, I know."
+
+"With all my heart, Tom. I am fully as impatient as he can be to sign
+and seal our reconciliation. Indeed, I feel myself already less sinned
+against than sinning; and an act of forgiveness is only an exchange of
+prisoners between us. If you knew how young I feel again at all this,
+Withering," said he, grasping his friend's hand. "What a happiness to
+know that poor George's memory is so revered that one who has failed
+towards him in fidelity should come to expiate the wrong thus openly! My
+fine noble-hearted boy deserved this tribute! And he told you how they
+loved each other; in what a brotherhood they lived; and what a glorious
+fellow George was? Did he tell you of his gentleness?--womanly softness
+it was, Tom. A careless observer might have said there was no stuff in
+him to make a soldier, and yet where was there his equal? You heard what
+he did at Naghapoor and Meerutan, where he held a mountain-pass with
+three squadrons against a whole army corps, and never owned to being
+wounded till he fell fainting from his horse on the retreat. Oh, let me
+not speak of these things, or my heart will burst I must leave you, old
+friend; this agitation will unfit me for much that is before me; let me
+go, I beseech you, and when you see me to-morrow, you 'll find I am all
+myself again."
+
+It was in silence they grasped each other's hand, and parted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. A HAPPY MEETING
+
+Barrington scarcely closed his eyes that night after he had parted with
+Withering, so full was he of thinking over all he had heard. "It was,"
+as he repeated to himself over and over again, "'such glorious news' to
+hear that it was no long-laid plot, no dark treachery, had brought poor
+George to his grave, and that the trusted friend had not turned out a
+secret enemy. How prone we are," thought he, "to suffer our suspicions
+to grow into convictions, just by the mere force of time. Conyers was
+neither better nor worse than scores of young fellows entering on life,
+undisciplined in self-restraint, and untutored by converse with the
+world; and in his sorrow and repentance he is far and away above most
+men. It was fine of him to come thus, and become his own accuser, rather
+than suffer a shade of reproach to rest upon the fame of his friend. And
+this reparation he would have made years ago, but for my impatience. It
+was I that would not listen,--would not admit it.
+
+"I believe in my heart, then, this confession has a higher value for
+me than would the gain of our great suit. It is such a testimony to my
+brave boy as but one man living could offer. It is a declaration to the
+world that says, 'Here am I, high in station, covered with dignities
+and rich in rewards; yet there was a man whose fate has never interested
+you, over whose fall you never sorrowed; hundreds of times my superior.'
+What a reward is this for all my life of toil and struggle,--what a
+glorious victory, when the battle looked so doubtful! People will see at
+last it is not an old man's phantasy; it is not the headlong affection
+of a father for his son has made me pursue this reparation for him here.
+There is a witness 'come to judgment,' who will tell them what George
+Barrington was; how noble as a man, how glorious as a soldier."
+
+While the old man revelled in the happiness of these thoughts, so
+absorbed was he by them that he utterly forgot the immediate object
+which had occasioned his journey,--forgot Stapylton and the meeting, and
+all that had led to it. Thus passed the hours of the night; and as the
+day broke, he arose, impatient to actual feverishness for the coming
+interview. He tried by some occupation to fill up the time. He sat down
+to write to his sister an account of all Withering had told him, leaving
+the rest to be added after the meeting; but he found, as he read it
+over, that after the mention of George's name, nothing dropped from
+his pen but praises of him. It was all about his generosity, his
+open-heartedness, and his bravery. "This would seem downright
+extravagant," said he, as he crushed the paper in his hand, "till she
+hears it from the lips of Conyers himself." He began another letter, but
+somehow again he glided into the self-same channel.
+
+"This will never do," said he; "there's nothing for it but a brisk
+walk." So saying he sallied out into the deserted streets, for few
+were about at that early hour. Barrington turned his steps towards the
+country, and soon gained one of those shady alleys which lead towards
+Finglas. It was a neighborhood he had once known well, and a favorite
+resort of those pleasant fellows who thought they compensated for a hard
+night at Daly's by sipping syllabub of a morning on a dewy meadow. He
+once had rented a little cottage there; a fancy of poor George's it
+was, that there were some trout in the stream beside it; and Barrington
+strolled along till he came to a little mound, from which he could see
+the place, sadly changed and dilapidated since he knew it. Instead of
+the rustic bridge that crossed the river, a single plank now spanned the
+stream, and in the disorder and neglect of all around, it was easy to
+see it had fallen to the lot of a peasant to live in it. As
+Barrington was about to turn away, he saw an old man--unmistakably a
+gentleman--ascending the hill, with a short telescope in his hand.
+As the path was a narrow one, he waited, therefore, for the other's
+arrival, before he began to descend himself. With a politeness which in
+his younger days Irish gentlemen derived from intercourse with France,
+Barring-ton touched his hat as he passed the stranger, and the other, as
+if encouraged by the show of courtesy, smiled as he returned the salute,
+and said,--
+
+"Might I take the liberty to ask you if you are acquainted with this
+locality?"
+
+"Few know it better, or, at least, knew it once," said Barrington.
+
+"It was the classic ground of Ireland in days past," said the stranger.
+"I have heard that Swift lived here."
+
+"Yes; but you cannot see his house from this. It was nearer to Santry,
+where you see that wood yonder. There was, however, a celebrity once
+inhabited that small cottage before us. It was the home of Parnell."
+
+"Is that Parnell's cottage?" asked the stranger, with eagerness; "that
+ruined spot, yonder?"
+
+"Yes. It was there he wrote some of his best poems. I knew the room well
+he lived in."
+
+"How I would like to see it!" cried the other.
+
+"You are an admirer of Parnell, then?" said Barrington, with a smile of
+courteous meaning.
+
+"I will own to you, sir, it was less of Parnell I was thinking than of
+a dear friend who once talked to me of that cottage. He had lived there,
+and cherished the memory of that life when far away from it; and so
+well had he described every walk and path around it, each winding of the
+river, and every shady nook, that I had hoped to recognize it without a
+guide."
+
+"Ah, it is sadly changed of late. Your friend had not probably seen it
+for some years?"
+
+"Let me see. It was in a memorable year he told me he lived there,--when
+some great demonstration was made by the Irish volunteers, with the
+Bishop of Down at their head. The Bishop dined there on that day."
+
+"The Earl of Bristol dined that day with me, there," said Barrington,
+pointing to the cottage.
+
+"May I ask with whom I have the honor to speak, sir?" said the stranger,
+bowing.
+
+"Was it George Barrington told you this?" said the old man, trembling
+with eagerness: "was it he who lived here? I may ask, sir, for I am his
+father!"
+
+"And I am Ormsby Conyers," said the other; and his face became pale, and
+his knees trembled as he said it.
+
+"Give me your hand, Conyers," cried Barrington,--"the hand that my dear
+boy has so often pressed in friendship. I know all that you were to each
+other, all that you would be to his memory."
+
+"Can you forgive me?" said Conyers.
+
+"I have, for many a year. I forgave you when I thought you had been his
+enemy. I now know you had only been your own to sacrifice such love,
+such affection as he bore you."
+
+"I never loved him more than I have hated myself for my conduct towards
+him."
+
+"Let us talk of George,--he loved us both," said Barrington, who still
+held Conyers by the hand. "It is a theme none but yourself can rival me
+in interest for."
+
+It was not easy for Conyers to attain that calm which could enable him
+to answer the other's questions; but by degrees he grew to talk freely,
+assisted a good deal by the likeness of the old man to his son,--a
+resemblance in manner even as much as look,--and thus, before they
+reached town again, they had become like familiar friends.
+
+Barrington could never hear enough of George; even of the incidents he
+had heard of by letter, he liked to listen to the details again, and to
+mark how all the traits of that dear boy had been appreciated by others.
+
+"I must keep you my prisoner," said Barrington, as they gained the door
+of his hotel. "The thirst I have is not easily slaked; remember that for
+more than thirty years I have had none to talk to me of my boy! I know
+all about your appointment with Withering; he was to have brought you
+here this morning to see me, and my old friend will rejoice when he
+comes and finds us here together."
+
+"He was certain you would come up to town," said Conyers, "when you got
+his letters. You would see at once that there were matters which should
+be promptly dealt with; and he said, 'Barrington will be my guest at
+dinner to-morrow.'"
+
+"Eh?--how?--what was it all about? George has driven all else out of my
+head, and I declare to you that I have not the very vaguest recollection
+of what Wither-ing's letters contained. Wait a moment; a light is
+breaking on me. I do remember something of it all now. To be sure! What
+a head I have! It was all about Stapylton. By the way, General, how you
+would have laughed had you heard the dressing Withering gave me last
+night, when I told him I was going to give Stapylton a meeting."
+
+"A hostile meeting?"
+
+"Well, if you like to give it that new-fangled name, General, which I
+assure you was not in vogue when I was a young man. Withering rated me
+soundly for the notion, reminded me of my white hairs and such other
+disqualifications, and asked me indignantly, 'What the world would say
+when they came to hear of it?' 'What would the world say if they heard
+I declined it, Tom?' was my answer. Would they not exclaim, 'Here is one
+of that fire-eating school who are always rebuking us for our laxity in
+matters of honor; look at him and say, are these the principles of his
+sect?'"
+
+Conyers shook his head dissentingly, and smiled.
+
+"No, no!" said Barrington, replying to the other's look, "you are
+just of my own mind! A man who believes you to have injured him claims
+reparation as a matter of right. I could not say to Stapylton, 'I will
+not meet you!'"
+
+"I _did_ say so, and that within a fortnight."
+
+"You said so, and under what provocation?"
+
+"He grossly insulted my son, who was his subaltern; he outraged him by
+offensive language, and he dared even to impugn his personal courage. It
+was in one of those late riots where the military were called out; and
+my boy, intrusted with the duty of dispersing an assemblage, stopped
+to remonstrate where he might have charged, and actually relieved
+the misery he had his orders to have trampled under the feet of
+his squadron. Major Stapylton could have reprimanded, he might have
+court-martialled him; he had no right to attempt to dishonor him. My son
+left the service,--I made him leave on the spot,--and we went over to
+France to meet this man. I sent for Proctor to be my boy's friend, and
+my letter found him at Sir Gilbert Stapylton's, at Hollowcliffe. To
+explain his hurried departure, Proctor told what called him away. 'And
+will you suffer your friend to meet that adventurer,' said Sir Gilbert,
+'who stole my nephew's name if he did not steal more?' To be brief, he
+told that this fellow had lived with Colonel Howard Stapylton, British
+Resident at Ghurtnapore, as a sort of humble private secretary. 'In
+the cholera that swept the district Howard died, and although his will,
+deposited at Calcutta, contained several legacies, the effects to redeem
+them were not to be discovered. Meanwhile this young fellow assumed the
+name of Stapylton, gave himself out for his heir, and even threatened
+to litigate some landed property in England with Howard's brother. An
+intimation that if he dared to put his menace in action a full inquiry
+into his conduct should be made, stopped him, and we heard no more of
+him,--at least, for a great many years. When an old Madras friend of
+Howard's who came down to spend his Christmas, said, "Who do you think
+I saw in town last week, but that young scamp Howard used to call his
+Kitmagar, and who goes by the name of Stapylton?" we were so indignant
+at first that we resolved on all manner of exposures; but learning that
+he had the reputation of a good officer, and had actually distinguished
+himself at Waterloo, we relented. Since that, other things have come to
+our knowledge to make us repent our lenity. In fact, he is an adventurer
+in its very worst sense, and has traded upon a certain amount of
+personal courage to cover a character of downright ignominy.' Proctor,
+on hearing all this, recalled me to England; and declared that he had
+traced enough to this man's charge to show he was one whom no gentleman
+could meet. It would appear that some recent discoveries had been made
+about him at the Horse Guards also; for when Proctor asked for a certain
+piece of information from one of his friends in office there, he heard,
+for answer, 'We hope to know that, and more, in a day or two.'"
+
+"Do you know that I 'm sorry for it,--heartily sorry?" said Barrington.
+"The fellow had that stamp of manliness about him that would seem the
+pledge of a bold, straightforward nature."
+
+"I have a high value for courage, but it won't do everything."
+
+"More 's the pity, for it renders all that it aids of tenfold more
+worth."
+
+"And on the back of all this discovery comes Hunter's letter, which
+Withering has sent you, to show that this Stapylton has for years
+back been supplying the Indian Directors with materials to oppose your
+claims."
+
+"Nothing ever puzzled us so much as the way every weak point of our
+case was at once seized upon, and every doubt we ourselves entertained
+exaggerated into an impassable barrier. Withering long suspected that
+some secret enemy was at work within our own lines, and repeatedly said
+that we were sold. The difficulty is, why this man should once have been
+our enemy, and now should strive so eagerly to be not alone our friend,
+but one of us. You have heard he proposed for my granddaughter?"
+
+"Fred suspected his intentions in that quarter, but we were not certain
+of them."
+
+"And it is time I should ask after your noble-hearted boy. How is he,
+and where?"
+
+"He is here, at my hotel, impatiently waiting your permission to go down
+to 'The Home.' He has a question to ask there, whose answer will be his
+destiny."
+
+"Has Josephine turned another head then?" said Barring-ton, laughing.
+
+"She has won a very honest heart; as true and as honorable a nature as
+ever lived," said Conyers, with emotion. "Your granddaughter does not
+know, nor needs ever to know, the wrong I have done her father; and if
+you have forgiven me, you will not remember it against my boy."
+
+"But what do you yourself say to all this? You have never seen the
+girl?"
+
+"Fred has."
+
+"You know nothing about her tastes, her temper, her bringing up."
+
+"Fred does."
+
+"Nor are you aware that the claim we have so long relied on is almost
+certain to be disallowed. I have scarcely a hope now remaining with
+regard to it."
+
+"I have more than I need; and if Fred will let me have a bungalow in his
+garden, I'll make it all over to him tomorrow."
+
+"It is then with your entire consent he would make this offer?"
+
+"With my whole heart in it! I shall never feel I have repaired the
+injury I have done George Barrington till I have called his daughter my
+own."
+
+Old Barrington arose, and walked up and down with slow and measured
+steps. At last he halted directly in front of General Conyers, and
+said,--
+
+"If you will do me one kindness, I will agree to everything. What am I
+saying? I agree already; and I would not make a bargain of my consent;
+but you will not refuse me a favor?"
+
+"Ask me anything, and I promise it on the faith of a gentleman."
+
+"It is this, then; that you will stand by me in this affair of
+Stapylton's. I have gone too far for subtleties or niceties. It is no
+question of who was his father, or what was his own bringing up. I have
+told him I should be at his orders, and don't let me break my word."
+
+"If you choose me for your friend, Barrington, you must not dictate how
+I am to act for you."
+
+"That is quite true; you are perfectly correct there," said the other,
+in some confusion.
+
+"On that condition, then, that I am free to do for you what I would
+agree to in my own case, I accept the charge."
+
+"And there is to be no humbug of consideration for my age and my white
+hairs; none of that nonsense about a fellow with one leg in the grave.
+Mark you, Conyers, I will stand none of these; I have never taken a writ
+of ease not to serve on a jury, nor will I hear of one that exempts me
+from the rights of a gentleman."
+
+"I have got your full powers to treat, and you must trust me. Where are
+we to find Stapylton's friend?"
+
+"He gave me an address which I never looked at. Here it is!" and he drew
+a card from his pocket.
+
+"Captain Duff Brown, late Fifth Fusiliers, Holt's Hotel, Charing Cross."
+
+"Do you know him?" asked Barrington, as the other stood silently
+re-reading the address.
+
+"Yes, thoroughly," said he, with a dry significance. "The man who
+selects Duff Brown to act for him in an affair of honor must be in a
+sore strait. It is a sorry indorsement to character. He had to leave the
+service from the imputation of foul play in a duel himself; and I took
+an active part against him."
+
+"Will this make your position unpleasant to you,--would you rather not
+act for me?"
+
+"Quite the reverse. It is more than ever necessary you should have some
+one who not only knows the men he is to deal with, but is known himself
+to them. It is a preliminary will save a world of trouble."
+
+"When can we set out?"
+
+"To-night by the eight-o'clock packet, we can sail for Liverpool; but
+let us first of all despatch Fred to 'The Home.' The poor boy will be
+half dead with anxiety till he knows I have your permission."
+
+"I 'll accredit him with a letter to my sister; not that he needs
+it, for he is one of her prime favorites. And now for another point.
+Withering must be made believe that we are all off together for the
+country this evening. He is so opposed to this affair with Stapylton,
+that he is in a mood to do anything to prevent it."
+
+"Well thought of; and here comes the man himself in search of us."
+
+"I have been half over the town after you this morning, General," said
+Withering, as he entered; "and your son, too, could make nothing of your
+absence. He is in the carriage at the door now, not knowing whether he
+ought to come up."
+
+"I 'll soon reassure him on that score," said Barrington, as he left the
+room, and hastened downstairs with the step of one that defied the march
+of time.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. MEET COMPANIONSHIP
+
+In a very modest chamber of a house in one of the streets which lead
+from the Strand to the Thames, two persons sat at supper. It is no time
+for lengthened introductions, and I must present Captain Duff Brown very
+hurriedly to my reader, as he confronted his friend Stapylton at table.
+The Captain was a jovial-looking, full-whiskered, somewhat corpulent
+man, with a ready reply, a ready laugh, and a hand readier than either,
+whether the weapon wielded was a billiard-cue or a pistol.
+
+The board before them was covered with oysters and oyster-shells, porter
+in its pewter, a square-shaped decanter of gin, and a bundle of cigars.
+The cloth was dirty, the knives unclean, and the candles ill-matched and
+of tallow; but the guests did not seem to have bestowed much attention
+to these demerits, but ate and drank like men who enjoyed their fare.
+
+"The best country in Europe,--the best in the world,--I call England
+for a fellow who knows life," cried the Captain. "There is nothing you
+cannot do; nothing you cannot have in it."
+
+"With eight thousand a year, perhaps," said Stapylton, sarcastically.
+
+"No need of anything like it. Does any man want a better supper than
+we have had to-night? What better could he have? And the whole cost not
+over five, or at most six shillings for the pair of us."
+
+"You may talk till you are hoarse, Duff, but I'll not stay in it When
+once I have settled these two or three matters I have told you of, I'll
+start for--I don't much care whither. I'll go to Persia, or perhaps to
+the Yankees."
+
+"_I_ always keep America for the finish!" said the other. "It is to
+the rest of the world what the copper hell is to Crockford's,--the last
+refuge when one walks in broken boots and in low company. But tell me,
+what have you done to-day; where did you go after we parted?"
+
+"I went to the Horse Guards, and saw Blanchard,--pompous old humbug
+that he is. I told him that I had made up my mind to sell out; that I
+intended to take service in a foreign army,--he hates foreigners,--and
+begged he would expedite my affairs with his Royal Highness, as my
+arrangements could not admit of delay."
+
+"And he told you that there was an official routine, out of which no
+officer need presume to expect his business could travel?"
+
+"He told me no such thing. He flatly said, 'Your case is already before
+the Commander-in-Chief, Major Stapylton, and you may rely on it there
+will be no needless delay in dealing with it."
+
+"That was a threat, I take it."
+
+"Of course it was a threat; and I only said, 'It will be the first
+instance of the kind, then, in the department,' and left him."
+
+"Where to, after that?"
+
+"I next went to Gregory's, the magistrate of police. I wanted to see the
+informations the black fellow swore to; and as I knew a son of Gregory's
+in the Carbiniers, I thought I could manage it; but bad luck would have
+it that the old fellow should have in his hands some unsettled bills
+with my indorsements on them,--fact; Gregory and I used to do a little
+that way once,--and he almost got a fit when he heard my name."
+
+"Tried back after that, eh?"
+
+"Went on to Renshaw's and won fifty pounds at hazard, took Blake's odds
+on Diadem, and booked myself for a berth in the Boulogne steamer, which
+leaves at two this morning."
+
+"You secured a passport for me, did n't you?"
+
+"No. You'll have to come as my servant. The Embassy fellows were all
+strangers to me, and said they would not give a separate passport
+without seeing the bearer."
+
+"All right. I don't dislike the second cabin, nor the ladies'-maids.
+What about the pistols?"
+
+[Illustration: 508]
+
+"They are yonder under the great-coat. Renshaw lent them. They are not
+very good, he says, and one of them hangs a little in the fire."
+
+"They 'll be better than the old Irishman's, that's certain. You may
+swear that his tools were in use early in the last century."
+
+"And himself, too; that's the worst of it all. I wish it was not a
+fellow that might be my grandfather."
+
+"I don't know. I rather suspect, if I was given to compunctions, I'd
+have less of them for shaking down the rotten ripe fruit than the
+blossom."
+
+"And he 's a fine old fellow, too," said Stapylton, half sadly.
+
+"Why didn't you tell him to drop in this evening and have a little
+_cart?_"
+
+For a while Stapylton leaned his head on his hand moodily, and said
+nothing.
+
+"Cheer up, man! Taste that Hollands. I never mixed better," said Brown.
+
+"I begin to regret now, Duff, that I did n't take your advice."
+
+"And run away with her?"
+
+"Yes, it would have been the right course, after all!"
+
+"I knew it. I always said it. I told you over and over again what would
+happen if you went to work in orderly fashion. They 'd at once say, 'Who
+are your people,--where are they,--what have they?' Now, let a man be as
+inventive as Daniel Defoe himself, there will always slip out some flaw
+or other about a name, or a date,--dates are the very devil! But when
+you have once carried her off, what can they do but compromise?"
+
+"She would never have consented."
+
+"I 'd not have asked her. I 'd have given her the benefit of the
+customs of the land she lived in, and made it a regular abduction. Paddy
+somebody and Terence something else are always ready to risk their necks
+for a pint of whiskey and a breach of the laws."
+
+"I don't think I could have brought myself to it."
+
+"_I_ could, I promise you."
+
+"And there 's an end of a man after such a thing."
+
+"Yes, if he fails. If he's overtaken and thrashed, I grant you he not
+only loses the game, but gets the cards in his face, besides. But why
+fail? Nobody fails when he wants to win,--when he determines to win.
+When I shot De Courcy at Asterabad--"
+
+"Don't bring up that affair, at least, as one of precedent, Duff. I
+neither desire to be tried for a capital felony, nor to have committed
+one."
+
+"Capital fiddlesticks! As if men did not fight duels every day of the
+week; the difference between guilt and innocence being that one fellow's
+hand shook, and the other's was steady. De Courcy would have 'dropped'
+me, if I'd have Jet him."
+
+"And so _you_ would have carried her off, Master Duff?" said Stapylton,
+slowly.
+
+"Yes; if she had the pot of money you speak of, and no Lord Chancellor
+for a guardian. I 'd have made the thing sure at once."
+
+"The money she will and must have; so much is certain."
+
+"Then I 'd have made the remainder just as certain."
+
+"It is a vulgar crime, Duff; it would be very hard to stoop to it."
+
+"Fifty things are harder,--no cash, no credit are harder. The Fleet is
+harder. But what is that noise? Don't you hear a knock at the door? Yes,
+there's some one without who hasn't much patience." So saying, he arose
+and walked to the door. As he opened it, he started back a little with
+surprise, for it was a police constable stood before him.
+
+"Not you, Captain, not _you_, sir! it's another gentleman I want. I
+see him at the table there,--Major Stapylton." By this time the man
+had entered the room and stood in front of the fire. "I have a warrant
+against you, Major," said he, quietly. "Informations have been sworn
+before Mr. Colt that you intend to fight a duel, and you must appear at
+the office to-morrow, to enter into your bond, and to give securities to
+keep the peace."
+
+"Who swore the informations?" cried Brown.
+
+"What have we to do with that?" said Stapylton, impatiently. "Isn't the
+world full of meddling old women? Who wants to know the names?"
+
+"I 'll lay the odds it was old Conyers; the greatest humbug in that land
+of humbugs,--Bengal. It was he that insisted on my leaving the Fifth.
+Come, Sergeant, out with it. This was General Conyers's doing?"
+
+"I'm sorry to be obliged to declare you in custody, Major," said
+the policeman; "but if you like to come over to Mr. Colt's private
+residence, I 'm sure he 'd settle the matter this evening."
+
+"He'll do no such thing, by George!" cried Brown. "The sneaking dogs
+who have taken this shabby course shall be exposed in open court. We
+'ll have the names in full, and in every newspaper in England. Don't
+compromise the case, Stapylton; make them eat the mess they have cooked,
+to the last mouthful. We 'll show the world what the fighting Irishman
+and his gallant friend are made of. Major Stapylton is your prisoner,
+Sergeant?"
+
+The man smiled slightly at the passionate energy of the speaker, and
+turned to Stapylton. "There 's no objection to your going to your
+lodgings, Major. You 'll be at the chief office by ten to-morrow."
+
+Stapylton nodded assent, and the other retired and closed the door.
+
+"What do you say now?" cried Brown, triumphantly. "Did n't I tell you
+this? Did n't I say that when old Con-yers heard my name, he 'd say,
+'Oh, there 'll be no squaring this business'?"
+
+"It's just as likely that he said, 'I 'll not confer with that man; he
+had to leave the service.'"
+
+"More fool you, then, not to have had a more respectable friend. Had you
+there, Stapylton,--eh?"
+
+"I acknowledge that. All I can say in extenuation is, that I hoped old
+Barrington, living so long out of the world, would have selected another
+old mummy like himself, who had never heard of Captain Duff Brown, nor
+his famous trial at Calcutta."
+
+"There's not a man in the kingdom has not heard of me. I 'm as well
+known as the first Duke in the land."
+
+"Don't boast of it, Duff; even notoriety is not always a cheap luxury."
+
+"Who knows but you may divide it with me to-morrow or next day?"
+
+"What do you mean, sir?--what do you mean?" cried Stapylton, slapping
+the table with his clenched hand.
+
+"Only what I said,--that Major Stapylton may furnish the town with a
+nine-days wonder, _vice_ Captain Duff Brown, forgotten."
+
+Evidently ashamed of his wrath, Stapylton tried to laugh off the
+occasion of it, and said, "I suppose neither of us would take the matter
+much to heart."
+
+"I 'll not go to the office with you to-morrow, Stapylton," added
+he, after a pause; "that old Sepoy General would certainly seize the
+opportunity to open some old scores that I'd as soon leave undisturbed."
+
+"All right, I think you are prudent there."
+
+"But I 'll be of use in another way. I 'll lay in wait for that fellow
+who reports for the 'Chronicle,' the only paper that cares for these
+things, and I 'll have him deep in the discussion of some devilled
+kidneys when your case is called on."
+
+"I fancy it does not matter what publicity it obtains."
+
+"Ah, I don't know that. Old Braddell, our major, used to say,
+'Reputation, after forty, is like an old wall. If you begin to break a
+hole in it, you never know how much will come away.'"
+
+"I tell you again, Duff, I'm past scandalizing; but have your way, if
+you will 'muzzle the ox,' and let us get away from this as soon as may
+be. I want a little rest after this excitement."
+
+"Well, I 'm pretty much in the same boot myself, though I don't
+exactly know where to go. France is dangerous. In Prussia there are two
+sentences recorded against me. I 'm condemned to eight years' hard
+labor in Wurtemberg, and pronounced dead in Austria for my share in that
+Venetian disturbance."
+
+"Don't tell me of these rascalities. Bad enough when a man is driven to
+them, but downright infamy to be proud of."
+
+"Have you never thought of going into the Church? I 've a notion you 'd
+be a stunning preacher."
+
+"Give up this bantering, Duff, and tell me how I shall get hold of
+young Conyers. I 'd rather put a ball in that fellow than be a
+Lieutenant-General. He has ever been my rock ahead. That silly coxcomb
+has done more to mar my destiny than scores of real enemies. To shoot
+him would be to throw a shell in the very midst of them."
+
+"I 'd rather loot him, if I had the choice; the old General has lots of
+money. Stapylton, scuttle the ship, if you like, but first let _me_ land
+the cargo. Of all the vengeances a man can wreak on another the weakest
+is to kill him. For my part, I 'd cherish the fellow that injured me.
+I 'd set myself to study his tastes and learn his ambitions. I 'd
+watch over him and follow him, being, as it were, his dearest of all
+friends,--read backwards!"
+
+"This is tiresome scoundrelism. I'll to bed," said Stapylton, taking a
+candle from the table.
+
+"Well, if you must shoot this fellow, wait till he's married; wait for
+the honeymoon."
+
+"There's some sense in that. I 'll go and sleep over it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. AUNT DOROTHEA.
+
+"You must come down with me for one day, Tom, to see an old aunt of mine
+at Bournemouth," said Hunter to young Dill. "I never omitted going to
+see her the first thing whenever I landed in England, and she 'll not
+forgive me if I were to do so now."
+
+"But why should I go, sir? My presence would only trouble the comfort of
+a family meeting."
+
+"Quite the reverse. She 'll be delighted to see you. It will be such a
+triumph to her, amongst all her neighbors, to have had a visit from the
+hero of the day,--the fellow that all the print-shops are full of. Why,
+man, you are worth five hundred pounds to me. I 'm not sure I might not
+say double as much."
+
+"In that case, sir, I 'm perfectly at your orders."
+
+And down they went, and arrived late on the day after this conversation
+at an old-fashioned manor-house, where Miss Dorothy Hunter had passed
+some sixty-odd years of her life. Though to Tom she seemed to bear
+a great resemblance to old Miss Barrington, there was really little
+likeness between them, beyond an inordinate pride of birth, and an
+intense estimation for the claims of family. Miss Hunter's essential
+characteristic was a passion for celebrities; a taste somewhat difficult
+to cultivate in a very remote and little visited locality. The result
+was that she consoled herself by portraits, or private letters, or
+autographs of her heroes, who ranged over every imaginable career in
+life, and of whom, by mere dint of iteration, she had grown to believe
+herself the intimate friend or correspondent.
+
+No sooner had she learned that her nephew was to be accompanied by the
+gallant young soldier whose name was in every newspaper than she made
+what she deemed the most suitable preparations for his reception. Her
+bedroom was hung round with portraits of naval heroes, or pictures of
+sea-fights. Grim old admirals, telescope in hand, or with streaming
+hair, shouting out orders to board the enemy, were on every side; while,
+in the place of honor, over the fireplace, hung a vacant frame, destined
+one day to contain the hero of the hour, Tom Dill himself.
+
+Never was a poor fellow in this world less suited to adulation of this
+sort. He was either overwhelmed with the flattery, or oppressed by a
+terror of what some sensible spectator--if such there were--would think
+of the absurd position in which he was forced to stand. And when
+he found himself obliged to inscribe his name in a long column of
+illustrious autographs, the sight of his own scarce legible characters
+filled up the measure of his shame.
+
+"He writes like the great Turenne," said Miss Dorothy; "he always wrote
+from above downwards, so that no other name than his own could figure on
+the page."
+
+"I got many a thrashing for it at school, ma'am," said Tom, apologizing,
+"and so I gave up writing altogether."
+
+"Ah, yes! the men of action soon learn to despise the pen; they prefer
+to make history rather than record it."
+
+It was not easy for Hunter to steer his bashful friend through all the
+shoals and quicksands of such flattery; but, on the plea of his broken
+health and strength, he hurried him early to his bed, and returned to
+the fireside, where his aunt awaited him.
+
+"He's charming, if he were only not so diffident. Why will he not be more
+confiding, more at his ease with me,--like Mungo Park, or Sir Sidney
+Smith?"
+
+"After a while, so he will, aunt. You 'll see what a change there will
+be in him at our next visit All these flatteries he meets with are too
+much for him; but when we come down again, you 'll see him without these
+distracting influences. Then bear in mind his anxieties,--he has not yet
+seen his family; he is eager to be at home again. I carried him off here
+positively in spite of himself, and on the strict pledge of only for one
+day."
+
+"One day! And do you mean that you are to go tomorrow?"
+
+"No help for it, aunt. Tom is to be at Windsor on Saturday. But for
+that, he would already have been on his way to Ireland."
+
+"Then there's no time to be lost. What can we do for him? He'snot rich?"
+
+"Hasn't a shilling; but would reject the very shadow of such
+assistance."
+
+"Not if a step were purchased for him; without his knowledge, I mean."
+
+"It would be impossible that he should not know it."
+
+"But surely there is some way of doing it A handsome sum to commemorate
+his achievement might be subscribed. I would begin it with a thousand
+pounds."
+
+"He'd not accept it. I know him thoroughly. There's only one road to him
+through which he would not deem a favor a burden."
+
+"And what of that?"
+
+"A kindness to his sister. I wish you saw her, aunt!"
+
+"Is she like him?"
+
+"Like him? Yes; but very much better-looking. She's singularly handsome,
+and such a girl! so straightforward and so downright It is a positive
+luxury to meet her after all the tiresome conventionalities of the
+every-day young lady."
+
+"Shall I ask her here?"
+
+"Oh, if you would, aunt!--if you only would!"
+
+"That you may fall in love with her, I suppose?"
+
+"No, aunt, that is done already."
+
+"I think, sir, I might have been apprised of this attachment!" said she,
+bridling.
+
+"I didn't know it myself, aunt, till I was close to the Cape. I thought
+it a mere fancy as we dropped down Channel; grew more thoughtful over it
+in the Bay of Biscay; began to believe it as we discovered St. Helena;
+and came back to England resolved to tell you the whole truth, and ask
+you, at least, to see her and know her."
+
+"So I will, then. I 'll write and invite her here."
+
+"You 're the best and kindest aunt in Christendom!" said he, rushing
+over and kissing her.
+
+"I'm not going to let you read it, sir," said she, with a smile. "If she
+show it to you, she may. Otherwise it is a matter between ourselves."
+
+"Be it entirely as you wish, aunt."
+
+"And if all this goes hopefully on," said she, after a pause, "is Aunt
+Dorothea to be utterly forgotten? No more visits here,--no happy summer
+evenings,--no more merry Christmases?"
+
+"Nay, aunt, I mean to be your neighbor. That cottage you have often
+offered me, near the rocks, I 'll not refuse it again,--that is, if you
+tempt me once more."
+
+"It is yours, and the farm along with it. Go to bed now, and leave me to
+write my note, which will require-some thought and reflection."
+
+"I know you 'll do it well. I know none who could equal you in such a
+task."
+
+"I 'll try and acquit myself with credit," said she, as she sat down to
+the writing-desk.
+
+"And what is all this about,--a letter from Miss Dorothea to Polly,"
+said Tom, as they drove along the road back to town. "Surely they never
+met?"
+
+"Never; but my aunt intends that they shall. She writes to ask your
+sister to come on a visit here."
+
+"But why not have told her the thing was impossible? You know us. You
+have seen the humble way we live,--how many a care it costs to keep up
+that little show of respectability that gets us sufferance in the world,
+and how one little attempt beyond this is quite out of our reach. Why
+not have told her frankly, sir, 'These people are not in our station'?"
+
+"Just because I acknowledge no such distinction as you want to draw,
+my good fellow. If my aunt has asked your sister to come three hundred
+miles to see her, she has thought over her request with more foresight
+than you or I could have given it, take my word for it. When she means
+kindly, she plans thoughtfully. And now I will tell you what I never
+meant to have spoken of, that it was only last night she asked me how
+could she be of use to you?"
+
+"To _me!_" said he, blushing, "and why to _me?_"
+
+"Can you never be brought to see that you are a hero, Tom,--that all the
+world is talking of you just now, and people feel a pride in being even
+passingly mixed up with your name?"
+
+"If they only knew how much I have to be ashamed of before I can
+begin to feel vain, they 'd not be so ready with their praise or their
+flattery."
+
+"I 'll talk over all that with your sister Polly," said Hunter, gayly;
+for he saw the serious spirit that was gaining over the poor fellow.
+
+"Do so, sir; and you'll soon see, if there's anything good or hopeful
+about me, where it comes from and who gave it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. FROM GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON
+
+Beddwys, N. Wales.
+
+My dear Fred,--How happy I am that you are enjoying yourself; short of
+being with you, nothing could have given me greater pleasure than your
+letter. I like your portrait of the old lady, whose eccentricities
+are never inconsistent with some charming traits of disposition, and
+a nature eminently high-minded and honorable; but why not more about
+Josephine? She is surely oftener in your thoughts than your one brief
+paragraph would bespeak, and has her due share in making the cottage the
+delightful home you describe it to be. I entreat you to be more open and
+more explicit on this theme, for it may yet be many days before I can
+explore the matter for myself; since, instead of the brief absence
+I calculated on, we may, for aught I know, be detained here for some
+weeks.
+
+It is clear to me, from your last, a note of mine from Liverpool to you
+must have miscarried. You ask me where you are to address me next, and
+what is the nature of the business which has called me away so suddenly?
+I gave you in that letter all the information that I was myself
+possessed of, and which, in three words, amounted to this: Old
+Barrington, having involved himself in a serious personal quarrel with
+Stapylton, felt, or believed, that he ought to give him a meeting.
+Seeing how useless all attempt at dissuasion proved, and greatly
+fearing what hands he might fall into, I agreed to be his friend on
+the occasion; trusting, besides, that by a little exercise of tact and
+temper, extreme measures might be avoided, and the affair arranged. You
+may well believe, without my insisting further upon it, that I felt
+very painfully how we should both figure before the world,--a man of
+eighty-three or four, accompanied to the ground by another of sixty-odd!
+I know well how, in the changed temper of the age, such acts are
+criticised, and acquiesce, besides, in the wiser spirit that now
+prevails. However, as I said before, if Barrington must go on, it were
+better he should do so under the guidance of a sincere friend than of
+one casually elevated to act as such, in a moment of emergency.
+
+We left Dublin, by the mail-packet, on Wednesday; and after a rough
+passage of twenty-three hours, reached Liverpool too late to catch the
+evening coach. Thus detained, we only arrived here on Sunday night late.
+At my club I found a note from Stapylton, stating that he had daily
+called there to learn if we had come, but the boisterous state of the
+weather sufficiently explained our delay, and giving an address where he
+might be found, as well as that of "his friend." Now, it so chanced that
+this friend was a very notorious person well known to me in India, where
+he had been tried for an unfair duel, and narrowly escaped--I should say
+unjustly escaped--being hanged. Though I had fully made up my mind not
+to be placed in any relations with such a man, I thought it would be
+as well that Barrington should know the character of his antagonist's
+friend from other sources, and so I invited an old Bengal companion of
+mine to dine with us the day after we arrived. Stamer was a judge of the
+criminal court, and tried Duff Brown, the man I speak of. As we sat over
+our wine together, we got upon this case, and Stamer declared that it
+was the only criminal cause in his whole life wherein he regretted the
+escape of the guilty party. "The fellow," said he, "defended himself in
+a three hours' speech, ably and powerfully; but enunciated at times--as
+it were unconsciously--sentiments so abominable and so atrocious as
+to destroy the sympathy a part of his discourse excited. But somehow
+boldness has its fascination, and he was acquitted."
+
+Barrington's old-fashioned notions were not, however, to be shocked
+even by this narrative, and he whispered to me, "Unpleasant for _you_,
+Conyers. Wish it might have been otherwise, but it can't be helped." We
+next turned to discuss Duff Brown's friend, and Stamer exclaimed, "Why,
+that's the man they have been making all this fuss about in India. He
+was, or he said he was, the adopted son of Howard Stapylton; but the
+family never believed the adoption, nor consented to receive him, and at
+this moment a Moonshee, who acted as Persian secretary to old Stapylton,
+has turned up with some curious disclosures, which, if true, would
+show that this young fellow held a very humble position in Stapylton's
+household, and never was in his confidence. This Moonshee was at Malta a
+few weeks ago, and may be, for aught I know, in England now."
+
+I asked and obtained Barrington's permission to tell how we were
+ourselves involved with this Major Stapylton, and he quickly declared
+that, while the man stood thus accused, there could be no thought of
+according him a satisfaction. The opinion was not the less stringent
+that Stamer was himself an Irishman and of a fighting family.
+
+I am not very sure that we made Barrington a convert to our opinions,
+but we at least, as we separated for the night, left him doubtful and
+hesitating. I had not been in bed above an hour, when Mr. Withering
+awoke me. He had followed us from Dublin as soon as he learned our
+departure, and, going straight to a magistrate, swore informations
+against both Barrington and Stapylton. "My old friend will never forgive
+me, I know," said he; "but if I had not done this, I should never have
+forgiven myself." It was arranged between us that I was to mention the
+fact of such informations having been sworn, without stating by whom, to
+Barrington, and then persuade him to get privately away from town before
+a warrant could be served. I leave you to imagine that my task was not
+without its difficulties, but, before the day broke, I succeeded in
+inducing him to leave, and travelling by post without halt, we arrived
+at this quiet spot yesterday evening. Barrington, with all his good
+temper, is marvellously put out and irritable, saying, "This is not the
+way such things were done once;" and peevishly muttered, "I wonder what
+poor Harry Beamish or Guy Hutchinson would say to it all?" One thing
+is quite clear, we had got into a wasps' nest; Stapylton and his friend
+were both fellows that no honorable man would like to deal with, and
+we must wait with a little patience to find some safe road out of this
+troublesome affair.
+
+A letter came to B. from the India House the evening before we left
+town, but he handed it to me before he finished reading it, merely
+remarking, "The old story, 'Yours of the ninth or nineteenth has duly
+been received,' &c." But I found that it contained a distinct admission
+that his claim was not ill-founded, and that some arrangement ought to
+be come to.
+
+I now close my very lengthy epistle, promising, however, that as soon
+as I hear from town, either from Withering or Stamer, you shall have
+my news. We are, of course, close prisoners here for the present,
+for though the warrant would not extend to Ireland, Barrington's
+apprehensions of being "served" with such a writ at all would induce him
+to hide for six months to come.
+
+I scarcely ask you to write to me here, not knowing our probable stay;
+but to-morrow may, perhaps, tell us something on this head. Till when,
+believe me,
+
+Yours affectionately,
+
+Ormsby Conters.
+
+My most cordial greeting to Miss Barrington, and my love to her niece.
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO HIS SISTER MISS DINAH BARRINGTON.
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Dinah,--I hardly know how to tell you what has happened, or what
+is happening around me. I came over here to meet Major Stapylton, but
+find that there is no such person,--the man who calls himself so being a
+mere adventurer, who had taken the name, and, I believe, no small share
+of the goods, of its owner, got into the Bengal army, thence into our
+own service, and though not undistinguished for gallantry, seems to have
+led a life of ceaseless roguery and intrigue. He knew all about poor
+George's business, and was in correspondence with those we believe to be
+our friends in India, but who now turn out to be our inveterate enemies.
+This we have got at by the confession of one of those Oriental fellows
+they call Moonshees, who has revealed all their intercourse for years
+back, and even shown a document setting forth the number of rupees
+he was to receive when Stapylton had been married to Josephine. The
+Moonshee is very ill, and his examination can only be conducted at
+intervals; but he insists on a point of much importance to us, which is,
+that Stapylton induced him to tear out of the Rajah's Koran the page
+on which the adoption of George was written, and signed by the Meer
+himself. He received a large sum for this service, which, however, he
+evaded by a fraud, sending over to England not the real document itself,
+but a copy made by himself, and admirably counterfeited. It was the
+possession of this by Stapylton which enabled him to exercise a great
+control over our suit,--now averring that it was lost; now, under
+pledge of secrecy, submitting it to the inspection of some of the
+Indian authorities. Stapylton, in a word, saw himself in a position to
+establish our claim, whenever the time came that by making Josephine his
+wife, he could secure the fortune. This is all that we know up to
+this, but it is a great deal, and shows in what a maze of duplicity and
+treachery we have been involved for more than twenty years. The chief
+point, however, is that the real deed, written in the Meer's Koran, and
+torn out of it by the Moonshee, in his first impulse to forward it to
+Stapylton, is now extant, and the Koran itself is there to show the
+jagged margin of the torn-out leaf, and the corresponding page on the
+opposite side of the volume. Stapylton refuses to utter one word since
+the accusation against him has been made; and as the charges stand to
+falsifying documents, abstraction of funds, and other derelictions in
+India, he is now under a heavy bail to appear when called on.
+
+The whole business has made me so nervous and excitable that I cannot
+close my eyes at night, and I feel feverish and restless all day. It is
+very shocking to think of a man one has never injured, never heard of,
+animated with a spirit so inimical as to pass years of life in working
+ill to us. He would appear to have devoted himself to the task of
+blackening poor George's character and defaming him. It would seem that
+Mr. Howard Stapylton was one of those who took an active part against
+George. Whether this young fellow caught the contagion of this
+antipathy, or helped to feed it, I cannot tell; but it is certain that
+all the stories of cruelty and oppression the India Board used to trump
+up to us came from this one source; and at the end of all he seeks to be
+one of a family he has striven for years to ruin and to crush! I am lost
+in my efforts to understand this, though Stamer and Withering assure
+me they can read the man like print. Indeed, they see inferences and
+motives in fifty things which convey nothing to me; and whenever I feel
+myself stopped by some impassable barrier, to _them_ it is only a bridge
+that conducts to a fresh discovery.
+
+The Stapyltons are all in arms now that another sportsman has winged the
+bird for them; and each day increases the number of accusations against
+this unfortunate fellow. It is true, dear Dinah, that our own prospects
+brighten through all this. I am constantly receiving civil messages
+and hopeful assurances; and even some of the directors have called to
+express sympathy and good wishes. But how chilled is the happiness that
+comes dashed with the misfortune of another! What a terrible deal it
+detracts from our joy to know that every throb of pleasure to ourselves
+has cost a pang of misery elsewhere! I wish this fellow could have gone
+his way, never minding us; or, if that could n't be, that he 'd have
+grown tired of persecuting those who had never harmed him, and given us
+up!
+
+They are now assailing him on all sides. One has found that he forged a
+will; another that he falsified a signature; and a miserable creature--a
+native Indian, who happened to be in that Manchester riot the other
+day--has now been ferreted out to swear that Stapylton followed him
+through a suburb, down a lane, and into a brick-field, where he cut
+him down and left him for dead. There seems a great deal of venom
+and acrimony in all this; and though the man is unquestionably not my
+friend, and I see that this persecution continues, I find it very hard
+not to stand by him.
+
+As for Withering, it has made the veteran ten years younger. He is up
+every morning at five, and I hear that he never goes to his room till
+long past midnight. These are the pastimes that to such men replace
+the sports of the field and the accidents of the chase. They have
+their vacillations of hope and fear, their moments of depression and of
+triumph in them; and they run a fellow-creature to earth with all the
+zest of a hard rider after a fox.
+
+Tell my darling Fifine that I am longing to be at home again,--longing
+for the quiet roof, and the roses at the window, and the murmur of the
+river, and her own sweet voice better than them all. And what a deal of
+happiness is in our power if we would only consent to enjoy it, without
+running after some imaginary good, some fancied blessing, which is
+to crown our wishes! If I could but only have guessed at the life of
+anxiety, doubt, and vacillation the pursuit of this claim would have
+cost me,--the twenty years of fever,--
+
+I give you my word, Dinah, I 'd rather have earned my daily bread with a
+spade, or, when too old for that, taken to fishing for a livelihood.
+
+But why do I complain of anything at this moment? When have I been so
+truly happy for many a long year? Conyers never leaves me,--he talks of
+George from morning to night. And I now see that with all my affection
+for that dear boy, I only half knew his noble nature, his fine and
+generous character. If you only heard of the benevolent things he has
+done; the poor fellows he has sent home to their families at his own
+cost; the sums he has transmitted to wives and widows of soldiers in
+England; the children whose care and support he has provided for! These
+were the real drains on that fortune that the world thought wasted and
+squandered in extravagance. And do you know, Dinah, there is a vein of
+intense egotism in my heart that I never so much as suspected! I found
+it out by chance,--it was in marking how far less I was touched by the
+highest and best traits of my poor boy than by the signs of love to
+myself! and when Conyers said, "He was always talking about you; he
+never did anything important without the question, 'How would "Dad" like
+this, I wonder? would "Dad" say "God speed" in this case?' And his first
+glass of wine every day was to the health of that dear old father over
+the seas."
+
+To you who loved him only a little less than myself, I have no shame
+in the confession of this weakness. I suppose Conyers, however, has hit
+upon it, for he harps on this theme continually, and, in sheer pride of
+heart, I feel ten years younger for it.
+
+Here comes Withering to say, "Some more wonderful news;" but I have
+begged him to keep it till I have sealed this letter, which if it grows
+any longer, I 'll never have courage to send to you. A dozen kisses to
+Fifine I can, however, transmit without any increase to the postage.
+Give my love to young Conyers; tell him I am charmed with his father,--I
+never met any one so companionable to me, and I only long for the day
+when the same roof shall cover all of us.
+
+Yours, my dearest sister, ever affectionately,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+
+FROM T. WITHERING, ESQ., TO MISS DINAH BARRINGTON, "THE HOME."
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Miss Barrington,--If your brother has deputed me to write to
+you, it is not that he is ill, but simply that the excitement caused by
+some late events here has so completely mastered him that he can neither
+sit quiet a moment, nor address him steadily to any task. Nor am I
+surprised it should be so. Old, weather-beaten sailor on the ocean of
+life as I am, I feel an amount of feverishness and anxiety I am half
+ashamed of. Truth is, my dear Miss Dinah, we lawyers get so much
+habituated to certain routine rogueries that we are almost shocked when
+we hear of a wickedness not designated by a statute. But I must not
+occupy your time with such speculations, the more since I have only a
+brief space to give to that report of proceedings to which I want your
+attention. And, first of all, I will entreat you to forgive me for all
+want of sequence or connection in what I may say, since events have
+grown so jumbled together in my mind, that it is perfectly impossible
+for me to be certain whether what I relate should come before or after
+some other recorded fact In a word, I mean to give you an outline of our
+discoveries, without showing the track of our voyage on the map, or even
+saying how we came by our knowledge.
+
+You are aware, Barrington tells me, how Stapylton came by the name he
+bears. Aware that he was for some of his earlier years domesticated
+with old Howard Stapylton at Ghurtnapore, in some capacity between
+confidential valet and secretary,--a position that was at once one of
+subordination and trust,--it would now appear that a Moonshee, who
+had long served Colonel Barrington as Persian correspondent, came into
+Howard Stapylton's service in the same capacity: how introduced, or
+by whom, we know not. With this Moonshee, the young fellow I speak of
+became an intimate and close friend, and it is supposed obtained from
+him all that knowledge of your nephew's affairs which enabled him to see
+to what his claim pretended, and what were its prospects of success. It
+is now clear enough that he only regarded this knowledge at first as a
+means of obtaining favor from the Indian Government. It was, in fact,
+by ceding to them in detail certain documents, that he got his first
+commission in the Madras Fusiliers, and afterwards his promotion in the
+same regiment; and when, grown more ambitious, he determined to enter
+the King's service, the money for purchase came from the same source.
+Being, however, a fellow of extravagant habits, his demands grew at last
+to be deemed excessive and importunate; and though his debts had been
+paid three several times, he was again found involving himself as
+before, and again requiring assistance. This application was, however,
+resisted; and it was apparently on the strength of that refusal that
+he suddenly changed his tactics, turned his attention towards us, and
+bethought him that by forwarding your grandniece's claim,--if he could
+but win her affections in the mean while,--he would secure as a wife one
+of the richest heiresses in Europe. An examination of dates proves this,
+by showing that his last application to the Indian Board was only a few
+weeks before he exchanged into the regiment of Hussars he lately served
+with, and just then ordered to occupy Kilkenny. In one word, when it
+was no longer profitable to oppose Josephine's claim, he determined to
+support it and make it his own. The "Company," however, fully assured
+that by the papers in their possession they could prove their own cause
+against Colonel Barrington, resisted all his menaces,--when, what does
+he do? It was what only a very daring and reckless fellow would ever
+have thought of,--one of those insolent feats of boldness that succeed
+by the very shock they create. He goes to the Secret Committee at the
+India House and says: "Of the eighteen documents I have given you,
+seven are false. I will not tell you which they are, but if you do not
+speedily compromise this claim and make a satisfactory settlement on
+Colonel Barrington's daughter, I'll denounce you, at all the peril it
+may be to myself." At first they agree, then they hesitate, then they
+treat again, and so does the affair proceed, till suddenly--no one can
+guess why--they assume a tone of open defiance, and flatly declare
+they will hold no further intercourse with him, and even threaten with
+exposure any demand on his part.
+
+This rejection of him came at a critical moment. It was just when the
+press had begun to comment on the cruelty of his conduct at Peterloo,
+and when a sort of cry was got up through the country to have him
+dismissed from the service. We all saw, but never suspected, why he was
+so terribly cut up at this time. It was hard to believe that he could
+have taken mere newspaper censure so much to heart. We never guessed
+the real cause, never saw that he was driven to his last expedient,
+and obliged to prejudice all his hope of success by precipitancy. If he
+could not make Josephine his wife at once, on the very moment, all was
+lost. He made a bold effort at this. Who knows if he might not have
+succeeded but for you, as Josephine was very young, my old friend
+himself utterly unfit to cope with anything but open hostility? I say
+again, I 'd not have answered for the result if you had not been in
+command of the fortress. At all events, he failed; and in the failure
+lost his temper so far as to force a quarrel upon your brother. He
+failed, however; and no sooner was he down, than the world was atop
+of him: creditors, Jews, bill-discounters, and, last of all, the
+Stapyltons, who, so long as he bore their family name thousands of miles
+off, or associated it with deeds of gallantry, said nothing; now, that
+they saw it held up to attack and insult, came forward to declare that
+he never belonged to them, and at length appealed formally to the Horse
+Guards, to learn under what designation he had entered the service, and
+at what period taken the name he went by.
+
+Stapylton's application for leave to sell out had just been sent in;
+and once more the newspapers set up the cry that this man should not be
+permitted to carry away to Aix and Baden the proceeds of a sale which
+belonged to his "creditors." You know the world, and I need not tell you
+all the pleasant things it told this fellow, for men are pretty nigh
+as pitiless as crows to their wounded. I thought the complication had
+reached its limit, when I learned yesterday evening that Stapylton had
+been summoned before a police magistrate for a case of assault committed
+by him when in command of his regiment at Manchester. The case had
+evidently been got up by a political party, who, seeing the casual
+unpopularity of the man, determined to profit by it. The celebrated
+radical barrister, Hesketh, was engaged for the plaintiff.
+
+When I arrived at the court, it was so full that it was with difficulty
+I got a passage to a seat behind the bench. There were crowds of
+fashionables present, the well-known men about town, and the idlers of
+the clubs, and a large sprinkling of military men, for the news of the
+case had got wind already.
+
+Stapylton, dressed in black, and looking pale and worn, but still
+dignified and like a gentleman, had not a single friend with him. I own
+to you, I felt ashamed to be there, and was right glad when he did not
+recognize me.
+
+Though the case opened by a declaration that this was no common assault
+case, wherein in a moment of passion a man had been betrayed into an
+excess, I knew the cant of my craft too well to lay any stress on such
+assertion, and received it as the ordinary exordium. As I listened,
+however, I was struck by hearing that the injured man was asserted to
+be one well known to Stapylton, with whom he had been for years in
+intimacy, and that the assault was in reality a deliberate attempt to
+kill, and not, as had been represented, a mere passing act of savage
+severity committed in hot blood. "My client," said he, "will be brought
+before you; he is a Hindoo, but so long a resident of this country that
+he speaks our language fluently. You shall hear his story yourselves,
+and yourselves decide on its truthfulness. His wounds are, however, of
+so serious a nature that it will be advisable his statement should be
+a brief one." As he said this, a dark-complexioned fellow, with a look
+half-frightened, half defiant, was carried forwards in a chair, and
+deposited, as he sat, on the table. He gave his name as Lai Adeen, his
+age as forty-eight, his birthplace Majamarha, near Agra. He came to this
+country twelve years ago, as servant to an officer who had died on the
+passage, and after many hardships in his endeavor to earn a livelihood,
+obtained employment at Manchester in the mill of Brandling and Bennett,
+where he was employed to sweep the corridors and the stairs; his wages
+were nine shillings a week. All this, and much more of the same kind,
+he told simply and collectedly. I tried to see Stapylton while this
+was going on, but a pillar of the gallery, against which he leaned,
+concealed him from my view.
+
+I omit a great deal, not without its interest, but reserving it for
+another time, and come to his account of the night on which he was
+wounded. He said that as the cavalry marched on that morning into
+Manchester, he was struck by seeing at the head of the regiment one he
+had never set his eyes on for years, but whose features he knew too well
+to be deceived in.
+
+"I tried to get near him, that he might recognize me," said he; "but the
+crowd kept me back, and I could not. I thought, indeed, at one moment he
+had seen me, and knew me; but as he turned his head away, I supposed I
+was mistaken.
+
+"It was on the following evening, when the riot broke out in Mill
+Street, that I saw him next. I was standing at the door of a chemist's
+shop when the cavalry rode by at a walk. There was a small body of them
+in front, at about forty or fifty paces, and who, finding a sort of
+barricade across the street, returned to the main body, where they
+seemed to be reporting this. A cry arose that the troops had been
+blocked up at the rear, and at the same instant a shower of stones came
+from the side-streets and the house-tops. Thinking to do him a service,
+I made my way towards him I knew, in order to tell him by what way he
+could make his escape; and jostled and pushed, and half ridden down, I
+laid my hand on his horse's shoulder to keep myself from falling. 'Stand
+back, you scoundrel!' said he, striking me with the hilt of his sword in
+the face. 'Don't you know me, master?' cried I, in terror. He bent down
+in his saddle till his face was almost close to mine, and then, reining
+his horse back to give him room for a blow, he aimed a desperate cut at
+me. I saw it coming, and threw myself down; but I rose the next instant
+and ran. The street was already so clear by this time, I got into
+Cleever's Alley, down Grange Street, up the lane that leads to the
+brick-fields, and at last into the fields themselves. I was just
+thinking I was safe, when I saw a horseman behind me. He saw me, and
+dashed at me. I fell upon my knees to ask mercy, and he gave me this;"
+and he pointed to the bandages which covered his forehead, stained as
+they were with clotted blood. "I fell on my face, and he tried to make
+his horse trample on me; but the beast would not, and he only touched
+me with his hoof as he sprang across me. He at last dismounted to see,
+perhaps, if I were dead; but a shout from some of the rioters warned him
+to mount again; and he rode away, and I lay there till morning. It is
+not true that I was in prison and escaped,--that I was taken to the
+hospital, and ran away from it. I was sheltered in one of the clay-huts
+of the brickmakers for several weeks, afraid to come abroad, for I knew
+that the Sahib was a great man and could take my life. It was only by
+the persuasions of others that I left my hiding-place and have come here
+to tell my story."
+
+On being questioned why this officer could possibly desire to injure
+him, what grudge one in such a station could bear him, he owned he could
+not say; they had never been enemies, and, indeed, it was in the hope
+of a friendly recognition and assistance that he approached him in Mill
+Street.
+
+Stapylton's defence was very brief, given in an off-hand, frank manner,
+which disposed many in his favor. He believed the fellow meant to attack
+him; he certainly caught hold of his bridle. It was not his intention
+to give him more than a passing blow; but the utterance of a Hindoo
+curse--an expression of gross outrage in the East--recalled prejudices
+long dormant, and he gave the rascal chase, and cut him over the
+head,--not a severe cut, and totally unaccompanied by the other details
+narrated.
+
+"As for our former acquaintance I deny it altogether. I have seen
+thousands of his countrymen, and may have seen him; but, I repeat, I
+never knew him, nor can he presume to say he knew me!"
+
+The Hindoo smiled a faint, sickly smile, made a gesture of deep
+humility, and asked if he might put a few questions to the "Sahib."
+
+"Were you in Naghapoor in the year of the floods?"
+
+"Yes," said Stapylton, firmly, but evidently with an effort to appear
+calm.
+
+"In the service of the great Sahib, Howard Stapylton?"
+
+"In his service? Certainly not. I lived with him as his friend, and
+became his adopted heir.''
+
+"What office did you fill when you first came to the 'Residence'?"
+
+"I assisted my friend in the duties of his government; I was a good
+Oriental scholar, and could write and speak a dialect he knew nothing
+of. But I submit to the court that this examination, prompted and
+suborned by others, has no other object than to insult me, by leading to
+disclosures of matters essentially private in their nature."
+
+"Let me ask but one question," said the barrister. "What name did you
+bear before you took that of Stapylton?"
+
+"I refuse to submit to this insolence," said Stapylton, rising, angrily.
+"If the laws of the country only can lend themselves to assist the
+persecutions of a rascally Press, the sooner a man of honor seeks
+another land the better. Adjudicate on this case, sirs; I will not stoop
+to bandy words with these men."
+
+"I now, sir," said Hesketh, opening his bag and taking out a roll of
+papers, "am here to demand a committal for forgery against the person
+before you, passing under the name of Horace Stapylton, but whose real
+designation is Samuel Scott Edwardes, son of Samuel Edwardes, a name
+notorious enough once."
+
+I cannot go on, my dear friend; the emotions that overpowered me at the
+time, and compelled me to leave the court, are again threatening me,
+and my brain reels at the recollection of a scene which, even to my
+fast-fading senses, was the most trying of my life.
+
+To General Conyers I must refer you for what ensued after I left. I
+cannot even say who came home with me to the hotel, though I am aware
+I owed that kindness to some one. The face of that unhappy man is yet
+before me, and all the calm in which I have written up to this leaves
+me, as I think over one of the most terrible incidents of my life.
+
+Your brother, shocked of course, bears up bravely, and hopes to write to
+you to-morrow.
+
+One word of good cheer before I close this miserable record. The Indian
+directors have written to offer excellent terms--splendidly liberal
+terms, Conyers calls them, and I agree with him. We have had a very
+busy week of it here, but it will be well requited if all that I now
+anticipate be confirmed to us. Barrington begs you will tell your
+neighbors, the Dills, that Tom--I think that is the name--has just
+arrived at Southampton with General Hunter, and will be here to-morrow
+evening.
+
+I have cut out a short passage from the newspaper to finish my
+narrative. I will send the full report, as published, to-morrow.
+
+Your attached friend,
+
+T. Withering.
+
+"The chief police-office in Marlborough Street was yesterday the scene
+of a very shocking incident. The officer whose conduct at the head of
+his regiment in Manchester has of late called for the almost unanimous
+reprobation of the Press, was, while answering to a charge of aggravated
+assault, directly charged with forgery. Scarcely was the allegation
+made, than he drew a pistol from his pocket, and, placing the muzzle to
+his mouth, pulled the trigger. The direction of the weapon, however, was
+accidentally turned, and the ball, instead of proceeding upwards, passed
+through the lower jaw, fracturing the bone, and created a terrible
+wound. It is supposed that the large vessels are not injured, and that
+he may yet recover. All who witnessed the scene describe it as one of
+intense horror.
+
+"The unhappy man was at once removed to the Middlesex Hospital. He has
+not uttered a word since the event; and when asked if there were any
+relatives or friends whom he wished might be sent for, merely shook his
+head negatively. It is said that when the result of the consultation
+held on him was announced to him as favorable, he seemed rather grieved
+than otherwise at the tidings."
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO DINAH, HIS SISTER.
+
+My dear Dinah,--How glad am I to tell you that we leave this to-morrow,
+and a large party of us, too, all for "The Home." Put young Conyers in
+my dressing-room, so that the large green bedroom can be free for the
+General, at least for one of the generals--for we have another here,
+Hunter, who will also be our guest. Then there will be Withering. As for
+myself, I can be stowed away anywhere. What happiness would there be to
+us all at such a meeting, if it were not for that poor wretch who lies
+in all his agony a few streets off, and who is never out of my thoughts.
+I went twice to the hospital to see him. The first time I lost courage,
+and came away. The second, I sent up my name, and asked if he would wish
+to see me. The only answer I got was my visiting-card torn in two! How
+hard it is for an injurer to forgive him he has injured! I have arranged
+with the Stapyltons, however, who instigated the charge of forgery,
+not to press it; at least, they are to take bail, and the bail will
+be forfeited, so I understand it; but Withering will explain all more
+clearly.
+
+Our own affairs are all as bright and prosperous as our best wishes
+could desire. The Council have had all the evidence before them, and the
+Moonshee has produced his copy of the Koran, with the torn leaf fitting
+into the jagged margin, and George is vindicated at last in everything.
+His loyalty, his disinterestedness, his honesty, all established. The
+ceremony of his marriage has been fully recognized; and General Conyers
+tells me that the lowest estimate of our claim is a little short of a
+quarter of a million sterling. He counsels me not to be exigent in
+my terms; if he knew me better, perhaps, he would not have deemed the
+advice so necessary.
+
+What will Fifine say to all this wealth? Will she want to go back to
+India, and be a princess, and ride about on an elephant; or will she
+reconcile herself to such humble ways as ours? I am most eager to hear
+how she will take the tidings. Withering says it will not spoil her;
+that knowing nothing of life in its moneyed relations, she runs no
+risk of being carried away by any vulgar notions of her own importance
+through riches.
+
+Conyers has never once hinted at his son's pretensions since Fifine has
+become an heiress; and I fancy--it may be only fancy--is a shade or so
+cool towards me, so that I have not referred to them. But what can I do?
+I cannot offer him my granddaughter, nor--if what you tell me be true,
+that they are always quarrelling--would the proposal be a great kindness
+to either.
+
+Here is Tom Dill, too, and what a change! He is the image of Polly; and
+a fine, well-grown, straight-figured fellow, that looks you manfully in
+the face,--not the slouching, loutish, shamefaced creature you remember
+him. Hunter has had him gazetted to an Ensigncy in the 10th Foot, and
+he will, or I much mistake him, do honest credit to the recommendation.
+Hunter takes him about with him wherever he goes, telling all about
+the shipwreck and Tom's gallantry,--enough to turn the lad's head with
+vanity, but that he is a fine, simple-hearted creature, who thinks very
+little of himself or his achievement. He seems to have no other thought
+than what Polly, his sister, will say and think of him.
+
+He also will be one of our party; that is if I can persuade him to make
+"The Home" his headquarters while our friends are with us. What a strong
+muster we shall be; and how we 'll astonish that old bin of Madeira,
+Dinah! By the way, I have been rather boastful about it to Conyers, and
+let some bottles have the sun on them for a couple of hours every day.
+
+I should like to try my chance once more of seeing that poor fellow
+at the hospital, but Withering will not hear of it; he got positively
+ill-tempered at the bare mention of such a wish. Even Conyers says,
+"Better not," with an air that may mean for the sick man's sake as much
+as my own.
+
+A little more of this life of noise, confusion, and excitement would
+finish me. This city existence, with its incessant events and its never
+ending anxieties, is like walking in a high wind with the chimney-pots
+falling and crashing on every side of one,--while I am pitying the
+fellow whose skull is just cracked, I am forced to remember that my own
+is in danger. And yet there are people who like it; who tell you
+that out of London there is no living; that the country is a grave,
+aggravated by the consciousness that one is dead and buried there!
+
+On Tuesday,--Wednesday, at farthest,--Dinah, look out for us. I do not
+believe there is that prize in the wheel that would tempt me again away
+from home! and till I reach it, believe, my dear Dinah,
+
+Your loving brother,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+I have just seen Conyers. He met Sir Harvey Hethrington, the Home
+Secretary, this morning, and they got into a talk over our business,
+and H. said how cruelly I had been treated all this time back, and how
+unfairly poor George's memory was dealt with. "We want," said he, "to
+show your friend our respect and our sympathy, and we have thought of
+submitting his name to the King for a Baronetcy. How do you think Mr.
+Barrington himself would take our project?" "I 'll find out," said
+Conyers, as he told me of the conversation. "If they don't let me
+off, Conyers," said I, "ask them to commute it to Knighthood, for the
+heralds' fees will be smaller; but I'll try, meanwhile, if I can't
+escape either." So that now, Dinah, you may expect me on Saturday. I
+told you what a place this was; you are never sure what may befall you
+from one moment to another!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. THE END
+
+Fortune had apparently ceased to persecute Peter Barrington.
+
+The Minister did not press honors upon him, and he was free to wait for
+his companions, and in their company he returned to Ireland.
+
+The news of his success--great as it was, magnified still more--had
+preceded him to his own country; and he was met, as all lucky men are
+met, and will be met to the end of time, by those who know the world and
+feelingly estimate that the truly profitable are the fortunate!
+
+Not that he remarked how many had suddenly grown so cordial; what
+troops of passing acquaintances had become in a moment warm friends,
+well-wishing and affectionate. He never so much as suspected that "Luck"
+is a deity worshipped by thousands, who even in the remotest way are not
+to be benefited by it. He had always regarded the world as a far better
+thing than many moralists would allow it to be,--unsteady, wilful,
+capricious, if you like--but a well-intentioned, kindly minded world,
+that would at all times, where passion or prejudice stood aloof,
+infinitely rather do the generous thing than the cruel one.
+
+Little wonder, then, if he journeyed in a sort of ovation! At every
+change of horses in each village they passed, there was sure to be some
+one who wanted to shake his hand. People hobbled out on crutches and
+quitted sick-beds to say how "glad they were;" mere acquaintances most
+of them, who felt a strange mysterious sort of self-consequence in
+fancying themselves for the moment the friends of Peter Barrington, the
+millionnaire! This is all very curious, but it is a fact,--a fact which
+I make no pretence to explain, however.
+
+"And here comes the heartiest well-wisher of them all!" cried
+Barrington, as he saw his sister standing on the roadside, near the
+gate. With thoughtful delicacy, his companions lingered behind, while
+he went to meet and embraced her. "Was I not a true prophet, Dinah dear?
+Did I not often foretell this day to you?" said he, as he drew her arm,
+and led her along, forgetting all about his friends and companions.
+
+"Have they paid the money, Peter?" said she, sharply.
+
+"Of course they have not; such things are not settled like the fare of a
+hackney-coach. But our claim is acknowledged, and, fifty thousand
+times better, George Barrington's name absolved from every shadow of an
+imputation."
+
+"What is the amount they agree to give?"
+
+"Upon my life, I don't know,--that is, I don't recollect, there were
+so many interviews and such discussions; but Withering can tell you
+everything. Withering knows it all. Without _him_ and Conyers I don't
+know how I could have got on. If you had heard how he spoke of George at
+the Council! 'You talk of _my_ services,' said he; 'they are no more
+fit to be compared with those of Colonel Barrington, than are _my_ petty
+grievances with the gross wrongs that lie on _his_ memory.' Withering
+was there; he heard the words, and described the effect of them as
+actually overwhelming."
+
+"And Withering believes the whole thing to be settled?"
+
+"To be sure, he does! Why should he oppose his belief to that of the
+whole world? Why, my dear Dinah, it is not one, nor two, but some
+hundreds of people have come to wish me joy. They had a triumphal arch
+at Naas, with 'Welcome to Barrington' over it. At Carlow, Fishbourne
+came out with the corporation to offer me congratulations."
+
+She gave a hasty, impatient shake of the head, but repressed the sharp
+reply that almost trembled on her lips.
+
+"By George!" cried he, "it does one's heart good to witness such a burst
+of generous sentiment. You 'd have thought some great national benefit
+had befallen, or that some one--his country's idol--had just reaped the
+recompense of his great services. They came flocking out of the towns as
+we whirled past, cheering lustily, and shouting, 'Barrington forever!'"
+
+"I detest a mob!" said she, pursing up her lips.
+
+"These were no mobs, Dinah; these were groups of honest fellows, with
+kind hearts and generous wishes."
+
+Another, but more decisive, toss of the head warned Peter that the
+discussion had gone far enough; indeed she almost said so, by asking
+abruptly, "What is to be done about the boy Conyers? He is madly in love
+with Josephine."
+
+"Marry her, I should say!"
+
+"As a cure for the complaint, I suppose. But what if she will not have
+him? What if she declares that she 'd like to go back to the convent
+again,--that she hates the world, and is sorry she ever came out into
+it,--that she was happier with the sisters--"
+
+"Has she said all this to you, sister?"
+
+"Certainly not, Peter," said Dinah, bridling up. "These were confidences
+imparted to the young man himself. It was he told me of them: he came
+to me last night in a state bordering on distraction. He was hesitating
+whether he would not throw himself into the river or go into a marching
+regiment."
+
+"This is only a laughing matter, then, Dinah?" said Peter, smiling.
+
+"Nothing of the kind, brother! He did not put the alternatives so much
+in juxtaposition as I have; but they lay certainly in that manner on his
+thoughts. But when do your friends arrive? I thought they were to have
+come with you?"
+
+"What a head I have, Dinah! They are all here; two carriages of them. I
+left them on the road when I rushed on to meet you. Oh, here they come!
+here they are!"
+
+"My brother's good fortune, gentlemen, has made him seem to forget what
+adversity never did; but I believe you all know how welcome you are
+here? Your son, General Conyers, thought to meet you earlier, by taking
+boat down to the village, and the girls went with him. Your friend,
+Polly Dill, is one of them, General Hunter."
+
+Having thus, with one sweep of the scythe, cut down a little of all
+around her, she led the way towards the cottage, accepting the arm of
+General Conyers with an antiquated grace that sorely tried Hunter's good
+manners not to smile at.
+
+"I know what you are looking at, what you are thinking of, Barrington,"
+said Withering, as he saw the other stand a moment gazing at the
+landscape on the opposite side of the river.
+
+"I don't think you do, Tom," said he, smiling.
+
+"You were thinking of buying that mountain yonder. You were saying to
+yourself, 'I 'll be the owner of that beech wood before I'm a month
+older!'"
+
+"Upon my life, you 're right! though I have n't the remotest notion of
+how you guessed it. The old fellow that owns it shall name his own terms
+to-morrow morning. Here come the girls, and they 've got Tom Dill with
+them. How the fellow rows! and Fifine is laughing away at Conyers's
+attempt to keep the boat straight. Look at Hunter, too; he 's off to
+meet them. Is he 'going in' for the great heiress prize, eh, Tom?" said
+he, with a knowing smile.
+
+Though Hunter assisted the ladies to land with becoming gallantry, he
+did not offer his arm to Josephine, but dropped behind, where Tom Dill
+brought up the rear with his sister.
+
+"We have no confidences that you may not listen to," said Polly, as she
+saw that he hesitated as to joining them. "Tom, indeed, has been telling
+of yourself, and you may not care to hear your own praises."
+
+"If they come from _you_, I 'm all ears for them."
+
+"Isn't that pretty, Tom? Did you ever hear any one ask more candidly
+for--no, not flattery--what is it to be called?"
+
+Tom, however, could not answer, for he had stopped to shake hands with
+Darby, whose "May I never!" had just arrested him.
+
+"What an honest, fine-hearted fellow it is!" said Hunter, as they moved
+on, leaving Tom behind.
+
+"But if _you_ had n't found it out, who would have known, or who
+acknowledged it? _I_ know--for he has told me--all you have been to
+him."
+
+"Pooh, pooh! nothing; less than nothing. He owes all that he is to
+himself. He is one of those fellows who, once they get into the right
+groove in life, are sure to go ahead. Not even _you_ could make a doctor
+of him. Nature made him a soldier."
+
+Polly blushed slightly at the compliment to those teachings she believed
+a secret, and he went on,--
+
+"What has the world been doing here since I left?"
+
+"Pretty much what it did while you were here. It looked after its
+turnips and asparagus, took care of its young calves, fattened its
+chickens, grumbled at the dear-ness of everything, and wondered when Dr.
+Buck would preach a new sermon."
+
+"No deaths,--no marriages?"
+
+"None. There was only one candidate for both, and he has done
+neither,--Major M'Cormick."
+
+"Confound that old fellow! I had forgotten him. Do you remember the
+last day I saw you here? We were in the garden, talking, as we believed,
+without witnesses. Well, _he_ overheard us. He heard every word we said,
+and a good deal more that we did not say."
+
+"Yes; so he informed me, a few days after."
+
+"You don't mean to say that he had the impertinence--"
+
+"The frankness, General,--the charming candor,--to tell me that I was a
+very clever girl, and not to be discouraged by one failure or two; that
+with time and perseverance--I think he said perseverance--some one was
+sure to take a fancy to me: he might not, perhaps, be handsome, possibly
+not very young; his temper, too, might chance to be more tart than
+was pleasant; in a word, he drew such a picture that I had to stop him
+short, and ask was he making me a proposal? He has never spoken to me
+since!"
+
+"I feel as if I could break his neck," muttered Hunter, below his
+breath; then added, "Do you remember that I asked leave to write to you
+once,--only once?"
+
+"Yes, I remember it."
+
+"And you would not answer me. You shook your head, as though to say the
+permission would be of no service to me; that I might write, but, you
+understand, that it would only be to indulge in a delusion--"
+
+"What an expressive shake of the head that meant all that!"
+
+"Ah! there it is again; never serious, never grave! And now I want
+you to be both. Since I landed in England, I ran down for a day to
+Devonshire. I saw an old aunt of mine, who, besides being very rich,
+has retained no small share of the romance of her life. She always had
+a dash of hero-worship about her, and so I took down Tom with me to show
+her the gallant fellow whose name was in all the newspapers, and of whom
+all the world was talking. She was charmed with him,--with his honest,
+manly simplicity, his utter want of all affectation. She asked me ten
+times a day, 'Can I not be of service to him? Is there no step he wishes
+to purchase? Is there nothing we can do for him?' 'Nothing,'said I; 'he
+is quite equal to his own fortune.' 'He may have brothers,' said she.
+'He has a sister,' said I,--'a sister who has made him all that he is,
+and it was to repay her love and affection that he has shown himself
+to be the gallant fellow we have seen him.' 'Tell her to come and see
+me.--that is,' said she, correcting herself, 'give her a letter I shall
+write, and persuade her, if you can, to oblige me by doing what I ask.'
+Here is the letter; don't say no till you have read it. Nay, don't shake
+your head so deploringly; things may be hard without being impossible.
+At all events, read her note carefully. It's a droll old hand, but clear
+as print."
+
+"I'll read it," said she, looking at the letter; but the sorrowful tone
+revealed how hopelessly she regarded the task.
+
+"Ask Tom about her; and make Tom tell you what she is like. By Jove! he
+has such an admiration for the old damsel, I was half afraid he meant to
+be my uncle."
+
+They reached the cottage laughing pleasantly over this conceit, and
+Polly hurried up to her room to read the letter. To her surprise,
+Josephine was there already, her eyes very red with crying, and her
+cheeks flushed and feverish-looking.
+
+"My dearest Fifine, what is all this for, on the happiest day of your
+life?" said she, drawing her arm around her.
+
+"It's all _your_ fault,--all _your_ doing," said the other, averting her
+head, as she tried to disengage herself from the embrace.
+
+"My fault,--my doing? What do you mean, dearest, what can I have done to
+deserve this?"
+
+"You know very well what you have done. You knew all the time how it
+would turn out."
+
+Polly protested firmly that she could not imagine what was attributed to
+her, and only after a considerable time obtained the explanation of the
+charge. Indeed it was not at first easy to comprehend it, given, as
+it was, in the midst of tears, and broken at every word by sobs. The
+substance was this: that Fifine, in an attempted imitation of Polly's
+manner,--an effort to copy the coquetting which she fancied to be so
+captivating,--had ventured to trifle so far with young Conyers, that,
+after submitting to every alternative of hope and fear for weeks
+long, he at last gave way, and determined to leave the house, quit the
+country, and never meet her more. "It was to be like you I did it,"
+cried she, sobbing bitterly, "and see what it has led me to."
+
+"Well, dearest, be really like me for half an hour; that is, be very
+patient and very quiet. Sit down here, and don't leave this till I come
+back to you."
+
+Polly kissed her hot cheek as she spoke; and the other sat down where
+she was bade, with the half-obedient sulkiness of a naughty child.
+
+"Tell young Mr. Conyers to come and speak to me. I shall be in the
+garden," said she to his servant; and before she had gone many paces he
+was beside her.
+
+"Oh, Polly dearest! have you any hope for me?" cried he, in agony. "If
+you knew the misery I am enduring."
+
+"Come and take a walk with me," said she, passing her arm within his. "I
+think you will like to hear what I have to tell you."
+
+The revelation was not a very long one; and as they passed beneath the
+room where Josephine sat, Polly called out, "Come down here, Fifine, we
+are making a bouquet; try if you can find 'heart's-ease.'"
+
+What a happy party met that day at dinner! All were in their best
+spirits, each contented with the other. "Have you read my aunt's note?"
+whispered Hunter to Polly, as they passed into the drawing-room.
+
+"Yes. I showed it also to Miss Dinah. I asked her advice."
+
+"And what did she say,--what did she advise?"
+
+"She said she 'd think over it and tell me to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow! Why not now,--why not at once?" cried he, impatiently. "I
+'ll speak to her myself;" and he hurried to the little room where Miss
+Dinah was making tea.
+
+It was not a very long interview; and Hunter returned, fond, radiant,
+and triumphant. "She's the cleverest old woman I ever met in my life,"
+said he; "and the best, besides, after my Aunt Dorothy. She said that
+such an invitation as that was too cordial to be coldly declined; that
+it meant more--far more--than a politeness; that you ought to go, yes,
+by all means; and if there was any difficulty about the journey, or any
+awkwardness in travelling so far, why, there was an easy remedy for it,
+as well as for meeting my aunt a perfect stranger."
+
+"And what was that?"
+
+"To go as her niece, dearest Polly,--to be the wife of a man who loves
+you."
+
+"Is it possible that you have so much to say to each other that you
+won't take tea?" cried Aunt Dinah; while she whispered to Withering, "I
+declare we shall never have a sociable moment till they're all married
+off, and learn to conduct themselves like reasonable creatures."
+
+Is it not the best testimony we can give to happiness, that it is a
+thing to feel and not describe,--to be enjoyed, but not pictured? It is
+like a debt that I owe to my reader, to show him "The Home" as it was
+when blissful hearts were gathered under its roof; and yet, for the life
+of me, I cannot acquit myself of it. To say that there were old people
+with their memories of the past, and young ones with their hopes of the
+future; that there were bygones to sigh over, and vistas to gaze at,
+conveys but little of the kindliness by which heart opened to heart,
+and sorrow grew lighter by mutual endurance, and joys became brighter as
+they were imparted to another.
+
+"So I find," said Barrington, as they sat at breakfast together, "that
+Josephine insists on going back to the convent, and Fred is resolved on
+an exchange into the Infantry, and is off for Canada immediately."
+
+"Not a bit of it!" broke in Hunter, who remarked nothing of the roguish
+drollery of old Peter's eye, nor even suspected that the speech was made
+in mockery. "Master Fred is coming with me into Kilkenny this morning,
+for a visit to the Dean, or whatever he is, who dispenses those social
+handcuffs they call licenses."
+
+"Why, they were quarrelling all the morning," repeated Harrington.
+
+"So we were, sir, and so we mean to do for many a year," said Josephine;
+"and to keep us in countenance, I hear that General Hunter and Polly
+have determined to follow our example."
+
+"What do I hear, Miss Dill?" said Miss Barrington, with an affected
+severity.
+
+"I'm afraid, madam, it is true; there has been what my father calls 'a
+contagious endemic' here lately, and we have both caught it; but ours
+are mild cases, and we hope soon to recover."
+
+"What's this I see here?" cried Fred, who, to conceal his shame, had
+taken up the newspaper. "Listen to this: 'The notorious Stapylton,
+_alias_ Edwardes, whose case up to yesterday was reported all but
+hopeless, made his escape from the hospital, and has not since been
+heard of. It would appear that some of the officials had been bribed to
+assist his evasion, and a strict inquiry will be immediately set on foot
+into the affair.'"
+
+"Do you think he has got over to France?" whispered Peter to Withering.
+
+"Of course he has; the way was all open, and everything ready for him!"
+
+"Then I am thoroughly happy!" cried Barrington, "and there's not even
+the shadow of a cloud over our present sunshine."
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
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+ <head>
+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ Barrington, Vol II. by Charles James Lever
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+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: Barrington
+ Volume II (of II)
+
+Author: Charles James Lever
+
+Illustrator: Phiz.
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34883]
+Last Updated: February 27, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p>
+<br /><br />
+</p>
+<h1>
+BARRINGTON
+</h1>
+<h3>
+Volume II.
+</h3>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<h2>
+By Charles James Lever
+</h2>
+<h3>
+With Illustrations By Phiz.
+</h3>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<h3>
+Boston: Little, Brown, And Company.
+</h3>
+<h4>
+1907.
+</h4>
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="100%" alt="Frontispiece " />
+</div>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img alt="titlepage (27K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" />
+</div>
+<p>
+<br /> <br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="toc">
+<big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+</p>
+<p>
+<br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FIFINE AND
+POLLY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AT
+HOME AGAIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+SMALL DINNER-PARTY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+MOVE IN ADVANCE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+CABINET COUNCIL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AN
+EXPRESS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CROSS-EXAMININGS
+<br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GENERAL
+CONYERS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MAJOR
+M'CORMICK'S LETTER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;INTERCHANGED
+CONFESSIONS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STAPYLTON'S
+VISIT AT &ldquo;THE HOME&rdquo; <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII.
+</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT <br /><br /> <a
+href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CROSS-PURPOSES <br /><br />
+<a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STORMS <br /><br />
+<a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE OLD LEAVEN
+<br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A HAPPY
+MEETING <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MEET
+COMPANIONSHIP <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. &nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AUNT
+DOROTHEA <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FROM
+GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER
+XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE END <br /><br />
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<h1>
+VOLUME II.
+</h1>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER I. FIFINE AND POLLY
+</h2>
+<p>
+There are a few days in our autumnal season&mdash;very few and rare!&mdash;when
+we draw the curtain against the glare of the sun at breakfast, and yet in
+the evening are glad to gather around the cheerful glow of the fire. These
+are days of varied skies, with fleecy clouds lying low beneath a broad
+expanse of blue, with massive shadows on the mountains, and here and there
+over the landscape tips of sunlight that make the meanest objects
+pictures; and, with all these, a breezy wind that scatters the yellow
+leaves and shakes the tree-tops, while it curls the current of the bright
+river into mimic waves. The sportsman will tell you that on such days the
+birds are somewhat wild, and the angler will vow that no fish will rise to
+the fly, nor is it a scent-lying day for the harriers; and yet, with all
+this, there is a spring and elasticity in the air that impart themselves
+to the temperament, so that the active grow energetic, and even the
+indolent feel no touch of lassitude.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was on the morning of such a day that Barrington, with his sister and
+granddaughter, drew nigh the Home. Conyers had parted with them at Dublin,
+where his regiment was now stationed, but was to follow in a day or two.
+All the descriptions&mdash;descriptions which had taken the shape of
+warnings&mdash;which they had given Josephine of the cottage could not
+prevent her asking at each turn of the road if that large house yonder, if
+that sombre tower over the trees, if that massive gate-lodge were not
+theirs. &ldquo;I know this is it, grandpapa,&rdquo; said she, clapping her hands with
+delight as they came opposite a low wall within which lay the spacious
+lawn of Cobham Park, a portion of the house itself being just visible
+through the trees; &ldquo;don't tell me, aunt,&rdquo; cried she, &ldquo;but let me guess
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the seat of Sir Charles Cobham, child, one of the richest baronets
+in the kingdom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There it is at last,&mdash;there it is!&rdquo; cried she, straining oat of the
+carriage to see the handsome portico of a very large building, to which a
+straight avenue of oaks led up from the high-road. &ldquo;My heart tells me,
+aunt, that this is ours!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was once on a time, Fifiue,&rdquo; said the old man, with a quivering voice,
+and a glassy film over his eyes; &ldquo;it was once, but it is so no longer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Barrington Hall has long ceased to belong to us,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah; &ldquo;and
+after all the pains I have taken in description, I cannot see how you
+could possibly confound it with our little cottage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The young girl sat back without a word, and, whether from disappointment
+or the rebuke, looked forth no more.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are drawing very near now, Fifine,&rdquo; said the old man, after a long
+silence, which lasted fully two miles of the way. &ldquo;Where you see the tall
+larches yonder&mdash;not there&mdash;lower down, at the bend of the
+stream; those are the trees. I declare, Dinah, I fancy they have grown
+since we saw them last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no doubt you do, Peter; not that you will find the cottage far
+more commodious and comfortable than you remembered it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, they've repaired that stile, I see,&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;and very well they've
+done it, without cutting away the ivy. Here we are, darling; here we are!&rdquo;
+and he grasped the young girl's hand in one of his, while he drew the
+other across his eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They 're not very attentive, I must say, brother Peter, or they would not
+leave us standing, with our own gate locked against us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see Darby running as fast as he can. Here he comes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, by the powers, ye're welcome home, your honor's reverence, and the
+mistresses!&rdquo; cried Darby, as he fumbled at the lock, and then failing in
+all his efforts,&mdash;not very wonderful, seeing that he had taken a
+wrong key,&mdash;he seized a huge stone, and, smashing the padlock at a
+blow, threw wide the gate to admit them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are initiated at once into our Irish ways, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss
+Barrington. &ldquo;All that you will see here is in the same style. Let that be
+repaired this evening, sir, and at your own cost,&rdquo; whispered she to Darby,
+into whose hand at the same moment Peter was pressing a crown piece.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'T is the light of my eyes to see your honors home again! 'Tis like rain
+to the new potatoes what I feel in my heart, and looking so fresh and well
+too! And the young lady, she isn't&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+From what dread anticipation Darby's sudden halt saved him the expression
+is not for me to say, but that Peter Barrington guessed it is probable,
+for he lay back in the carriage and shook with laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Drive on, sir,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah to the postilion, &ldquo;and pull up at the
+stone cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can drive to the door now, ma'am,&rdquo; said Darby, &ldquo;the whole way; Miss
+Polly had the road made while you were away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a clever girl! Who could have thought it?&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I opine that we might have been consulted as to the change. On a matter
+as important as this, Peter, I think our voices might have been asked.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how well she has done it too!&rdquo; muttered he, half aloud; &ldquo;never
+touched one of those copper beeches, and given us a peep of the bright
+river through the meadows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+As the carriage rolled briskly along, Darby, who trotted alongside, kept
+up a current narrative of the changes effected during their absence.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The ould pigeon-house is tuck down, and an iligant new one put up in the
+island; and the calves' paddock is thrown into the flower-garden, and
+there's a beautiful flight of steps down to the river, paved with white
+stones,&mdash;sorrow one is n't white as snow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a mercy we had not a sign over the door, brother Peter,&rdquo; whispered
+Miss Dinah, &ldquo;or this young lady's zeal would have had it emblazoned like a
+shield in heraldry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, how lovely, how beautiful, how exquisite!&rdquo; cried Josephine, as they
+came suddenly round the angle of a copse and directly in front of the
+cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nor was the praise exaggerated. It was all that she had said. Over a light
+trellis-work, carried along under the thatch, the roses and jessamine
+blended with the clematis and the passion-flower, forming a deep eave of
+flowers, drooping in heavy festoons across the spaces between the windows,
+and meeting the geraniums which grew below. Through the open sashes the
+rooms might be seen, looking more like beautifnl bowers than the chambers
+of a dwelling-house. And over all, in sombre grandeur, bent the great
+ilex-trees, throwing their grand and tranquil shade over the cottage and
+the little grass-plot and even the river itself, as it swept smoothly by.
+There was in the stillness of that perfumed air, loaded with the
+sweet-brier and the rose, a something of calm and tranquillity; while in
+the isolation of the spot there was a sense of security that seemed to
+fill op the measure of the young girl's hopes, and made her exclaim with
+rapture, &ldquo;Oh, this, indeed, is beautiful!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my darling Fifine!&rdquo; said the old man, as he pressed her to his
+heart; &ldquo;your home, your own home! I told you, my dear child, it was not a
+great castle, no fine château, like those on the Meuse and the Sambre, but
+a lowly cottage with a thatched roof and a rustic porch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In all this ardor for decoration and smartness,&rdquo; broke in Miss Dinah, &ldquo;it
+would not surprise me to find that the peacock's tail had been picked out
+in fresh colors and varnished.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faix! your honor is not far wrong,&rdquo; interposed Darby, who had an Irish
+tendency to side with the majority. &ldquo;She made us curry and wash ould
+Sheela, the ass, as if she was a race-horse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope poor Wowsky escaped,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's what he didn't! He has to be scrubbed with soap and water every
+morning, and his hair divided all the way down his back, like a
+Christian's, and his tail looks like a bunch of switch grass.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That 's the reason he has n't come out to meet me; the poor fellow is
+like his betters,&mdash;he's not quite sure that his altered condition
+improves him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have at least one satisfaction, brother Peter,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+sharply; &ldquo;you find Darby just as dirty and uncared for as you left him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By my conscience, there 's another of us is n't much changed since we met
+last,&rdquo; muttered Darby, but in a voice only audible to himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, what a sweet cottage! What a pretty summer-house!&rdquo; cried Josephine,
+as the carriage swept round the copse, and drew short up at the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This summer-house is your home, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington, tartly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Home! home! Do you mean that we live here,&mdash;live here always, aunt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most distinctly I do,&rdquo; said she, descending and addressing herself to
+other cares. &ldquo;Where's Jane? Take these trunks round by the back door.
+Carry this box to the green-room,&mdash;to Miss Josephine's room,&rdquo; said
+she, with a stronger stress on the words.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, darling, it is a very humble, it is a very lowly,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+&ldquo;but let us see if we cannot make it a very happy home;&rdquo; but as he turned
+to embrace her, she was gone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I told you so, brother Peter,&mdash;I told you so, more than once; but,
+of course, you have your usual answer, 'We must do the best we can!' which
+simply means, doing worse than we need do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington was in no mood for a discussion; he was too happy to be once
+more at home to be ruffled by any provocation his sister could give him.
+Wherever he turned, some old familiar object met his eye and seemed to
+greet him, and he bustled in and out from his little study to the garden,
+and then to the stable, where he patted old Roger; and across to the
+cow-house, where Maggie knew him, and bent her great lazy eyes softly on
+him; and then down to the liver-side, where, in gilt letters, &ldquo;Josephine&rdquo;
+shone on the trim row-boat he had last seen half rotten on the bank; for
+Polly had been there too, and her thoughtful good-nature, forgetting
+nothing which might glad them on their coming.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile, Josephine had reached her chamber, and, locking the door, sat
+down and leaned her head on the table. Though no tears fell from her eyes,
+her bosom heaved and fell heavily, and more than one deep sigh escaped
+her. Was it disappointment that had so overcome her? Had she fancied
+something grander and more pretentious than this lonely cottage? Was it
+that Aunt Dinah's welcome was wanting in affection? What revulsion could
+it be that so suddenly overwhelmed her? Who can tell these things, who can
+explain how it is that, without any definite picture of an unexpected joy,
+imagination will so work upon us that reality will bring nothing but a
+blank? It is not that the object is less attractive than is hoped for, it
+is simply that a dark shadow has passed over our own hearts; the sense of
+enjoyment has been dulled, and we are sad without a reason. If we
+underrate sorrows of our youth,&mdash;and this is essentially one of them,&mdash;it
+is because our mature age leaves us nothing of that temperament on which
+such afflictions preyed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine, without knowing why, without even a reason, wished herself back
+in the convent. There, if there was a life of sombre monotony and
+quietude, there was at least companionship; she had associates of her own
+age. They had pursuits in common, shared the same hopes and wishes and
+fears; but here&mdash;but here&mdash;Just as her thoughts had carried her
+so far, a tap&mdash;a very gentle tap&mdash;came to the door. Josephine
+heard it, but made no answer. It was repeated a little louder, and then a
+low pleasing voice she had never heard before said, &ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Josephine,&mdash;&ldquo;yes&mdash;that is&mdash;who are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Polly Dill,&rdquo; was the answer; and Josephine arose and unlocked the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Barrington told me I might take this liberty,&rdquo; said Polly, with a
+faint smile. &ldquo;She said, 'Go and make acquaintance for yourself; I never
+play master of the ceremonies.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are Polly,&mdash;the Polly Dill I have heard so much of?&rdquo; said
+Josephine, regarding her steadily and fixedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How stranded your friends must have been for a topic when they talked of
+<i>me!</i>&rdquo; said Polly, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is quite true you have beautiful teeth,&mdash;I never saw such
+beautiful teeth,&rdquo; said Josephine to herself, while she still gazed
+earnestly at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you,&rdquo; said Polly, &ldquo;are so like what I had pictured you,&mdash;what I
+hoped you would be. I find it hard to believe I see you for the first
+time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, then, <i>you</i> did not think the Rajah's daughter should be a
+Moor?&rdquo; said Josephine, half haughtily. &ldquo;It is very sad to see what
+disappointments I had caused.&rdquo; Neither the saucy toss of the head, nor the
+tone that accompanied these words, were lost upon Polly, who began to feel
+at once that she understood the speaker.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your brother,&rdquo; continued Josephine, &ldquo;is the famous Tom Dill I have
+heard such stories about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Tom! he is anything rather than famous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, he is remarkable; he is odd, original, or whatever you would call
+it. Fred told me he never met any one like him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tom might say as much of Mr. Conyers, for, in truth, no one ever showed
+him such kindness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred told me nothing of that; but perhaps,&rdquo; added she, with a flashing
+eye, &ldquo;you were more in his confidence than I was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I knew very little of Mr. Conyers; I believe I could count on the fingers
+of one hand every time I met him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How strange that you should have made so deep an impression, Miss Dill!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am flattered to hear it, but more surprised than flattered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I don't wonder at it in the least,&rdquo; said Josephine, boldly. &ldquo;You are
+very handsome, you are very graceful, and then&mdash;&rdquo; She hesitated and
+grew confused, and stammered, and at last said, &ldquo;and then there is that
+about you which seems to say, 'I have only to wish, and I can do it.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no such gift, I assure you,&rdquo; said Polly, with a half-sad smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I know you are very clever; I have heard how accomplished you were,
+how beautifully you rode, how charmingly you sang. I wish he had not told
+me of it all&mdash;for if&mdash;for if&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If what? Say on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you were not so superior to me, I feel that I could love you;&rdquo; and
+then with a bound she threw her arms around Polly's neck, and clasped her
+affectionately to her bosom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sympathy, like a fashionable physician, is wonderfully successful where
+there is little the matter. In the great ills of life, when the real
+afflictions come down to crush, to wound, or to stun us, we are
+comparatively removed from even the kindest of our comforters. Great
+sorrows are very selfish things. In the lighter maladies, however, in the
+smaller casualties of fortune, sympathy is a great remedy, and we are
+certain to find that, however various our temperaments, it has a sort of
+specific for each. Now Josephine Barrington had not any great cares upon
+her heart; if the balance were to be struck between them, Polly Dill could
+have numbered ten, ay, twenty, for her one, but she thought hers was a
+case for much commiseration, and she liked commiseration, for there are
+moral hypochondrias as well as physical ones. And so she told Polly how
+she had neither father nor mother, nor any other belongings than &ldquo;dear old
+grandpapa and austere Aunt Dinah;&rdquo; that she had been brought up in a
+convent, never knowing one of the pleasures of youth, or her mind being
+permitted to stray beyond the dreary routine of prayer and penance. Of
+music she knew nothing but the solemn chants of the organ, and even
+flowers were to her eyes but the festal decorations of the high altar;
+and, lastly, she vaguely balanced between going back to the dismal
+existence of the cloister, or entering upon the troubled sea of life, so
+full of perils to one unpractised and unskilled as she was. Now Polly was
+a very pretty comforter through these afflictions; her own home
+experiences were not all rose-colored, but the physician who whispers
+honeyed consolations to the patient has often the painful consciousness of
+a deeper malady within than that for which he ministers. Polly knew
+something of a life of struggle and small fortune, with its daily incident
+of debt and dun. She knew what it was to see money mix itself with every
+phase of existence, throwing its damper over joy, arresting the hand of
+benevolence, even denying to the sick-bed the little comforts that help to
+cheat misery. She knew how penury can eat its canker into the heart till
+all things take the color of thrift, and life becomes at last the terrible
+struggle of a swimmer storm-tossed and weary; and yet, with all this
+experience in her heart, she could whisper cheerful counsels to Josephine,
+and tell her that the world had a great many pleasant paths through it,
+though one was occasionally footsore before reaching them; and in this way
+they talked till they grew very fond of each other, and Josephine was
+ready to confess that the sorrow nearest to her heart was parting with
+her. &ldquo;But must you go, dearest Polly,&mdash;must you really go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must, indeed,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;for if I did not, two little
+sisters of mine would go supperless to bed, not to speak of a small boy
+who is waiting for me with a Latin grammar before him; and the cook must
+get her orders for to-morrow; and papa must have his tea; and this short,
+stumpy little key that you see here unlocks the oat-bin, without which an
+honest old pony would share in the family fast: so that, all things
+considered, my absence would be far from advisable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And when shall we meet again, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not to-morrow, dear; for to-morrow is our fair at Inistioge, and I have
+yarn to buy, and some lambs to sell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And could you sell lambs, Polly?&rdquo; said Josephine, with an expression of
+blank disappointment in her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly smiled, but not without a certain sadness, as she said, &ldquo;There are
+some sentimentalities which, to one in my condition, would just be as
+unsuitable as Brussels lace or diamonds. They are born of luxury and
+indolence, and pertain to those whose existence is assured to them; and my
+own opinion is, they are a poor privilege. At all events,&rdquo; added she,
+rapidly, &ldquo;they are not for me, and I do not wish for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The day after to-morrow, then, you will come here,&mdash;promise me
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be late, then, towards evening, for I have made an engagement to
+put a young horse in harness,&mdash;a three-year-old, and a sprightly one,
+they tell me,&mdash;so that I may look on the morning as filled. I see, my
+dear child, how shocked you are with all these unladylike cares and
+duties; but poor Tom and I used to weld our lives together, and while I
+took my share of boat-building one day, he helped me in the dairy the day
+after; but now that he is gone, our double functions devolve upon me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How happy you must be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I am; at least, I have no time to spare for unhappiness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I could but change with you, Polly!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Change what, my dear child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Condition, fortune, belongings,&mdash;everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take my word for it, you are just as well as you are; but I suppose it's
+very natural for one to fancy he could carry another's burden easier than
+his own, for it was only a few moments back I thought how I should like to
+be you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be me,&mdash;to be me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I was wrong, dearest. It was only a passing, fleeting thought,
+and I now see how absurd I was to wish to be very beautiful, dearly loved,
+and affectionately cared for, with a beautiful home to live in, and every
+hour free to be happy. Oh, what a sigh, dearest, what a sigh! but I assure
+you I have my calamities too; the mice have got at the seeds in my
+onion-bed, and I don't expect to see one come up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+If Josephine's first impulse was to feel angry, her next was to laugh out,
+which she did heartily; and passing her arm fondly round Polly's waist,
+she said, &ldquo;I 'll get used to your raillery, Polly, and not feel sore at
+it; but remember, too, it's a spirit I never knew before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How good and generous, then, to bear it so well!&rdquo; said Polly,
+affectionately; &ldquo;your friend Mr. Conyers did not show the same patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You tried him, then?&rdquo; said Josephine, with a half-eager glance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course; I talked to him as I do to every one. But there goes your
+dinner-bell.&rdquo; Checking herself on a reflection over the pretension of this
+summons of three people to a family meal in a cottage, Polly tied on her
+bonnet and said &ldquo;Good-bye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER II. AT HOME AGAIN
+</h2>
+<p>
+The Barringtons had not been quite a fortnight settled in their home, when
+a note came from Conyers, lamenting, in most feeling terms, that he could
+not pay them his promised visit. If the epistle was not very long, it was
+a grumble from beginning to end. &ldquo;Nobody would know,&rdquo; wrote he, &ldquo;it was
+the same regiment poor Colonel Hunter commanded. Our Major is now in
+command,&mdash;the same Stapylton you have heard me speak of; and if we
+never looked on him too favorably, we now especially detest him. His first
+step was to tell us we were disorderly, ill-dressed, and ill-disciplined;
+but we were even less prepared to hear that we could not ride. The result
+of all this is, we have gone to school again,&mdash;even old captains, who
+have served with distinction in the field, have been consigned to the
+riding-house; and we poor subs are treated as if we were the last refuse
+of all the regiments of the army, sent here to be reformed and corrected.
+We have incessant drills, parades, and inspections, and, worse again, all
+leave is stopped. If I was not in the best of temper with the service
+before, you may judge how I feel towards it now. In fact, if it were not
+that I expect my father back in England by the middle of May, I 'd send in
+my papers and leave at once. How I fall back now in memory to the happy
+days of my ramble with you, and wonder if I shall ever see the like again.
+And how I hate myself for not having felt at the time how immeasurably
+delightful they were! Trust me never to repeat the mistake if I have the
+opportunity given me. I asked this morning for three days&mdash;only three&mdash;to
+run down and see you once more before we leave,&mdash;for we are ordered
+to Honnslow,&mdash;and I was refused. But this was not all: not content
+with rejecting my request, he added what he called an expression of
+astonishment that an officer so deficient in his duties should care to
+absent himself from regimental discipline.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor boy!&mdash;this is, indeed, too bad,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as she had
+read thus far; &ldquo;only think, Peter, how this young fellow, spoiled and
+petted as he was as a child,&mdash;denied nothing, pampered as though he
+were a prince,&mdash;should find himself the mark of so insulting a
+tyranny. Are you listening to me, Peter Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eh,&mdash;what? No, thank you, Dinah; I have made an excellent
+breakfast,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly, and again addressed himself to the
+letter he was reading. &ldquo;That's what I call a Trump, Dinah,&mdash;a regular
+Trump.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is the especial favorite that has called for the very choice eulogy?&rdquo;
+said she, bridling up.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone into the thing, too, with heart and soul,&mdash;a noble fellow!&rdquo;
+continued Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray enlighten us as to the name that calls forth such enthusiasm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stapylton, my dear Dinah,&mdash;Major Stapylton. In all my life I do not
+remember one instance to parallel with this generous and disinterested
+conduct. Listen to what Withering says,&mdash;not a man given to take up
+rash impressions in favor of a stranger. Listen to this: 'Stapylton has
+been very active,&mdash;written to friends, both at Calcutta and Agra, and
+shown, besides, an amount of acuteness in pursuit of what is really
+important, that satisfies me a right good common lawyer has been lost by
+his being a soldier.' And here, again he recurs to him: it is with
+reference to certain documents: 'S. persists in believing that with proper
+diligence these may be recovered; he says that it is a common practice
+with the Moonshees to retain papers, in the hope of their being one day
+deemed of value; and he is fully persuaded that they have not been
+destroyed. There is that about the man's manner of examining a question,&mdash;his
+patience, his instinctive seizure of what is of moment, and his invariable
+rejection of whatever is immaterial; and, lastly, his thorough
+appreciation of the character of that evidence which would have most
+weight with the Indian Board, which dispose me to regard him as an
+invaluable ally to our cause.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do me the favor to regard this picture of your friend now,&rdquo; said Miss
+Barrington, as she handed the letter from Conyers across the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington read it over attentively. &ldquo;And what does this prove, my dear
+sister?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;This is the sort of stereotyped complaint of every
+young fellow who has been refused a leave. I have no doubt Hunter was too
+easy-tempered to have been strict in discipline, and the chances are these
+young dogs had everything their own way till Stapylton came amongst them.
+I find it hard to believe that any man likes unpopularity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps not, Peter Barrington; but he may like tyranny more than he hates
+unpopularity; and, for my own part, this man is odious to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't say so, Dinah,&mdash;don't say so, I entreat of you, for he will be
+our guest here this very day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Our guest!&mdash;why, is not the regiment under orders to leave?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is; but Withering says it would be a great matter if we could have
+a sort of consultation together before the Major leaves Ireland. There are
+innumerable little details which he sees ought to be discussed between us;
+and so he has persuaded him to give us a day,&mdash;perhaps two days,&mdash;no
+small boon, Dinah, from one so fully occupied as he is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish he would not make the sacrifice, Peter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear sister, are we so befriended by Fortune that we can afford to
+reject the kindness of our fellows?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm no believer in chance friendships, Peter Barrington; neither you nor
+I are such interesting orphans as to inspire sympathy at first sight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine could not help a laugh at Miss Dinah's illustration, and old
+Barriqgton himself heartily joined in the merriment, not sorry the while
+to draw the discussion into a less stern field. &ldquo;Come, come, Dinah,&rdquo; said
+he, gayly, &ldquo;let us put out a few bottles of that old Madeira in the sun;
+and if Darby can find us a salmon-trout, we 'll do our best to entertain
+our visitors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It never occurred to me to doubt the probability of their enjoying
+themselves, Peter; my anxieties were quite on another score.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Fifine,&rdquo; continued Barrington, &ldquo;we shall see if Polly Dill has
+really made you the perfect housekeeper she boasted. The next day or two
+will put your talents to the test.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, if we could only have Polly herself here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What for?&mdash;on what pretext, Miss Barrington?&rdquo; said Dinah, haughtily.
+&ldquo;I have not, so far as I am aware, been accounted very ignorant of
+household cares.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Withering declares that your equal is not in Europe, Dinah.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Withering's suffrage can always be bought by a mock-turtle soup, and
+a glass of Roman punch after it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How he likes it,&mdash;how he relishes it! He says that he comes back to
+the rest of the dinner with the freshness of a man at an assize case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So like him!&rdquo; said Dinah, scornfully; &ldquo;he has never an illustration that
+is not taken from the Four Courts. I remember one day, when asking for the
+bill of fare, he said, 'Will you kindly let me look at the cause list.'
+Prepare yourself, Josephine, for an avalanche of law anecdotes and Old
+Bailey stories, for I assure you you will hear nothing for the next three
+days but drolleries that have been engrossed on parchment and paid stamp
+duty to the Crown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington gave a smile, as though in protest against the speech, and left
+the room. In truth, he was very anxious to be alone, and to think over, at
+his leisure, a short passage in his letter which he had not summoned
+courage to read aloud. It was Withering's opinion that to institute the
+inquiries in India a considerable sum of money would be required, and he
+had left it for Barrington's consideration whether it were wiser to risk
+the great peril of this further involvement, or once more to try what
+chance there might be of a compromise. Who knows what success might have
+attended the suggestion if the old lawyer had but employed any other word!
+Compromise, however, sounded to his ears like an unworthy concession,&mdash;a
+surrender of George's honor. Compromise might mean money for his
+granddaughter, and shame to her father's memory. Not, indeed, that
+Withering was, as a man, one to counsel such a course, but Withering was a
+lawyer, and in the same spirit that he would have taken a verdict for half
+his claim if he saw an adverse feeling in the jury-box, so he would bow to
+circumstances that were stronger than him, and accept the best he could,
+if he might not have all that he ought But could Barrington take this
+view? He thought not. His conviction was that the main question to
+establish was the fair fame and honor of his son; his guide was, how
+George himself would have acted&mdash;would have felt&mdash;in the same
+contingency; and he muttered, &ldquo;He'd have been a hardy fellow who would
+have hinted at compromise to <i>him</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The next point was how the means for the coming campaign were to be
+provided. He had already raised a small sum by way of mortgage on the
+&ldquo;Home,&rdquo; and nothing remained but to see what further advance could be made
+on the same security. When Barrington was a great estated gentleman with a
+vast fortune at his command, it cost him wonderfully little thought to
+contract a loan, or even to sell a farm. A costly election, a few weeks of
+unusual splendor, an unfortunate night at play, had made such sacrifices
+nothing very unusual, and he would give his orders on this score as
+unconcernedly as he would bid his servant replenish his glass at table.
+Indeed, he had no more fear of exhausting his fortune than he felt as to
+out-drinking his cellar. There was enough there, as he often said, for
+those who should come after him. And now, what a change! He stood actually
+appalled at the thought of a mortgage for less than a thousand pounds. But
+so it is; the cockboat may be more to a man than was once the
+three-decker. The cottage was his all now; that lost, and they were
+houseless. Was it not a bold thing to risk everything on one more throw?
+There was the point over which he now pondered as he walked slowly along
+in the little shady alley between the laurel hedges. He had no friend
+nearer his heart than Withering, no one to whom he could unbosom himself
+so frankly and so freely, and yet this was a case on which he could not
+ask his counsel. All his life long he had strenuously avoided suffering a
+question of the kind to intervene between them. Of his means, his
+resources, his straits, or his demands, Withering knew positively nothing.
+It was with Barrington a point of delicacy to maintain this reserve
+towards one who was always his lawyer, and often his guest. The very
+circumstance of his turning innkeeper was regarded by Withering as
+savoring far more of caprice than necessity, and Barrington took care to
+strengthen this impression.
+</p>
+<p>
+If, then, Withering's good sense and worldly knowledge would have been
+invaluable aids to him in this conjunction, he saw he could not have them.
+The same delicacy which debarred him heretofore, would still interpose
+against his appeal to that authority. And then he thought how he had once
+troops of friends to whom he could address himself for counsel. There is
+nothing more true, indeed, than the oft-uttered scoff on the hollowness of
+those friendships which attach to the days of prosperous fortune, and the
+world is very prone to point to the utter loneliness of him who has been
+shipwrecked by Fate; but let us be just in our severity, and let us own
+that a man's belongings, his associates, his&mdash;what common parlance
+calls&mdash;friends, are the mere accidents of his station, and they no
+more accompany him in his fall than do the luxuries he has forfeited. From
+the level from which he has lapsed they have not descended. They are
+there, living to-day as they lived yesterday. If their sympathy is not
+with him, it is because neither are they themselves; they cross each other
+no more. Such friendships are like the contracts made with a crew for a
+particular voyage,&mdash;they end with the cruise. No man ever understood
+this better than Barrington; no man ever bore the world less of ill will
+for its part towards himself. If now and then a sense of sadness would
+cloud him at some mark of passing forgetfulness, he would not own to the
+gloomy feeling; while to any show of recognition, to any sign of a
+grateful remembrance of the past, he would grow boastful to very vanity.
+&ldquo;Look there, Dinah,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;what a noble-hearted fellow that is! I
+scarcely was more than commonly civil to him formerly, and you saw how
+courteous he was in making a place for us, how heartily he hoped I was in
+good health.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll send over to Dill and have a talk with him,&rdquo; was Barrington's last
+resolve, as he turned the subject over and over in his mind. &ldquo;Dill 's a
+shrewd fellow, and I 'm not sure that he has not laid by a little money;
+he might feel no objection to a good investment for it, with such
+security.&rdquo; And he looked around as he spoke on the trees, some of which he
+planted, every one of which he knew, and sighed heavily. &ldquo;He 'll scarce
+love the spot more than I did,&rdquo; muttered he, and walked along with his
+head down. After a while he took out Withering's letter from his pocket
+and re-read it. Somehow, it was hard to say why, it did not read so
+promisingly as at first. The difficulties to be encountered were very
+stubborn ones, so much so that he very palpably hinted how much better
+some amicable settlement would be than an open contest wherein legal
+subtlety and craft should be evoked. There was so much of that matter
+always taken for granted, to be proved, to be demonstrated true on
+evidence, that it actually looked appalling. &ldquo;Of the searches and
+inquiries instituted in India,&rdquo; wrote Withering, &ldquo;I can speak but vaguely;
+but I own the very distance magnifies them immensely to my eyes.&rdquo; &ldquo;Tom is
+growing old, not a doubt of it,&rdquo; muttered Barrington; &ldquo;these were not the
+sort of obstacles that could have terrified him once on a time. He 'd have
+said, 'If there 's evidence, we 'll have it; if there's a document, we 'll
+find it.' It's India, that far-away land, that has frightened him. These
+lawyers, like certain sportsmen, lose their nerve if you take them out of
+their own country. It 's the new style of fences they can't face. Well,
+thanks to him who gave it, I have my stout heart still, and I 'll go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going on&rdquo; was, however, not the easy task it first seemed, nor was the
+pleasantest part of it the necessity of keeping the secret from his
+sister. Miss Dinah had from the first discouraged the whole suit. The
+adversary was too powerful, the odds against them were too great; the
+India Board had only to protract and prolong the case and <i>they</i> must
+be beaten from sheer exhaustion. How, then, should he reconcile her to
+mortgaging the last remnant of all their fortune for &ldquo;one more throw on
+the table&rdquo;? &ldquo;No chance of persuading a woman that this would be wise,&rdquo;
+said he. And he thought, when he had laid the prejudice of sex as the
+ground of error, he had completed his argument.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going on&rdquo; had its fine generous side about it, also, that cheered and
+elevated him. It was for George he was doing it, and that dear girl, whose
+every trait recalled her father; for let those explain it who can, she,
+who had never seen nor even heard of her father since her infancy,
+inherited all his peculiar ways and habits, and every trick of his manner.
+Let me own that these, even more than any qualities of sterling worth,
+endeared her to her grandfather; and just as he had often declared no rank
+or position that could befall George would have been above his deserts, so
+he averred that if Josephine were to be the greatest heiress in England
+to-morrow, she would be a grace and an ornament to the station. If Aunt
+Dinah would occasionally attempt to curb this spirit, or even limit its
+extravagance, his invariable answer was, &ldquo;It may be all as you say,
+sister, but for the life of me I cannot think my swans to be geese.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+As he thus mused and meditated, he heard the wicket of the garden open and
+shut, and shortly afterwards a half-shambling shuffling step on the
+gravel. Before he had time to speculate on whose it should be, he saw
+Major M'Cormick limping laboriously towards him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How is this, Major?&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;has the change of weather disagreed with
+your rheumatism?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's the wound; it's always worse in the fall of the year,&rdquo; croaked the
+other. &ldquo;I'd have been up to see you before but for the pains, and that old
+fool Dill&mdash;a greater fool myself for trusting him&mdash;made me put
+on a blister down what he calls the course of the nerve, and I never knew
+torture till I tried it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sister Dinah has, I verily believe, the most sovereign remedy for
+these pains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it the green draught? Oh, don't I know it,&rdquo; burst out the Major. &ldquo;You
+might hear my shouts the day I took it down at Inistioge. There was n't a
+bit of skin left on my lips, and when I wiped the perspiration off my head
+my hair came off too. Aquafortis is like egg-flip compared to that blessed
+draught; and I remember well how I crawled to my writing-desk and wrote,
+'Have me opened,' for I knew I was poisoned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you tell my sister of your sufferings?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure I did, and she only smiled and said that I took it when I was
+fasting, or when I was full, I forget which; and that I ought to have
+taken a brisk walk, and I only able to creep; and only one spoonful at a
+time, and it was the whole bottle I swallowed. In fact, she owned
+afterwards that nothing but the strength of a horse could have saved me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter found it very hard to maintain a decent gravity at the play of the
+Major's features, which during the narrative recalled every dire
+experience of his medicine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, come into the house and we'll give you something better,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I saw your granddaughter at the window as I came by,&mdash;a
+good-looking young woman, and not so dark as I suspected she 'd be.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's not a handsomer girl in Ireland; and as to skin, she 's not as
+brown as her father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It wouldn't be easy to be that; he was about three shades deeper than a
+Portuguese.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;George Barrington was confessedly the finest-looking fellow in the King's
+army, and as English-looking a gentleman as any man in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The tone of this speech was so palpably that of one who would not stand
+the very shadow of a rejoinder, that the Major held his peace, and
+shuffled along without a word. The thought, however, of administering a
+rebuke to any one within the precincts of his home was so repugnant to
+Barrington's nature, that he had scarcely uttered the words than he was
+eager to repair them, and with a most embarrassed humility he stammered
+out something about their recent tour abroad and all the enjoyment it had
+given them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe so,&rdquo; rejoined the other, dryly; &ldquo;but I never saw any pleasure in
+spending money you could keep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Major, that is precisely the very money that does procure
+pleasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wasn't that a post-chaise I saw through the trees? There it is again;
+it's making straight for the 'Home,'&rdquo; said M'Cormick, pointing with his
+stick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Peter; &ldquo;I was expecting a couple of friends to pass a day or
+so with me here. Will you excuse me if I hurry forward to welcome them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't make a stranger of me; I'll saunter along at my leisure,&rdquo; said the
+Major, as Barrington walked briskly on towards the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER III. A SMALL DINNER-PARTY
+</h2>
+<p>
+Withering and Stapylton had arrived fully two hoars earlier than they were
+expected, and Miss Dinah was too deeply engaged in the household cares
+that were to do them honor to receive them. Josephine, too, was not less
+busily occupied, for her conventual education had made her wonderfully
+skilful in all sorts of confectionery, and she was mistress of devices in
+spun sugar and preserved fruits, which rose in Aunt Dinah's eyes to the
+dignity of high art. Barrington, however, was there to meet them, and with
+a cordial welcome which no man could express more gracefully. The luncheon
+hour passed pleasantly over, for all were in good humor and good spirits.
+Withering's holiday always found him ready to enjoy it, and when could old
+Peter feel so happy as when he had a guest beneath his roof who thoroughly
+appreciated the cottage, and entered into the full charm of its lovely
+scenery! Such was Stapylton; he blended a fair liking for the picturesque
+with a natural instinct for comfort and homeliness, and he saw in this
+spot what precisely embraced both elements. It was very beautiful; but,
+better still, it was very lovable. &ldquo;It was so rare&rdquo;&mdash;so, at least, he
+told Barrington&mdash;&ldquo;to find a cottage wherein internal comfort had not
+been sacrificed to some requirement of outward show. There was only one
+way of doing this,&rdquo; said he, as Barrington led him through the little
+flower-garden, giving glimpses of the rooms within as they passed,&mdash;&ldquo;only
+one way, Mr. Barrington; a man must have consummate taste, and strong
+credit at his banker's.&rdquo; Barrington's cheek grew a thought redder, and he
+smiled that faint sad smile which now and then will break from one who
+feels that he could rebut what he has just heard, if it were but right or
+fitting he should do so. Of course, amongst really distressing sensations
+this has no place; but yet there is a peculiar pain in being complimented
+by your friend on the well-to-do condition of your fortune when your
+conscience is full of the long watching hours of the night, or, worse
+still, the first awaking thought of difficulties to which you open your
+eyes of a morning. It is not often, nor are there many to whom you can
+say, &ldquo;I cannot tell the day or the hour when all this shall pass away from
+me; my head is racked with care, and my heart heavy with anxiety.&rdquo; How
+jarring to be told of all the things you ought to do! You who could so
+well afford it! And how trying to have to take shelter from your necessity
+under the shadow of a seeming stinginess, and to bear every reflection on
+your supposed thrift rather than own to your poverty!
+</p>
+<p>
+If Withering had been with them as they strolled, this, perhaps, might
+have been avoided; he had all a lawyer's technical skill to change a
+topic; but Withering had gone to take his accustomed midday nap, the
+greatest of all the luxuries his time of idleness bestowed upon him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, although Stapylton's alludings&mdash;and they were no more&mdash;to
+Barrington's gifts of fortune were such as perfectly consisted with good
+taste and good breeding, Barring-ton felt them all painfully, and probably
+nothing restrained him from an open disclaimer of their fitness save the
+thought that from a host such an avowal would sound ungracefully. &ldquo;It is
+my duty now,&rdquo; reasoned he, &ldquo;to make my guest feel that all the attentions
+he receives exact no sacrifice, and that the pleasure his presence affords
+is unalloyed by a single embarrassment. If he must hear of my
+difficulties, let it be when he is not beneath my roof.&rdquo; And so he let
+Stapylton talk away about the blessings of tranquil affluence, and the
+happiness of him whose only care was to find time for the enjoyments that
+were secured to him. He let him quote Pope and Wharton and Edmund Burke,
+and smiled the blandest concurrence with what was irritating him almost to
+fever.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is Withering's favorite spot,&rdquo; said Peter, as they gained the shade
+of a huge ilex-tree, from which two distinct reaches of the river were
+visible.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it shall be mine, too,&rdquo; said Stapylton, throwing himself down in the
+deep grass; &ldquo;and as I know you have scores of things which claim your
+attention, let me release you, while I add a cigar&mdash;the only possible
+enhancement&mdash;to the delight of this glorious nook.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it shall be as you wish. We dine at six. I 'll go and look after a
+fish for our entertainment;&rdquo; and Barrington turned away into the copse,
+not sorry to release his heart by a heavy sigh, and to feel he was alone
+with his cares.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us turn for a moment to M'Cormick, who continued to saunter slowly
+about the garden, in the expectation of Barrington's return. Wearied at
+length with waiting, and resolved that his patience should not go entirely
+unrequited, he turned into a little shady walk on which the windows of the
+kitchen opened. Stationing himself there, in a position to see without
+being seen, he took what he called an observation of all within. The sight
+was interesting, even if he did not bring to it the appreciation of a
+painter. There, upon a spacious kitchen table, lay a lordly sirloin,
+richly and variously colored, flanked by a pair of plump guinea-hens and a
+fresh salmon of fully twenty pounds' weight. Luscious fruit and vegetables
+were heaped and mingled in a wild profusion, and the speckled plumage of
+game was half hidden under the massive bunches of great hot-house grapes.
+It is doubtful if Sneyders himself could have looked upon the display with
+a higher sense of enjoyment It is, indeed, a question between the relative
+merits of two senses, and the issue lies between the eye and the palate.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wisely reasoning that such preparations were not made for common guests,
+M'Cormick ran over in his mind all the possible and impossible names he
+could think of, ending at last with the conviction it was some &ldquo;Nob&rdquo; he
+must have met abroad, and whom in a moment of his expansive hospitality he
+had invited to visit him. &ldquo;Isn't it like them!&rdquo; muttered he. &ldquo;It would be
+long before they'd think of such an entertainment to an old neighbor like
+myself; but here they are spending&mdash;who knows how much?&mdash;for
+somebody that to-morrow or next day won't remember their names, or maybe,
+perhaps, laugh when they think of the funny old woman they saw,&mdash;the
+'Fright' with the yellow shawl and the orange bonnet. Oh, the world, the
+world!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not for me to speculate on what sort of thing the world had been, if
+the Major himself had been intrusted with the control and fashion of it;
+but I have my doubts that we are just as well off as we are. &ldquo;Well, though
+they haven't the manners to say 'M'Cormick; will you stop and dine?' they
+haven't done with me yet; not a bit!&rdquo; And with this resolve he entered the
+cottage, and found his way to the drawing-room. It was unoccupied; so he
+sat himself down in a comfortable armchair, to await events and their
+issue. There were books and journals and newspapers about; but the Major
+was not a reader, and so he sat musing and meditating, while the time went
+by. Just as the clock struck five, Miss Dinah, whose various cares of
+housewifery had given her a very busy day, was about to have a look at the
+drawing-room before she went to dress, and being fully aware that one of
+her guests was asleep, and the other full stretched beside the river, she
+felt she could go her &ldquo;rounds&rdquo; without fear of being observed. Now,
+whatever had been the peculiar functions she was lately engaged in, they
+had exacted from her certain changes in costume more picturesque than
+flattering. In the first place, the sleeves of her dress were rolled up
+above the elbows, displaying arms more remarkable for bone than beauty. A
+similar curtailment of her petticoats exhibited feet and ankles which&mdash;not
+to be ungallant&mdash;might be called massive rather than elegant; and
+lastly, her two long curls of auburn hair&mdash;curls which, in the
+splendor of her full toilette, were supposed to be no mean aids to her
+captivating powers&mdash;were now tastefully festooned and fastened to the
+back of her head, pretty much as a pair of hawsers are occasionally
+disposed on the bow of a merchantman! Thus costumed, she had advanced into
+the middle of the room before she saw the Major.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pleasure quite unexpected, sir, is this,&rdquo; said she, with a vigorous
+effort to shake out what sailors would call her &ldquo;lower courses.&rdquo; &ldquo;I was
+not aware that you were here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, then, I came in myself, just like old times. I said this morning,
+if it 's fine to-day, I 'll just go over to the 'Fisherman's Home.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The Home,' sir, if you please. We retain so much of the former name.&rdquo;
+But just as she uttered the correction, a chance look at the glass
+conveyed the condition of her head-gear,&mdash;a startling fact which made
+her cheeks perfectly crimson. &ldquo;I lay stress upon the change of name, sir,&rdquo;
+continued she, &ldquo;as intimating that we are no longer innkeepers, and expect
+something, at least, of the deference rendered to those who call their
+house their own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, and why not?&rdquo; croaked out the Major, with a malicious grin.
+&ldquo;And I forgot all about it, little thinking, indeed, to surprise you in
+'dishabille,' as they call it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>You</i> surprise me, sir, every time we meet,&rdquo; said she, with flashing
+eyes. &ldquo;And you make me feel surprised with myself for my endurance!&rdquo; And
+so saying, she retired towards the door, covering her retreat as she went
+by every object of furniture that presented itself, and, like a skilful
+general, defending her rear by every artifice of the ground. Thus did she
+exit, and with a bang of the door&mdash;as eloquent as any speech&mdash;close
+the colloquy.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faix! and the Swiss costume doesn't become you at all!&rdquo; said the Major,
+as he sat back in his chair, and cackled over the scene.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Miss Barrington, boiling with passion, passed her brother's door, she
+stopped to knock.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter!&rdquo; cried she. &ldquo;Peter Barrington, I say!&rdquo; The words were, however,
+not well out, when she heard a step ascending the stair. She could not
+risk another discovery like the last; so, opening the door, she said,
+&ldquo;That hateful M'Cormick is below. Peter, take care that on no account&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was no time to finish, and she had barely an instant to gain her own
+room, when Stapylton reached the corridor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington had, however, heard enough to inform him of his sister's
+high behest. Indeed, he was as quick at interpreting brief messages as
+people have grown in these latter days of telegraphic communication.
+Oracular utterings had been more than once in his life his only
+instructors, and he now knew that he had been peremptorily ordered not to
+ask the Major to dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are, doubtless, people in this world&mdash;I almost fancy I have met
+one or two such myself&mdash;who would not have felt peculiar difficulty
+in obeying this command; who would have gone down to the drawing-room and
+talked coolly to the visitor, discussing commonplaces, easily and
+carelessly, noting the while how at every pause of the conversation each
+was dwelling on the self-same point, and yet, with a quiet abstinence,
+never touching it, till with a sigh, that was half a malediction, the
+uninvited would rise to take leave. Barrington was not of this number. The
+man who sat under his roof was sacred. He could have no faults; and to
+such a pitch had this punctilio carried him, that had an actual enemy
+gained the inside of his threshold, he would have spared nothing to treat
+him with honor and respect.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; muttered he, as he slowly descended the stairs, &ldquo;it will be
+the first time in my life I ever did it, and I don't know how to go about
+it now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+When a frank and generous man is about to do something he is ashamed of,
+how readily will a crafty and less scrupulous observer detect it!
+M'Cormick read Barrington's secret before he was a minute in the room. It
+was in vain Peter affected an off-hand easy manner, incidentally dropping
+a hint that the Attorney-General and another friend had just arrived,&mdash;a
+visit, a mere business visit it was, to be passed with law papers and
+parchments. &ldquo;Poor fun when the partridges were in the stubble, but there
+was no help for it. Who knew, however, if he could not induce them to give
+him an extra day, and if I can, Major, you must promise to come over and
+meet them. You 'll be charmed with Withering, he has such a fund of
+agreeability. One of the old school, but not the less delightful to you
+and me. Come, now, give me your word&mdash;for&mdash;shall we say
+Saturday?&mdash;Yes, Saturday!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 've nothing to say against it,&rdquo; grumbled out M'Cormick, whose assent
+was given, as attorneys say, without prejudice to any other claim.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear from me in the morning, then,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I 'll send you
+a line to say what success I have had with my friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Any time in the day will do,&rdquo; said the Major, unconcernedly; for, in
+truth, the future never had in his estimation the same interest as the
+present. As for the birds in the bush, he simply did not believe in them
+at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly. &ldquo;You shall hear from me early, for I
+am anxious you should meet Withering and his companion, too,&mdash;a
+brother-soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who may he be?&rdquo; asked M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's my secret, Major,&mdash;that's my secret,&rdquo; said Peter, with a
+forced laugh, for it now wanted but ten minutes to six; &ldquo;but you shall
+know all on Saturday.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Had he said on the day of judgment, the assurance would have been as
+palatable to M'Cormick. Talking to him of Saturday on a Monday was asking
+him to speculate on the infinite. Meanwhile he sat on, as only they sit
+who understand the deep and high mystery of that process. Oh, if you who
+have your fortunes to make in life, without any assignable mode for so
+doing, without a craft, a calling, or a trade, knew what success there was
+to be achieved merely by sitting&mdash;by simply being &ldquo;there,&rdquo; eternally
+&ldquo;there&rdquo;&mdash;a warning, an example, an illustration, a what you will, of
+boredom or infliction; but still &ldquo;there.&rdquo; The butt of this man, the terror
+of that,&mdash;hated, feared, trembled at,&mdash;but yet recognized as a
+thing that must be, an institution that was, and is, and shall be, when we
+are all dead and buried.
+</p>
+<p>
+Long and dreary may be the days of the sitter, but the hour of his reward
+will come at last. There will come the time when some one&mdash;any one&mdash;will
+be wanted to pair off with some other bore, to listen to his stories and
+make up his whist-table; and then he will be &ldquo;there.&rdquo; I knew a man who,
+merely by sitting on patiently for years, was at last chosen to be sent as
+a Minister and special Envoy to a foreign Court just to get rid of him.
+And for the women sitters,&mdash;the well-dressed and prettily got-up
+simperers, who have sat their husbands into Commissionerships, Colonial
+Secretaryships, and such like,&mdash;are they not written of in the Book
+of Beauty?
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here 's M'Cormick, Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, with a voice shaking with
+agitation and anxiety, &ldquo;whom I want to pledge himself to us for Saturday
+next. Will you add your persuasions to mine, and see what can be done?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think you can depend upon me?&rdquo; cackled out the Major.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am certain of it, sir; I feel your word like your bond on such a
+matter,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah. &ldquo;My grandniece, Miss Josephine Barrington,&rdquo; said
+she, presenting that young lady, who courtesied formally to the
+unprepossessing stranger.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm proud of the honor, ma'am,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, with a deep bow, and
+resumed his seat; to rise again, however, as Withering entered the room
+and was introduced to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is intolerable, Peter,&rdquo; whispered Miss Barrington, while the lawyer
+and the Major were talking together. &ldquo;You are certain you have not asked
+him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;On my honor, Dinah! on my honor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope I am not late?&rdquo; cried Stapylton, entering; then turning hastily to
+Barrington, said, &ldquo;Pray present me to your niece.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my sister, Major Stapylton; this is my granddaughter;&rdquo; and the
+ladies courtesied, each with a degree of satisfaction which the reader
+shall be left to assign them.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a few words of commonplace civility, uttered, however, with a
+courtesy and tact which won their way for the speaker, Stapylton
+recognized and shook hands with M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know my neighbor, then?&rdquo; said Barrington, in some surprise.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am charmed to say I do; he owes me the <i>denouement</i> of a most
+amusing story, which was suddenly broken off when we last parted, but
+which I shall certainly claim after dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has been kind enough to engage himself to us for Saturday,&rdquo; began
+Dinah. But M'Cormick, who saw the moment critical, stepped in,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear every word of it before you sleep. It's all about
+Walcheren, though they think Waterloo more the fashion now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just as this young lady might fancy Major Stapylton a more interesting
+event than one of us,&rdquo; said Withering, laughing. &ldquo;But what 's become of
+your boasted punctuality, Barrington? A quarter past,&mdash;are you
+waiting for any one?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we, Dinah?&rdquo; asked Barrington, with a look of sheepishness.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I am aware of, Peter. There is no one to <i>come</i>;&rdquo; and she
+laid such an emphasis on the word as made the significance palpable.
+</p>
+<p>
+To Barrington it was painful as well as palpable; so painful, indeed, that
+he hurriedly rang the bell, saying, in a sharp voice, &ldquo;Of course, we are
+all here,&mdash;there are six of us. Dinner, Darby!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The Major had won, but he was too crafty to show any triumph at his
+victory, and he did not dare even to look towards where Miss Barrington
+stood, lest he should chance to catch her eye. Dinner was at length
+announced. Withering gave his arm to Miss Barrington, Stapylton took
+charge of Josephine, and old Peter, pleasantly drawing his arm within
+M'Cormick's, said, &ldquo;I hope you 've got a good appetite, Major, for I have
+a rare fish for you to-day, and your favorite sauce, too,&mdash;smelt, not
+lobster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Poor Barrington! it was a trying moment for him, that short walk into the
+dinner-room, and he felt very grateful to M'Cormick that he said nothing
+peevish or sarcastic to him on the way. Many a dinner begins in
+awkwardness, but warms as it proceeds into a pleasant geniality. Such was
+the case here. Amongst those, besides, who have not the ties of old
+friendship between them, or have not as yet warmed into that genial
+good-fellowship which is, so to say, its foster-brother, a character of
+the M'Cormick class is not so damaging an element as might be imagined,
+and at times there is a positive advantage in having one of whose merits,
+by a tacit understanding, all are quite agreed. Withering and Stapylton
+both read the man at once, and drew out his salient points&mdash;his
+parsimony, his malice, and his prying curiosity&mdash;in various ways, but
+so neatly and so advisedly as to make him fancy he was the attacking
+party, and very successful, too, in his assaults upon the enemy. Even
+Barrington, in the honest simplicity of his nature, was taken in, and more
+than once thought that the old Major was too severe upon the others, and
+sat in wondering admiration of their self-command and good temper. No
+deception of this sort prevailed with Miss Barrington, who enjoyed to the
+fullest extent the subtle raillery with which they induced him to betray
+every meanness of his nature, and yet never suffered the disclosure to
+soar above the region of the ludicrous.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have been rather hard upon them, Major,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they
+strolled about on the greensward after dinner to enjoy their coffee and a
+cigar. &ldquo;Don't you think you have been a shade too severe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will do them good. They wanted to turn me out like a bagged fox, and
+show the ladies some sport; but I taught them a thing or two.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, M'Cormick, you wrong them there; they had no such intentions,
+believe me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know that <i>you</i> did n't see it,&rdquo; said he, with emphasis, &ldquo;but your
+sister did, and liked it well, besides; ay, and the young one joined in
+the fun. And, after all, I don't see that they got much by the victory,
+for Withering was not pleased at my little hit about the days when he used
+to be a Whig and spout liberal politics; and the other liked just as
+little my remark about the fellows in the Company's service, and how
+nobody knew who they were or where they came from. He was in the Madras
+army himself, but I pretended not to know it; but I found his name written
+on the leaf of an old book he gave me, and the regiment he was in: and did
+you see how he looked when I touched on it? But here he comes now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make your peace with him, M'Cormick, make your peace!&rdquo; said Barrington,
+as he moved away, not sorry, as he went, to mark the easy familiarity with
+which Stapylton drew his arm within the other's, and walked along at his
+side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wasn't that a wonderful dinner we had to-day, from a man that hasn't a
+cross in his pocket?&rdquo; croaked out M'Cormick to Stapylton.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sherry and Madeira after your soup, then Sauterne,&mdash;a thing I don't
+care for any more than the oyster patties it came with; champagne next,
+and in tumblers too! Do you ever see it better done at your mess? Or where
+did you ever taste a finer glass of claret?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was all admirable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was only one thing forgotten,&mdash;not that it signifies to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what might that be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was n't paid for! No, nor will it ever be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You amaze me, Major. My impression was that our friend here was, without
+being rich, in very comfortable circumstances; able to live handsomely,
+while he carried on a somewhat costly suit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That 's the greatest folly of all,&rdquo; broke out M'Cormick; &ldquo;and it's to get
+money for that now that he's going to mortgage this place here,&mdash;ay,
+the very ground under our feet!&rdquo; And this he said with a sort of tremulous
+indignation, as though the atrocity bore especially hard upon <i>them</i>.
+&ldquo;Kinshela, the attorney from Kilkenny, was up with me about it yesterday.
+'It's an elegant investment, Major,' says he, 'and you 're very likely to
+get the place into your hands for all the chance old Peter has of paying
+off the charge. His heart is in that suit, and he 'll not stop as long as
+he has a guinea to go on with it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I said, 'I 'd think of it: I 'd turn it over in my mind;' for there's
+various ways of looking at it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy I apprehend one of them,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a half-jocular
+glance at his companion. &ldquo;You have been reflecting over another
+investment, eh? Am I not right? I remarked you at dinner. I saw how the
+young brunette had struck you, and I said to myself, 'She has made a
+conquest already!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a bit of it; nothing of the kind,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, awkwardly. &ldquo;I 'm
+too 'cute to be caught that way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, but remember it might be a very good catch. I don't speak of the
+suit, because I agree with you, the chances in that direction are very
+small, indeed, and I cannot understand the hopeful feeling with which he
+prosecutes it; but she is a fine, handsome girl, very attractive in
+manner, and equal to any station.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what's the good of all that to me? Wouldn't it be better if she could
+make a pease-pudding, like Polly Dill, or know how to fatten a turkey, or
+salt down a side of bacon?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so; I declare, I don't think so,&rdquo; said Stapylton, as he
+lighted a fresh cigar. &ldquo;These are household cares, and to be bought with
+money, and not expensively, either. What a man like you or I wants is one
+who should give a sort of tone,&mdash;impart a degree of elegance to his
+daily life. We old bachelors grow into self-indulgence, which is only
+another name for barbarism. With a mistaken idea of comfort we neglect
+scores of little observances which constitute the small currency of
+civilization, and without which all intercourse is unpleasing and
+ungraceful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not quite sure that I understand you aright, but there's one thing I
+know, I 'd think twice of it before I 'd ask that young woman to be Mrs.
+M'Cormick. And, besides,&rdquo; added he, with a sly side-look, &ldquo;if it's so good
+a thing, why don't you think of it for yourself?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I need not tell an old soldier like <i>you</i> that full pay and a wife
+are incompatible. Every wise man's experience shows it; and when a fellow
+goes to the bishop for a license, he should send in his papers to the
+Horse Guards. Now, I 'm too poor to give up my career. I have not, like
+you, a charming cottage on a river's bank, and a swelling lawn dotted over
+with my own sheep before my door. I cannot put off the harness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who talks of putting off the harness?&rdquo; cried Withering, gayly, as he
+joined them. &ldquo;Who ever dreamed of doing anything so ill-judging and so
+mistaken? Why, if it were only to hide the spots where the collar has
+galled you, you ought to wear the trappings to the last. No man ever knew
+how to idle, who had n't passed all his life at it! Some go so far as to
+say that for real success a man's father and grandfather should have been
+idlers before him. But have you seen Barrington? He has been looking for
+you all over the grounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Stapylton; &ldquo;my old brother-officer and myself got into pipeclay
+and barrack talk, and strolled away down here unconsciously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, we 'd better not be late for tea,&rdquo; broke in the Major, &ldquo;or we 'll
+hear of it from Miss Dinah!&rdquo; And there was something so comic in the
+seriousness of his tone, that they laughed heartily as they turned towards
+the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER IV. A MOVE IN ADVANCE
+</h2>
+<p>
+How pleasantly did the next day break on the &ldquo;Home&rdquo;! Polly Dill arrived in
+the best of possible spirits. A few lines from Tom had just reached them.
+They were written at sea; but the poor fellow's notions of latitude and
+longitude were so confused that it was not easy to say from whence. They
+were cheery, however, he was in good health, his comrades were
+kind-hearted creatures, and evidently recognized in him one of a station
+above their own. He said that he could have been appointed hospital
+sergeant-if he liked, but that whatever reminded him of his old calling
+was so distasteful that he preferred remaining as he was, the rather as he
+was given to believe he should soon be a corporal.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I mean to stop there, Polly; and now that I have n't got to
+study for it, I feel a courage as to the future I never knew before. Give
+my love to Mr. Conyers, and say that I 'm never tired of thinking over the
+last night I saw him, and of all his good nature to me, and that I hope I
+'ll see his father some day or other to thank him. I suppose father does
+n't miss me? I 'm sure mother does n't; and it 's only yourself, Polly,
+will ever feel a heavy heart for the poor castaway! But cheer up! for as
+sure as my name is Tom, I 'll not bring discredit on you, and you 'll not
+be ashamed to take my arm down the main street when we meet. I must close
+now, for the boat is going.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;P. S. I dreamed last night you rode Sid Davis's brown mare over the
+Millrace at Graigue. Would n't it be strange if it came true? I wish I
+could know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I show this to my friend here, Polly?&rdquo; said Barrington, pointing to
+Withering. &ldquo;It's a letter he 'd like to read; and as she nodded assent, he
+handed it across the breakfast-table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is your brother's regiment, Miss Dill?&rdquo; said Stapylton, who had just
+caught a stray word or two of what passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Forty-ninth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Forty-ninth,&rdquo; said he, repeating the words once or twice. &ldquo;Let me
+see,&mdash;don't I know some Forty-ninth men? To be sure I do. There's Rep
+ton and Hare. Your brother will be delighted with Hare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother is in the ranks, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said she, flushing a deep
+scarlet; and Barrington quickly interposed,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the wild frolic of a young man to escape a profession he had no
+mind for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But in foreign armies every one does it,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, hurriedly.
+&ldquo;No matter what a man's rank may be, he must carry the musket; and I own I
+like the practice,&mdash;if for nothing else for that fine spirit of <i>camaraderie</i>
+which it engenders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Fifine's eyes sparkled with pleasure at what she deemed the well-bred
+readiness of this speech, while Polly became deadly pale, and seemed with
+difficulty to repress the repartee that rose to her mind. Not so Miss
+Dinah, who promptly said, &ldquo;No foreign customs can palliate a breach of our
+habits. We are English, and we don't desire to be Frenchmen or Germans.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Might we not occasionally borrow from our neighbors with advantage?&rdquo;
+asked Stapylton, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I agree with Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering,&mdash;&ldquo;I agree with Miss
+Barrington, whose very prejudices are always right. An army formed by a
+conscription which exempts no man is on a totally different footing from
+one derived from voluntary enlistment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A practice that some say should be reserved for marriage,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, whose happy tact it was to relieve a discussion by a ready
+joke.
+</p>
+<p>
+They arose from table soon after,&mdash;Polly to accompany Miss Barrington
+over the garden and the shrubberies, and show all that had been done in
+their absence, and all that she yet intended to do, if approved of;
+Withering adjourned to Barrington's study to pore over parchments; and
+Stapylton, after vainly seeking to find Josephine in the drawing-room, the
+flower-garden, or the lawn, betook himself with a book, the first he could
+find on the table, to the river's side, and lay down, less to read than to
+meditate and reflect.
+</p>
+<p>
+A breezy morning of a fine day in early autumn, with slow sailing clouds
+above and a flickering sunlight on the grass below, besides a rippling
+river, whose banks are glowing with blue and purple heath-bells,&mdash;all
+these and a Waverley novel were not enough to distract Stapylton from the
+cares that pressed upon his mind; for so it is, look where we may on those
+whom Fortune would seem to have made her especial favorites, and we shall
+find some unsatisfied ambition, some craving wish doomed to
+disappointment, some hope deferred till the heart that held it has ceased
+to care for its accomplishment. To the world's eyes, here was a man
+eminently fortunate: already high up in the service, with health, vigor,
+and good looks, a reputation established for personal gallantry in the
+field, and an amount of capacity that had already won for him more than
+one distinction, and yet all these, great and solid advantages as they
+are, were not sufficient to give the ease of mind we call happiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had debts, some of them heavy debts, but these sat lightly on him. He
+was one of those men creditors never crush, some secret consciousness
+seeming to whisper that, however ill the world may go with them for a
+while, in the long run they must triumph; and thus Mr. Hirman Davis, to
+whom he owed thousands, would have cashed him another bill to-morrow, all
+on the faith of that future which Stapylton talked about with the careless
+confidence of a mind assured.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had enemies, too,&mdash;powerful and determined enemies,&mdash;who
+opposed his advancement for many a year, and were still adverse to him;
+but, like the creditors, they felt he was not a man to be crushed, and so
+he and his ill-wishers smiled blandly when they met, exchanged the most
+cordial greetings, and even imparted little confidences of their several
+fortunes with all that well-bred duplicity which so simulates friendship.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had been crossed,&mdash;no, not in love, but in his ambition to marry
+one greatly above him in station; but her subsequent marriage had been so
+unfortunate that he felt in part recompensed for the slight she passed
+upon him; so that, taking it all and all, fate had never been cruel to him
+without a compensation.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are men who feel their whole existence to be a hand-to-hand struggle
+with the world, who regard the world as an adversary to be worsted, and
+all whose efforts are devoted to reach that point upon which they can turn
+round and say, &ldquo;You see that I have won the game. I was unknown, and I am
+famous; I was poor, and I am rich; I was passed over and ignored, and now
+the very highest are proud to recognize me!&rdquo; Stapylton was one of these.
+All the egotism of his nature took this form, and it was far more in a
+spirit against his fellows than in any indulgence of himself he fought and
+struggled with Fortune. Intrusted by Withering with much of the secret
+history of Barring-ton's claim against the India Company, he had learned
+considerably more through inquiries instituted by himself, and at length
+arrived at the conclusion that if old Barring-ton could be persuaded to
+limit his demands within moderate bounds, and not insist upon the details
+of that personal reparation which he assumed so essential to his son's
+honor, a very ample recompense would not be refused him. It was to induce
+Barrington to take this course Stapylton had consented to come down with
+Withering,&mdash;so, at least, he said, and so Withering believed. Old
+lawyer that he was, with a hundred instincts of distrust about him, he had
+conceived a real liking for Stapylton, and a great confidence in his
+judgment. &ldquo;We shall have to divide our labors here, Major,&rdquo; said he, as
+they travelled along together; &ldquo;I will leave the ladies to your care.
+Barrington shall be mine.&rdquo; A very brief acquaintance with Miss Dinah
+satisfied Stapylton that she was one to require nice treatment, and what
+he called &ldquo;a very light hand.&rdquo; The two or three little baits he had thrown
+out took nothing; the stray bits of sentimentality, or chance scraps of
+high-toned principle he had addressed to her, had failed. It was only when
+he had with some sharpness hit off some small meanness in M'Cormick's
+nature that she had even vouchsafed him so much as a half-smile of
+approval, and he saw that even then she watched him closely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, half aloud to himself, &ldquo;that old woman is not one easily to
+be dealt with; and the younger one, too, would have a will of her own if
+she had but the way to use it. If Polly had been in her place,&mdash;the
+clever, quickwitted Polly,&mdash;she would have gone with me in my plans,
+associated herself in all my projects, and assured their success. Oh for a
+good colleague just to keep the boat's head straight when one is weary of
+rowing!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would I do?&rdquo; said a low voice near. And, on looking up, he saw Josephine
+standing over him, with an arch smile on her face as though she had
+surprised him in a confession.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long have you been there?&rdquo; asked he, hurriedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A few seconds.''
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what have you heard me say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you wanted a colleague, or a companion of some sort; and as I was
+the only useless person here, I offered myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In good faith?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In good faith!&mdash;why not? I am more likely to gain by the association
+than you are; at least, if you can only be as pleasant of a morning as you
+were yesterday at dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll try,&rdquo; said he, springing to his feet; &ldquo;and as a success in these
+efforts is mainly owing to the amount of zeal that animates them, I am
+hopeful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which means a flattery at the outset,&rdquo; said she, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only as much as your friend Mr. Withering would throw out to dispose the
+court in his favor; and now, which way shall we walk? Are you to be the
+guide, or I?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You, by all means, since you know nothing of the locality.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Agreed. Well, here is my plan. We cross the river in this boat, and take
+that path yonder that leads up by the waterfall. I know, from the dark
+shadow of the mountain, that there is a deep glen, very wild, very
+romantic, and very solemn, through which I mean to conduct you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All this means a very long excursion, does it not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have just told me that you were free from all engagement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; but not from all control. I must ask Aunt Dinah's leave before I set
+out on this notable expedition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do nothing of the kind. It would be to make a caprice seem a plan. Let us
+go where you will,&mdash;here, along the river's side; anywhere, so that
+we may affect to think that we are free agents, and not merely good
+children sent out for a walk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a rebel against authority you are for one so despotic yourself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I despotic! Who ever called me so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your officers say as much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know from what quarter that came,&rdquo; said he; and his bronzed face grew a
+shade deeper. &ldquo;That dilettante soldier, young Conyers, has given me this
+character; but I 'd rather talk of you than myself. Tell me all about your
+life. Is it as delightful as everything around would bespeak it? Are these
+trees and flowers, this sunny bank, this perfumed sward, true emblems of
+the existence they embellish, or is Paradise only a cheat?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so. I think Paradise is very like what it looks, not but I
+own that the garden is pleasanter with guests in it than when only Adam
+and Eve were there. Mr. Withering is charming, and you can be very
+agreeable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would I knew how to be so,&rdquo; said he, seriously, &ldquo;just at this moment;
+for I am going away from Ireland, and I am very desirous of leaving a good
+impression behind me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What could it signify to you how you were thought of in this lonely
+spot?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More than you suspect,&mdash;more than you would, perhaps, credit,&rdquo; said
+he, feelingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a little pause, during which they walked along side by side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you thinking of?&rdquo; said she, at last
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was thinking of a strange thing,&mdash;it was this: About a week ago
+there was no effort I was not making to obtain the command of my regiment.
+I wanted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; and so bent was I on gaining my object,
+that if giving away three or four years of that life that I may hope for
+would have done it, I 'd have closed the bargain; and now the ambition is
+gone, and I am speculating whether I 'll not take the cottage of your
+friend Major M'Cormick,&mdash;he offered it to me last night,&mdash;and
+become your neighbor. What say <i>you</i> to the project?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;For us the exchange will be all a gain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want your opinion,&mdash;your own,&rdquo; said he, with a voice reduced to a
+mere whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd like it of all things; although, if I were your sister or your
+daughter, I'd not counsel it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why not, if you were my sister?&rdquo; said he, with a certain constraint
+in his manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd say it was inglorious to change from the noble activity of a
+soldier's life to come and dream away existence here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what if I have done enough for this same thing men call fame? I have
+had my share of campaigning, and as the world looks there is wondrous
+little prospect of any renewal of it. These peace achievements suit your
+friend Conyers better than me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you are not just to him. If I read him aright, he is burning for
+an occasion to distinguish himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+A cold shrug of the shoulders was his only acknowledgment of this speech,
+and again a silence fell between them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would rather talk of <i>you</i>, if you would let me,&rdquo; said he, with
+much significance of voice and manner. &ldquo;Say would you like to have me for
+your neighbor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be a pleasant exchange for Major M'Cormick,&rdquo; said she, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want you to be serious now. What I am asking you interests me too
+deeply to jest over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;First of all, is the project a serious one?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Next, why ask advice from one as inexperienced as I am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because it is not counsel I ask,&mdash;it is something more. Don't look
+surprised, and, above all, don't look angry, but listen to me. What I have
+said now, and what more I would say, might more properly have been uttered
+when we had known each other longer; but there are emergencies in life
+which give no time for slow approaches, and there are men, too, that they
+suit not. Imagine such now before you,&mdash;I mean, both the moment and
+the man. Imagine one who has gone through a great deal in life, seen,
+heard, and felt much, and yet never till now, never till this very
+morning, understood what it was to know one whose least word or passing
+look was more to him than ambition, higher than all the rewards of glory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We never met till yesterday,&rdquo; said she, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True; and if we part to-morrow, it will be forever. I feel too
+painfully,&rdquo; added he, with more eagerness, &ldquo;how I compromise all that I
+value by an avowal abrupt and rash as this is; but I have had no choice. I
+have been offered the command of a native force in India, and must give my
+answer at once. With hope&mdash;the very faintest, so that it be hope&mdash;I
+will refuse. Remember I want no pledge, no promise; all I entreat is that
+you will regard me as one who seeks to win your favor. Let time do the
+rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not think I ought to do this&mdash;I do not know if you should ask
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I speak to your grandfather&mdash;may I tell him what I have told you&mdash;may
+I say, 'It is with Josephine's permission&mdash;'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am called Miss Barrington, sir, by all but those of my own family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forgive me, I entreat you,&rdquo; said he, with a deep humility in his tone. &ldquo;I
+had never so far forgotten myself if calm reason had not deserted me. I
+will not transgress again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the shortest way back to the cottage,&rdquo; said she, turning into a
+narrow path in the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It does not lead to my hope,&rdquo; said he, despondingly; and no more was
+uttered between them for some paces.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not walk so very fast, Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said he, in a tone which
+trembled slightly. &ldquo;In the few minutes&mdash;the seconds you could accord
+me&mdash;I might build the whole fortune of my life. I have already
+endangered my hopes by rashness; let me own that it is the fault I have
+struggled against in vain. This scar&rdquo;&mdash;and he showed the deep mark of
+a sabre-wound on the temple&mdash;&ldquo;was the price of one of my offendings;
+but it was light in suffering to what I am now enduring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can we not talk of what will exact no such sacrifice?&rdquo; said she, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not now, not now!&rdquo; said he, with emotion; &ldquo;if you pass that porch without
+giving me an answer, life has no longer a tie for me. You know that I ask
+for no pledge, no promise, merely time,&mdash;no more than time,&mdash;a
+few more of those moments of which you now would seem eager to deny me.
+Linger an instant here, I beseech you, and remember that what to <i>you</i>
+may be a caprice may to <i>me</i> be a destiny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not hear more of this,&rdquo; said she, half angrily. &ldquo;If it were not
+for my own foolish trustfulness, you never would have dared to address
+such words to one whom you met yesterday for the first time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true your generous frankness, the nature they told me you
+inherited, gives me boldness, but it might teach you to have some pity for
+a disposition akin to it. One word,&mdash;only one word more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one, sir! The lesson my frankness has taught me is, never to incur
+this peril again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you part from me in anger?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not with <i>you</i>; but I will not answer for myself if you press me
+further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even this much is better than despair,&rdquo; said he, mournfully; and she
+passed into the cottage, while he stood in the porch and bowed
+respectfully as she went by. &ldquo;Better than I looked for, better than I
+could have hoped,&rdquo; muttered he to himself, as he strolled away and
+disappeared in the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER V. A CABINET COUNCIL
+</h2>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you think of it, Dinah?&rdquo; said Barrington, as they sat in conclave
+the next morning in her own sitting-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+She laid down a letter she had just finished reading on the table,
+carefully folding it, like one trying to gain time before she spoke: &ldquo;He's
+a clever man, and writes well, Peter; there can be no second opinion upon
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But his proposal, Dinah,&mdash;his proposal?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pleases me less the more I think of it. There is great disparity of age,&mdash;a
+wide discrepancy in character. A certain gravity of demeanor would not be
+undesirable, perhaps, in a husband for Josephine, who has her moments of
+capricious fancy; but if I mistake not, this man's nature is stern and
+unbending.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There will be time enough to consider all that, Dinah. It is, in fact, to
+weigh well the chances of his fitness to secure her happiness that he
+pleads; he asks permission to make himself known to her, rather than to
+make his court.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I used to fancy that they meant the same thing,&mdash;I know that they
+did in my day, Peter,&rdquo; said she, bridling; &ldquo;but come to the plain question
+before us. So far as I understand him, his position is this: 'If I satisfy
+you that my rank and fortune are satisfactory to you, have I your
+permission to come back here as your granddaughter's suitor?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not precisely, Dinah,&mdash;not exactly this. Here are his words: 'I am
+well aware that I am much older than Miss Barrington, and it is simply to
+ascertain from herself if, in that disparity of years, there exists that
+disparity of tastes and temper which would indispose her to regard me as
+one to whom she would intrust her happiness. I hope to do this without any
+offence to her delicacy, though not without peril to my own self-love.
+Have I your leave for this experiment?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is he? Who are his friends, connections, belongings? What is his
+station independently of his military rank, and what are his means? Can
+you answer these questions?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one of them. I never found myself till to-day in a position to
+inquire after them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us begin, then, by that investigation, Peter. There is no such test
+of a man as to make him talk of himself. With you alone the matter,
+perhaps, would not present much difficulty to him, but I intend that Mr.
+Withering's name and my own shall be on the committee; and, take <i>my</i>
+word for it, we shall sift the evidence carefully.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bear in mind, sister Dinah, that this gentleman is, first of all, our
+guest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The first of all that I mean to bear in mind is, that he desires to be
+your grandson.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&mdash;of course. I would only observe on the reserve that
+should be maintained towards one who honors us with his presence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter Barrington, the Arabs, from whom you seem to borrow your notions on
+hospitality, seldom scruple about cutting a guest's head off when he
+passes the threshold; therefore I would advise you to adopt habits that
+may be more suited to the land we live in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All I know is,&rdquo; said Barrington, rising and pacing the room, &ldquo;that I
+could no more put a gentleman under my roof to the question as to his
+father and mother and his fortune, than I could rifle his writing-desk and
+read his letters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother Peter, the weakness of your disposition has cost you one of the
+finest estates in your country, and if it could be restored to you
+to-morrow, the same imbecility would forfeit it again. I will, however,
+take the matter into my own hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With Withering, I suppose, to assist you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly not. I am perfectly competent to make any inquiry I deem
+requisite without a legal adviser. Perhaps, were I to be so accompanied,
+Major Stapylton would suppose that he, too, should appear with his
+lawyer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington smiled faintly at the dry jest, but said nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; resumed she, &ldquo;that you are very much afraid about my want of tact
+and delicacy in this investigation. It is a somewhat common belief amongst
+men that in all matters of business women err on the score of hardness and
+persistence. I have listened to some edifying homilies from your friend
+Withering on female incredulity and so forth,&mdash;reproaches which will
+cease to apply when men shall condescend to treat us as creatures
+accessible to reason, and not as mere dupes. See who is knocking at the
+door, Peter,&rdquo; added she, sharply. &ldquo;I declare it recalls the old days of
+our innkeeping, and Darby asking for the bill of the lame gentleman in No.
+4.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, they were pleasant days, too,&rdquo; said Barrington, but in a
+tone so low as to be unheard by his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo; said Withering, as he opened the door a few inches, and
+peeped inside. &ldquo;I want to show you a note I have just had from Kinshela,
+in Kilkenny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, yes; come in,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington. &ldquo;I only wish you had arrived a
+little earlier. What is your note about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's very short and very purpose-like. The first of it is all about
+Brazier's costs, which it seems the taxing-officer thinks fair and
+reasonable,&mdash;all excepting that charge for the additional affidavits.
+But here is what I want to show you. 'Major M'Cormick, of M'Cormick's
+Grove, has just been here; and although I am not entitled to say as much
+officially on his part, I entertain no doubt whatever but that he is ready
+to advance the money we require. I spoke of fifteen hundred, but said
+twelve might possibly be taken, and twelve would be, I imagine, his limit,
+since he held to this amount in all our conversation afterwards. He
+appears to be a man of strange and eccentric habits, and these will
+probably be deemed a sufficient excuse for the singular turn our interview
+took towards its conclusion. I was speaking of Mr. Barrington's wish for
+the insertion in the deed of a definite period for redemption, and he
+stopped me hastily with, &ldquo;What if we could strike out another arrangement?
+What if he was to make a settlement of the place on his granddaughter? I
+am not too old to marry, and I 'd give him the money at five per cent.&rdquo; I
+have been careful to give you the very expressions he employed, and of
+which I made a note when he left the office; for although fully aware how
+improper it would be in me to submit this proposal to Mr. Barrington, I
+have felt it my duty to put you in possession of all that has passed
+between us.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How can you laugh, Peter Barrington?&mdash;how is it possible you can
+laugh at such an insult,&mdash;such an outrage as this? Go on, sir,&rdquo; said
+she, turning to Withering; &ldquo;let us hear it to the end, for nothing worse
+can remain behind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no more; at least, there is not anything worth hearing. Kinshela
+winds up with many apologies, and hopes that I will only use his
+communication for my own guidance, and not permit it in any case to
+prejudice him in your estimation.&rdquo; As he spoke, he crumpled up the note in
+his hand in some confusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who thinks of Mr. Kinshela, or wants to think of him, in the matter?&rdquo;
+said she, angrily. &ldquo;I wish, however, I were a man for a couple of hours,
+to show Major M'Cormick the estimate I take of the honor he intends us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;After all, Dinah, it is not that he holds us more cheaply, but rates
+himself higher.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; broke in Withering; &ldquo;and I know, for my own part, I have never
+been able to shake off the flattery of being chosen by the most nefarious
+rascal to defend him on his trial. Every man is a great creature in his
+own eyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sir, be proud of your client,&rdquo; said she, trembling with anger.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&mdash;he 's no client of mine, nor is this a case I would plead
+for him. I read you Kinshela's note because I thought you were building
+too confidently on M'Cormick's readiness to advance this money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understood what that readiness meant, though my brother did not.
+M'Cormick looked forward to the day&mdash;and not a very distant day did
+he deem it&mdash;when he should step into possession of this place, and
+settle down here as its owner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington's face grew pale, and a glassy film spread over his eyes, as
+his sister's words sunk into his heart. &ldquo;I declare, Dinah,&rdquo; said he,
+falteringly, &ldquo;that never did strike me before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'It never rains but it pours,' says the Irish adage,&rdquo; resumed she. &ldquo;My
+brother and I were just discussing another proposal of the same kind when
+you knocked. Read that letter. It is from a more adroit courtier than the
+other, and, at least, he does n't preface his intentions with a bargain.&rdquo;
+And she handed Stapylton's letter to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the lawyer, &ldquo;this is another guess sort of man, and a very
+different sort of proposal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspected that he was a favorite of yours,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+significantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I own to it. He is one of those men who have a great attraction for
+me,&mdash;men who come out of the conflict of life and its interests
+without any exaggerated notions of human perfectibility or the opposite,
+who recognize plenty of good and no small share of bad in the world, but,
+on the whole, are satisfied that, saving ill health, very few of our
+calamities are not of our own providing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All of which is perfectly compatible with an odious egotism, sir,&rdquo; said
+she, warmly; &ldquo;but I feel proud to say such characters find few admirers
+amongst women.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;From which I opine that he is not fortunate enough to number Miss Dinah
+Barrington amongst his supporters?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are right there, sir. The prejudice I had against him before we met
+has been strengthened since I have seen him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is candid of you, however, to call it a prejudice,&rdquo; said he, with a
+smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be it so, Mr. Withering; but prejudice is only another word for an
+instinct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm afraid if we get into ethics we 'll forget all about the proposal,&rdquo;
+said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a sarcasm!&rdquo; cried Withering, &ldquo;that if we talk of morals we shall
+ignore matrimony.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I like the man, and I like his letter,&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I distrust both one and the other,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I almost fancy I could hold a brief on either side,&rdquo; interposed
+Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course you could, sir; and if the choice were open to you, it would be
+the defence of the guilty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering, calmly, &ldquo;when a great legal
+authority once said that he only needed three lines of any man's writing
+'to hang him,' it ought to make us very lenient in our construction of a
+letter. Now, so far as I can see in this one before us, he neither asks
+nor protests too much. He begs simply for time, he entreats leave to draw
+a bill on your affections, and he promises to meet it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir, he wishes to draw at sight, though he has never shown us the
+letter of credit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I vow to Heaven it is hopeless to expect anything practical when you two
+stand up together for a sparring-match,&rdquo; cried Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be practical, then, brother Peter, and ask this gentleman to give you a
+quarter of an hour in your study. Find out who he is; I don't expect you
+to learn what he is, but what he has. With his fortune we shall get the
+clew to himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; chimed in Withering, &ldquo;all that is very businesslike and
+reasonable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it pledges us to nothing,&rdquo; added she. &ldquo;We take soundings, but we
+don't promise to anchor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you go off again with your figures of speech, Dinah, there is an end
+of me, for I have one of those unhappy memories that retain the
+illustration and forget what it typified. Besides this, here is a man who,
+out of pure good nature and respect for poor George's memory, has been
+doing us most important services, written letters innumerable, and taken
+the most active measures for our benefit. What sort of a figure shall I
+present if I bring him to book about his rental and the state of his bank
+account?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With the exercise of a little tact, Barrington,&mdash;a little management&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask a man with a club-foot to walk gingerly! I have no more notion of
+getting at anything by address than I have of tying the femoral artery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The more blunt the better, Peter Barrington. You may tumble into the
+truth, though you'd never pick your way into it. Meanwhile, leave me to
+deal with Major M'Cor-mick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You'll do it courteously, Dinah; you'll bear in mind that he is a
+neighbor of some twenty years' standing?&rdquo; said Barrington, in a voice of
+anxiety.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll do it in a manner that shall satisfy <i>my</i> conscience and <i>his</i>
+presumption.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She seated herself at the table as she said this, and dashed off a few
+hasty lines. Indeed, so hurried was the action, that it looked far more
+like one of those instances of correspondence we see on the stage than an
+event of real life.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will that do?&rdquo; said she, showing the lines to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lawyer read them over to himself, a faint twitching of the mouth
+being the only sign his face presented of any emotion. &ldquo;I should say
+admirably,&mdash;nothing better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I see it, Dinah?&rdquo; asked Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear it, brother,&rdquo; said she, taking the paper and reading,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Miss Barrington informs Mr. Kinshela that if he does not at once retract
+his epistle of this morning's date, she will place it in the hands of her
+legal adviser, and proceed against it as a threatening letter.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, sister, you will not send this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As sure as my name is Dinah Barrington.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VI. AN EXPRESS
+</h2>
+<p>
+In the times before telegraphs,&mdash;and it is of such I am writing,&mdash;a
+hurried express was a far more stirring event than in these our days of
+incessant oracles. While, therefore, Barrington and his sister and
+Withering sat in deep consultation on Josephine's fate and future, a hasty
+summons arrived from Dublin, requiring the instantaneous departure of
+Stapylton, whose regiment was urgently needed in the north of England, at
+that time agitated by those disturbances called the Bread Riots. They were
+very formidable troubles, and when we look back upon them now, with the
+light which the great events of later years on the Continent afford us,
+seem more terrible still. It was the fashion, however, then, to treat them
+lightly, and talk of them contemptuously; and as Stapylton was eating a
+hasty luncheon before departure, he sneered at the rabble, and scoffed at
+the insolent pretension of their demands. Neither Barrington nor Withering
+sympathized with the spirit of the revolt, and yet each felt shocked at
+the tone of haughty contempt Stapylton assumed towards the people. &ldquo;You'll
+see,&rdquo; cried he, rising, &ldquo;how a couple of brisk charges from our fellows
+will do more to bring these rascals to reason than all the fine pledges of
+your Parliament folk; and I promise you, for my own part, if I chance upon
+one of their leaders, I mean to lay my mark on him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear, sir, it is your instinctive dislike to the plebeian that moves
+you here,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah. &ldquo;You will not entertain the question whether
+these people may not have some wrongs to complain of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps so, madam,&rdquo; said he; and his swarthy face grew darker as he
+spoke. &ldquo;I suppose this is the case where the blood of a gentleman boils
+indignantly at the challenge of the <i>canaille</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not have a French word applied to our own people, sir,&rdquo; said she,
+angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well said,&rdquo; chimed in Withering. &ldquo;It is wonderful how a phrase can seem
+to carry an argument along with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And old Peter smiled, and nodded his concurrence with this speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a sad minority do I stand in!&rdquo; said Stapylton, with an effort to
+smile very far from successful. &ldquo;Will not Miss Josephine Barrington have
+generosity enough to aid the weaker side?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if it be the worst cause,&rdquo; interposed Dinah. &ldquo;My niece needs not to
+be told she must be just before she is generous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then it is to your own generosity I will appeal,&rdquo; said Stapylton, turning
+to her; &ldquo;and I will ask you to ascribe some, at least, of my bitterness to
+the sorrow I feel at being thus summoned away. Believe me it is no light
+matter to leave this place and its company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But only for a season, and a very brief season too, I trust,&rdquo; said
+Barrington. &ldquo;You are going away in our debt, remember.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a loser's privilege, all the world over, to withdraw when he has
+lost enough,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a sad smile towards Miss Dinah; and
+though the speech was made in the hope it might elicit a contradiction,
+none came, and a very awkward silence ensued.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will reach Dublin to-night, I suppose?&rdquo; said Withering, to relieve
+the painful pause in the conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be late,&mdash;after midnight, perhaps.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And embark the next morning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two of our squadrons have sailed already; the others will, of course,
+follow to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And young Conyers,&rdquo; broke in Miss Dinah,&mdash;&ldquo;he will, I suppose,
+accompany this&mdash;what shall I call it?&mdash;this raid?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, madam. Am I to convey to him your compliments upon the first
+opportunity to flesh his maiden sword?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are to do nothing of the kind, sir; but tell him from me not to
+forget that the angry passions of a starving multitude are not to be
+confounded with the vindictive hate of our natural enemies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Natural enemies, my dear Miss Barrington! I hope you cannot mean that
+there exists anything so monstrous in humanity as a natural enemy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do, sir; and I mean all those whose jealousy of us ripens into hatred,
+and who would spill their heart's blood to see us humbled. When there
+exists a people like this, and who at every fresh outbreak of a war with
+us have carried into the new contest all the bitter animosities of long
+past struggles as debts to be liquidated, I call these natural enemies;
+and, if you prefer a shorter word for it, I call them Frenchmen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dinah, Dinah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter, Peter! don't interrupt me. Major Stapylton has thought to tax me
+with a blunder, but I accept it as a boast!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam, I am proud to be vanquished by you,&rdquo; said Stapylton, bowing low.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I trust, sir,&rdquo; said she, continuing her speech, and as if heedless of
+his interruption, &ldquo;that no similarity of name will make you behave at
+Peterloo&mdash;if that be the name&mdash;as though you were at Waterloo.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life!&rdquo; cried he, with a saucy laugh, &ldquo;I don't know how I am to
+win your good opinion, except it be by tearing off my epaulettes, and
+putting myself at the head of the mob.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know very little of my sister, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, &ldquo;or
+you would scarcely have selected that mode of cultivating her favor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is a popular belief that ladies always side with the winning
+cause,&rdquo; said Stapylton, affecting a light and easy manner; &ldquo;so I must do
+my best to be successful. May I hope I carry your <i>good</i> wishes away
+with me?&rdquo; said he, in a lower tone to Josephine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope that nobody will hurt you, and you hurt nobody,&rdquo; said she,
+laughingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this, I take it, is about as much sympathy as ever attends a man on
+such a campaign. Mr. Barrington, will you grant me two minutes of
+conversation in your own room?&rdquo; And, with a bow of acquiescence,
+Barrington led the way to his study.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ought to have anticipated your request, Major Stapyl-ton,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, when they found themselves alone. &ldquo;I owe you a reply to your
+letter, but the simple fact is, I do not know what answer to give it; for
+while most sensible of the honor you intend us, I feel still there is much
+to be explained on both sides. We know scarcely anything of each other,
+and though I am conscious of the generosity which prompts a man with <i>your</i>
+prospects and in <i>your</i> position to ally himself with persons in <i>ours</i>,
+yet I owe it to myself to say, it hangs upon a contingency to restore us
+to wealth and station. Even a portion of what I claim from the East India
+Company would make my granddaughter one of the richest heiresses in
+England.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton gave a cold, a very cold smile, in reply to this speech. It
+might mean that he was incredulous or indifferent, or it might imply that
+the issue was one which need not have been introduced into the case at
+all. Whatever its signification, Barrington felt hurt by it, and hastily
+said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I have any need to trouble you with these details: it is rather
+my province to ask for information regarding <i>your</i> circumstances
+than to enter upon a discussion of <i>ours</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am quite ready to give you the very fullest and clearest,&mdash;I mean
+to yourself personally, or to your sister; for, except where the lawyer
+intervenes of necessity and <i>de droit</i>, I own that I resent his
+presence as an insult. I suppose few of us are devoid of certain family
+circumstances which it would be more agreeable to deal with in confidence;
+and though, perhaps, I am as fortunate as most men in this respect, there
+are one or two small matters on which I would ask your attention. These,
+however, are neither important nor pressing. My first care is to know,&mdash;and
+I hope I am not peremptory in asking it,&mdash;have I your consent to the
+proposition contained in my letter; am I at liberty to address Miss
+Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington flushed deeply and fidgeted; he arose and sat down again,&mdash;all
+his excitement only aggravated by the well-bred composure of the other,
+who seemed utterly unconscious of the uneasiness he was causing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think, Major, that this is a case for a little time to reflect,&mdash;that
+in a matter so momentous as this, a few days at least are requisite for
+consideration? We ought to ascertain something at least of my
+granddaughter's own sentiments,&mdash;I mean, of course, in a general way.
+It might be, too, that a day or two might give us some better insight into
+her future prospects.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pardon my interrupting you; but, on the last point, I am perfectly
+indifferent. Miss Barrington with half a province for her dower, would be
+no more in my eyes than Miss Barrington as she sat at breakfast this
+morning. Nor is there anything of high-flown sentiment in this
+declaration, as my means are sufficiently ample for all that I want or
+care.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, at least, is one difficulty disposed of. You are an eldest son?&rdquo;
+said he; and he blushed at his own boldness in making the inquiry.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am an only son.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Easier again,&rdquo; said Barrington, trying to laugh off the awkward moment.
+&ldquo;No cutting down one's old timber to pay off the provisions for younger
+brothers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In my case there is no need of this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your father. Is he still living, Major Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father has been dead some years.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington fidgeted again, fumbled with his watch-chain and his eye-glass,
+and would have given more than he could afford for any casualty that
+should cut short the interview. He wanted to say, &ldquo;What is the amount of
+your fortune? What is it? Where is it? Are you Wiltshire or Staffordshire?
+Who are your uncles and aunts, and your good friends that you pray for,
+and where do you pray for them?&rdquo; A thousand questions of this sort arose
+in his mind, one only more prying and impertinent than another. He knew he
+ought to ask them; he knew Dinah would have asked them. Ay, and would have
+the answers to them as plain and palpable as the replies to a life
+assurance circular; but he could n't do it. No; not if his life depended
+on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had already gone further in his transgression of good manners than it
+ever occurred to him before to do, and he felt something between a holy
+inquisitor and a spy of the police.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton looked at his watch, and gave a slight start.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Later than you thought, eh?&rdquo; cried Peter, overjoyed at the diversion.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton smiled a cold assent, and put up his watch without a word. He
+saw all the confusion and embarrassment of the other, and made no effort
+to relieve him. At last, but not until after a considerable pause, he
+said,&mdash;&ldquo;I believe, Mr. Barrington,&mdash;I hope, at least,&mdash;I
+have satisfactorily answered the questions which, with every right on your
+part, you have deemed proper to put to me. I cannot but feel how painful
+the task has been to you, and I regret it the more, since probably it has
+set a limit to inquiries which you are perfectly justified in making, but
+which closer relations between us may make a matter far less formidable
+one of these days.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, yes,&mdash;just so; of course,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly assenting
+to he knew not what.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I trust I take my leave of you with the understanding that when we
+meet again, it shall be as in the commencement of these pleasanter
+relations. I own to you I am the more eager on this point, that I perceive
+your sister, Miss Barrington, scarcely regards me very favorably, and I
+stand the more in need of your alliance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think it possible, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, boldly,
+&ldquo;that my sister and I could have two opinions upon anything or anybody.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I only ask that she may partake of yours on this occasion,&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, bowing. &ldquo;But I must start; as it is, I shall be very late in
+Dublin. Will you present my most respectful adieux to the ladies, and say
+also a goodbye for me to Mr. Withering?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You'll come in for a moment to the drawing-room, won't you?&rdquo; cried
+Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not. I opine it would be better not. There would be a certain
+awkwardness about it,&mdash;that is, until you have informed Miss Dinah
+Barrington of the extent to which you have accorded me your confidence,
+and how completely I have opened every detail of my circumstances. I
+believe it would be in better taste not to present myself. Tell Withering
+that if he writes, Manchester will find me. I don't suspect he need give
+himself any more trouble about establishing the proofs of marriage. They
+will scarcely contest that point. The great question will and must be, to
+ascertain if the Company will cease to oppose the claim on being fully
+convinced that the letter to the Meer Busherat was a forgery, and that no
+menace ever came from Colonel Barrington's hand as to the consequences of
+opposing his rule. Get them to admit this,&mdash;let the issue rest upon
+this,&mdash;and it will narrow the whole suit within manageable limits.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you not say this much to him before you go? It would come with so
+much more force and clearness from yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done so till I was wearied. Like a true lawyer, he insists upon
+proving each step as he goes, and will not condescend to a hypothetical
+conclusion, though I have told him over and over again we want a
+settlement, not a victory. Good-bye, good-bye! If I once launch out into
+the cause, I cannot tear myself away again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has your guest gone, Peter?&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as her brother re-entered
+the drawing-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; it was a hurried departure, and he had no great heart for it,
+either. By the way, Withering, while it is fresh in my head, let me tell
+you the message he has sent you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was there none for <i>me</i>, Peter?&rdquo; said she, scofflngly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but there was, Dinah! He left with me I know not how many polite and
+charming things to say for him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And am I alone forgotten in this wide dispensation of favors?&rdquo; asked
+Josephine, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course not, dear,&rdquo; chimed in Miss Dinah. &ldquo;Your grandpapa has been
+charged with them all. You could not expect a gentleman so naturally timid
+and bashful as our late guest to utter them by his own lips.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Withering, laughing, &ldquo;that you have not forgiven the haughty
+aristocrat for his insolent estimate of the people!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He an aristocrat! Such bitter words as his never fell from any man who
+had a grandfather!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wrong for once, Dinah,&rdquo; broke in Barrington. &ldquo;I can answer for it that
+you are unjust to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall see,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Come, Josephine, I have a whole morning's work
+before me in the flower-garden, and I want your help. Don't forget, Peter,
+that Major M'Cormick's butler, or boatman, or bailiff, whichever he be,
+has been up here with a present of seakale this morning. Give him
+something as you pass the kitchen; and you, Mr. Withering, whose trade it
+is to read and unravel mysteries, explain if you can the meaning of this
+unwonted generosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose we can all guess it,&rdquo; said he, laughing. &ldquo;It's a custom that
+begins in the East and goes round the whole world till it reaches the vast
+prairie in the Far West.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what can that custom be, Aunt Dinah?&rdquo; asked Josephine, innocently.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's an ancient rite Mr. Withering speaks, of, child, pertaining to the
+days when men offered sacrifices. Come along; I 'm going!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VII. CROSS-EXAMININGS.
+</h2>
+<p>
+While Barrington and his lawyer sat in conclave over the details of the
+great suit, Stapylton hurried along his road with all the speed he could
+summon. The way, which for some miles led along the river-side, brought
+into view M'Cormick's cottage, and the Major himself, as he stood
+listlessly at his door.'
+</p>
+<p>
+Halting his carriage for a moment, Stapylton jumped out and drew nigh the
+little quickset hedge which flanked the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What can I do for you in the neighborhood of Manchester, Major? We are
+just ordered off there to ride down the Radicals.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish it was nearer home you were going to do it,&rdquo; said he, crankily.
+&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo;&mdash;and he pointed to some fresh-turned earth,&mdash;&ldquo;they
+were stealing my turnips last night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would appear that these fellows in the North are growing dangerous,&rdquo;
+said Stapylton.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'T is little matter to us,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, sulkily. &ldquo;I'd care more about
+a blight in the potatoes than for all the politics in Europe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A genuine philosopher! How snug you are here, to be sure! A man in a
+pleasant nook like this can well afford to smile at the busy ambitions of
+the outer world. I take it you are about the very happiest fellow I know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe I am, maybe I'm not,&rdquo; said he, peevishly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This spot only wants what I hinted to you t'other evening, to be
+perfection.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay!&rdquo; said the other, dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you agree with me heartily, if you had the candor to say it. Come,
+out with it, man, at once. I saw your gardener this morning with a great
+basketful of greenery, and a large bouquet on the top of it,&mdash;are not
+these significant signs of a projected campaign? You are wrong, Major,
+upon my life you are wrong, not to be frank with me. I could, by a strange
+hazard, as the newspapers say, 'tell you something to your advantage.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About what?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About the very matter you were thinking of as I drove up. Come, I will be
+more generous than you deserve.&rdquo; And, laying his arm on M'Cormick's
+shoulder, he halt whispered in his ear; &ldquo;It is a good thing,&mdash;a
+deuced good thing! and I promise you, if I were a marrying man, you 'd
+have a competitor. I won't say she 'll have one of the great fortunes
+people rave about, but it will be considerable,&mdash;very considerable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know, or what do you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll tell you in three words. How I know is, because I have been the
+channel for certain inquiries they made in India. What I know is, the
+Directors are sick of the case, they are sorely ashamed of it, and not a
+little uneasy lest it should come before the public, perhaps before the
+Parliament. Old Barrington has made all negotiation difficult by the
+extravagant pretensions he puts forward about his son's honor, and so
+forth. If, however, the girl were married, her husband would be the person
+to treat with, and I am assured with him they would deal handsomely, even
+generously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why would n't all this make a marrying man of you, though you were
+n't before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's a slight canonical objection, if you must know,&rdquo; said Stapylton,
+with a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I perceive,&mdash;a wife already! In India, perhaps?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no time just now for a long story, M'Cormick,&rdquo; said he,
+familiarly, &ldquo;nor am I quite certain I 'd tell it if I had. However, you
+know enough for all practical purposes, and I repeat to you this is a
+stake I can't enter for,&mdash;you understand me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's another thing, now,&rdquo; said M'Cormick; &ldquo;and as we are talking so
+freely together, there's no harm in mentioning it. It 's only the other
+day, as I may call it, that we met for the first time?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very true: when I was down here at Cobham.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And never heard of each other before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not to my knowledge, certainly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That being the case, I 'm curious to hear how you took this wonderful
+interest in me. It wasn't anything in my appearance, I 'm sure, nor my
+manner; and as to what you 'd hear about me among those blackguards down
+here, there's nothing too bad to say of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll be as frank as yourself,&rdquo; said Stapylton, boldly; &ldquo;you ask for
+candor, and you shall have it. I had n't talked ten minutes with you till
+I saw that you were a thorough man of the world; the true old soldier, who
+had seen enough of life to know that whatever one gets for nothing in this
+world is just worth nothing, and so I said to myself, 'If it ever occurs
+to me to chance upon a good opportunity of which I cannot from
+circumstances avail myself, there's my man. I'll go to him and say,
+&ldquo;M'Cormick, that's open to you, there's a safe thing!&rdquo; And when in return
+he 'd say, &ldquo;Stapylton, what can I do for you?&rdquo; my answer would be, &ldquo;Wait
+till you are satisfied that I have done you a good turn; be perfectly
+assured that I have really served you.&rdquo; And then, if I wanted a loan of a
+thousand or fifteen hundred to lodge for the Lieutenant-Colonelcy, I 'd
+not be ashamed to say, &ldquo;M'Cormick, let me have so much.&rdquo;'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's <i>it</i>, is it?&rdquo; said M'Cormick, with a leer of intense cunning.
+&ldquo;Not a bad bargain for <i>you</i>, anyhow. It is not every day that a man
+can sell what is n't his own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might say, it's not every day that a man regards a possible loan as a
+gift, but I 'm quite ready to reassure all your fears on that score; I'll
+even pledge myself never to borrow a shilling from you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don't mean that; you took me up so quick,&rdquo; said the old fellow,
+reddening with a sense of shame he had not felt for many a year. &ldquo;I may be
+as stingy as they call me, but for all that I 'd stand to a man who stands
+to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Between gentlemen and men of the world these things are better left to a
+sense of an honorable understanding than made matters of compact. There is
+no need of another word on the matter. I shall be curious, however, to
+know how your project speeds. Write to me,&mdash;you have plenty of time,&mdash;and
+write often. I 'm not unlikely to learn something about the Indian claim,
+and if I do, you shall hear of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not over good at pen and ink work; indeed, I haven't much practice,
+but I'll do my best.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do, by all means. Tell me how you get on with Aunt Dinah, who, I suspect,
+has no strong affection for either of us. Don't be precipitate; hazard
+nothing by a rash step; secure your way by intimacy, mere intimacy: avoid
+particular attentions strictly; be always there, and on some pretext or
+other&mdash;But why do I say all this to an old soldier, who has made such
+sieges scores of times?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I think I see my way clear enough,&rdquo; said the old fellow, with a
+grin. &ldquo;I wish I was as sure I knew why you take such an interest in me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe I have told you already; I hope there is nothing so strange in
+the assurance as to require corroboration. Come, I must say good-bye; I
+meant to have said five words to you, and I have stayed here
+five-and-twenty minutes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would n't you take something?&mdash;could n't I offer you anything?&rdquo; said
+M'Cormick, hesitatingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, thanks. I lunched before I started; and although old Dinah made
+several assaults upon me while I ate, I managed to secure two cutlets and
+part of a grouse-pie, and a rare glass of Madeira to wash them down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That old woman is dreadful, and I'll take her down a peg yet, as sure as
+my name is Dan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, don't, Major; don't do anything of the kind. The people who tame
+tigers are sure to get scratched at last, and nobody thanks them for their
+pains. Regard her as the sailors do a fire-ship; give her a wide berth,
+and steer away from her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but she sometimes gives chase.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strike your flag, then, if it must be; for, trust me, you 'll not conquer
+<i>her</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We 'll see, we 'll see,&rdquo; muttered the old fellow, as he waved his adieux,
+and then turned back into the house again.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering a
+malediction on the &ldquo;dear friend&rdquo; he had just parted with. When the <i>bourgeois
+gentilhomme</i> objected to his adversary pushing him <i>en tierce</i>
+while he attacked him <i>en quarte</i>, he was expressing a great social
+want, applicable to those people who in conversation will persist in
+saying many things which ought not to be uttered, and expressing doubts
+and distrusts which, however it be reasonable to feel, are an outrage to
+avow.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The old fox,&rdquo; said Stapylton, aloud, &ldquo;taunted me with selling what did
+not belong to me; but he never suspects that I have bought something
+without paying for it, and that something himself! Yes, the mock siege he
+will lay to the fortress will occupy the garrison till it suits me to open
+the real attack, and I will make use of him, besides, to learn whatever
+goes on in my absence. How the old fellow swallowed the bait! What
+self-esteem there must be in such a rugged nature, to make him imagine he
+could be successful in a cause like this! He is, after all, a clumsy agent
+to trust one's interest to. If the choice had been given me, I'd far
+rather have had a woman to watch over them. Polly Dill, for instance, the
+very girl to understand such a mission well. How adroitly would she have
+played the game, and how clearly would her letters have shown me the exact
+state of events!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Such were the texts of his musings as he drove along, and deep as were his
+thoughts, they never withdrew him, when the emergency called, from
+attention to every detail of the journey, and he scrutinized the
+post-horses as they were led out, and apportioned the rewards to the
+postilions as though no heavier care lay on his heart than the road and
+its belongings. While he rolled thus smoothly along, Peter Barrington had
+been summoned to his sister's presence, to narrate in full all that he had
+asked, and all that he had learned of Stapylton and his fortunes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Dinah was seated in a deep armchair, behind a formidable
+embroidery-frame,&mdash;a thing so complex and mysterious in form as to
+suggest an implement of torture. At a short distance off sat Withering,
+with pen, ink, and paper before him, as if to set down any details of
+unusual importance; and into this imposing presence poor Barrington
+entered with a woful sense of misgiving and humiliation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have got a quiet moment at last, Peter,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington. &ldquo;I have
+sent the girls over to Brown's Barn for the tulip-roots, and I have told
+Darby that if any visitors came they were to be informed we were
+particularly occupied by business, and could see no one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; added Withering; &ldquo;it is a case before the Judge in Chamber.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what have we got to hear?&rdquo; asked Barrington, with an air of
+innocence.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have got to hear your report, brother Peter; the narrative of your
+late conversation with Major Stapylton; given, as nearly as your memory
+will serve, in the exact words and in the precise order everything
+occurred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;October the twenty-third,&rdquo; said Withering, writing as he spoke; &ldquo;minute
+of interview between P. B. and Major S. Taken on the same morning it
+occurred, with remarks and observations explanatory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Begin,&rdquo; said Dinah, imperiously, while she worked away without lifting
+her head. &ldquo;And avoid, so far as possible, anything beyond the precise
+expression employed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don't suppose I took notes in shorthand of what we said to each
+other, do you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I certainly suppose you can have retained in your memory a conversation
+that took place two hours ago,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can relate it circumstantially and clearly,&rdquo; added Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I 'm very sorry to disappoint you, but I can do nothing of the
+kind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean to say that you had no interview with Major Stapylton,
+Peter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or that you have forgotten all about it?&rdquo; said Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or is it that you have taken a pledge of secrecy, brother Peter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, no! It is simply this, that though I retain a pretty fair general
+impression of what I said myself, and what he said afterwards, I could no
+more pretend to recount it accurately than I could say off by heart a
+scene in 'Romeo and Juliet.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why don't you take the 'Comedy of Errors' for your illustration, Peter
+Barrington? I ask you, Mr. Withering, have you in all your experience met
+anything like this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would go hard with a man in the witness-box to make such a
+declaration, I must say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What would a jury think of, what would a judge say to him?&rdquo; said she,
+using the most formidable of all penalties to her brother's imagination.
+&ldquo;Wouldn't the court tell him that he would be compelled to speak out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They'd have it out on the cross-examination, at all events, if not on the
+direct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the name of confusion, what do you want with me?&rdquo; exclaimed Peter, in
+despair.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We want everything,&mdash;everything that you heard about this man. Who
+he is, what he is; what by the father's side, what by the mother's; what
+are his means, and where; who knows him, who are his associates. Bear in
+mind that to us, here, he has dropped out of the clouds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And gone back there too,&rdquo; added Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish to Heaven he had taken me with him!&rdquo; sighed Peter, drearily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think in this case, Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering, with a
+well-affected gravity, &ldquo;we had better withdraw a juror, and accept a
+nonsuit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done with it altogether,&rdquo; said she, gathering up her worsted and
+her needles, and preparing to leave the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, entreatingly, &ldquo;imagine a man as wanting
+in tact as I am,&mdash;and as timid, too, about giving casual offence,&mdash;conducting
+such an inquiry as you committed to my hands. Fancy how, at every attempt
+to obtain information, his own boldness, I might call it rudeness, stared
+him in the face, till at last, rather than push his investigations, he
+grew puzzled how to apologize for his prying curiosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother, brother, this is too bad! It had been better to have thought
+more of your granddaughter's fate and less of your own feelings.&rdquo; And with
+this she flounced out of the room, upsetting a spider-table, and a case of
+stuffed birds that stood on it, as she passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/410.jpg" width="100%" alt="410 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't doubt but she 's right, Tom,&rdquo; said Peter, when the door closed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did he not tell you who he was, and what his fortune? Did you really
+learn nothing from him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He told me everything; and if I had not been so cruelly badgered, I could
+have repeated every word of it; but you never made a hound true to the
+scent by flogging him, Tom,&mdash;is n't that a fact, eh?&rdquo; And consoled by
+an illustration that seemed so pat to his case, he took his hat and
+strolled out into the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VIII. GENERAL CONYERS
+</h2>
+<p>
+In a snug little room of the Old Ship Hotel, at Dover, a large, heavy man,
+with snow-white hair, and moustaches,&mdash;the latter less common in
+those days than the present,&mdash;sat at table with a younger one, so
+like him that no doubt could have existed as to their being father and
+son. They had dined, and were sitting over their wine, talking
+occasionally, but oftener looking fondly and affectionately at each other;
+and once, by an instinct of sudden love, grasping each other's hand, and
+sitting thus several minutes without a word on either side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You did not expect me before to-morrow, Fred,&rdquo; said the old man, at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, father,&rdquo; replied young Conyers. &ldquo;I saw by the newspapers that you
+were to dine at the Tuileries on Tuesday, and I thought you would not quit
+Paris the same evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; I started the moment I took off my uniform. I wanted to be with you,
+my boy; and the royal politeness that detained me was anything but a
+favor. How you have grown, Fred,&mdash;almost my own height, I believe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The more like you the better,&rdquo; said the youth, as his eyes ran over, and
+the old man turned away to hide his emotion.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a moment he said: &ldquo;How strange you should not have got my letters,
+Fred; but, after all, it is just as well as it is. I wrote in a very angry
+spirit, and was less just than a little cool reflection might have made
+me. They made no charges against me, though I thought they had. There were
+grumblings and discontents, and such-like. They called me a Rajah, and
+raked up all the old stories they used to circulate once on a time about a
+far better fellow&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean Colonel Barrington, don't you?&rdquo; said Fred.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where or how did you hear of that name?&rdquo; said the old man, almost
+sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;An accident made me the guest of his family, at a little cottage they
+live in on an hish river. I passed weeks there, and, through the favor of
+the name I bore, I received more kindness than I ever before met in life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And they knew you to be a Conyers, and to be my son?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was Colonel Barrington's aunt was my hostess, and she it was who, on
+hearing my name, admitted me at once to all the privileges of old
+friendship. She told me of the close companionship which once subsisted
+between you and her nephew, and gave me rolls of his letters to read
+wherein every line spoke of you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. Barrington, the father of George, how did he receive you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;At first with such coolness that I could n't bring myself to recross his
+threshold. He had been away from home when I arrived, and the day of his
+return I was unexpectedly presented to him by his sister, who evidently
+was as unprepared as myself for the reception I met with.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was that reception,&mdash;how was it? Tell me all as it
+happened.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the affair of a moment. Miss Barrington introduced me, saying,
+'This is the son of poor George's dearest friend,&mdash;this is a
+Conyers;' and the old man faltered, and seemed like to faint, and after a
+moment stammered out something about an honor he had never counted upon,&mdash;a
+visit he scarcely could have hoped for; and, indeed, so overcome was he
+that he staggered into the house only to take to his bed, where he lay
+seriously ill for several days after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor fellow! It was hard to forgive,&mdash;very hard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but he has forgiven it&mdash;whatever it was&mdash;heartily, and
+wholly forgiven it. We met afterwards by a chance in Germany, and while I
+was hesitating how to avoid a repetition of the painful scene which marked
+our first meeting, he came manfully towards me with his hand out, and
+said, 'I have a forgiveness to beg of you; and if you only know how I long
+to obtain it, you would scarce say me no.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The worthy father of poor George! I think I hear him speak the very words
+himself. Go on, Fred,&mdash;go on, and tell me further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no more to tell, sir, unless I speak of all the affectionate
+kindness he has shown,&mdash;the trustfulness and honor with which he has
+treated me. I have been in his house like his own son.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! if you had known that son! If you had seen what a type of a soldier
+he was! The most intrepid, the boldest fellow that ever breathed; but with
+a heart of childlike simplicity and gentleness. I could tell you traits of
+him, of his forbearance, his forgiveness, his generous devotion to
+friendship, that would seem to bespeak a nature that had no room for other
+than soft and tender emotion; and yet, if ever there was a lion's heart
+within a man's bosom it was his.&rdquo; For a moment or two the old man seemed
+overcome by his recollections, and then, as if by an effort, rallying
+himself, he went on: &ldquo;You have often heard the adage, Fred, that enjoins
+watching one's pennies and leaving the pounds to take care of themselves;
+and yet, trust me, the maxim is truer as applied to our morals than our
+money. It is by the smaller, finer, and least important traits of a man
+that his fate in life is fashioned. The caprices we take no pains to curb,
+the tempers we leave unchecked, the petty indulgences we extend to our
+vanity and self-love,&mdash;these are the great sands that wreck us far
+oftener than the more stern and formidable features of our character. I
+ought to know this truth; I myself lost the best and truest and the
+noblest friend that ever man had, just from the exercise of a spirit of
+bantering and ridicule which amused those about me, and gave me that
+pre-eminence which a sarcastic and witty spirit is sure to assert. You
+know already how George Barrington and I lived together like brothers. I
+do not believe two men ever existed more thoroughly and sincerely attached
+to each other. All the contrarieties of our dispositions served but to
+heighten the interest that linked us together. As for myself, I was never
+wearied in exploring the strange recesses of that great nature that seemed
+to unite all that could be daring and dashing in man with the tenderness
+of a woman. I believe I knew him far better than he knew himself. But to
+come to what I wanted to tell you, and which is an agony to me to dwell
+on. Though for a long while our close friendship was known in the
+regiment, and spoken of as a thing incapable of change, a sort of rumor&mdash;no,
+not even a rumor, but an impression&mdash;seemed to gain, that the ties
+between us were looser on my side than his; that George looked up to <i>me</i>,
+and that I, with the pride of a certain superiority, rather lorded it over
+<i>him</i>. This feeling became painfully strengthened when it got about
+that Barrington had lent me the greater part of the purchase-money for my
+troop,&mdash;a promotion, by the way, which barred his own advancement,&mdash;and
+it was whispered, so at least I heard, that Barrington was a mere child in
+my hands, whom I rebuked or rewarded at pleasure. If I could have traced
+these rumors to any direct source, I could have known how to deal with
+them. As it was, they were vague, shadowy, and unreal; and their very
+unsubstantiality maddened me the more. To have told George of them would
+have been rasher still. The thought of a wrong done to <i>me</i> would
+have driven him beyond all reason, and he would infallibly have
+compromised himself beyond recall. It was the very first time in my life I
+had a secret from him, and it eat into my heart like a virulent disease.
+The consciousness that I was watched, the feeling that eyes were upon me
+marking all I did, and tongues were commenting on all I said, exasperated
+me, and at one moment I would parade my friendship for Barrington in a
+sort of spirit of defiance, and at another, as though to give the lie to
+my slanderers, treat him with indifference and carelessness, as it were,
+to show that I was not bound to him by the weight of a direct obligation,
+and that our relations involved nothing of dependence. It was when, by
+some cruel mischance, I had been pursuing this spirit to its extreme, that
+the conversation one night at mess turned upon sport and tiger-hunting.
+Many stories were told, of course, and we had the usual narratives of
+hairbreadth escapes and perils of the most appalling kind; till, at
+length, some one&mdash;I forget exactly who it was&mdash;narrated a
+single-handed encounter with a jaguar, which in horror exceeded anything
+we had heard before. The details were alone not so terrible, but the
+circumstances so marvellous, that one and all who listened cried out, 'Who
+did it?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The man who told me the tale,' replied the narrator, 'and who will
+probably be back to relate it here to you in a few days,&mdash;Colonel
+Barrington.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have told you the devilish spirit which had me in possession. I have
+already said that I was in one of those moods of insolent mockery in which
+nothing was sacred to me. No sooner, then, did I hear Barrington's name
+than I burst into a hearty laugh, and said, 'Oh! if it was one of George
+Barrington's tigers, you ought to have mentioned that fact at the outset.
+You have been exciting our feelings unfairly.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I assume that his statement was true,' said the other, gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Doubtless; just as battle-pieces are true, that is, pic-torially true.
+The tiger did nothing that a tiger ought not to do, nor did George
+transgress any of those &ldquo;unities&rdquo; which such combats require. At the same
+time, Barring-ton's stories have always a something about them that stamps
+the authorship, and you recognize this trait just as you do a white horse
+in a picture by Wouvermans.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In this strain I went on, heated by my own warmed imagination, and the
+approving laughter of those around me. I recounted more than one feat of
+Barrington's,&mdash;things which I knew he had done, some of them almost
+incredible in boldness. These I told with many a humorous addition and
+many an absurd commentary, convulsing the listeners with laughter, and
+rendering my friend ridiculous.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He came back from the hills within the week, and before he was two hours
+in his quarters he had heard the whole story. We were at luncheon in the
+mess-room when he entered, flushed and excited, but far more moved by
+emotion than resentment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Ormsby,' said he, 'you may laugh at me to your heart's content and I'll
+never grumble at it; but there are some young officers here who, not
+knowing the ties that attach us, may fancy that these quizzings pass the
+limits of mere drollery, and even jeopardize something of my truthfulness.
+<i>You</i>, I know, never meant this any more than I have felt it, but
+others might, and might, besides, on leaving this and sitting at other
+tables, repeat what they had heard here. Tell them that you spoke of me as
+you have a free right to do, in jest, and that your ridicule was the
+good-humored banter of a friend,&mdash;of a friend who never did, never
+could, impugn my honor.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;His eyes were swimming over, and his lips trembling, as he uttered the
+last words. I see him now, as he stood there, his very cheek shaking in
+agitation. That brave, bold fellow, who would have marched up to a battery
+without quailing, shook like a sickly girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Am I to say that you never draw the long-bow, George?' asked I, half
+insolently.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'You are to say, sir, that I never told a lie,' cried he, dark with
+passion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Oh, this discussion will be better carried on elsewhere,' said I, as I
+arose and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As I was in the wrong, totally in the wrong, I was passionate and
+headstrong. I sat down and wrote a most insolent letter to Barrington. I
+turned all the self-hate that was consuming <i>me</i> against my friend,
+and said I know not what of outrage and insult. I did worse; I took a copy
+of my letter, and declared that I would read it to the officers in the
+mess-room. He sent a friend to me to beg I would not take this course of
+open insult. My answer was, 'Colonel Barrington knows his remedy.' When I
+sent this message, I prepared for what I felt certain would follow. I knew
+Barrington so well that I thought even the delay of an hour, then two
+hours, strange. At length evening drew nigh, and, though I sat waiting in
+my quarters, no one came from him,&mdash;not a letter nor a line apprised
+me what course he meant to take.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not caring to meet the mess at such a moment, I ordered my horses and
+drove up to a small station about twenty miles off, leaving word where I
+was to be found. I passed three days there in a state of fevered
+expectancy. Barrington made no sign, and, at length, racked and distressed
+by the conflict with myself,&mdash;now summoning up an insolent spirit of
+defiance to the whole world, now humbling myself in a consciousness of the
+evil line I had adopted,&mdash;I returned one night to my quarters. The
+first news that greeted me was that Barrington had left us. He had
+accepted the offer of a Native command which had been made to him some
+months before, and of which we had often canvassed together all the
+advantages and disadvantages. I heard that he had written two letters to
+me before he started, and torn them up after they were sealed. I never
+heard from him, never saw him more, till I saw his dead body carried into
+camp the morning he fell.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must get to the end of this quickly, Fred, and I will tell you all at
+once, for it is a theme I will never go back on. I came to England with
+despatches about two years after Barrington's death. It was a hurried
+visit, for I was ordered to hold myself in readiness to return almost as
+soon as I arrived. I was greatly occupied, going about from place to
+place, and person to person, so many great people desired to have a verbal
+account of what was doing in India, and to hear confidentially what I
+thought of matters there. In the midst of the mass of letters which the
+post brought me every morning, and through which, without the aid of an
+officer on the staff, I could never have got through, there came one whose
+singular address struck me. It was to 'Captain Ormsby Conyers, 22d Light
+Dragoons,' a rank I had held fourteen years before that time in that same
+regiment. I opined at once that my correspondent must have been one who
+had known me at that time and not followed me in the interval. I was
+right. It was from old Mr. Barrington,&mdash;George Barrington's father.
+What version of my quarrel with his son could have reached him, I cannot
+even guess, nor by what light he read my conduct in the affair; but such a
+letter I never read in my life. It was a challenge to meet him anywhere,
+and with any weapon, but couched in language so insulting as to impugn my
+courage, and hint that I would probably shelter myself behind the pretext
+of his advanced age. 'But remember,' said he, 'if God has permitted me to
+be an old man, it is <i>you</i> who have made me a childless one!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a few seconds he paused, overcome by emotion, and then went on: &ldquo;I sat
+down and wrote him a letter of contrition, almost abject in its terms. I
+entreated him to believe that for every wrong I had done his noble-hearted
+son, my own conscience had repaid me in misery ten times told; that if he
+deemed my self-condemnation insufficient, it was open to him to add to it
+whatever he wished of obloquy or shame; that if he proclaimed me a coward
+before the world, and degraded me in the eyes of men, I would not offer
+one word in my defence. I cannot repeat all that I said in my deep
+humiliation. His answer came at last, one single line, re-enclosing my own
+letter to me: 'Lest I should be tempted to make use of this letter, I send
+it back to you; there is no need of more between us.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With this our intercourse ceased. When a correspondence was published in
+the 'Barrington Inquiry,' as it was called, I half hoped he would have
+noticed some letters of mine about George; but he never did, and in his
+silence I thought I read his continued unforgiveness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope, father, that you never believed the charges that were made
+against Captain Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one of them; disloyalty was no more his than cowardice. I never knew
+the Englishman with such a pride of country as he had, nor could you have
+held out a greater bribe to him, for any achievement of peril, than to
+say, 'What a gain it would be for England!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How was it that such a man should have had a host of enemies?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing so natural. Barrington was the most diffident of men; his
+bashfulness amounted to actual pain. With strangers, this made him cold to
+very sternness, or, as is often seen in the effort to conquer a natural
+defect, gave him a manner of over-easy confidence that looked like
+impertinence. And thus the man who would not have wounded the self-love of
+the meanest beggar, got the reputation of being haughty, insolent, and
+oppressive. Besides this, when he was in the right, and felt himself so,
+he took no pains to convince others of the fact. His maxim was,&mdash;have
+I not heard it from his lips scores of times,&mdash;'The end will show.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet the end will not show, father; his fame has not been vindicated,
+nor his character cleared.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In some measure the fault of those who took up his cause. They seemed
+less to insist on reparation than punishment. They did not say, 'Do
+justice to this man's memory;' but, 'Come forward and own you wronged him,
+and broke his heart.' Now, the accusation brought against George
+Barrington of assuming sovereign power was not settled by his death; his
+relatives forgot this, or merged it in their own charge against the
+Company. They mismanaged everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it too late to put them on the right track, father; or could you do
+it?&rdquo; asked the youth, eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not too late, boy! There is time for it yet. There is, however, one
+condition necessary, and I do not see how that is to be secured.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should see Mr. Barrington and confer with him alone; he must admit me
+to his confidence, and I own to you, I scarcely deem that possible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I try&mdash;may I attempt this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not like to refuse you, Fred: but if I say Yes, it will be to
+include you in my own defeated hopes. For many a year Mr. Barrington has
+refused to give one sign of his forgiveness; for in his treatment of you I
+only recognize the honorable feeling of exempting the son from the penalty
+due to the father. But perhaps defeat is better than self-reproach, and as
+I have a strong conviction I could serve him, I am ready to risk a
+failure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may make the attempt, then?&rdquo; said Fred, eagerly. &ldquo;I will write to Miss
+Barrington to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now of yourself. What of your career? How do you like soldiering,
+boy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Less than ever, sir; it is only within the last week or two that we have
+seen anything beyond barrack or parade duty. Now, however, we have been
+called to repress what are called risings in the northern shires; and our
+task has been to ride at large unarmed mobs and charge down masses, whose
+grape-shot are brickbats. Not a very glorious campaign!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The old man smiled, but said nothing for a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your colonel is on leave, is he not?&rdquo; asked he.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. We are commanded by that Major Stapylton I told you of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A smart officer, but no friend of yours, Fred,&rdquo; said the General,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir; certainly no friend of mine,&rdquo; said the young man, resolutely.
+&ldquo;To refuse me a week's leave to go and meet my father, whom I have not
+seen for years, and, when pressed, to accord me four days, is to disgust
+me with himself and the service together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, as you cannot be my guest, Fred, I will be yours. I 'll go back
+with you to headquarters. Stapylton is a name I used to be familiar with
+long ago. It may turn out that I know his family; but let us talk of
+Barrington. I have been thinking it would be better not to link any
+question of his own interests with my desire to meet him, but simply to
+say I 'm in England, and wish to know if he would receive me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as you wish, sir. I will write to his sister by this post.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And after one day in town, Fred, I am ready to accompany you anywhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER IX. MAJOR M'CORMICK'S LETTER
+</h2>
+<p>
+As it was not often that Major M'Cormick performed the part of a
+letter-writer, perhaps my reader will pardon me if I place him before him
+on one of these rare occasions. If success would always respond to labor,
+his would have been a real triumph; for the effort cost him many days, two
+sleepless nights, a headache, and half a quire of paper.
+</p>
+<p>
+Had not Stapylton retained him by an admirably selected hamper of good
+things from a celebrated Italian warehouse in the Strand, I am afraid that
+M'Cormick's zeal might have cooled down to the zero of forgetfulness; but
+the reindeer hams and the Yarmouth bloaters, the potted shrimps and the
+preserved guavas, were an appeal that addressed themselves to that organ
+which with him paid the double debt of digestion and emotion. He felt that
+such a correspondent was worth a sacrifice, and he made it That my reader
+may appreciate the cost of the achievement, I would have him imagine how a
+mason about to build a wall should be obliged to examine each stone before
+he laid it, test its constituent qualities, its shape and its size,&mdash;for
+it was thus that almost every word occasioned the Major a reference to the
+dictionary, spelling not having been cultivated in his youth, nor much
+practised in his riper years. Graces of style, however, troubled him
+little; and, to recur to my figure of the stone-mason, if he was
+embarrassed in his search for the materials, he cared wonderfully little
+for the architecture. His letter ran thus, and the reader will perceive
+that it must have been written some weeks after the events recorded in the
+last chapter:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mac's Nest, October, Thursday.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear S.,&mdash;A touch of my old Walcheren complaint has laid me up since
+Tuesday, and if the shakes make me illegible now, that's the reason why.
+Besides this the weather is dreadful; cold east winds and rains, sometimes
+sleet, every day; and the turf so wet, it 's only smoke, not fire. I
+believe it is the worst climate in Europe, and it gets wetter every year.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The hamper came to hand, but though it was marked 'Carriage paid, this
+side up,' they upset it and broke two bottles, and charged seven and
+fourpence-halfpenny for the bringing it, which is, I think, enormous; at
+least, Tim Hacket got over a thrashing-machine from Scotland last spring
+for twelve and four, and there 's no comparison between the two. Thanks to
+you, however, all the same; but if you can get any of this charge reduced,
+so much the better, not to speak of the bottles,&mdash;both mixed pickles&mdash;which
+they ought to make good.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad to see you are touching up the Radicals in the North; powder
+and ball will do more to bring them to reason than spouting in Parliament.
+The papers say there was nine killed and twenty-three wounded; and one
+fellow, the 'Stockport Bee,' says, that 'if the Butcher that led the
+dragoons is n't turned out of the service with disgrace no gentleman will
+degrade himself by entering the army.' Isn't the Butcher yourself? Miss
+Barrington, always your friend, says it is; and that if the account of
+another paper, called the 'Ægis,' be true, you 'll have to go to a
+court-martial. I stood stoutly to you through it all, and declared that
+when the niggers was up at Jamaica, we had n't time to take the names of
+the prisoners, and we always cut one of their ears off to know them again.
+Old Peter laughed till the tears ran down his face, but Dinah said, 'If I
+did not suppose, sir, that you were inventing a very graceless joke, I'd
+insist on your leaving this room and this house on the instant.' It was
+ten o'clock at night, and raining hard; so you may guess I gave in. Bad as
+she is, the young one is her equal, and I gave up all thoughts of what you
+call 'prosecuting my suit' in that quarter. She isn't even commonly civil
+to me, and when I ask her for, maybe, the mustard at dinner, she turns
+away her head, and says, 'Darby, give Major M'Cormick the salt.' That's
+French politeness, perhaps; but I'll pay them all off yet, for they can't
+get sixpence on the mortgage, and I 'm only drinking out that bin of old
+Madeira before I tell them that I won't advance the money. Why should I?
+The women treat me worse than a dog, and old B. is neither more nor less
+than a fool. Dill, the doctor, however he got it, says it's all up about
+the suit with the India Company; that there's no proof of the Colonel's
+marriage at all, that the charges against him were never cleared up, and
+that nothing can come out of it but more disgrace and more exposure.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish you 'd send me the correct account of what took place between you
+and one of your subalterns, for old Dinah keeps harping on it in a sort of
+mysterious and mischievous way of her own, that provokes me. Was it that
+he refused to obey orders, or that <i>you</i>, as <i>she</i> says, used
+such language towards him that he wrote to report you? Give it to me in
+black and white, and maybe I won't try her temper with it. At all events,
+make out some sort of a case, for the old woman is now intolerable. She
+said yesterday, 'Major Stapylton, to whom I write by this post, will see
+that his visit here must be preceded by an explanation.' There's her words
+for you, and I hope you like them!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you are right to be in no hurry about purchasing, for many say
+the whole system will be changed soon, and the money would be clean thrown
+away. Besides this, I have been looking over my bauk-book, and I find I
+could n't help you just now. Two bad harvests, and the smut in the wheat
+last year, are running me mighty close. I won't finish this till
+to-morrow, for I 'm going to dine at 'The Home' to-day. It is the
+granddaughter's birthday, and there was a regular shindy about who was
+going to be asked. Old Peter was for a grand celebration, and inviting the
+Admiral, and the Gores, and God knows who besides; and Dinah was for what
+she called a family party, consisting, I suppose, of herself and Darby. I
+'ll be able, before I close this, to tell you how it was ended; for I only
+know now that Dill and his daughter are to be there.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wednesday.&mdash;I sit down with a murdering headache to finish this
+letter. Maybe it was the pickled lobster, or the ice punch, or the other
+drink they called champagne-cup that did it. But I never passed such a
+night since I was in the trenches, and I am shaking still, so that I can
+scarce hold the pen. It was a grand dinner, to be sure, for ruined people
+to give. Venison from Carrick Woods, and game of every kind, with all
+kinds of wine; and my Lord Car-rickmore talking to Miss Dinah, and the
+Admiral following up with the niece, and Tom Brabazon, and Dean of
+Deanspark, and the devil knows who besides, bringing up the rear, with
+Dill and your obedient servant. Every dish that came in, and every bottle
+that was uncorked, I said to myself, 'There goes another strap on the
+property;' and I felt as if we were eating the trees and the timber and
+the meadows all the time at table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It 's little of the same sympathy troubled the others. My Lord was as
+jolly as if he was dining with the King; and old Cobham called for more of
+the Madeira, as if it was an inn; and Peter himself&mdash;the heartless
+old fool&mdash;when he got up to thank the company for drinking his
+granddaughter's health, said, 'May I trust that even at my advanced age
+this may not be the last time I may have to speak my gratitude to you all
+for the generous warmth with which you have pledged this toast; but even
+should it be so, I shall carry away with me from this evening's happiness
+a glow of pleasure that will animate me to the last. It was only this
+morning I learned what I know you will all hear with satisfaction, that
+there is every probability of a speedy arrangement of my long-pending suit
+with the Company, and that my child here will soon have her own again.'
+Grand applause and huzzas, with a noise that drowned 'Bother!' from
+myself, and in the middle of the row up jumps the Admiral, and cries out,
+'Three cheers more for the Rajah's daughter!' I thought the old roof would
+come down; and the blackguards in the kitchen took up the cry and shouted
+like mad, and then we yelled again, and this went on for maybe five
+minutes. 'What does it all mean,' says I, 'but a cheer for the Court of
+Bankruptcy, and Hip, hip, hurray! for the Marshalsea Prison!' After that,
+he had half an hour or more of flatteries and compliments. My Lord was so
+happy, and Peter Barrington so proud, and the Admiral so delighted, and
+the rest of us so much honored, that I could n't stand it any longer, but
+stole away, and got into the garden, to taste a little fresh air and
+quietness. I had n't gone ten paces, when I came plump upon Miss Dinah,
+taking her coffee under a tree. 'You are a deserter, I fear, sir,' said
+she, in her own snappish way; so I thought I 'd pay her off, and I said,
+'To tell you the truth, Miss Barrington, at our time of life these sort of
+things are more full of sadness than pleasure. We know how hollow they
+are, and how little heart there is in the cheers of the people that are so
+jolly over your wine, but would n't stop to talk to you when you came down
+to water!'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The worse we think of the world, Major M'Cormick,' says she, 'the more
+risk we run of making ourselves mean enough to suit it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I don't suspect, ma'am,' says I, 'that when people have known it so long
+as you and I, that they are greatly in love with it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'They may, however, be mannerly in their dealings with it, sir,' said
+she, fiercely; and so we drew the game, and settled the men for another
+battle.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Is there anything new, ma'am?' says I, after a while.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I believe not, sir. The bread riots still continue in the North, where
+what would seem the needless severity of some of the military commanders
+has only exasperated the people. You have heard, I suppose, of Major
+Stapylton's business?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Not a word, ma'am,' says I; 'for I never see a paper.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I know very little of the matter myself,' says she. 'It was, it would
+appear, at some night assemblage at a place called Lund's Common. A young
+officer sent forward by Major Stapylton to disperse the people, was so
+struck by the destitution and misery he witnessed, and the respectful
+attitude they exhibited, that he hesitated about employing force, and
+restricted himself to counsels of quietness and submission. He did more,&mdash;not
+perhaps very prudently, as some would say,&mdash;he actually emptied his
+pockets of all the money he had, giving even his watch to aid the starving
+horde before him. What precise version of his conduct reached his
+superior, I cannot say; but certainly Major Stapylton commented on it in
+terms of the harshest severity, and he even hinted at a reason for the
+forbearance too offensive for any soldier to endure.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She did not seem exactly to know what followed after this, but some sort
+of inquiry appeared to take place, and witnesses were examined as to what
+really occurred at Lund's Common; and amongst others, a Lascar, who was
+one of the factory hands,&mdash;having come to England a great many years
+before with an officer from India. This fellow's evidence was greatly in
+favor of young Conyers, and was subjected to a very severe
+cross-examination from yourself, in the middle of which he said something
+in Hindostanee that nobody in the court understood but you; and after this
+he was soon dismissed and the case closed for that day.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'What do you think, Major M'Cormick,' said she, 'but when the court of
+inquiry opened the next morning, Lal-Adeen, the Lascar, was not to be
+found high or low. The court have suspended their sittings to search for
+him; but only one opinion prevails,&mdash;that Major Stapylton knows more
+of this man's escape than he is likely to tell.' I have taken great pains
+to give you her own very words in all this business, and I wrote them down
+the moment I got home, for I thought to myself you 'd maybe write about
+the matter to old Peter, and you ought to be prepared for the way they
+look at it; the more because Miss Dinah has a liking for young Conyers,&mdash;what
+she calls a motherly affection; but I don't believe in the motherly part
+of it! But of course you care very little what the people here say about
+you at all. At least, I know it would n't trouble <i>me</i> much, if I was
+in your place. At all events, whatever you do, do with a high hand, and
+the Horse Guards is sure to stand to you. Moderation may be an elegant
+thing in civil life, but I never knew it succeed in the army. There's the
+rain coming on again, and I just sent out six cars to the bog for turf; so
+I must conclude, and remain, yours sincerely,
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Daniel T. M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm thinking of foreclosing the small mortgage I hold on 'The Home,' but
+as they pay the interest regularly, five per cent, I would n't do it if I
+knew things were going on reasonably well with them; send me a line about
+what is doing regarding the 'claim,' and it will guide me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+While Major M'Cormick awaited the answer to his postscript, which to him&mdash;as
+to a lady&mdash;was the important part of his letter, a short note arrived
+at 'The Home' from Mr. Withering, enclosing a letter he had just received
+from Major Stapylton. Withering's communication was in answer to one from
+Barrington, and ran thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear B.,&mdash;All things considered, I believe you are right in not
+receiving General Conyers at this moment. It would probably, as you
+suspect, enable calumnious people to say that you could make your
+resentments play second when they came in the way of your interests. If
+matters go on well, as I have every hope they will, you can make the <i>amende</i>
+to him more satisfactorily and more gracefully hereafter. Buxton has at
+length consented to bring the case before the House; of course it will not
+go to a division, nor, if it did, could it be carried; but the discussion
+will excite interest, the Press will take it up, and after a few regretful
+and half-civil expressions from the Ministry, the India Board will see the
+necessity of an arrangement.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is somewhat unfortunate and <i>mal à propos</i> that Stapylton should
+at this moment have got into an angry collision with young Conyers. I have
+not followed the case closely, but, as usual in such things, they seem
+each of them in the wrong,&mdash;the young sub wanting to make his
+generous sympathy supply the place of military obedience, and the old
+officer enforcing discipline at the cost of very harsh language. I learn
+this morning that Conyers has sold out, intending to demand a personal
+satisfaction. You will see by S.'s letter that he scarcely alludes to this
+part of the transaction at all. S. feels very painfully the attacks of the
+Press, and sees, perhaps, more forcibly than I should in his place, the
+necessity of an exchange. Read attentively the portion I have underlined.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It is to this alone I have to direct my readers' attention, the first two
+sides of the letter being entirely filled with details about the &ldquo;claim&rdquo;:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The newspapers have kept me before you for some days back, much more, I
+doubt not, to their readers' amusement than to my own gratification. I
+could, if I pleased, have told these slanderers that I did not charge a
+crowd of women and children,&mdash;that I did not cut down an elderly man
+at his own door-sill,&mdash;that I did not use language &ldquo;offensive and
+unbecoming&rdquo; to one of my officers, for his having remonstrated in the name
+of humanity against the cruelty of my orders. In a word, I might have
+shown the contemptible scribblers that I knew how to temper duty with
+discretion, as I shall know how, when the occasion offers, to make the
+punishment of a calumniator a terror to his colleagues. However, there is
+a very absurd story going about of a fellow whose insolence I certainly <i>did</i>
+reply to with the flat of my sabre, and whom I should be but too happy to
+punish legally, if he could be apprehended. That he made his escape after
+being captured, and that I connived at or assisted in it,&mdash;I forget
+which,&mdash;you have probably heard. In fact, there is nothing too
+incredible to say of me for the moment; and what is worse, I begin to
+suspect that the Home Secretary, having rather burned his fingers in the
+business, will not be very sorry to make an Admiral Byng of a Major of
+Hussars. For each and all these reasons I mean to exchange, and, if
+possible, into a regiment in India. This will, of course, take some time;
+meanwhile, I have asked for and obtained some months' leave. You will be
+surprised at my troubling you with so much of purely personal matters, but
+they are the necessary preface to what I now come. You are aware of the
+letter I wrote some time back to Mr. Barrington, and the request it
+preferred. If the reply I received was not discouraging, neither was it
+conclusive. The ordinary commonplaces as to the shortness of our
+acquaintance, the want of sufficient knowledge of each other's tastes,
+characters, &amp;c, were duly dwelt upon; but I could not at the end say,
+was I an accepted or a rejected suitor. Now that the critical moment of my
+life draws nigh,&mdash;for such I feel the present emergency,&mdash;an act
+of confidence in me would have more than double value. Can you tell me
+that this is the sentiment felt towards me, or am I to learn that the
+yells of a rabble have drowned the voices of my friends? In plain words,
+will Miss Josephine Barrington accept my offer? Will she intrust her
+happiness to my keeping, and change the darkest shadow that ever lowered
+over my life into a gleam of unspeakable brightness? You have given me too
+many proofs of a friendly disposition towards me, not to make me feel that
+you are the best fitted to bring this negotiation to a good issue. If I do
+not mistake you much, you look with favor on my suit and wish it success.
+I am ashamed to say how deeply my hopes have jeopardized my future
+happiness, but I tell you frankly life has no such prize to my ambition,
+nor, in fact, any such alternative of despair before me.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, my dear Barrington,&rdquo; continued Withering's letter, &ldquo;there is a great
+deal in this that I like, and something with which I am not so much
+pleased. If, however, I am not the Major's advocate to the extent he asks,
+or expects me, it is because I feel that to be unjustly dealt with is a
+stronger claim on <i>your</i> heart than that of any other man I ever met
+with, and the real danger here would be that you should suffer that
+feeling to predominate over all others. Consult your granddaughter's
+interests, if you can, independently of this; reflect well if the plan be
+one likely to promise her happiness. Take your sensible, clear-headed
+sister into your counsels; but, above all, ascertain Josephine's own
+sentiments, and do nothing in direct opposition to them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, placing the letter in her hands, &ldquo;this is
+as much to your address as to mine. Read it over carefully, and you'll
+find me in the garden when you have done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington laid down her great roll of worsted work, and began her
+task without a word. She had not proceeded very far, however, when
+Josephine entered in search of a book. &ldquo;I beg pardon, aunt, if I derange
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We say disturb, or inconvenience, in English, Miss Barrington. What is it
+you are looking for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The 'Legend of Montrose,' aunt. I am so much amused by that Major
+Dalgetty that I can think of nothing but him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; muttered the old lady. &ldquo;It was of a character not altogether
+dissimilar I was thinking myself at that moment. Sit down here, child, and
+let me talk to you. This letter that I hold here, Josephine, concerns
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me, aunt&mdash;concerns <i>me?</i> And who on earth could have written a
+letter in which I am interested?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear it.&rdquo; She coughed only once or twice, and then went on:
+&ldquo;It's a proposal of marriage,&mdash;no less. That gallant soldier who left
+us so lately has fallen in love with you,&mdash;so he says, and of course
+he knows best. He seems fully aware that, being older than you, and graver
+in temperament, his offer must come heralded with certain expressions
+almost apologetic; but he deals with the matter skillfully, and tells us
+that being well off as regards fortune, of good blood, and with fair
+prospects before him, he does not wish to regard his suit as hopeless.
+Your grandfather was minded to learn how you might feel disposed to accept
+his addresses by observing your demeanor, by watching what emotion mention
+of him might occasion, by seeing how far you felt interested in his good
+or ill repute. I did not agree with him. I am never for the long road when
+there is a short one, and therefore I mean to let you hear his letter.
+This is what he writes.&rdquo; While Miss Dinah read the extract which the
+reader has just seen, she never noticed, or, if noticed, never attended
+to, the agitation in her niece's manner, or seemed to remark that from a
+deep-crimson at first her cheeks grew pale as death, and her
+lips-tremulous. &ldquo;There, child,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as she finished&mdash;&ldquo;there
+are his own words; very ardent words, but withal respectful. What do you
+think of them,&mdash;of them and of him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine hung down her head, and with her hands firmly clasped together,
+she sat for a few moments so motionless that she seemed scarcely to
+breathe.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you like to think over this before you speak of it, Josephine?
+Would you like to take this letter to your room and ponder over it alone?&rdquo;
+No answer came but a low, half-subdued sigh.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you do not wish to make a confidante of me, Josephine, I am sorry for
+it, but not offended.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, aunt, it is not that,&rdquo; burst she in; &ldquo;it is to <i>you</i> and you
+alone, I wish to speak, and I will be as candid as yourself. I am not
+surprised at the contents of this letter. I mean, I was in a measure
+prepared for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is to say, child, that he paid you certain attentions?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded assent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how did you receive them? Did you let him understand that you were
+not indifferent to him,&mdash;that his addresses were agreeable to you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Another, but shorter, nod replied to this question.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must confess,&rdquo; said the old lady, bridling up, &ldquo;all this amazes me
+greatly. Why, child, it is but the other day you met each other for the
+first time. How, when, and where you found time for such relations as you
+speak of, I cannot imagine. Do you mean to tell me, Josephine, that you
+ever talked alone together?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Constantly, aunt!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Constantly!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, aunt. We talked a great deal together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But how, child,&mdash;where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here, aunt, as we used to stroll together every morning through the wood
+or in the garden; then as we went on the river or to the waterfall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can comprehend nothing of all this, Josephine. I know you mean to deal
+openly with me; so say at once, how did this intimacy begin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can scarcely say how, aunt, because I believe we drifted into it. We
+used to talk a great deal of ourselves, and at length we grew to talk of
+each other,&mdash;of our likings and dislikings, our tastes and our
+tempers. And these did not always agree!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, aunt,&rdquo; said she, with a heavy sigh. &ldquo;We quarrelled very often; and
+once,&mdash;I shall not easily forget it,&mdash;once seriously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was it about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was about India, aunt; and he was in the wrong, and had to own it
+afterwards and ask pardon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He must know much more of that country than you, child. How came it that
+you presumed to set up your opinion against his?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The presumption was his,&rdquo; said she, haughtily. &ldquo;He spoke of <i>his</i>
+father's position as something the same as <i>my</i> father's. He talked
+of him as a Rajah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not know that he spoke of his father,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+thoughtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he spoke much of him. He told me, amongst other things, how he had
+been a dear friend of papa's; that as young men they lived together like
+brothers, and never were separate till the fortune of life divided them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is all this I am listening to? Of whom are you telling me,
+Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of Fred, Aunt Dinah; of Fred, of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean young Conyers, child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. How could I mean any other?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ta, ta, ta!&rdquo; said the old lady, drumming with her heel on the floor and
+her fingers on the table. &ldquo;It has all turned out as I said it would!
+Peter, Peter, will you never be taught wisdom? Listen to me, child!&rdquo; said
+she, turning almost sternly towards Josephine. &ldquo;We have been at
+cross-purposes with each other all this time. This letter which I have
+just read for you&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped suddenly as she reached thus far,
+and after a second's pause, said, &ldquo;Wait for me here; I will be back
+presently. I have a word to say to your grandfather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Leaving poor Josephine in a state of trepidation and bewilderment,&mdash;ashamed
+at the confession she had just made, and trembling with a vague sense of
+some danger that impended over her,&mdash;Miss Dinah hurried away to the
+garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here's a new sort of worm got into the celery, Dinah,&rdquo; said he, as she
+came up, &ldquo;and a most destructive fellow he is. He looks like a mere
+ruffling of the leaf, and you 'd never suspect him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is your peculiarity never to suspect anything, brother Peter, even
+after you have had warning of peril. Do you remember my telling you, when
+we were up the Rhine, what would come of that intimacy between Conyers and
+Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I do,&rdquo; said he, making what seemed an effort of memory.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can you recall the indolent slipshod answer you made me about it? But
+of course you cannot. It was an old-maid's apprehensions, and you forgot
+the whole thing. Well, Peter, I was right and you were wrong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not the first time that the double event has come off so!&rdquo; said he,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are too fond of that cloak of humility, Peter Barrington. The plea of
+Guilty never saved any one from transportation!&rdquo; Waiting a moment to
+recover her breath after this burst of passion, she went on: &ldquo;After I had
+read that letter you gave me, I spoke to Josephine; I told her in a few
+words how it referred to her, and frankly asked her what she thought of
+it. She was very candid and very open, and, I must say, also very
+collected and composed. Young ladies of the present day possess that
+inestimable advantage over their predecessors. Their emotions do not
+overpower them.&rdquo; This was the second time of &ldquo;blowing off the steam,&rdquo; and
+she had to wait a moment to rally. &ldquo;She told me, frankly, that she was not
+unprepared for such an offer; that tender passages had already been
+exchanged between them. The usual tomfoolery, I conclude,&mdash;that
+supreme effort of selfishness people call love,&mdash;in a word, Peter,
+she was in no wise disinclined to the proposal; the only misfortune was,
+she believed it came from young Conyers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington would have laughed, and laughed heartily, if he dared. As it
+was, the effort to restrain himself sent the blood to his head, and made
+his eyes run over.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may well blush, Peter Barrington,&rdquo; said she, shaking her finger at
+him. &ldquo;It's all your own doing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And when you undeceived her, Dinah, what did she say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not done so yet; but my impression is that so susceptible a young
+lady should find no great difficulty in transferring her affections. For
+the present I mean to limit myself to declaring that this offer is not
+from Conyers; if she has curiosity to know the writer, she shall learn it.
+I always had my doubts about these convents Bread and water diet makes
+more epicures than abstinents!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER X. INTERCHANGED CONFESSIONS
+</h2>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington, with Josephine at one side and Polly Dill on the other,
+sat at work in her little room that opened on the garden. Each was engaged
+in some peculiar task, and each seemed bent upon her labor in that
+preoccupied way which would imply that the cares of needlework make no
+mean call upon human faculties. A close observer would, however, have
+remarked that though Miss Barrington stitched vigorously away at the
+background for a fierce tiger with measly spots over him, Polly seemed
+oftener to contemplate than continue her handiwork; while Josephine's
+looks strayed constantly from the delicate tracery she was following, to
+the garden, where the roses blended with the jasmine, and the drooping
+honeysuckles hung listlessly over the boughs of the apple-tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If your work wearies you, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, &ldquo;you had better read
+for us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no, not at all, aunt; I like it immensely. I was only wondering why
+one should devise such impossible foliage, when we have the real thing
+before us, in all its grace and beauty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said the old lady; &ldquo;the sight of a real tiger would not put me
+out of countenance with my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It certainly ought not, ma'am,&rdquo; said Polly; while she added, in a faint
+whisper, &ldquo;for there is assuredly no rivalry in the case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps Miss Dill is not too absorbed in her study of nature, as applied
+to needlework, to read out the newspaper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do it with pleasure, ma'am. Where shall I begin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Deaths and marriages first, of course, child. Then fashion and varieties;
+take the accidents afterwards, and close with anything remarkable in
+politics, or any disastrous occurrence in high life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly obeyed to the letter; once only straying into an animated account of
+a run with the Springfield fox-hounds, where three riders out of a large
+field came in at the death; when Miss Dinah stopped her abruptly, saying,
+&ldquo;I don't care for the obituary of a fox, young lady. Go on with something
+else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you have the recent tragedy at Ring's End, ma'am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know it by heart Is there nothing new in the fashions,&mdash;how are
+bonnets worn? What's the latest sleeve? What's the color in vogue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A delicate blue, ma'am; a little off the sky, and on the hyacinth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very becoming to fair people,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, with a shake of her blond
+ringlets.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The Prince's Hussars!' Would you like to hear about <i>them</i>, ma'am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By all means.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's a very short paragraph. 'The internal troubles of this unhappy
+regiment would seem to be never ending. We last week informed our readers
+that a young subaltern of the corps, the son of one of our most
+distinguished generals, had thrown up his commission and repaired to the
+Continent, to enable him to demand a personal satisfaction from his
+commanding officer, and we now learn that the Major in question is
+precluded from accepting the gage of battle by something stronger than
+military etiquette.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Read it again, child; that vile newspaper slang always puzzles me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly recited the passage in a clear and distinct voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you understand by it, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take it to mean nothing, madam. One of those stirring pieces of
+intelligence which excites curiosity, and are no more expected to be
+explained than a bad riddle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It cannot surely be that he shelters himself under his position towards
+us? That I conclude is hardly possible!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Miss Barrington said this as a reflection, she addressed herself
+almost directly to Josephine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As far as I am concerned, aunt,&rdquo; answered Josephine, promptly, &ldquo;the Major
+may fight the monster of the Drachenfels to-morrow, if he wishes it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, here is another mystery apparently on the same subject. 'The Lascar,
+Lal-Adeen, whom our readers will remember as having figured in a
+police-court a few days back, and was remanded till the condition of his
+wound&mdash;a severe sabre-cut on the scalp&mdash;should permit his
+further examination, and on the same night made his escape from the
+hospital, has once again, and very unexpectedly, turned up at
+Boulogne-sur-Mer. His arrival in this country&mdash;some say voluntarily,
+others under a warrant issued for his apprehension&mdash;will probably
+take place to-day or to-morrow, and, if report speak truly, be followed by
+some of the most singular confessions which the public has heard for a
+long time back.' 'The Post' contradicts the statement, and declares 'no
+such person has ever been examined before the magistrate, if he even have
+any existence at all.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what interest has all this for us?&rdquo; asked Miss Dinah, sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not forget, ma'am, that this is the same man Major Stapylton was
+said to have wounded; and whose escape scandal hinted he had connived at,
+and who now 'does not exist.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I declare Miss Dill, I remember no such thing; but it appears to me that
+Major Stapylton occupies a very considerable space in your own thoughts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy Polly likes him, aunt,&rdquo; said Josephine, with a slight smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I will own he interests me; there is about him a mysterious
+something that says, 'I have more in my head and on my heart than you
+think of, and more, perhaps, than you could carry if the burden were
+yours.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A galley-slave might say the same, Miss Dill.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt of it, ma'am; and if there be men who mix in the great world,
+and dine at grand houses, with something of the galley-slave on their
+conscience, they assuredly impress us with an amount of fear that is half
+a homage. One dreads them as he does a tiger, but the terror is mingled
+with admiration.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is nonsense, young lady, and baneful nonsense, too, begotten of
+French novels and a sickly sentimentality. I hope Fifine despises it as
+heartily as I do.&rdquo; The passionate wrath which she displayed extended to
+the materials of her work-basket, and while rolls of worsted were upset
+here, needles were thrown there; and at last, pushing her embroidery-frame
+rudely away, she arose and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dearest Polly, how could you be so indiscreet! You know, far better than
+I do, how little patience she has with a paradox.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sweet Fifine,&rdquo; said the other, in a low whisper, &ldquo;I was dying to get
+rid of her, and I knew there was only one way of effecting it. You may
+remark that whenever she gets into a rage, she rushes out into the
+flower-garden, and walks round and round till she's ready to drop. There
+she is already; you may gauge her anger by the number of her revolutions
+in a minute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why did you wish her away, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll tell you why; that is, there is a charming French word for what I
+mean, the verb 'agacer,' all untranslatable as it is. Now there are
+moments when a person working in the same room&mdash;reading, writing,
+looking out of the window&mdash;becomes an insupportable infliction. You
+reason, and say, 'How absurd, how childish, how ungenerous,' and so forth.
+It won't do; for as you look round he is there still, and by his mere
+presence keeps up the ferment in your thoughts. You fancy, at last, that
+he stands between you and your inner self, a witness that won't let your
+own conscience whisper to you, and you come in the end to hate him. Your
+dear aunt was on the high-road to this goal, when I bethought me of my
+expedient! And now we are all alone, dearest, make me a confession.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not like Major Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you do like somebody else?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; said she, slowly, and dividing the syllables as she spoke them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That being the case, and seeing, as you do, that your aunt is entirely of
+your own mind, at least as to the man you do not care for, why don't you
+declare as much frankly to your grandfather, and break off the negotiation
+at once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just because that dear old grandpapa asked me not to be precipitate, not
+to be rash. He did not tell me that I must love Major Stapylton, or must
+marry him; but he said, 'If you only knew, Fifine, what a change in our
+fortune would come of a change in <i>your</i> feelings; if you could but
+imagine, child, how the whole journey of life might be rendered easier,
+all because you took the right-hand road instead of the left; if you could
+guess these things, and what might follow them&mdash;'&rdquo; She stopped.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. I have said all that he said; he kissed my cheek as he got thus far,
+and hurried away from the room.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you, like a sweet, obedient child, hastened away to yours; wrote a
+farewell, a heart-broken farewell, to Fred Conyers; and solemnly swore to
+your own conscience you 'd marry a man you disliked. These are the sort of
+sacrifices the world has a high admiration for; but do you know, Fifine,
+the world limps a little in its morality sometimes, and is not one-half
+the fine creature it thinks itself. For instance, in the midst of all its
+enthusiasm for you, it has forgotten that in accepting for your husband a
+man you do not love, you are doing a dishonesty; and that, besides this,
+you really love another. It is what the French call the aggravating
+circumstance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean to do nothing of the kind!&rdquo; broke in Fifine, boldly. &ldquo;Your lecture
+does not address itself to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not be angry, Fifine,&rdquo; said the other, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is rather too hard to be rebuked for the faults one might have, but
+has not committed. It's like saying how wet you 'd have been had you
+fallen into that pool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it also means, don't fall into the pool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know, Polly,&rdquo; said Josephine, archly, &ldquo;I have a sort of suspicion
+that you don't dislike this Major yourself! Am I right?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not say you were altogether wrong; that is, he interests me, or,
+rather, he puzzles me, and it piques my ingenuity to read him, just as it
+would to make out a cipher to which I had only one-half the key.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such a feeling as that would never inspire a tender interest, at least,
+with <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor did I say it was, Fifine. I have read in some book of my father's how
+certain physicians inoculated themselves with plague, the better to note
+the phenomena, and trace the course; and I own I can understand their
+zeal, and I 'd risk something to decipher this man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This may be very nice in medicine, Polly, but very bad in morals! At all
+events, don't catch the plague for the sake of saving <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! I assure you any step I take shall be done in the interests of
+science solely; not but that I have a small debt to acquit towards the
+gallant Major.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have! What can it possibly be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it was this wise,&rdquo; said she, with a half-sigh. &ldquo;We met at a
+country-house here, and he paid me certain attentions, made me compliments
+on my riding, which I knew to be good, and my singing, which was just
+tolerable; said the usual things which mean nothing, and a few of those
+more serious ones which are supposed to be more significant; and then he
+asked my father's leave to come and visit him, and actually fixed a day
+and an hour. And we, poor people, all delighted with the flattery of such
+high notice, and thinking of the effect upon our neighbors so splendid a
+visitor would produce, made the most magnificent preparations to receive
+him,&mdash;papa in a black satin waistcoat, mamma in her lilac ribbons. I
+myself,&mdash;having put the roof on a pigeon-pie, and given the last
+finishing touch to a pagoda of ruby jelly,&mdash;I, in a charming figured
+muslin and a blush rose in my hair, awaited the hour of attack! And, after
+all, he never came. No, Fifine, never came! He forgot us, or he changed
+his mind, or something else turned up that he liked better; or&mdash;which
+is just as likely as any of the three&mdash;he thought it would be a
+charming piece of impertinence to pass off on such small folk, who
+presumed to fancy themselves company for him. At all events, Fifine, we
+saw him no more. He went his way somewhere, and we were left lamenting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you really liked him, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, of the two, I disliked him; but I wished very much that he might like
+<i>me!</i> I saw him very overbearing and very insolent to those who were
+certainly his equals, assuming a most offensive superiority everywhere and
+to any one, and I thought what an awful humiliation it would be if so
+great a personage were to be snubbed by the doctor's daughter. I wanted to
+give a lesson which could only be severe if it came from one humble as
+myself; but he defeated me, Fifine, and I am still his debtor! If I did
+not like him before, you may believe that I hate him now; and I came off
+here this morning, in hot haste, for no other purpose than to set you
+against him, and induce you to regard him as I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was little need,&rdquo; said Fifine, calmly; &ldquo;but here comes my aunt back
+again. Make your submission quickly, Polly, or it will be too late to
+expect mercy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll do better,&rdquo; said Polly, rising. &ldquo;I 'll let my trial go on in my
+absence;&rdquo; and with this she stepped out of the window as Miss Barrington
+entered by the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XI. STAPYLTON'S VISIT AT &ldquo;THE HOME&rdquo;
+</h2>
+<p>
+So secretly had Barrington managed, that he negotiated the loan of five
+hundred pounds on a mortgage of the cottage without ever letting his
+sister hear of it; and when she heard on a particular day that her brother
+expected Mr. Kinshela, the attorney, from Kilkenny, on business, she made
+the occasion the pretext of a visit to Dr. Dill, taking Josephine with
+her, to pass the day there.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington was therefore free to receive his lawyer at his ease, and
+confer with him alone. Not that he cared much for his company; he felt
+towards the attorney pretty much as an ardent soldier feels to a
+non-combatant, the commissary, or the paymaster. Had he been a barrister,
+indeed, old Peter would have welcomed him with the zest of true
+companionship; he would have ransacked his memory for anecdotes, and
+prepared for the meeting as for an encounter of sharp wits. Now it is no
+part of my task to present Mr. Kinshela more than passingly to my reader,
+and I will merely say that he was a shrewd, commonplace man, whose
+practice rarely introduced him to the higher classes of his county, and
+who recognized Barrington, even in his decline, as a person of some
+consideration.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had dined well, and sat over their wine in the little dining-room
+over the river, a favorite spot of Barrington's when he wished to be
+confidential, for it was apart from the rest of the cottage, and removed
+from all intrusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, you won't tell me, Kinshela, who lent us this money?&rdquo; said the old
+man, as he passed the decanter across the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not that I won't, sir, but I can't. It was in answer to an
+advertisement I inserted in the 'Times,' that I got an application from
+Granger and Wood to supply particulars; and I must say there was no
+unnecessary security on their part. It was as speedily settled a
+transaction as I ever conducted, and I believe in my heart we might have
+had a thousand pounds on it just as easily as five hundred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As well as it is, Kinshela. When the day of repayment comes round, I'll
+perhaps find it heavy enough;&rdquo; and he sighed deeply as he spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who knows, sir? There never was a time that capital expended on land was
+more remunerative than the present.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, Mr. Kinshela well knew that the destination of the money they spoke
+of was not in this direction, and that it had as little to say to subsoil
+drainage or top dressing as to the conversion of the heathen; but he was
+angling for a confidence, and he did not see how to attain it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington smiled before he answered,&mdash;one of those sad, melancholy
+smiles which reveal a sorrow a man is not able to suppress,&mdash;and then
+he said, &ldquo;I 'm afraid, Kinshela, I 'll not test the problem this time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be better employed, perhaps, sir. You mean, probably, to take
+your granddaughter up to the drawing-room at the Castle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never so much as thought of it, Joe Kinshela; the fact is, that money
+is going where I have sent many a hundred before it,&mdash;in law! I have
+had a long, wearisome, costly suit, that has well-nigh beggared me; and of
+that sum you raised for me I don't expect to have a shilling by this day
+week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I heard something about that, sir,&rdquo; said the other, cautiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was it you heard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, of course, worth repeating; nothing from any one that knew the
+matter himself; just the gossip that goes about, and no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, let us hear the gossip that goes about, and I'll promise to tell
+you if it's true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, indeed,&rdquo; said Kinshela, drawing a long breath, &ldquo;they say that your
+claim is against the India Board.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barring ton nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that it is a matter little short of a million is in dispute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+He nodded again twice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And they say, too,&mdash;of course, on very insufficient knowledge,&mdash;that
+if you would have abated your demands once on a time, you might readily
+have got a hundred thousand pounds, or even more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's not impossible,&rdquo; muttered Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that, now&mdash;&rdquo; he stammered for an instant, and then stopped.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But now? Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure, sir, they can know nothing about it; it's just idle talk, and no
+more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on, and tell me what they say <i>now</i>,&rdquo; said Barrington, with a
+strong force on the last word.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They say you 'll be beaten, sir,&rdquo; said he, with an effort.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And do they say why, Kinshela?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, sir; they say you won't take advice; and no matter what Mr.
+Withering counsels, or is settled in consultation, you go your own way and
+won't mind them; and that you have been heard to declare you 'll have all,
+or nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They give me more credit than I deserve, Kinshela. It is, perhaps, what I
+ought to have said, for I have often <i>thought it</i>. But in return for
+all the kind interest my neighbors take about me, let them know that
+matters look better for us than they once did. Perhaps,&rdquo; added he, with a
+laugh,&mdash;&ldquo;perhaps I have overcome my obstinacy, or perhaps my
+opponents have yielded to it. At all events, Joe, I believe I see land at
+last, and it was a long 'lookout' and many a fog-bank I mistook for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what makes you think now you'll win?&rdquo; said the other, growing bolder
+by the confidence reposed in him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington half started at the presumption of the question; but he
+suddenly remembered how it was he himself who had invited the discussion,
+so he said calmly,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My hope is not without a foundation. I expect by the mail to-night a
+friend who may be able to tell me that I have won, or as good as won.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Kinshela was dying to ask who the friend was, but even his curiosity had
+its prudential limits; so he merely took out his watch, and, looking at
+it, remarked that the mail would pass in about twenty minutes or so.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the way, I must n't forget to send a servant to wait on the roadside;&rdquo;
+and he rang the bell and said, &ldquo;Let Darby go up to the road and take Major
+Stapylton's luggage when he arrives.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that the Major Stapylton is going to be broke for the doings at
+Manchester, sir?&rdquo; asked Kinshela.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is the same Major Stapylton that a rascally press is now libelling and
+calumniating,&rdquo; said Barrington, hotly. &ldquo;As to being broke, I don't believe
+that we have come yet to that pass in England that the discipline of our
+army is administered by every scribbler in a newspaper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I humbly crave your pardon, sir, if I have said the slightest thing to
+offend; but I only meant to ask, was he the officer they were making such
+a fuss about?&rdquo; &ldquo;He is an officer of the highest distinction, and a
+wellborn gentleman to boot,&mdash;two admirable reasons for the assaults
+of a contemptible party. Look you, Kinshela; you and I are neither of us
+very young or inexperienced men, but I would ask you, have we learned any
+wiser lesson from our intercourse with life than to withhold our judgment
+on the case of one who rejects the sentence of a mob, and appeals to the
+verdict of his equals?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if he cut the people down in cold blood,&mdash;if it be true that he
+laid open that poor black fellow's cheek from the temple to the chin&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If he did no such thing,&rdquo; broke in Barrington; &ldquo;that is to say, if there
+is no evidence whatever that he did so, what will your legal mind say
+then, Joe Kinshela?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just this, sir. I'd say&mdash;what all the newspapers are saying&mdash;that
+he got the man out of the way,&mdash;bribed and sent him off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not hint that he murdered him, and buried him within the precincts of
+the jail? I declare I wonder at your moderation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sure, sir, that if I suspected he was an old friend of yours&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing of the kind,&mdash;a friend of very short standing; but what has
+that to say to it? Is he less entitled to fair play whether he knew me or
+not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All I know of the case is from the newspapers; and as I scarcely see one
+word in his favor, I take it there is not much to be said in his defence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if my ears don't deceive me, that was the guard's horn I heard
+then. The man himself will be here in five minutes or so. You shall
+conduct the prosecution, Kinshela, and I 'll be judge between you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heaven forbid, sir; on no account whatever!&rdquo; said Kinshela, trembling all
+over. &ldquo;I'm sure, Mr. Barrington, you couldn't think of repeating what I
+said to you in confidence&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, Kinshela. You shall do it yourself; and it's only fair to tell
+you that he is a right clever fellow, and fully equal to the task of
+defending himself.&rdquo; Peter arose as he spoke, and walked out upon the lawn,
+affectedly to meet his coming guest, but in reality to cover a laugh that
+was half smothering him, so comical was the misery expressed in the
+attorney's face, and so ludicrous was his look of terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course I need not say that it never occurred to Barrington to realize
+his threat, which he merely uttered in the spirit of that quizzing habit
+that was familiar to him. &ldquo;Yes, Kinshela,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;here he comes. I
+recognize his voice already;&rdquo; and Barrington now walked forward to welcome
+his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not till after some minutes of conversation, and when the light
+fell strongly on Stapylton's features, that Barrington saw how changed a
+few weeks of care had made him. He looked at the least ten years older
+than before. His eyes had lost their bold and daring expression, too, and
+were deep sunk, and almost furtive in their glance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are tired, I fear,&rdquo; said Barrington, as the other moved his hand
+across his forehead, and, with a slight sigh, sank down upon a sofa.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Less tired than worried,&mdash;harassed,&rdquo; said he, faintly. &ldquo;Just as at a
+gaming-table a man may lose more in half an hour's high play than years of
+hard labor could acquire, there are times of life when we dissipate more
+strength and vigor than we ever regain. I have had rough usage since I saw
+you last,&rdquo; said he, with a very sickly smile. &ldquo;How are the ladies,&mdash;well,
+I hope?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perfectly well. They have gone to pass the day with a neighbor, and will
+be home presently. By the way, I left a friend here a few moments ago.
+What can have become of him?&rdquo; and he rang the bell hastily. &ldquo;Where's Mr.
+Kinshela, Darby?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone to bed, sir. He said he 'd a murthering headache, and hoped your
+honor would excuse him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Barrington laughed heartily at this message, Stapylton never asked
+the reason, but sat immersed in thought and unmindful of all around him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect you ought to follow his good example, Major,&rdquo; said Peter.
+&ldquo;A mug of mulled claret for a nightcap, and a good sleep, will set you all
+right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will take more than that to do it,&rdquo; said the Major, sadly. Then
+suddenly rising, and pacing the room with quick, impatient steps, he said,
+&ldquo;What could have induced you to let them bring your claim before the
+House? They are going to do so, ain't they?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. Tom Withering says that nothing will be so effectual, and I thought
+you agreed with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never. Nothing of the kind. I said, threaten it; insist that if they
+continue the opposition, that you will,&mdash;that you must do so; but I
+never was the fool to imagine that it could really be a wise step. What 's
+the fate of all such motions? I ask you. There's a speech&mdash;sometimes
+an able one&mdash;setting forth a long catalogue of unmerited injuries and
+long suffering. There's a claim made out that none can find a flaw in, and
+a story that, if Parliament was given to softness, might move men almost
+to tears, and at the end of it up rises a Minister to say how deeply he
+sympathizes with the calamity of the case, but that this house is, after
+all, not the fitting locality for a discussion which is essentially a
+question of law, and that, even if it were, and if all the allegations
+were established,&mdash;a point to which he by no means gave adhesion,&mdash;there
+was really no available fund at the disposal of the Crown to make
+reparation for such losses. Have you not seen this, or something like
+this, scores of times? Can you tell me of one that succeeded?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A case of such wrong as this cannot go without reparation,&rdquo; said Peter,
+with emotion. &ldquo;The whole country will demand it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The country will do no such thing. If it were a question of penalty or
+punishment,&mdash;yes! the country would demand it. Fine, imprison,
+transport, hang him! are easy words to utter, and cheap ones; but pay him,
+reinstate him, reward him! have a very different sound and significance.
+They figure in the budget, and are formidable on the hustings. Depend on
+it, Mr. Barrington, the step will be a false one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has been my fate never to have got the same advice for two weeks
+together since the day I entered on this weary suit,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+with a peevishness not natural to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may as well tell you the whole truth at once,&rdquo; said Stapylton. &ldquo;The
+Board have gone back of all their good intentions towards us; some recent
+arrivals from India, it is said, have kindled again the old fire of
+opposition, and we are to be met by a resistance bold and uncompromising.
+They are prepared to deny everything we assert; in fact, they have
+resolved to sweep all the pieces off the board and begin the whole game
+again, and all because you have taken this unfortunate course of appeal to
+Parliament.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you told Withering this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; I have talked the matter over for nearly four hours with him. Like a
+lawyer, he was most eager to know from what source came the new evidence
+so damaging to us. I could only guess at this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your guess was&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I scarcely like to own to you that I take a less favorable view of
+mankind than you do, who know it better; but in this case my suspicion
+attaches to a man who was once your son's dearest friend, but grew to be
+afterwards his deadliest enemy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not have this said, Major Stapylton. I know whom you mean, and I
+don't believe a word of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton simply shrugged his shoulders, and continued to pace the room
+without speaking, while Barrington went on muttering, half aloud: &ldquo;No, no,
+impossible; quite impossible. These things are not in nature. I don't
+credit them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You like to think very well of the world, sir!&rdquo; said the Major, with a
+faint scorn, so faint as scarcely to color his words.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think very badly of it, and you 'll soon come down to the level you
+assign it,&rdquo; said Peter, boldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best suffrages.
+You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I have met with from
+the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous usage,&mdash;not very
+just. Well! what will you say when I tell you that I have been refused an
+inquiry into my conduct at Manchester; that the Government is of opinion
+that such an investigation might at the moment be prejudicial to the
+public peace, without any counterbalancing advantage on the score of a
+personal vindication; that they do not deem the time favorable for the
+calm and unbiassed judgment of the country; in one short word, sir, they
+'d rather ruin a Major of Hussars than risk a Cabinet. I am to exchange
+into any corps or any service I can; and they are to tide over these
+troubles on the assumption of having degraded me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope you wrong them,&mdash;I do hope you wrong them!&rdquo; cried Barrington,
+passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall see if I do,&rdquo; said he, taking several letters from his pocket,
+and searching for one in particular. &ldquo;Yes, here it is. This is from
+Aldridge, the private secretary of the Commander-in-chief. It is very
+brief, and strictly secret:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Dear S.,&mdash;The &ldquo;Chief&rdquo; does not like your scrape at all. You did
+rather too much, or too little,&mdash;a fatal mistake dealing with a mob.
+You must consent&mdash;there's no help for it&mdash;to be badly used, and
+an injured man. If you don't like the half-pay list,&mdash;which would, in
+my mind, be the best step,&mdash;there 's the Seventeenth ordered to
+Baroda, and Maidstone refuses to go. This, or the Second West India, are
+the only things open. Above all, don't show fight; don't rally a party
+round you, for there is not a man in England whose influence is
+sufficiently great to stand between you and the public. A conple of years'
+patience and a hot climate will set all right, and reinstate you
+everywhere. Come over here at once and I 'll do my best for you.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Yours ever,
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'St. George Aldridge.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a friend's letter,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a sneer; &ldquo;and he has no
+better counsel to give me than to plead guilty, and ask for a mitigated
+punishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Harrington was silenced; he would not by any expression of indignation add
+to the great anger of the other, and he said nothing. At last he said, &ldquo;I
+wish from my heart&mdash;I wish I could be of any service to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are the only man living who can,&rdquo; was the prompt answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so&mdash;in what way? Let me hear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;When I addressed a certain letter to you some time back, I was in a
+position both of fortune and prospect to take at least something from the
+presumption of my offer. Now, though my fortune remains, my future is more
+than clouded, and if I ask you to look favorably on my cause now, it is to
+your generosity I must appeal; I am, in fact, asking you to stand by a
+fallen man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+This speech, uttered in a voice slightly shaken by agitation, went to
+Barrington's heart. There was not a sentiment in his nature so certain to
+respond to a call upon it as this one of sympathy with the beaten man; the
+weaker side was always certain of his adherence. With a nice tact
+Stapylton said no more, but, pushing open the window, walked out upon the
+smooth sward, on which a faint moonlight flickered. He had shot his bolt,
+and saw it as it quivered in his victim's flesh. Barrington was after him
+in an instant, and, drawing an arm within his he said in a low voice, &ldquo;You
+may count upon me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton wrung his hand warmly, without speaking. After walking for a few
+moments, side by side, he said: &ldquo;I must be frank with you, Mr. Barrington.
+I have little time and no taste for circumlocution; I cannot conceal from
+myself that I am no favorite with your sister. I was not as eager as I
+ought to have been to cultivate her good opinion; I was a little piqued at
+what I thought mere injustices on her part,&mdash;small ones, to be sure,
+but they wounded me, and with a temper that always revolted against a
+wrong, I resented them, and I fear me, in doing so, I jeopardized her
+esteem. If she is as generous as her brother, she will not remember these
+to me in my day of defeat. Women, however, have their own ideas of mercy,
+as they have of everything, and she may not choose to regard me as you
+have done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect you are wrong about this,&rdquo; said Harrington, breaking in.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I wish I may be; at all events, I must put the feeling to the test
+at once, for I have formed my plan, and mean to begin it immediately.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very few words will tell it. I intend to go on half-pay, or sell out if
+that be refused me; set out for India by the next mail, and, with what
+energy remains to me, vindicate your son's claim. I have qualifications
+that will make me better than a better man. I am well versed in
+Hindostanee, and a fair Persian scholar; I have a wide acquaintance with
+natives of every rank, and I know how and where to look for information.
+It is not my disposition to feel over-sanguine, but I would stake all I
+possess on my success, for I see exactly the flaws in the chain, and I
+know where to go to repair them. You have witnessed with what ardor I
+adopted the suit before; but you cannot estimate the zeal with which I
+throw myself into it now&mdash;<i>now</i> that, like George Barring-ton
+himself, I am a man wronged, outraged, and insulted.&rdquo; For a few seconds be
+seemed overcome by passion and unable to continue; then he went on: &ldquo;If
+your granddaughter will accept me, it is my intention to settle on her all
+I possess. Our marriage can be private, and she shall be free to accompany
+me or to remain here, as she likes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But how can all this be done so hurriedly? You talk of starting at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must, if I would save your son's cause. The India Board are sending out
+their emissaries to Calcutta, and I must anticipate them&mdash;if I cannot
+do more, by gaining them over to us on the voyage out. It is a case for
+energy and activity, and I want to employ both.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The time is very short for all this,&rdquo; said Barrington, again.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is, sir, and so are the few seconds which may rescue a man from
+drowning! It is in the crisis of my fate that I ask you to stand by me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But have you any reason to believe that my granddaughter will hear you
+favorably? You are almost strangers to each other?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If she will not give me the legal right to make her my heir, I mean to
+usurp the privilege. I have already been with a lawyer for that purpose.
+My dear sir,&rdquo; added he, passionately, &ldquo;I want to break with the past
+forever! When the world sets up its howl against a man, the odds are too
+great! To stand and defy it he must succumb or retreat. Now, I mean to
+retire, but with the honors of war, mark you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sister will never consent to it,&rdquo; muttered Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you? Have I the assurance of <i>your</i> support?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can scarcely venture to say 'yes,' and yet I can't bear to say 'no' to
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is less than I looked for from you,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mournfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know Dinah so well. I know how hopeless it would be to ask her
+concurrence to this plan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She may not take the generous view of it; but there is a worldly one
+worth considering,&rdquo; said Stapylton, bitterly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, sir, if you count on <i>that</i>, I would not give a copper
+half-penny for your chance of success!&rdquo; cried Barrington, passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have quite misconceived me; you have wronged me altogether,&rdquo; broke in
+Stapylton, in a tone of apology; for he saw the mistake he had made, and
+hastened to repair it. &ldquo;My meaning was this&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So much the better. I'm glad I misunderstood you. But here come the
+ladies. Let us go and meet them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One word,&mdash;only one word. Will you befriend me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do all that I can,&mdash;that is, all that I ought,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, as he led him away, and re-entered the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not meet them to-night,&rdquo; said Stapylton, hurriedly. &ldquo;I am nervous
+and agitated. I will say good-night now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+This was the second time within a few days that Stapylton had shown an
+unwillingness to confront Miss Barrington, and Peter thought over it long
+and anxiously. &ldquo;What can he mean by it?&rdquo; said he, to himself. &ldquo;Why should
+he be so frank and outspoken with me, and so reserved with her? What can
+Dinah know of him? What can she suspect, that is not known to me? It is
+true they never did like each other,&mdash;never 'hit it off' together;
+but that is scarcely <i>his</i> fault. My excellent sister throws away
+little love on strangers, and opens every fresh acquaintance with a very
+fortifying prejudice against the newly presented. However it happens,&rdquo;
+muttered he, with a sigh, &ldquo;<i>she</i> is not often wrong, and <i>I</i> am
+very seldom right;&rdquo; and, with this reflection, he turned once again to
+resume his walk in the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XII. A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT
+</h2>
+<p>
+Stapylton did not make his appearance at breakfast; he sent down a message
+that he had passed a feverish night, and begged that Dr. Dill might be
+sent for. Though Barrington made two attempts to see his guest, the
+quietness of the room on each occasion implied that he was asleep, and,
+fearing to disturb him, he went downstairs again on tiptoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is what the persecution has done, Dinah,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;They have
+brought that stout-hearted fellow so low that he may be the victim of a
+fever to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nonsense, Peter. Men of courage don't fall sick because the newspapers
+calumniate them. They have other things on their minds than such puny
+attacks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So he may, likely enough, too. He is bent heart and soul on what I told
+you last night, and I 'm not surprised if he never closed his eyes
+thinking of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Neither did I!&rdquo; said she, curtly, and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctor was not long in arriving, and, after a word or two with
+Barrington, hastened to the patient's room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we alone?&rdquo; asked Stapylton, cutting short the bland speech with which
+Dill was making his approaches. &ldquo;Draw that curtain a bit, and take a good
+look at me. Are my eyes bloodshot? Are the pupils dilated? I had a bad
+sunstroke once; see if there be any signs of congestion about me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I see none. A little flushed; your pulse, too, is accelerated, and
+the heart's action is labored&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind the heart; if the head be well, it will take care of it. Reach
+me that pocket-book; I want to acquit one debt to you before I incur
+another. No humbug between us;&rdquo; and he pressed some notes into the other's
+palm as he spoke. &ldquo;Let us understand each other fully, and at once. I 'm
+not very ill; but I want <i>you</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am at your orders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faithfully,&mdash;loyally?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faithfully,&mdash;loyally!&rdquo; repeated the other after him.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/454.jpg" width="100%" alt="454 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You've read the papers lately,&mdash;you've seen these attacks on me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, what do they say and think here&mdash;I mean in this house&mdash;about
+them? How do they discuss them? Remember, I want candor and frankness; no
+humbug. I'll not stand humbug.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The women are against you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both of them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How comes that?&mdash;on what grounds?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The papers accused you of cruelty; they affirmed that there was no cause
+for the measures of severity you adopted; and they argued&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't bore me with all that balderdash. I asked you how was it that these
+women assumed I was in the wrong?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I was about to tell you, if you had not interrupted me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is, they believed what they read in the newspapers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, of course, swallowed that fine story about the Hindoo fellow that I
+first cut down, and afterwards bribed to make his escape from the
+hospital?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect they half believed it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or rather, believed half of it, the cutting down part! Can you tell me
+physiologically,&mdash;for I think it comes into that category,&mdash;why
+it is that women not otherwise ill-natured, in nine cases out of ten take
+the worst alternative as the credible one? But never mind that. They
+condemn me. Is n't it so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; and while old Barrington insists&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who cares what he insists? Such advocacy as his only provokes attack, and
+invites persecution. I 'd rather have no such allies!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe you are right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want fellows like yourself, doctor,&mdash;sly, cautious, subtle
+fellows,&mdash;accustomed to stealing strong medicines into the system in
+small doses; putting the patient, as you call it in your slang, 'under the
+influence' of this, that, and t'other,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Dill smiled blandly at the compliment to his art, and Stapylton went on:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I have time just now for this sort of chronic treatment. I need
+a heroic remedy, doctor. I 'm in love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Dill, with an accent nicely balanced between interest and
+incredulity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, and I want to marry!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The granddaughter. There is no need, I hope, to make the distinction, for
+I don't wish to be thought insane. Now you have the case. What 's your
+prescription?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Propose for her!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I have, but they hesitate. The old man is not unfavorable; he is,
+perhaps, more: he is, in a measure, friendly; but what avails such
+advocacy? I want another guess sort of aid,&mdash;a clever man; or, what
+is better still, a clever woman, to befriend me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+He waited some seconds for a reply, but Dill did not speak; so he went on:
+&ldquo;A clever woman, to take a woman's view of the case, balancing this
+against that, never ignoring an obstacle, but inquiring what there may be
+to compensate for it Do you know such a one, doctor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps I may; but I have my doubts about securing her services.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even with a retainer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even with a retainer. You see, Major,&rdquo;&mdash;here Dill dropped his voice
+to a most confidential whisper,&mdash;&ldquo;my daughter Polly,&mdash;for I know
+we both have her in mind,&mdash;Polly is a strange sort of girl, and very
+hard to understand; for while, if the case were her own, she 'd no more
+think of romance than she would of giving ten guineas for a dress, if she
+was advising another whose position and prospects were higher than hers,
+it's the romantic part of it she'd lay all the stress on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;From which I gather that my suit will not stand this test!&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, with a peculiar smile. &ldquo;Eh, is n't that your meaning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are certainly some years older than the lady,&rdquo; said Dill, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not old enough to be, as the world would surely say, 'her father,' but
+fully old enough to give license for sarcasm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, as she will be a great fortune&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a sixpence,&mdash;she'll not have sixpence, doctor. That bubble has
+burst at last, and can never be blown again. The whole claim has been
+rejected, refused, thrown out, and there 's an end of it. It amuses the
+old man to sit on the wreck and fancy he can repair the shattered timbers
+and make them seaworthy; and, for the time he is likely to last, it is
+only kindness to leave him to his delusion; but he is ruined,&mdash;ruined
+beyond recall, and as I have told you, the girl will have nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do they know this,&mdash;has Barrington heard it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I broke it to him last night, but I don't think he fully realized
+the tidings; he has certain reserves&mdash;certain little conceits of his
+own&mdash;which are to supply him with a sort of hope; but let us talk of
+something more practical. How can we secure Miss Dill's services?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A few days ago, the easiest way would have been to offer to befriend her
+brother, but this morning brings us news that this is not needed,&mdash;he
+is coming home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a great event in its way; at least, it may be for Tom. It seems
+there was a collision at sea, somewhere near the Cape, between the ship
+'St. Helen's,' that carried out General Hunter and his staff, and the
+'Regulus,' with the Forty-ninth on board. It was at night, and a terrible
+sea on at the time. In the shock the 'St. Helen's' took fire; and as the
+two ships were inextricably locked together, the danger was common to
+each. While the boats were being lowered and manned,&mdash;for it was soon
+seen the vessel could not be saved,&mdash;a cry was raised that the fire
+was gaining on the fore-hold, and would soon reach the magazine. The woful
+news spread at once, and many jumped overboard in their terror. Just then
+Tom heard that there was a means of drowning the powder by opening a
+certain sluice, and, without waiting for more, he clambered across into
+the sinking vessel, made his way through smoke and fire, gained the spot,
+and succeeded, just as the very ladder itself had caught the flames. How
+he got back he cannot tell, for the vessel foundered in a few minutes, and
+he was so burned&mdash;face, cheek, and one shoulder&mdash;that he was
+unconscious of everything; and even when the account came, was still in
+bed, and not able to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He was a wild sort of lad, was he not,&mdash;a scamp, in short?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, not exactly that; idle&mdash;careless&mdash;kept bad company at
+times.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;These are the fellows who do this kind of thing once in their lives,&mdash;mark
+you, never twice. They never have more than one shot in their locker, but
+it will suffice in this case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the worthy doctor was very far from enthusiastic about his son's
+gallantry, there was a degree of coolness in the Major's estimate of it
+that almost shocked him; and he sat staring steadily at the stern bronzed
+face, and the hard lineaments of the man, and wondering of what strange
+stuff such natures were fashioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's quite clear, then, that for Master Tom we can do nothing half so
+good as chance has done for him,&rdquo; said Stapylton, after a short interval.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Chance and himself too,&rdquo; added the doctor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton made no answer, but, covering his eyes with his hand, lay deep
+in thought.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you only had the Attorney-General, Mr. Withering, on your side,&rdquo; said
+Dill. &ldquo;There is no man has the same influence over this family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not what <i>you</i> call influence I want, my good sir. It is a far
+more subtle and more delicate agent. I require the sort of aid, in fact,
+which your daughter could supply, if she would. An appointment awaits me
+in India, but I must occupy it at once. I have no time for a long
+courtship. I 'm just as hurried as that boy of yours was when he swamped
+the powder-magazine. It's a skirmish where I can't wait for the heavy
+artillery, but must do my best with the light field-guns,&mdash;do you
+understand me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Dill nodded, and Stapylton resumed: &ldquo;The thing can be done just by the
+very road that you have pronounced impossible,&mdash;that is, by the
+romantic side of it,&mdash;making it a case of violent love at first
+sight, the passion of a man past the heyday of youth, but yet young enough
+to feel a most ardent affection. I am, besides,&rdquo; said he, laughing with a
+strange blending of levity and sarcasm, &ldquo;a sort of Brummagem hero; have
+been wounded, led assaults, and that kind of thing, to a degree that
+puffery can take the benefit of. And, last of all, doctor, I am rich
+enough to satisfy greater ambitions than ought to live under such a roof
+as this. Do you see the part your daughter can take in this drama?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And could you induce her to accept it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not very certain,&mdash;I'd be slow to pledge myself to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mockingly; &ldquo;the passing glimpses we bachelors
+obtain of the working of that vaunted institution, The Family, fail to
+impress us with all its imputed excellence; you are, it seems to me, just
+as powerless within your own doors as I am regarding what goes on in a
+neighbor's house. I take it, however, that it can't be helped. Children,
+like colonies, are only governable when helpless.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect you are wrong, sir; at least, I fancy I have as much of the
+sort of influence you speak of as others; but still, I think, here, in
+this particular case, you would yourself be your best ambassador, if you
+were strong enough to come down with me in the boat to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I am!&rdquo; cried Stapylton, starting up to a sitting posture; &ldquo;and
+what then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would be better in my house than this,&rdquo; said Dill, mysteriously.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak out, and speak clearly, doctor; I have very little the matter with
+me, and am in no want of change of air. What I need is the assistance of
+one dexterous enough to advocate my plans with persons and in places to
+which I have no access. Your daughter is just such a one,&mdash;will she
+do it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We can ask her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, how will you explain my absence to these people here? What will you
+say for my not appearing at breakfast, and yet being able to take an
+airing with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will put it on hygienic grounds,&rdquo; said Dill, smiling acutely. &ldquo;My
+profession has a number of sanctuaries the profane vulgar can never enter.
+I 'll just step down now and ask Barrington to lend me his boat, and I 'll
+throw out a dark hint that I 'd like to manage a consultation on your case
+without alarming you, for which purpose I 'd ask Dr. Tobin to be at my
+house, when we arrive there, by mere accident, so that a conference would
+follow as a matter of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very wily,&mdash;very subtle all this, doctor. Do you know, I 'm half
+frightened at the thought of trusting myself to such a master of intrigue
+and mystification.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have no fears; I reserve all my craft for my clients.&rdquo; And with this he
+left the room, but only for a few minutes; for he met Barrington on the
+stairs, and speedily obtained permission to take his boat to Inistioge,
+having first pledged himself to come back with Stapylton to dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall see, we shall see,&rdquo; muttered Stapylton to himself. &ldquo;Your
+daughter must decide where I am to dine today.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+By the way&mdash;that is, as they glided along the bright river&mdash;Dill
+tried to prepare Stapylton for the task before him, by sundry hints as to
+Polly's temper and disposition, with warnings against this, and cautions
+about that. &ldquo;Above all,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;don't try to overreach her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perfect frankness&mdash;candor itself&mdash;is my device. Won't that do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must first see will she believe it,&rdquo; said the doctor, slyly; and for
+the remainder of the way there was a silence between them.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIII. CROSS-PURPOSES
+</h2>
+<h3>
+&ldquo;Where 's Miss Polly?&rdquo; said Dill, hastily, as he passed his threshold.
+</h3>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She's making the confusion of roses in the kitchen, sir,&rdquo; said the maid,
+whose chemistry had been a neglected study.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell her that I have come back, and that there is a gentleman along with
+me,&rdquo; said he, imperiously, as he led the way into his study. &ldquo;I have
+brought you into this den of mine, Major, because I would just say one
+word more by way of caution before you see Polly. You may imagine, from
+the small range of her intercourse with the world, and her village life,
+that her acuteness will not go very far; don't be too sure of that,&mdash;don't
+reckon too much on her want of experience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose I have encountered as sharp wits as hers before this time o'
+day,&rdquo; replied he, half peevishly; and then, with an air of better temper,
+added, &ldquo;I have no secrets to hide, no mystery to cloak. If I want her
+alliance, she shall herself dictate the terms that shall requite it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctor shook his head dubiously, but was silent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect, my good doctor,&rdquo; said Stapylton, laughing, &ldquo;that your
+charming daughter is a little, a very little, of a domestic despot; you
+are all afraid of her; never very sure of what she will say or do or think
+on any given circumstances, and nervously alive to the risk of her
+displeasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is something in what you say,&rdquo; remarked Dill, with a sigh; &ldquo;but it
+was always my mistake to bring up my children with too much liberty of
+action. From the time they were so high&rdquo;&mdash;and he held his hand out
+about a yard above the floor&mdash;&ldquo;they were their own masters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as the words had fallen from him, a little chubby, shock-headed
+fellow, about five years old, burst into the room, which he believed
+unoccupied, and then, suddenly seeing his papa, set up a howl of terror
+that made the house ring.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it, Jimmy,&mdash;what is it, my poor man?&rdquo; said Polly, rushing
+with tucked-up sleeves to the spot; and, catching him up in her arms, she
+kissed him affectionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you take him away?&mdash;will you take him out of that?&rdquo; hissed out
+Dill between his teeth. &ldquo;Don't you see Major Stapylton here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Major Stapylton will excuse a toilette that was never intended for
+his presence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will certainly say there could not be a more becoming one, nor a more
+charming tableau to display it in!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, Jimmy,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;you must have some bread and jam for
+getting me such a nice compliment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And she bore away the still sobbing urchin, who, burying his head in her
+bosom, could never summon courage to meet his father's eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a spacious garden you appear to have here!&rdquo; said Stapylton, who saw
+all the importance of a diversion to the conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a very much neglected one,&rdquo; said Dill, pathetically. &ldquo;My poor dear
+boy Tom used to take care of it when he was here; he had a perfect passion
+for flowers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Whether that Tom was associated in the Major's mind with some other very
+different tastes or not, Stapylton smiled slightly, and after a moment
+said, &ldquo;If you permit me, I 'll take a stroll through your garden, and
+think over what we have been talking of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make yourself at home in every respect,&rdquo; said Dill. &ldquo;I have a few
+professional calls to make in the village, but we 'll meet at luncheon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's in the garden, Polly,&rdquo; said Dill, as he passed his daughter on the
+stairs; &ldquo;he came over here this morning to have a talk with you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, sir!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; he has got it into his head that you can be of service to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not impossible, sir; I think I might.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm glad to bear it, Polly; I'm delighted to see you take a good sensible
+view of things. I need not tell you he's a knowing one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir. But, as I have heard you card-players say, 'he shows his hand.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So he does, Polly; but I have known fellows do that just to mislead the
+adversary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sorry adversaries that could be taken in so easily.&rdquo; And with a saucy
+toss of her head she passed on, scarcely noticing the warning gesture of
+her father's finger as she went.
+</p>
+<p>
+When she had found her work-basket and supplied herself with the means of
+occupying her fingers for an hour or so, she repaired to the garden and
+took her seat under a large elm, around whose massive trunk a mossy bench
+ran, divided by rustic-work into a series of separate places.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a churlish idea it was to erect these barricades, Miss Dill!&rdquo; said
+Stapylton as he seated himself at her side; &ldquo;how unpicturesque and how
+prudish!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was a simple notion of my brother Tom's,&rdquo; said she, smiling, &ldquo;who
+thought people would not be less agreeable by being reminded that they had
+a place of their own, and ought not to invade that of their neighbor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an unsocial thought!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Tom! A strange reproach to make against <i>you</i>,&rdquo; said she,
+laughing out.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the way, has n't he turned out a hero,&mdash;saved a ship and all she
+carried from the flames,&mdash;and all at the hazard of his own life?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has done a very gallant thing; and, what's more, I 'll venture to say
+there is not a man who saw it thinks so little of it as himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose that every brave man has more or less of that feeling.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm glad to learn this fact from such good authority,&rdquo; said she, with a
+slight bend of the head.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A prettily turned compliment, Miss Dill. Are you habitually given to
+flattery?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No? I rather think not. I believe the world is pleased to call me more
+candid than courteous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you let me take you at the world's estimate,&mdash;that is, will you
+do me the inestimable favor to bestow a little of this same candor upon <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Willingly. What is to be the subject of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The subject is a very humble one,&mdash;myself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How can I possibly adjudicate on such a theme?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better than you think for, perhaps!&rdquo; And for a moment he appeared awkward
+and ill at ease. &ldquo;Miss Dill,&rdquo; said he, after a pause, &ldquo;fortune has been
+using me roughly of late; and, like all men who deem themselves hardly
+treated, I fly at once to any quarter where I fancy I have found a more
+kindly disposition towards me. Am I indulging a self-delusion in believing
+that such sentiments are yours?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly Dill, with her own keen tact, had guessed what was the real object
+of Stapylton's visit. She had even read in her father's manner how he
+himself was a shareholder in the scheme, and she had made up her mind for
+a great frankness on each side; but now, seeing the diplomatic
+mys-teriousness with which the Major opened his attack, that love of
+mischievous drollery which entered into her nature suggested a very
+different line. She determined, in fact, to seem to accept the Major's
+speech as the preliminary to an offer of his hand. She therefore merely
+turned her head slightly, and in a low voice said, &ldquo;Continue!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not deceived myself, then,&rdquo; said he, with more warmth of manner.
+&ldquo;I have secured one kind heart in my interest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must own,&rdquo; said she, with a half-coquettish look of pique, &ldquo;that you
+scarcely deserve it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How,&mdash;in what way?&rdquo; asked he, in astonishment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a very short memory you are blessed with! Must I, then, remind you
+of a certain evening at Cobham? Must I recall what I thought at the time
+very particular, as they certainly were very pleasant, attentions on your
+part? Must I, also, bring to mind a certain promised visit from you, the
+day and hour all named by yourself,&mdash;a visit which never came off?
+And after all this, Major, are you not really a bold man to come down and
+take up your negotiation where you dropped it? Is there not in this a
+strong conviction of the greatness of Major Stapylton and the littleness
+of the doctor's daughter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton was struck dumb. When a general sees that what he meant as a
+feint has been converted into a real attack, the situation is often
+imminent; but what comparison in difficulty is there between that mistake
+and that of him who assails what he never desired to conquer? How he
+inwardly cursed the stupidity with which he had opened his negotiation!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I perceive,&rdquo; said she, triumphing over his confusion, &ldquo;that your calmer
+judgment does not reassure you. You feel that there is a certain levity in
+this conduct not quite excusable! Own it frankly, and at once!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will own, if you like, that I was never in a situation of greater
+embarrassment!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I tell you why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You couldn't; it would be totally impossible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will try, however, if you permit me. You do! Then here goes. You no
+more intended anything to come of your little flirtation at Cobham than
+you now do of a more serious blunder. You never came here this morning to
+make your court to <i>me</i>, You are much pained at the awkwardness of a
+situation so naturally wounding to me, and for the life of you, you cannot
+imagine what escape there is out of such a difficulty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are wonderfully clever, Miss Dill,&rdquo; said he; and there was an honest
+admiration in his look that gave the words a full significance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;but I am wonderfully good-natured. I forgive you what is
+the hardest thing in the world to forgive!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! if you would but be my friend,&rdquo; cried he, warmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a want of tact there was in that speech, Major Stapylton!&rdquo; said she,
+with a laugh; &ldquo;but perhaps you wanted to reverse the line of our dear
+little poet, who tells of some one 'that came but for Friendship, and took
+away Love'!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How cruel you are in all this mockery of me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does not the charge of cruelty come rather ill from <i>you?&mdash;you</i>,
+who can afford to sport with the affections of poor village maidens. From
+the time of that 'Major bold of Halifax' the song tells of, I never heard
+your equal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could you prevail upon yourself to be serious for a few minutes?&rdquo; said
+he, gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not,&mdash;at least not just now; but why should I make the
+attempt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because I would wish your aid in a serious contingency,&mdash;a matter in
+which I am deeply interested, and which involves probably my future
+happiness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, Major! is it possible that you are going to trifle with my feelings
+once more?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Miss Dill, must I plead once more for a little mercy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, don't do any such thing; it would seem ungenerous to refuse, and yet
+I could not accord it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fairly beaten,&rdquo; said he, with a sigh; &ldquo;there is no help for it. You are
+the victor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How did you leave our friends at 'The Home'?&rdquo; said she, with an easy
+indifference in her tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All well, perfectly well; that is to say, I believe so, for I only saw my
+host himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a pleasant house; how well they understand receiving their friends!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so peaceful and so quiet!&rdquo; said he, with an effort to seem at ease.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the garden is charming!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And all this is perfectly intolerable,&rdquo; said he, rising, and speaking in
+a voice thick with suppressed anger. &ldquo;I never came here to play a part in
+a vaudeville! Your father led me to believe, Miss Dill, that you might not
+be indisposed to lend me your favoring aid in a suit which I am interested
+in. He told me I should at least find you frank and outspoken; that if you
+felt inclined to assist me, you'd never enhance the service by a seeming
+doubt or hesitation&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if I should not feel so inclined, what did he then give you to
+expect?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you'd say so!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I do, then, clearly and distinctly tell you, if my counsels offer a
+bar to your wishes, they are all enlisted against you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the acme of candor. You can only equal it by saying how I could
+have incurred your disfavor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is nothing of disfavor in the matter. I think you charming. You are
+a hero,&mdash;very clever, very fascinating, very accomplished; but I
+believe it would be a great mistake for Fifine to marry you. Your tempers
+have that sort of resemblance that leave no reliefs in their mutual play.
+You are each of you hot and hasty, and a little imperious; and if she were
+not very much in love, and consequently disposed to think a great deal of
+you and very little of herself, these traits that I speak of would work
+ill. But if every one of them were otherwise, there would still be one
+obstacle worse than all!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that is&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you not guess what I mean, Major Stapylton? You do not, surely, want
+confidences from me that are more than candor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I understand you aright?&rdquo; said he, growing red and pale by turns, as
+passion worked within him; &ldquo;do I apprehend you correctly? These people
+here are credulous enough to be influenced by the shadowy slanders of the
+newspapers, and they listen to the half-muttered accusations of a hireling
+press?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They do say very awkward things in the daily press, certainly,&rdquo; said she,
+dryly; &ldquo;and your friends marvel at the silence with which you treat them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I <i>have</i> divined your meaning,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It is by these
+cowardly assailants I am supposed to be vanquished. I suspect, however,
+that Colonel Barrington himself was, once on a time, indulged with the
+same sort of flattery. They said that he had usurped a sovereignty,
+falsified documents, purloined jewels of immense value. I don't know what
+they did not charge him with. And what do they say of me? That I exhibited
+great severity&mdash;cruelty, if you will&mdash;towards a mob in a state
+of rebellion; that I reprimanded a very silly subaltern for a misplaced
+act of humanity. That I have been cashiered, too, they assert, in face of
+the 'Gazette,' which announces my appointment to an unattached majority.
+In a word, the enormity of the falsehood has never stayed their hand, and
+they write of me whatever their unthinking malevolence can suggest to
+them. You have, perhaps, seen some of these paragraphs?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like every one else, I have read them occasionally; not very attentively,
+indeed. But, in truth, I'm not a reader of newspapers. Here, for instance,
+is this morning's as it came from Dublin, still unopened;&rdquo; and she handed
+it as she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us see if I be still honored with their notice,&rdquo; said he, unfolding
+the paper, and running his eyes hastily over it. &ldquo;Debate on the Sugar Bill&mdash;Prison
+Reforms&mdash;China&mdash;Reinforcements for Canada&mdash;Mail Service to
+the Colonies&mdash;Bankruptcy Court. Oh, here we have it&mdash;here it
+is!&rdquo; and he crushed the paper while he folded down one part of it. &ldquo;Shall
+I read it for you? The heading is very tempting: 'Late Military Scandal.&mdash;A
+very curious report is now going through our West-end Clubs, and
+especially such as are the resort of military officers. It is to the
+purport that a certain Field-officer of Cavalry&mdash;whose conduct has
+been the subject of severe strictures from the Press&mdash;will speedily
+be called to answer for a much graver offence than the transgression of
+regimental discipline. The story which has reached us is a very strange
+one, and we should call it incredible, if we were not informed, on
+author-ity, that one of our most distinguished Indian generals has
+declared himself fully satisfied of its truth in every particular.' Can
+you fancy anything worse than that, Miss Dill? An unknown somebody is
+alleged to be convinced of an unknown something that attaches to me; for,
+of course, I am designated as the 'Field-officer of Cavalry,' and the
+public is graciously pleased to hold me in abhorrence till I have found
+out my calumniator and refuted him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems very hard. Who do you suspect is the Indian General alluded to?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell me, first of all,&mdash;does he exist?&rdquo; &ldquo;And this, too, you will not
+reply to, nor notice?&rdquo; &ldquo;Not, certainly, through such a channel as it
+reaches me. If the slanderer will stand forth and avow himself, I may know
+how to deal with him. But what has led us into this digression? I am sure
+it is as little to your taste as to mine. I have failed in my mission, and
+if I were able to justify every act of my life, what would it avail me?
+You have pronounced against me; at least, you will not take my brief.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What if I were retained by the other side?&rdquo; said she, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never suspected that there was another side,&rdquo; said he, with an air of
+extreme indifference. &ldquo;Who is my formidable rival?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might have told you if I saw you were really anxious on the subject.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be but hypocrisy in me to pretend it. If, for example, Major
+McCormick&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, that is too bad!&rdquo; cried Polly, interrupting. &ldquo;This would mean an
+impertinence to Miss Barrington.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How pleasant we must have been! Almost five o'clock, and I scarcely
+thought it could be three!&rdquo; said he, with an affected languor.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Time's foot is not heard when he treads upon flowers,'&rdquo; said she,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where shall I find your father, Miss Dill? I want to tell him what a
+charming creature his daughter is, and how wretched I feel at not being
+able to win her favor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray don't; or he might fall into my own mistake, and imagine that you
+wanted a lease of it for life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still cruel, still inexorable!&rdquo; said he, with a mockery of affliction in
+his tone. &ldquo;Will you say all the proper things&mdash;the regrets, and such
+like&mdash;I feel at not meeting him again; and if he has asked me to
+dinner&mdash;which I really forget&mdash;will you make the fitting
+apology?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is it, in the present case?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm not exactly sure whether I am engaged to dine elsewhere, or too ill
+to dine at all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not say it is the despair at being rejected renders you unequal to
+the effort? I mean, of course, by myself, Major Stapylton.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no objection; say so, if you like,&rdquo; said he, with an insulting
+indifference. &ldquo;Good-day, Miss Dill. This is the way to the road, I
+believe;&rdquo; and, with a low bow, very deferential but very distant, he
+turned away to leave the garden. He had not, however, gone many paces,
+when he stopped and seemed to ponder. He looked up at the sky, singularly
+clear and cloudless as it was, without a breath of wind in the air; he
+gazed around him on every side, as if in search of an object he wanted;
+and then, taking out his purse, he drew forth a shilling and examined it.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; muttered he, &ldquo;Chance has been my only counsellor for many a year,
+and the only one that never takes a bribe! And yet, is it not taking to
+the raft before the ship has foundered? True; but shall I be sure of the
+raft if I wait for the shipwreck? She is intensely crafty. She has that
+sort of head that loves a hard knot to unravel! Here goes! Let Destiny
+take all the consequences!&rdquo; and as he flung up the piece of money in the
+air, he cried, &ldquo;Head!&rdquo; It was some minutes ere he could discover where it
+had fallen, amongst the close leaves of a border of strawberries. He bent
+down to look, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Head! she has won!&rdquo; Just as he arose from
+his stooping attitude he perceived that Polly was engaged in the adjoining
+walk, making a bouquet of roses. He sprang across the space, and stood
+beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought you had been a mile off by this time, at least,&rdquo; said she,
+calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I meant, and so I intended; but just as I parted from you, a thought
+struck me&mdash;one of those thoughts which come from no process of
+reasoning or reflection, but seem impelled by a force out of our own
+natures&mdash;that I would come back and tell you something that was
+passing in my mind. Can you guess it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; except it be that you are sorry for having trifled so unfeelingly
+with my hopes, and have come back to make the best reparation in your
+power, asking me to forgive and accept you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have guessed aright; it was for that I returned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a clever guess I made! Confess I am very ready-witted!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are; and it is to engage those ready wits in my behalf that I am now
+before you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'At my feet,' sir, is the appropriate expression. I wonder how a
+gentleman so suited to be the hero of a story could forget the language of
+the novel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want you to be serious,&rdquo; said he, almost sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why should that provoke seriousness from <i>me</i> which only costs
+<i>you</i> levity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Levity!&mdash;where is the levity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it not this instant that you flung a shilling in the air, and cried
+out, as you looked on it, 'She has won'? Is it not that you asked Chance
+to decide for you what most men are led to by their affections, or at
+least their interests; and if so, is levity not the name for this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True in part, but not in whole; for I felt it was <i>I</i> who had won
+when 'head' came uppermost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet you have lost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so! You refuse me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I forgive your astonishment. It is really strange, but I do refuse you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why? Are you piqued with me for anything that occurred this morning?
+Have I offended you by anything that dropped from me in that conversation?
+Tell me frankly, that I may, if in my power, rectify it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; I rather felt flattered at the notion of being consulted. I thought
+it a great tribute to my clear-headedness and my tact.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then tell me what it was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You really wish it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Insist upon it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I insist upon it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it was this. Seeing that you were intrusting your future fortune to
+chance, I thought that I would do the same, and so I tossed up whether,
+opportunity serving, I should accept you or a certain other, and the other
+won!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I ask for the name of my fortunate rival?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think it is very fair, perhaps not altogether delicate of you;
+and the more since he has not proposed, nor possibly ever may. But no
+matter, you shall hear his name. It was Major McCormick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;McCormick! You mean this for an insult to me, Miss Dill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/472.jpg" width="100%" alt="472 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it certainly is open to that objection,&rdquo; said she, with a very
+slight closure of her eyes, and a look of steady, resolute defiance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in this way,&rdquo; continued he, &ldquo;to throw ridicule over the offer I have
+made you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Scarcely that; the proposition was in itself too ridiculous to require
+any such aid from me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a moment Stapylton lost his self-possession, and he turned on her with
+a look of savage malignity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;An insult, and an intentional insult!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a bold thing to avow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so, Major Stapylton. We have been playing a very rough game
+with each other, and it is not very wonderful if each of us should have to
+complain of hard treatment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could not so very clever a person as Miss Dill perceive that I was only
+jesting?&rdquo; said he, with a cutting insolence in his tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I assure you that I did not,&rdquo; said she, calmly; &ldquo;had I known or even
+suspected it was a jest, I never should have been angry. That the
+distinguished Major Stapylton should mock and quiz&mdash;or whatever be
+the name for it&mdash;the doctor's daughter, however questionable the good
+taste, was, after all, only a passing slight. The thought of asking her to
+marry him was different,&mdash;that was an outrage!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall pay for this one day, perhaps,&rdquo; said he, biting his lip.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;this is not a debt of honor;
+you can afford to ignore it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you again, you shall pay for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Till then, sir!&rdquo; said she, with a courtesy; and without giving him time
+for another word, she turned and re-entered the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Scarcely had Stapylton gained the road when he was joined by McCormick.
+&ldquo;Faith, you didn't get the best of that brush, anyhow,&rdquo; said he, with a
+grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean, sir?&rdquo; replied Stapylton, savagely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean that I heard every word that passed between you, and I would n't
+have been standing in your shoes for a fifty-pound note.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How is your rheumatism this morning?&rdquo; asked Stapylton, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pretty much as it always is,&rdquo; croaked out the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be thankful to it, then; for if you were not a cripple, I 'd throw you
+into that river as sure as I stand here to say it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Major McCormick did not wait for a less merciful moment, but hobbled away
+from the spot with all the speed he could muster.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIV. STORMS
+</h2>
+<p>
+When Stapylton stepped out of his boat and landed at &ldquo;The Home,&rdquo; the first
+person he saw was certainly the last in his wishes. It was Miss Dinah who
+stood at the jetty, as though awaiting him. Scarcely deigning to notice,
+beyond a faint smile of acquiescence, the somewhat bungling explanation he
+gave of his absence, she asked if he had met her brother.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I left the village a couple of hours ago; rather
+loitering, as I came along, to enjoy the river scenery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He took the road, and in this way missed you,&rdquo; said she, dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How unfortunate!&mdash;for me, I mean, of course. I own to you, Miss
+Barrington, wide as the difference between our ages, I never yet met any
+one so thoroughly companionable to me as your brother. To meet a man so
+consummately acquainted with the world, and yet not soured by his
+knowledge; to see the ripe wisdom of age blended with the generous warmth
+of youth; to find one whose experiences only make him more patient, more
+forgiving, more trustful&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too trustful, Major Stapylton, far too trustful.&rdquo; And her bold gray eyes
+were turned upon him as she spoke, with a significance that could not be
+mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a noble feeling, madam,&rdquo; said he, haughtily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a great misfortune to its possessor, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can we deem that misfortune, Miss Barrington, which enlarges the charity
+of our natures, and teaches us to be slow to think ill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Not paying the slightest attention to his question, she said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother went in search of you, sir, to place in your hands some very
+urgent letters from the Horse Guards, and which a special messenger
+brought here this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Truly kind of him. They relate, I have no doubt, to my Indian
+appointment. They told me I should have news by to-day or to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He received a letter also for himself, sir, which he desired to show
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About his lawsuit, of course? It is alike a pleasure and a duty to me to
+serve him in that affair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It more nearly concerns yourself, sir,&rdquo; said she, in the same cold, stern
+tone; &ldquo;though it has certainly its bearing on the case you speak of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More nearly concerns myself!&rdquo; said he, repeating her words slowly. &ldquo;I am
+about the worst guesser of a riddle in the world, Miss Barrington. Would
+you kindly relieve my curiosity? Is this letter a continuation of those
+cowardly attacks which, in the want of a worthier theme, the Press have
+amused themselves by making upon me? Is it possible that some enemy has
+had the malice to attack me through my friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The writer of the letter in question is a sufficient guarantee for its
+honor, Mr. Withering.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Withering!&rdquo; repeated he, with a start, and then, as suddenly assuming
+an easy smile, added: &ldquo;I am perfectly tranquil to find myself in such
+hands as Mr. Withering's. And what, pray, does <i>he</i> say of me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you excuse me, Major Stapylton, if I do not enter upon a subject on
+which I am not merely very imperfectly informed, but on which so humble a
+judgment as mine would be valueless? My brother showed me the letter very
+hurriedly; I had but time to see to what it referred, and to be aware that
+it was his duty to let you see it at once,&mdash;if possible, indeed,
+before you were again under his roof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a grave significance your words have, Miss Barrington!&rdquo; said he,
+with a cold smile. &ldquo;They actually set me to think over all my faults and
+failings, and wonder for which of them I am now arraigned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We do not profess to judge you, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time they had sauntered up to the little garden in front of the
+cottage, within the paling of which Josephine was busily engaged in
+training a japonica. She arose as she heard the voices, and in her
+accustomed tone wished Stapylton good-evening. &ldquo;<i>She</i>, at least, has
+heard nothing of all this,&rdquo; muttered he to himself, as he saluted her. He
+then opened the little wicket; and Miss Barrington passed in,
+acknowledging his attention by a short nod, as she walked hastily forward
+and entered the cottage. Instead of following her, Stapylton closed the
+wicket again, remaining on the outside, and leaning his arm on the upper
+rail.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do you perform sentry? Are you not free to enter the fortress?&rdquo; said
+Fifine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect not,&rdquo; said he, in a low tone, and to hear which she was
+obliged to draw nigher to where he stood.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean? I don't understand you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No great wonder, for I don't understand myself. Your aunt has, however,
+in her own most mysterious way, given me to believe that somebody has
+written something about me to somebody else, and until I clear up what in
+all probability I shall never hear, that I had better keep to what the
+Scotch call the 'back o' the gate.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is quite unintelligible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope it is, for it is almost unendurable. I am sorely afraid,&rdquo; added
+he, after a minute, &ldquo;that I am not so patient as I ought to be under Miss
+Barrington's strictures. I am so much more in the habit of command than of
+obedience, that I may forget myself now and then. To <i>you</i>, however,
+I am ready to submit all my past life and conduct. By you I am willing to
+be judged. If these cruel calumnies which are going the round of the
+papers on me have lowered me in your estimation, my case is a lost one;
+but if, as I love to think, your woman's heart resents an injustice,&mdash;if,
+taking counsel of your courage and your generosity, you feel it is not the
+time to withdraw esteem when the dark hour of adversity looms over a man,&mdash;then,
+I care no more for these slanders than for the veriest trifles which cross
+one's every-day life. In one word,&mdash;your verdict is life or death to
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In that case,&rdquo; said she, with an effort to dispel the seriousness of his
+manner, &ldquo;I must have time to consider my sentence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that is exactly what you cannot have, Josephine,&rdquo; said he; and there
+was a certain earnestness in his voice and look, which made her hear him
+call her by her name without any sense of being off ended. &ldquo;First relieve
+the suffering; there will be ample leisure to question the sufferer
+afterwards. The Good Samaritan wasted few words, and asked for no time.
+The noblest services are those of which the cost is never calculated. Your
+own heart can tell you: can you befriend me, and will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not know what it is you ask of me,&rdquo; said she, with a frank boldness
+which actually disconcerted him. &ldquo;Tell me distinctly, what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will tell you,&rdquo; said he, taking her hand, but so gently, so
+respectfully withal, that she did not at first withdraw it,&mdash;&ldquo;I will
+tell you. It is that you will share that fate on which fortune is now
+frowning; that you will add your own high-couraged heart to that of one
+who never knew a fear till now; that you will accept my lot in this the
+day of my reverse, and enable me to turn upon my pursuers and scatter
+them. To-morrow or next day will be too late. It is now, at this hour,
+that friends hold back, that one more than friend is needed. Can you be
+that, Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; said she, firmly. &ldquo;If I read your meaning aright, I cannot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You cannot love me, Josephine,&rdquo; said he, in a voice of intense emotion;
+and though he waited some time for her to speak, she was silent. &ldquo;It is
+true, then,&rdquo; said he, passionately, &ldquo;the slanderers have done their work!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know nothing of these calumnies. When my grandfather told me that they
+accused you falsely, and condemned you unfairly, I believed him. I am as
+ready as ever to say so. I do not understand your cause; but I believe you
+to be a true and gallant gentleman!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But yet, not one to love!&rdquo; whispered he, faintly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again she was silent, and for some time he did not speak.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A true and gallant gentleman!&rdquo; said he, slowly repeating her own words;
+&ldquo;and if so, is it an unsafe keeping to which to intrust your happiness? It
+is no graceful task to have oneself for a theme; but I cannot help it. I
+have no witnesses to call to character; a few brief lines in an army list,
+and some scars&mdash;old reminders of French sabres&mdash;are poor
+certificates, and yet I have no others.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was something which touched her in the sadness of his tone as he
+said these words, and if she knew how, she would have spoken to him in
+kindliness. He mistook the struggle for a change of purpose, and with
+greater eagerness continued: &ldquo;After all I am scarcely more alone in the
+world than you are! The dear friends who now surround you cannot be long
+spared, and what isolation will be your fate then! Think of this, and
+think, too, how, in assuring your own future, you rescue mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Very differently from his former speech did the present affect her; and
+her cheeks glowed and her eyes flashed as she said, &ldquo;I have never
+intrusted my fate to your keeping, sir; and you may spare yourself all
+anxiety about it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mistake me. You wrong me, Josephine&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wrong yourself when you call me by my Christian name; and you arm me
+with distrust of one who would presume upon an interest he has not
+created.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You refuse me, then?&rdquo; said he, slowly and calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Once, and forever!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be that you are mistaken, Miss Barrington. It may be that this
+other affection, which you prefer to mine, is but the sickly sentiment of
+a foolish boy, whose life up to this has not given one single guarantee,
+nor shown one single trait of those which make 'true and gallant
+gentlemen.' But you have made your choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said she, with a low but firm voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You acknowledge, then, that I was right,&rdquo; cried he, suddenly; &ldquo;there is a
+prior attachment? Your heart is not your own to give?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And by what right do you presume to question me? Who are you, that dares
+to do this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who am I?&rdquo; cried he, and for once his voice rose to the discordant ring
+of passion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, that was my question,&rdquo; repeated she, firmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, then, you have had your lesson, young lady,&rdquo; said he; and the words
+came from him with a hissing sound, that indicated intense anger. &ldquo;Who am
+I? You want my birth, my parentage, my bringing up! Had you no friend who
+could have asked this in your stead? Or were all those around you so
+bereft of courage that they deputed to a young girl what should have been
+the office of a man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the savage earnestness of his manner startled, it did not affright
+her; and it was with a cold quietness she said, &ldquo;If you had known my
+father, Major Stapylton, I suspect you would not have accused his daughter
+of cowardice!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was he so very terrible?&rdquo; said he, with a smile that was half a sneer.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He would have been, to a man like you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To a man like me,&mdash;a man like me! Do you know, young lady, that
+either your words are very idle words or very offensive ones?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet I have no wish to recall them, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be better you could find some one to sustain them.
+Unfortunately, however, you cannot ask that gallant gentleman we were just
+talking of; for it is only the other day, and after passing over to Calais
+to meet me, his friends pretend that there is some obstacle to our
+meeting. I owe my tailor or my bootmaker something; or I have not paid my
+subscription to a club; or I have left an unsettled bill ar Baden. I
+really forget the precise pretext; but it was one which to them seemed
+quite sufficient to balk me of a redress, and at the same time to shelter
+their friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not believe one word of it, sir!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, we have at least arrived at a perfect frankness in our intercourse.
+May I ask you, young lady, which of your relatives has suggested your
+present course! Is it to your aunt or to your grandfather I must go for an
+explanation?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect it is to me, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he came from
+behind Josephine. &ldquo;It is to me you must address yourself. Fifine, my dear,
+your aunt is looking for you; go and tell her, too, that I am quite ready
+for tea, and you will find me here when it is ready. Major Stapylton and I
+will take a stroll along the river-side.&rdquo; Now this last was less an
+invitation than a sort of significant hint to Stapylton that his host had
+no intention to ask him to cross his threshold, at least for the present;
+and, indeed, as Barrington passed out and closed the wicket after him, he
+seemed as though closing the entrance forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a manner far more assured thau his wont, Barrington said: &ldquo;I have
+been in pursuit of you, Major Stapylton, since four o'clock. I missed you
+by having taken the road instead of the river; and am much grieved that
+the communication I have to make you should not take place anywhere rather
+than near my roof or within my own gates.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am to suppose from your words, sir, that what you are about to say can
+scarcely be said to a friend; and if so, cannot you hit upon a more
+convenient mode of making your communication?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not. I believe that I shall be dealing more fairly with you by
+saying what I have to say in person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Stapylton, calmly, as the other paused.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are aware,&rdquo; continued Barrington, &ldquo;that the chief obstacle to a
+settlement of the claims I have long preferred against the India Company
+has been a certain document which they possess, declaring that a large
+portion of the territory held by the Rajah of Luckerabad was not amenable
+to the laws that regulate succession, being what is called 'Lurkar-teea,'&mdash;conquered
+country,&mdash;over which, under no circumstances, could the Rajah
+exercise prospective rights. To this deed, for their better protection,
+the Company obtained the signature and seal of the Rajah himself, by means
+which, of course, we could never discover; but they held it, and always
+declared that no portion of my son's claim could extend to these lands.
+Now, as they denied that he could succeed to what are called the 'Turban
+lands,' meaning the right of sovereignty&mdash;being a British subject&mdash;on
+the one hand, and rejected his claim to these conquered countries on the
+other,&mdash;they excluded him altogether.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mildly, &ldquo;I'm shocked to interrupt you, but
+I am forced to ask, what is the intimate bearing of all this upon me, or
+on your position towards me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have a little patience, sir, and suffer me to proceed. If it should turn
+out that this document&mdash;I mean that which bears the signature and
+seal of the Rajah&mdash;should be a forgery; if, I say, it could be shown
+that what the India Board have long relied on to sustain their case and
+corroborate their own view could be proved false, a great point would be
+gained towards the establishment of our claim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doubtless,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with the half-peevish indifference of one
+listening against his will.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, there is a good prospect of this,&rdquo; said Barring-ton, boldly. &ldquo;Nay,
+more, it is a certainty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Barrington,&rdquo; said Stapylton, drawing himself haughtily up, &ldquo;a few
+hours ago this history would have had a very great interest for me. My
+hopes pointed to a very close relationship with your family; the last hour
+has sufficed to dispel those hopes. Your granddaughter has rejected me so
+decidedly that I cannot presume to suppose a change in her opinion
+possible. Let me not then, obtain any share in your confidence to which I
+have no right whatever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What I am about to say will have more interest for you, sir,&rdquo; continued
+Barrington. &ldquo;I am about to mention a name that you will recognize,&mdash;the
+Moonshee, Ali Gohur.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton started, and dropped the cigar he was smoking. To take out
+another and light it, however, sufficed to employ him, as he murmured
+between his teeth, &ldquo;Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This man says&mdash;&rdquo; continued Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Said, perhaps, if you like,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, &ldquo;for he died some months
+ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; he is alive at this hour. He was on board the Indiaman that was run
+down by the transport. He was saved and carried on board the 'Regulus' by
+the intrepidity of young Dill. He is now recovering rapidly from the
+injuries he received, and at the date of the letter which I hold here, was
+able to be in daily communication with Colonel Hunter, who is the writer
+of this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish the gallant Colonel honester company. Are you aware, Mr.
+Barrington, that you are speaking of one of the greatest rascals of a
+country not famed for its integrity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He lays no claim to such for the past; but he would seem desirous to make
+some reparation for a long course of iniquity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Charmed for his sake, and that of his well-wishers, if he have any. But,
+once again, sir, and at all the risk of appearing very impatient, what
+concern has all this for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A great deal, sir. The Moonshee declares that he has been for years back
+in close correspondence with a man we long since believed dead, and that
+this man was known to have communicated constantly with the law advisers
+of the India Board in a manner adverse to us, he being none other than the
+son of the notorious Sam Edwardes, whom he always addressed under cover to
+Captain Horace Stapylton, Prince's Hussars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is&mdash;strange enough, when one thinks of the quarter it comes
+from&mdash;perfectly true. I came to know Edwardes when on my voyage home,
+invalided. He took immense trouble about me, nursed and tended me, and, in
+return, asked as a favor to have some letters he was expecting addressed
+to my care. I neither knew who he was, nor cared. He got his letters, and
+I suppose read them; but of their contents, I, it is needless to say, know
+nothing. I am speaking of a dozen years ago, or, at least, eight or ten,
+for since that time I have never heard of either Edwardes or his friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He tells a different story. He asserts that to his letters, forwarded to
+the same address up to the period of last March, he regularly received
+replies; but at last finding that the writer was disposed to get rid of
+him, he obtained means to circulate a report of his death, and sailed for
+Europe to prefer his claims, whatever they be, in person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if every word of this were true, Mr. Barrington, which I don't
+suspect it is, how, in the name of common sense, does it concern me? I
+don't suppose I ever took my own letters at a post-office twice in my
+life. My servant, who has lived with me fourteen years, may, for aught I
+know, have been bribed to abstract these letters on their arrival; they
+would be easily recognized by the very superscription. This is one way the
+thing might have been done. There may have been fifty more, for aught I
+know or care.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don't deny that you knew Edwardes, and had a close intimacy with
+him?&mdash;a circumstance which you never revealed to Withering or
+myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not at all improbable I may have known half a dozen of that name.
+It is by no means an uncommon one, not to say that I have a singularly
+infelicitous memory for people's names. But for the last time, sir, I must
+protest against this conversation going any further. You have taken upon
+you, I would hope without intending it, the tone of a French <i>Juge
+d'Instruction</i> in the interrogation of a prisoner. You have questioned
+and cross-questioned me, asking how I can account for this, or explain
+that. Now, I am ready to concede a great deal to your position as my host,
+and to your years, but really I must entreat of you not to push my
+deference for these beyond the limits of the respect I owe myself. You
+very properly warned me at the opening of this conversation that it ought
+not to have the sanction of your roof-tree. I have only to beg that if it
+is to go any further, that it be conducted in such a shape as is usual
+between gentlemen who have an explanation to ask, or a satisfaction to
+demand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was consummate craft in giving the discussion this turn. Stapylton
+well knew the nature of the man he was addressing, and that after the
+passing allusion to his character as a host, he only needed to hint at the
+possibility of a meeting to recall him to a degree of respect only short
+of deference for his opponent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I defer to you at once, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said the old man, with a bland
+courtesy, as he uncovered and bowed. &ldquo;There was a time when I should
+scarcely have required the admonition you have given me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad to perceive that you understand me so readily,&rdquo; said Stapylton,
+who could scarcely repress the joy he felt at the success of his
+diversion; &ldquo;and that nothing may mar our future understanding, this is my
+address in London, where I shall wait your orders for a week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the stroke was shrewdly intended, and meant to throw upon
+Barrington all the onus of the provocation, the Major little suspected
+that it was the one solitary subject of which his opponent was a master.
+On the &ldquo;duello&rdquo; Barrington was an authority beyond appeal, and no
+subtlety, however well contrived, could embarrass or involve him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no satisfaction to claim at your hands, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said he,
+calmly. &ldquo;My friend, Mr. Withering, when he sent me these letters, knew you
+were my guest, and he said, 'Read them to Major Stapylton. Let him know
+what is said of him, and who says it.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, perhaps, you ought to add, sir, who gives it the sanction of his
+belief,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, angrily. &ldquo;You never took the trouble to
+recite these charges till they obtained your credence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have said nothing to disprove them,&rdquo; said the old man, quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is enough,&mdash;quite enough, sir; we understand each other
+perfectly. You allege certain things against me as injuries done you, and
+you wait for <i>me</i> to resent the imputation. I 'll not balk you, be
+assured of it. The address I have given you in London will enable you to
+communicate with me when you arrive there; for I presume this matter had
+better be settled in France or Holland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think so,&rdquo; said Barrington, with the air of a man thoroughly at his
+ease.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I need not say, Mr. Barrington, the regret it gives me that it was not
+one of my detractors himself, and not their dupe, that should occupy this
+place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The dupe, sir, is very much at your service.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Till we meet again,&rdquo; said Stapylton, raising his hat as he turned away.
+In his haste and the confusion of the moment, he took the path that led
+towards the cottage; nor did he discover his mistake till he heard
+Barrington's voice calling out to Darby,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get the boat ready to take Major Stapylton to Inistioge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You forget none of the precepts of hospitality,&rdquo; said Stapylton, wheeling
+hastily around, and directing his steps towards the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington looked after him as he went, and probably in his long and
+varied life, crossed with many a care and many troubles, he had never felt
+the pain of such severe self-reproach as in that moment. To see his guest,
+the man who had sat at his board and eaten his salt, going out into the
+dreary night without one hospitable effort to detain him, without a pledge
+to his health, without a warm shake of his hand, or one hearty wish for
+his return.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear, dear!&rdquo; muttered he, to himself, &ldquo;what is the world come to! I
+thought I had no more experiences to learn of suffering; but here is a new
+one. Who would have thought to see the day that Peter Barrington would
+treat his guest this fashion?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you coming in to tea, grandpapa?&rdquo; cried Josephine, from the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here I am, my dear!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your guest, Peter, what has become of him?&rdquo; said Dinah.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He had some very urgent business at Kilkenny; something that could not
+admit of delay, I opine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you have not let him go without his letters, surely. Here are all
+these formidable-looking despatches, on his Majesty's service, on the
+chimney-piece.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How forgetful of me!&rdquo; cried he, as, snatching them up, he hastened down
+to the river-side. The boat, however, had just gone; and although he
+shouted and called at the top of his voice, no answer came, and he turned
+back at last, vexed and disappointed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall have to start for Dublin to-morrow, Dinah,&rdquo; said he, as he walked
+thoughtfully up and down the room. &ldquo;I must have Withering's advice on
+these letters. There are very pressing matters to be thought of here, and
+I can take Major Stapylton's despatches with me. I am certain to hear of
+him somewhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington turned her eyes full upon him, and watched him narrowly.
+She was a keen detector of motives, and she scanned her brother's face
+with no common keenness, and yet she could see nothing beyond the
+preoccupation she had often seen. There was no impatience, no anxiety. A
+shade more thoughtful, perhaps, and even that passed off, as he sat down
+to his tea, and asked Fifine what commissions she had for the capital.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will leave by the evening mail, I suppose?&rdquo; said Miss Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Dinah, night travelling wearies me. I will take the coach as it
+passes the gate to-morrow at five; this will bring me in time to catch
+Withering at his late dinner, and a pleasanter way to finish a day's
+travel no man need ask for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing could be more easily spoken than these words, and Miss Dinah felt
+reassured by them, and left the room to give some orders about his
+journey.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifine, darling,&rdquo; said Barrington, after a pause, &ldquo;do you like your life
+here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I do, grandpapa. How could I wish for one more happy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it is somewhat dull for one so young,&mdash;somewhat solitary for a
+fair, bright creature, who might reasonably enough care for pleasure and
+the world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me it is a round of gayety, grandpapa; so that I almost felt inclined
+yesterday to wish for some quiet davs with aunt and yourself,&mdash;some
+of those dreamy days like what we had in Germany.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear me much, darling, that I contribute but little to the pleasure. My
+head is so full of one care or another, I am but sorry company, Fifine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you only knew how dull we are without you! How heavily the day drags
+on even with the occupations you take no share in; how we miss your steps
+on the stairs and your voice in the garden, and that merry laugh that sets
+ourselves a-laughing just by its own ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you would miss me, then?&rdquo; said he, as he pushed the hair from her
+temples, and stared steadfastly at her face,&mdash;&ldquo;you would miss me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would only be half life without you,&rdquo; cried she, passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So much the worse,&mdash;so much the worse!&rdquo; muttered he; and he turned
+away, and drew his hand across his eyes. &ldquo;This life of ours, Fifine, is a
+huge battle-field; and though the comrades fall fast around him, the brave
+soldier will fight on to the last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don't want a dress-coat, brother Peter, to dine with Withering, so I
+have just put up what will serve you for three days, or four, at
+furthest,&rdquo; said Dinah, entering. &ldquo;What will be the extent of your stay?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me have a black coat, Dinah; there 's no saying what great man may
+not ask for my company; and it might be a week before I get back again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's no necessity it should be anything of the kind, Peter; and with
+your habits an hotel life is scarcely an economy. Come, Fifine, get to
+bed, child. You'll have to be up at daybreak. Your grandpapa won't think
+his coffee drinkable, if it is not made by your hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And with this remark, beautifully balanced between a reproof and a
+flattery, she proceeded to blow out the candles, which was her accustomed
+mode of sending her company to their rooms.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XV. THE OLD LEAVEN
+</h2>
+<p>
+Withering arrived at his own door just as Barrington drove up to it. &ldquo;I
+knew my letter would bring you up to town, Barrington,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and I
+was so sure of it that I ordered a saddle of mutton for your dinner, and
+refused an invitation to the Chancellor's.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And quite right too. Iam far better company, Tom. Are we to be all
+alone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was exactly what I wanted. Now, as I need a long evening with you,
+the sooner they serve the soup the better; and be sure you give your
+orders that nobody be admitted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+If Mr. Withering's venerable butler, an official long versed in the
+mysteries of his office, were to have been questioned on the subject, it
+is not improbable he would have declared that he never assisted at a
+pleasanter tête-â tête than that day's dinner. They enjoyed their good
+dinner and their good wine like men who bring to the enjoyment a ripe
+experience of such pleasures, and they talked with the rare zest of good
+talkers and old friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are in favor with Nicholas,&rdquo; said Withering, as the butler withdrew,
+and left them alone, &ldquo;or he would never have given us that bottle of port.
+Do you mark, Barrington, it's the green seal that John Bushe begged so
+hard for one night, and all unsuccessfully.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is rare stuff!&rdquo; said Barrington, looking at it between him and the
+light.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it was that story of yours of the Kerry election that won it. The old
+fellow had to rush out of the room to have his laugh out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know, Tom,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he sipped his wine, &ldquo;I believe, in
+another generation, nobody will laugh at all. Since you and I were boys,
+the world has taken a very serious turn. Not that it is much wiser, or
+better, or more moral, or more cultivated, but it is graver. The old
+jollity would be now set down simply for vulgarity, and with many people a
+joke is only short of an insult.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I tell you why, Peter? We got our reputation for wit, just as we
+made our name for manufacture, and there sprung up a mass of impostors in
+consequence,&mdash;fellows who made poor jokes and rotten calicoes, that
+so disgusted the world that people have gone to France for their fun, and
+to Germany for their furniture. That is, to my taking, the reason of all
+this social reaction.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps you are right, Tom. Old Joe Millers are not unlike cloth made out
+of devil's dust. One can't expect much wear out of either.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We must secure another bottle from that bin before Nicholas changes his
+mind,&rdquo; said Withering, rising to ring the bell.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Tom, not for me. I want all the calm and all the judgment I can
+muster, and don't ask me to take more wine. I have much to say to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course you have. I knew well that packet of letters would bring you up
+to town; but you have had scarcely time to read them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very hurriedly, I confess. They reached me yesterday afternoon; and when
+I had run my eyes hastily over them, I said, 'Stapylton must see this at
+once.' The man was my guest,&mdash;he was under my roof,&mdash;there could
+not be a question about how to deal with him. He was out, however, when
+the packet reached my hands; and while the pony was being harnessed, I
+took another look over that letter from Colonel Hunter. It shocked me,
+Tom, I confess; because there flashed upon me quite suddenly the
+recollection of the promptitude with which the India Board at home here
+were provided with an answer to each demand we made. It was not merely
+that when we advanced a step they met us; but we could scarcely meditate a
+move that they were not in activity to repel it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I saw that, too, and was struck by it,&rdquo; said Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True enough, Tom. I remember a remark of yours one day. 'These people,'
+said you, 'have our range so accurately, one would suspect they had
+stepped the ground.'&rdquo; The lawyer smiled at the compliment to his
+acuteness, and the other went on: &ldquo;As I read further, I thought Stapylton
+had been betrayed,&mdash;his correspondent in India had shown his letters.
+'Our enemies,' said I, 'have seen our despatches, and are playing with our
+cards on the table.' No thought of distrust,&mdash;not a suspicion against
+his loyalty had ever crossed me till I met him. I came unexpectedly upon
+him, however, before the door, and there was a ring and resonance in his
+voice as I came up that startled me! Passion forgets to shut the door
+sometimes, and one can see in an angry mind what you never suspected in
+the calm one. I took him up at once, without suffering him to recover his
+composure, and read him a part of Hunter's letter. He was ready enough
+with his reply; he knew the Moonshee by reputation as a man of the worst
+character, but had suffered him to address certain letters under cover to
+him, as a convenience to the person they were meant for, and who was no
+other than the son of the notorious Sam Edwardes. 'Whom you have known all
+this while,' said I, 'without ever acknowledging to us?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Whom I did know some years back,' replied he, 'but never thought of
+connecting with the name of Colonel Barrington's enemy.' All this was
+possible enough, Tom; besides, his manner was frank and open in the
+extreme. It was only at last, as I dwelt, what he deemed too
+pertinaciously, on this point, that he suddenly lost control of himself,
+and said, 'I will have no more of this'&mdash;or, 'This must go no
+further'&mdash;or some words to that effect.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha! the probe had touched the sore spot, eh?&rdquo; cried Withering. &ldquo;Go on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'And if you desire further explanations from me, you must ask for them at
+the price men pay for inflicting unmerited insult.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cleverly turned, cleverly done,&rdquo; said Withering; &ldquo;but you were not to be
+deceived and drawn off by that feint, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Feint or not, it succeeded, Tom. He made me feel that I had injured him;
+and as he would not accept of my excuses,&mdash;as, in fact, he did not
+give me time to make them&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He got you into a quarrel, is n't that the truth?&rdquo; asked Withering,
+hotly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come, Tom, be reasonable; he had perfect right on his side. There
+was what he felt as a very grave imputation upon him; that is, I had made
+a charge, and his explanation had not satisfied me,&mdash;or, at all
+events, I had not said I was satisfied,&mdash;and we each of us, I take
+it, were somewhat warmer than we need have been.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are going to meet him,&mdash;going to fight a duel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if I am, it will not be the first time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can you tell for what? Will you be able to make any man of common
+intelligence understand for what you are going out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope so. I have the man in my eye. No, no, don't make a wry face, Tom.
+It's another old friend I was thinking of to help me through this affair,
+and I sincerely trust he will not be so hard to instruct as you imagine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How old are you, Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dinah says eighty-one; but I suspect she cheats me. I think I am
+eighty-three.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And is it at eighty-three that men fight duels?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;' Not if they can help it, Tom, certainly. I have never been out since I
+shot Tom Connelly in the knee, which was a matter of forty years ago, and
+I had good hopes it was to be my last exploit of this kind. But what is to
+be done if a man tells you that your age is your protection; that if it
+had not been for your white hairs and your shaking ankles, that he 'd have
+resented your conduct or your words to him? Faith, I think it puts a
+fellow on his mettle to show that his heart is all right, though his hand
+may tremble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll not take any share in such a folly. I tell you, Barrington, the
+world for whom you are doing this will be the very first to scout its
+absurdity. Just remember for a moment we are not living in the old days
+before the Union, and we have not the right, if we had the power, to throw
+our age back into the barbarism it has escaped from.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Barbarism! The days of poor Yelverton, and Ponsonby, and Harry Grattan,
+and Parsons, and Ned Lysaght, barbarism! Ah! my dear Tom, I wish we had a
+few of such barbarians here now, and I 'd ask for another bottle or two of
+that port.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll not give it a milder word; and what's more, I'll not suffer you to
+tarnish a time-honored name by a folly which even a boy would be blamed
+for. My dear old friend, just grant me a little patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is cool, certainly,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing. &ldquo;You have said all
+manner of outrageous things to me for half an hour unopposed, and now you
+cry have patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me your honor now that this shall not go further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot, Tom,&mdash;I assure you, I cannot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean by 'you cannot'?&rdquo; cried Withering, angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean just what I said. If you had accepted a man's brief, Tom
+Withering, there is a professional etiquette which would prevent your
+giving it up and abandoning him; and so there are situations between men
+of the world which claim exactly as rigid an observance. I told Stapylton
+I would be at his orders, and I mean to keep my word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if you had no right to pledge it; not if I can prove to you that this
+quarrel was a mere got-up altercation to turn you from an inquiry which
+this man dare not face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is too subtle for me, Withering,&mdash;far too subtle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No such thing, Barrington; but I will make it plainer. How if the man you
+are going to meet had no right to the name he bears?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do I care for his name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you care for the falsehood by which he has assumed one that is not
+his own?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may be sorry that he is not more clean-handed; but I tell you again,
+Tom, they never indulged such punctilios in our young days, and I 'm too
+old to go to school again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I declare, Barrington, you provoke me,&rdquo; said the lawyer, rising, and
+pacing the room with hasty strides. &ldquo;After years and years of weary toil,
+almost disheartened by defeat and failure, we at last see the outline of
+land; a few more days&mdash;or it may be hours&mdash;of perseverance may
+accomplish our task. Since I arose this morning I have learned more of our
+case, seen my way more clearly through matters which have long puzzled me,
+than the cost of years has taught me. I have passed four hours with one
+who would give his life to serve you, but whose name I was not at liberty
+to divulge, save in the last necessity, and the reasons for which reserve
+I heartily concur in; and now, by a rash and foolish altercation, you
+would jeopardy everything. Do you wonder if I lose temper?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have got me into such a state of bewilderment, Tom, that I don't know
+what I am asked to agree to. But who is your friend,&mdash;is n't it a
+woman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not a woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd have bet five pounds it was! When as sharp a fellow as you takes the
+wrong line of country, it's generally a woman is leading the way over the
+fences.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This time your clever theory is at fault.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, who is it? Out with him, Tom. I have not so many stanch friends in
+the world that I can afford to ignore them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will tell you his name on one condition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I agree. What is the condition?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is this: that when you hear it you will dismiss from your mind&mdash;though
+it be only for a brief space&mdash;all the prejudices that years may have
+heaped against him, and suffer me to show you that <i>you</i>, with all
+your belief in your own fairness, are not just; and with a firm conviction
+in your own generosity, might be more generous. There 's my condition!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it must be owned I am going to pay pretty smartly for my
+information,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing. &ldquo;And if you are about to preach
+to me, it will not be a 'charity' sermon; but, as I said before, I agree
+to everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Withering stopped his walk and resumed it again. It was evident he had not
+satisfied himself how he should proceed, and he looked agitated and
+undecided. &ldquo;Barrington,&rdquo; said he, at last, &ldquo;you have had about as many
+reverses in life as most men, and must have met with fully your share of
+ingratitude and its treatment. Do you feel, now, in looking back, that
+there are certain fellows you cannot forgive?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One or two, perhaps, push me harder than the rest; but if I have no gout
+flying about me, I don't think I bear them any malice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you have no gouty symptoms now, I take it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never felt better for the last twenty years.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is as it should be; for I want to talk to you of a man who, in all
+our friendship, you have never mentioned to me, but whose name I know will
+open an old wound,&mdash;Ormsby Conyers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington laid down the glass he was lifting to his lips, and covered his
+face with both his hands, nor for some moments did he speak a word.
+&ldquo;Withering,&rdquo; said he, and his voice trembled as he spoke, &ldquo;even your
+friendship has scarcely the right to go this far. The injury the man you
+speak of did me meets me every morning as I open my eyes, and my first
+prayer each day is that I may forgive him, for every now and then, as my
+lone lot in life comes strongly before me, I have need to pray for this;
+but I have succeeded at last,&mdash;I have forgiven him from my heart;
+but, dear friend, let us not talk of what tears open wounds that bleed
+afresh at a touch. I beseech you, let all that be a bygone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is more than I can do, Barrington; for it is not to me you must
+acknowledge you have forgiven this man,&mdash;you must tell it to
+himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is not needed, Tom. Thousands of long miles separate us, and will in
+all likelihood separate us to the last. What does he want with my
+forgiveness, which is less a question between him and me than between me
+and my own heart?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet it is what he most desires on earth; he told me so within an
+hour!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Told you so,&mdash;and within an hour?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Barrington, he is here. Not in the house,&rdquo; added he, hastily, for
+the suddenness of the announcement had startled the old man, and agitated
+him greatly. &ldquo;Be calm, my dear friend,&rdquo; said Withering, laying a hand on
+the other's shoulder. &ldquo;He who is now come to claim your forgiveness has
+never injured you to the extent you believe. He asks it as the last
+tribute to one he loved only less than you loved him. He has told me
+everything; never sparing himself, nor seeking by any subtlety to excuse a
+particle of his conduct. Let me tell you that story as I heard it. It will
+be some solace to you to know that your noble-hearted son inspired a
+friendship which, after the long lapse of years, extracts such an
+atonement as one act of disloyalty to it could demand. This was Ormsby
+Conyers's one and only treason to the love that bound them. Listen to it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington tried to speak, but could not; so he nodded an assent, and
+Withering continued. His story was that which the reader has already heard
+from the lips of Conyers himself, and the old lawyer told it well. If he
+did not attempt to extenuate the offence and wrong of Conyers, he showed
+the power and strength of an affection which could make one of the
+haughtiest of men come forward to accuse himself, and at every cost of
+humiliation vindicate the noble nature of his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why not have avowed all this before?&mdash;why not have spared
+himself years of self-accusing, and me years of aggravated misery?&rdquo; cried
+Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did make the attempt. He came to England about eighteen years ago, and
+his first care was to write to you. He asked to be allowed to see you, and
+sent you at the same time an admission that he had injured you, and was
+come to seek your forgiveness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's true, Tom; all strictly true. I remember all about it. His letter
+was such a one as an enemy might have used to crush him. My own temper at
+the time was not to be trusted too far; sorrow was making me cruel, and
+might make me vindictive; so I sent it back to him, and hinted it was
+safer in <i>his</i> hands than <i>mine</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he has never forgotten your generosity. He said, 'It was what well
+became the father of George Barrington. '&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If he is here in this city, now, let me see him. Remember, Withering,
+when a man comes to my age his time is short. Cannot we go to him at
+once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not feeling certain of your coming up to town to-day, I had arranged with
+Conyers to start for 'The Home' tomorrow; we were to await the post hour,
+and, if no letter came from you, to leave at ten o'clock. I was to take
+him up at Elvidge's Hotel. What say you if I drive him down to Reynolds's?
+You stop there, I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With all my heart, Tom. I am fully as impatient as he can be to sign and
+seal our reconciliation. Indeed, I feel myself already less sinned against
+than sinning; and an act of forgiveness is only an exchange of prisoners
+between us. If you knew how young I feel again at all this, Withering,&rdquo;
+said he, grasping his friend's hand. &ldquo;What a happiness to know that poor
+George's memory is so revered that one who has failed towards him in
+fidelity should come to expiate the wrong thus openly! My fine
+noble-hearted boy deserved this tribute! And he told you how they loved
+each other; in what a brotherhood they lived; and what a glorious fellow
+George was? Did he tell you of his gentleness?&mdash;womanly softness it
+was, Tom. A careless observer might have said there was no stuff in him to
+make a soldier, and yet where was there his equal? You heard what he did
+at Naghapoor and Meerutan, where he held a mountain-pass with three
+squadrons against a whole army corps, and never owned to being wounded
+till he fell fainting from his horse on the retreat. Oh, let me not speak
+of these things, or my heart will burst I must leave you, old friend; this
+agitation will unfit me for much that is before me; let me go, I beseech
+you, and when you see me to-morrow, you 'll find I am all myself again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was in silence they grasped each other's hand, and parted.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVI. A HAPPY MEETING
+</h2>
+<p>
+Barrington scarcely closed his eyes that night after he had parted with
+Withering, so full was he of thinking over all he had heard. &ldquo;It was,&rdquo; as
+he repeated to himself over and over again, &ldquo;'such glorious news' to hear
+that it was no long-laid plot, no dark treachery, had brought poor George
+to his grave, and that the trusted friend had not turned out a secret
+enemy. How prone we are,&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;to suffer our suspicions to grow
+into convictions, just by the mere force of time. Conyers was neither
+better nor worse than scores of young fellows entering on life,
+undisciplined in self-restraint, and untutored by converse with the world;
+and in his sorrow and repentance he is far and away above most men. It was
+fine of him to come thus, and become his own accuser, rather than suffer a
+shade of reproach to rest upon the fame of his friend. And this reparation
+he would have made years ago, but for my impatience. It was I that would
+not listen,&mdash;would not admit it.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe in my heart, then, this confession has a higher value for me
+than would the gain of our great suit. It is such a testimony to my brave
+boy as but one man living could offer. It is a declaration to the world
+that says, 'Here am I, high in station, covered with dignities and rich in
+rewards; yet there was a man whose fate has never interested you, over
+whose fall you never sorrowed; hundreds of times my superior.' What a
+reward is this for all my life of toil and struggle,&mdash;what a glorious
+victory, when the battle looked so doubtful! People will see at last it is
+not an old man's phantasy; it is not the headlong affection of a father
+for his son has made me pursue this reparation for him here. There is a
+witness 'come to judgment,' who will tell them what George Barrington was;
+how noble as a man, how glorious as a soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+While the old man revelled in the happiness of these thoughts, so absorbed
+was he by them that he utterly forgot the immediate object which had
+occasioned his journey,&mdash;forgot Stapylton and the meeting, and all
+that had led to it. Thus passed the hours of the night; and as the day
+broke, he arose, impatient to actual feverishness for the coming
+interview. He tried by some occupation to fill up the time. He sat down to
+write to his sister an account of all Withering had told him, leaving the
+rest to be added after the meeting; but he found, as he read it over, that
+after the mention of George's name, nothing dropped from his pen but
+praises of him. It was all about his generosity, his open-heartedness, and
+his bravery. &ldquo;This would seem downright extravagant,&rdquo; said he, as he
+crushed the paper in his hand, &ldquo;till she hears it from the lips of Conyers
+himself.&rdquo; He began another letter, but somehow again he glided into the
+self-same channel.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This will never do,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;there's nothing for it but a brisk walk.&rdquo;
+So saying he sallied out into the deserted streets, for few were about at
+that early hour. Barrington turned his steps towards the country, and soon
+gained one of those shady alleys which lead towards Finglas. It was a
+neighborhood he had once known well, and a favorite resort of those
+pleasant fellows who thought they compensated for a hard night at Daly's
+by sipping syllabub of a morning on a dewy meadow. He once had rented a
+little cottage there; a fancy of poor George's it was, that there were
+some trout in the stream beside it; and Barrington strolled along till he
+came to a little mound, from which he could see the place, sadly changed
+and dilapidated since he knew it. Instead of the rustic bridge that
+crossed the river, a single plank now spanned the stream, and in the
+disorder and neglect of all around, it was easy to see it had fallen to
+the lot of a peasant to live in it. As Barrington was about to turn away,
+he saw an old man&mdash;unmistakably a gentleman&mdash;ascending the hill,
+with a short telescope in his hand. As the path was a narrow one, he
+waited, therefore, for the other's arrival, before he began to descend
+himself. With a politeness which in his younger days Irish gentlemen
+derived from intercourse with France, Barring-ton touched his hat as he
+passed the stranger, and the other, as if encouraged by the show of
+courtesy, smiled as he returned the salute, and said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Might I take the liberty to ask you if you are acquainted with this
+locality?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Few know it better, or, at least, knew it once,&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the classic ground of Ireland in days past,&rdquo; said the stranger. &ldquo;I
+have heard that Swift lived here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; but you cannot see his house from this. It was nearer to Santry,
+where you see that wood yonder. There was, however, a celebrity once
+inhabited that small cottage before us. It was the home of Parnell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that Parnell's cottage?&rdquo; asked the stranger, with eagerness; &ldquo;that
+ruined spot, yonder?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. It was there he wrote some of his best poems. I knew the room well
+he lived in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How I would like to see it!&rdquo; cried the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are an admirer of Parnell, then?&rdquo; said Barrington, with a smile of
+courteous meaning.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will own to you, sir, it was less of Parnell I was thinking than of a
+dear friend who once talked to me of that cottage. He had lived there, and
+cherished the memory of that life when far away from it; and so well had
+he described every walk and path around it, each winding of the river, and
+every shady nook, that I had hoped to recognize it without a guide.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, it is sadly changed of late. Your friend had not probably seen it for
+some years?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me see. It was in a memorable year he told me he lived there,&mdash;when
+some great demonstration was made by the Irish volunteers, with the Bishop
+of Down at their head. The Bishop dined there on that day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Earl of Bristol dined that day with me, there,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+pointing to the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I ask with whom I have the honor to speak, sir?&rdquo; said the stranger,
+bowing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was it George Barrington told you this?&rdquo; said the old man, trembling with
+eagerness: &ldquo;was it he who lived here? I may ask, sir, for I am his
+father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am Ormsby Conyers,&rdquo; said the other; and his face became pale, and
+his knees trembled as he said it.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me your hand, Conyers,&rdquo; cried Barrington,&mdash;&ldquo;the hand that my
+dear boy has so often pressed in friendship. I know all that you were to
+each other, all that you would be to his memory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you forgive me?&rdquo; said Conyers.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have, for many a year. I forgave you when I thought you had been his
+enemy. I now know you had only been your own to sacrifice such love, such
+affection as he bore you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never loved him more than I have hated myself for my conduct towards
+him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us talk of George,&mdash;he loved us both,&rdquo; said Barrington, who
+still held Conyers by the hand. &ldquo;It is a theme none but yourself can rival
+me in interest for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not easy for Conyers to attain that calm which could enable him to
+answer the other's questions; but by degrees he grew to talk freely,
+assisted a good deal by the likeness of the old man to his son,&mdash;a
+resemblance in manner even as much as look,&mdash;and thus, before they
+reached town again, they had become like familiar friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington could never hear enough of George; even of the incidents he had
+heard of by letter, he liked to listen to the details again, and to mark
+how all the traits of that dear boy had been appreciated by others.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must keep you my prisoner,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they gained the door of
+his hotel. &ldquo;The thirst I have is not easily slaked; remember that for more
+than thirty years I have had none to talk to me of my boy! I know all
+about your appointment with Withering; he was to have brought you here
+this morning to see me, and my old friend will rejoice when he comes and
+finds us here together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He was certain you would come up to town,&rdquo; said Conyers, &ldquo;when you got
+his letters. You would see at once that there were matters which should be
+promptly dealt with; and he said, 'Barrington will be my guest at dinner
+to-morrow.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eh?&mdash;how?&mdash;what was it all about? George has driven all else
+out of my head, and I declare to you that I have not the very vaguest
+recollection of what Wither-ing's letters contained. Wait a moment; a
+light is breaking on me. I do remember something of it all now. To be
+sure! What a head I have! It was all about Stapylton. By the way, General,
+how you would have laughed had you heard the dressing Withering gave me
+last night, when I told him I was going to give Stapylton a meeting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A hostile meeting?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if you like to give it that new-fangled name, General, which I
+assure you was not in vogue when I was a young man. Withering rated me
+soundly for the notion, reminded me of my white hairs and such other
+disqualifications, and asked me indignantly, 'What the world would say
+when they came to hear of it?' 'What would the world say if they heard I
+declined it, Tom?' was my answer. Would they not exclaim, 'Here is one of
+that fire-eating school who are always rebuking us for our laxity in
+matters of honor; look at him and say, are these the principles of his
+sect?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Conyers shook his head dissentingly, and smiled.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; said Barrington, replying to the other's look, &ldquo;you are just of
+my own mind! A man who believes you to have injured him claims reparation
+as a matter of right. I could not say to Stapylton, 'I will not meet
+you!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I <i>did</i> say so, and that within a fortnight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You said so, and under what provocation?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He grossly insulted my son, who was his subaltern; he outraged him by
+offensive language, and he dared even to impugn his personal courage. It
+was in one of those late riots where the military were called out; and my
+boy, intrusted with the duty of dispersing an assemblage, stopped to
+remonstrate where he might have charged, and actually relieved the misery
+he had his orders to have trampled under the feet of his squadron. Major
+Stapylton could have reprimanded, he might have court-martialled him; he
+had no right to attempt to dishonor him. My son left the service,&mdash;I
+made him leave on the spot,&mdash;and we went over to France to meet this
+man. I sent for Proctor to be my boy's friend, and my letter found him at
+Sir Gilbert Stapylton's, at Hollowcliffe. To explain his hurried
+departure, Proctor told what called him away. 'And will you suffer your
+friend to meet that adventurer,' said Sir Gilbert, 'who stole my nephew's
+name if he did not steal more?' To be brief, he told that this fellow had
+lived with Colonel Howard Stapylton, British Resident at Ghurtnapore, as a
+sort of humble private secretary. 'In the cholera that swept the district
+Howard died, and although his will, deposited at Calcutta, contained
+several legacies, the effects to redeem them were not to be discovered.
+Meanwhile this young fellow assumed the name of Stapylton, gave himself
+out for his heir, and even threatened to litigate some landed property in
+England with Howard's brother. An intimation that if he dared to put his
+menace in action a full inquiry into his conduct should be made, stopped
+him, and we heard no more of him,&mdash;at least, for a great many years.
+When an old Madras friend of Howard's who came down to spend his
+Christmas, said, &ldquo;Who do you think I saw in town last week, but that young
+scamp Howard used to call his Kitmagar, and who goes by the name of
+Stapylton?&rdquo; we were so indignant at first that we resolved on all manner
+of exposures; but learning that he had the reputation of a good officer,
+and had actually distinguished himself at Waterloo, we relented. Since
+that, other things have come to our knowledge to make us repent our
+lenity. In fact, he is an adventurer in its very worst sense, and has
+traded upon a certain amount of personal courage to cover a character of
+downright ignominy.' Proctor, on hearing all this, recalled me to England;
+and declared that he had traced enough to this man's charge to show he was
+one whom no gentleman could meet. It would appear that some recent
+discoveries had been made about him at the Horse Guards also; for when
+Proctor asked for a certain piece of information from one of his friends
+in office there, he heard, for answer, 'We hope to know that, and more, in
+a day or two.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know that I 'm sorry for it,&mdash;heartily sorry?&rdquo; said
+Barrington. &ldquo;The fellow had that stamp of manliness about him that would
+seem the pledge of a bold, straightforward nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have a high value for courage, but it won't do everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More 's the pity, for it renders all that it aids of tenfold more worth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And on the back of all this discovery comes Hunter's letter, which
+Withering has sent you, to show that this Stapylton has for years back
+been supplying the Indian Directors with materials to oppose your claims.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing ever puzzled us so much as the way every weak point of our case
+was at once seized upon, and every doubt we ourselves entertained
+exaggerated into an impassable barrier. Withering long suspected that some
+secret enemy was at work within our own lines, and repeatedly said that we
+were sold. The difficulty is, why this man should once have been our
+enemy, and now should strive so eagerly to be not alone our friend, but
+one of us. You have heard he proposed for my granddaughter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred suspected his intentions in that quarter, but we were not certain of
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it is time I should ask after your noble-hearted boy. How is he, and
+where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is here, at my hotel, impatiently waiting your permission to go down
+to 'The Home.' He has a question to ask there, whose answer will be his
+destiny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has Josephine turned another head then?&rdquo; said Barring-ton, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She has won a very honest heart; as true and as honorable a nature as
+ever lived,&rdquo; said Conyers, with emotion. &ldquo;Your granddaughter does not
+know, nor needs ever to know, the wrong I have done her father; and if you
+have forgiven me, you will not remember it against my boy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what do you yourself say to all this? You have never seen the girl?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred has.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know nothing about her tastes, her temper, her bringing up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred does.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor are you aware that the claim we have so long relied on is almost
+certain to be disallowed. I have scarcely a hope now remaining with regard
+to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have more than I need; and if Fred will let me have a bungalow in his
+garden, I'll make it all over to him tomorrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is then with your entire consent he would make this offer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With my whole heart in it! I shall never feel I have repaired the injury
+I have done George Barrington till I have called his daughter my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Barrington arose, and walked up and down with slow and measured steps.
+At last he halted directly in front of General Conyers, and said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you will do me one kindness, I will agree to everything. What am I
+saying? I agree already; and I would not make a bargain of my consent; but
+you will not refuse me a favor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask me anything, and I promise it on the faith of a gentleman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is this, then; that you will stand by me in this affair of
+Stapylton's. I have gone too far for subtleties or niceties. It is no
+question of who was his father, or what was his own bringing up. I have
+told him I should be at his orders, and don't let me break my word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you choose me for your friend, Barrington, you must not dictate how I
+am to act for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is quite true; you are perfectly correct there,&rdquo; said the other, in
+some confusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;On that condition, then, that I am free to do for you what I would agree
+to in my own case, I accept the charge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there is to be no humbug of consideration for my age and my white
+hairs; none of that nonsense about a fellow with one leg in the grave.
+Mark you, Conyers, I will stand none of these; I have never taken a writ
+of ease not to serve on a jury, nor will I hear of one that exempts me
+from the rights of a gentleman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have got your full powers to treat, and you must trust me. Where are we
+to find Stapylton's friend?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He gave me an address which I never looked at. Here it is!&rdquo; and he drew a
+card from his pocket.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Captain Duff Brown, late Fifth Fusiliers, Holt's Hotel, Charing Cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know him?&rdquo; asked Barrington, as the other stood silently
+re-reading the address.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, thoroughly,&rdquo; said he, with a dry significance. &ldquo;The man who selects
+Duff Brown to act for him in an affair of honor must be in a sore strait.
+It is a sorry indorsement to character. He had to leave the service from
+the imputation of foul play in a duel himself; and I took an active part
+against him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will this make your position unpleasant to you,&mdash;would you rather
+not act for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite the reverse. It is more than ever necessary you should have some
+one who not only knows the men he is to deal with, but is known himself to
+them. It is a preliminary will save a world of trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;When can we set out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-night by the eight-o'clock packet, we can sail for Liverpool; but let
+us first of all despatch Fred to 'The Home.' The poor boy will be half
+dead with anxiety till he knows I have your permission.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll accredit him with a letter to my sister; not that he needs it, for
+he is one of her prime favorites. And now for another point. Withering
+must be made believe that we are all off together for the country this
+evening. He is so opposed to this affair with Stapylton, that he is in a
+mood to do anything to prevent it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well thought of; and here comes the man himself in search of us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been half over the town after you this morning, General,&rdquo; said
+Withering, as he entered; &ldquo;and your son, too, could make nothing of your
+absence. He is in the carriage at the door now, not knowing whether he
+ought to come up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll soon reassure him on that score,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he left the
+room, and hastened downstairs with the step of one that defied the march
+of time.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVII. MEET COMPANIONSHIP
+</h2>
+<p>
+In a very modest chamber of a house in one of the streets which lead from
+the Strand to the Thames, two persons sat at supper. It is no time for
+lengthened introductions, and I must present Captain Duff Brown very
+hurriedly to my reader, as he confronted his friend Stapylton at table.
+The Captain was a jovial-looking, full-whiskered, somewhat corpulent man,
+with a ready reply, a ready laugh, and a hand readier than either, whether
+the weapon wielded was a billiard-cue or a pistol.
+</p>
+<p>
+The board before them was covered with oysters and oyster-shells, porter
+in its pewter, a square-shaped decanter of gin, and a bundle of cigars.
+The cloth was dirty, the knives unclean, and the candles ill-matched and
+of tallow; but the guests did not seem to have bestowed much attention to
+these demerits, but ate and drank like men who enjoyed their fare.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The best country in Europe,&mdash;the best in the world,&mdash;I call
+England for a fellow who knows life,&rdquo; cried the Captain. &ldquo;There is nothing
+you cannot do; nothing you cannot have in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With eight thousand a year, perhaps,&rdquo; said Stapylton, sarcastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No need of anything like it. Does any man want a better supper than we
+have had to-night? What better could he have? And the whole cost not over
+five, or at most six shillings for the pair of us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may talk till you are hoarse, Duff, but I'll not stay in it When once
+I have settled these two or three matters I have told you of, I'll start
+for&mdash;I don't much care whither. I'll go to Persia, or perhaps to the
+Yankees.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I</i> always keep America for the finish!&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;It is to
+the rest of the world what the copper hell is to Crockford's,&mdash;the
+last refuge when one walks in broken boots and in low company. But tell
+me, what have you done to-day; where did you go after we parted?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I went to the Horse Guards, and saw Blanchard,&mdash;pompous old humbug
+that he is. I told him that I had made up my mind to sell out; that I
+intended to take service in a foreign army,&mdash;he hates foreigners,&mdash;and
+begged he would expedite my affairs with his Royal Highness, as my
+arrangements could not admit of delay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he told you that there was an official routine, out of which no
+officer need presume to expect his business could travel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He told me no such thing. He flatly said, 'Your case is already before
+the Commander-in-Chief, Major Stapylton, and you may rely on it there will
+be no needless delay in dealing with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was a threat, I take it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course it was a threat; and I only said, 'It will be the first
+instance of the kind, then, in the department,' and left him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where to, after that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I next went to Gregory's, the magistrate of police. I wanted to see the
+informations the black fellow swore to; and as I knew a son of Gregory's
+in the Carbiniers, I thought I could manage it; but bad luck would have it
+that the old fellow should have in his hands some unsettled bills with my
+indorsements on them,&mdash;fact; Gregory and I used to do a little that
+way once,&mdash;and he almost got a fit when he heard my name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tried back after that, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Went on to Renshaw's and won fifty pounds at hazard, took Blake's odds on
+Diadem, and booked myself for a berth in the Boulogne steamer, which
+leaves at two this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You secured a passport for me, did n't you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. You'll have to come as my servant. The Embassy fellows were all
+strangers to me, and said they would not give a separate passport without
+seeing the bearer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right. I don't dislike the second cabin, nor the ladies'-maids. What
+about the pistols?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/508.jpg" width="100%" alt="508 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are yonder under the great-coat. Renshaw lent them. They are not
+very good, he says, and one of them hangs a little in the fire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They 'll be better than the old Irishman's, that's certain. You may swear
+that his tools were in use early in the last century.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And himself, too; that's the worst of it all. I wish it was not a fellow
+that might be my grandfather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't know. I rather suspect, if I was given to compunctions, I'd have
+less of them for shaking down the rotten ripe fruit than the blossom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he 's a fine old fellow, too,&rdquo; said Stapylton, half sadly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why didn't you tell him to drop in this evening and have a little <i>écarté?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a while Stapylton leaned his head on his hand moodily, and said
+nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cheer up, man! Taste that Hollands. I never mixed better,&rdquo; said Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I begin to regret now, Duff, that I did n't take your advice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And run away with her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, it would have been the right course, after all!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I knew it. I always said it. I told you over and over again what would
+happen if you went to work in orderly fashion. They 'd at once say, 'Who
+are your people,&mdash;where are they,&mdash;what have they?' Now, let a
+man be as inventive as Daniel Defoe himself, there will always slip out
+some flaw or other about a name, or a date,&mdash;dates are the very
+devil! But when you have once carried her off, what can they do but
+compromise?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She would never have consented.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'd not have asked her. I 'd have given her the benefit of the customs
+of the land she lived in, and made it a regular abduction. Paddy somebody
+and Terence something else are always ready to risk their necks for a pint
+of whiskey and a breach of the laws.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think I could have brought myself to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I</i> could, I promise you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there 's an end of a man after such a thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, if he fails. If he's overtaken and thrashed, I grant you he not only
+loses the game, but gets the cards in his face, besides. But why fail?
+Nobody fails when he wants to win,&mdash;when he determines to win. When I
+shot De Courcy at Asterabad&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't bring up that affair, at least, as one of precedent, Duff. I
+neither desire to be tried for a capital felony, nor to have committed
+one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Capital fiddlesticks! As if men did not fight duels every day of the
+week; the difference between guilt and innocence being that one fellow's
+hand shook, and the other's was steady. De Courcy would have 'dropped' me,
+if I'd have Jet him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And so <i>you</i> would have carried her off, Master Duff?&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; if she had the pot of money you speak of, and no Lord Chancellor for
+a guardian. I 'd have made the thing sure at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The money she will and must have; so much is certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I 'd have made the remainder just as certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a vulgar crime, Duff; it would be very hard to stoop to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifty things are harder,&mdash;no cash, no credit are harder. The Fleet
+is harder. But what is that noise? Don't you hear a knock at the door?
+Yes, there's some one without who hasn't much patience.&rdquo; So saying, he
+arose and walked to the door. As he opened it, he started back a little
+with surprise, for it was a police constable stood before him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not you, Captain, not <i>you</i>, sir! it's another gentleman I want. I
+see him at the table there,&mdash;Major Stapylton.&rdquo; By this time the man
+had entered the room and stood in front of the fire. &ldquo;I have a warrant
+against you, Major,&rdquo; said he, quietly. &ldquo;Informations have been sworn
+before Mr. Colt that you intend to fight a duel, and you must appear at
+the office to-morrow, to enter into your bond, and to give securities to
+keep the peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who swore the informations?&rdquo; cried Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What have we to do with that?&rdquo; said Stapylton, impatiently. &ldquo;Isn't the
+world full of meddling old women? Who wants to know the names?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll lay the odds it was old Conyers; the greatest humbug in that land
+of humbugs,&mdash;Bengal. It was he that insisted on my leaving the Fifth.
+Come, Sergeant, out with it. This was General Conyers's doing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm sorry to be obliged to declare you in custody, Major,&rdquo; said the
+policeman; &ldquo;but if you like to come over to Mr. Colt's private residence,
+I 'm sure he 'd settle the matter this evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He'll do no such thing, by George!&rdquo; cried Brown. &ldquo;The sneaking dogs who
+have taken this shabby course shall be exposed in open court. We 'll have
+the names in full, and in every newspaper in England. Don't compromise the
+case, Stapylton; make them eat the mess they have cooked, to the last
+mouthful. We 'll show the world what the fighting Irishman and his gallant
+friend are made of. Major Stapylton is your prisoner, Sergeant?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The man smiled slightly at the passionate energy of the speaker, and
+turned to Stapylton. &ldquo;There 's no objection to your going to your
+lodgings, Major. You 'll be at the chief office by ten to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton nodded assent, and the other retired and closed the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you say now?&rdquo; cried Brown, triumphantly. &ldquo;Did n't I tell you
+this? Did n't I say that when old Con-yers heard my name, he 'd say, 'Oh,
+there 'll be no squaring this business'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's just as likely that he said, 'I 'll not confer with that man; he had
+to leave the service.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More fool you, then, not to have had a more respectable friend. Had you
+there, Stapylton,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I acknowledge that. All I can say in extenuation is, that I hoped old
+Barrington, living so long out of the world, would have selected another
+old mummy like himself, who had never heard of Captain Duff Brown, nor his
+famous trial at Calcutta.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's not a man in the kingdom has not heard of me. I 'm as well known
+as the first Duke in the land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't boast of it, Duff; even notoriety is not always a cheap luxury.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who knows but you may divide it with me to-morrow or next day?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean, sir?&mdash;what do you mean?&rdquo; cried Stapylton, slapping
+the table with his clenched hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only what I said,&mdash;that Major Stapylton may furnish the town with a
+nine-days wonder, <i>vice</i> Captain Duff Brown, forgotten.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Evidently ashamed of his wrath, Stapylton tried to laugh off the occasion
+of it, and said, &ldquo;I suppose neither of us would take the matter much to
+heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll not go to the office with you to-morrow, Stapylton,&rdquo; added he,
+after a pause; &ldquo;that old Sepoy General would certainly seize the
+opportunity to open some old scores that I'd as soon leave undisturbed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, I think you are prudent there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I 'll be of use in another way. I 'll lay in wait for that fellow who
+reports for the 'Chronicle,' the only paper that cares for these things,
+and I 'll have him deep in the discussion of some devilled kidneys when
+your case is called on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy it does not matter what publicity it obtains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, I don't know that. Old Braddell, our major, used to say, 'Reputation,
+after forty, is like an old wall. If you begin to break a hole in it, you
+never know how much will come away.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you again, Duff, I'm past scandalizing; but have your way, if you
+will 'muzzle the ox,' and let us get away from this as soon as may be. I
+want a little rest after this excitement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I 'm pretty much in the same boot myself, though I don't exactly
+know where to go. France is dangerous. In Prussia there are two sentences
+recorded against me. I 'm condemned to eight years' hard labor in
+Wurtemberg, and pronounced dead in Austria for my share in that Venetian
+disturbance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't tell me of these rascalities. Bad enough when a man is driven to
+them, but downright infamy to be proud of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you never thought of going into the Church? I 've a notion you 'd be
+a stunning preacher.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give up this bantering, Duff, and tell me how I shall get hold of young
+Conyers. I 'd rather put a ball in that fellow than be a
+Lieutenant-General. He has ever been my rock ahead. That silly coxcomb has
+done more to mar my destiny than scores of real enemies. To shoot him
+would be to throw a shell in the very midst of them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'd rather loot him, if I had the choice; the old General has lots of
+money. Stapylton, scuttle the ship, if you like, but first let <i>me</i>
+land the cargo. Of all the vengeances a man can wreak on another the
+weakest is to kill him. For my part, I 'd cherish the fellow that injured
+me. I 'd set myself to study his tastes and learn his ambitions. I 'd
+watch over him and follow him, being, as it were, his dearest of all
+friends,&mdash;read backwards!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is tiresome scoundrelism. I'll to bed,&rdquo; said Stapylton, taking a
+candle from the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if you must shoot this fellow, wait till he's married; wait for the
+honeymoon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's some sense in that. I 'll go and sleep over it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVIII. AUNT DOROTHEA.
+</h2>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must come down with me for one day, Tom, to see an old aunt of mine
+at Bournemouth,&rdquo; said Hunter to young Dill. &ldquo;I never omitted going to see
+her the first thing whenever I landed in England, and she 'll not forgive
+me if I were to do so now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why should I go, sir? My presence would only trouble the comfort of a
+family meeting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite the reverse. She 'll be delighted to see you. It will be such a
+triumph to her, amongst all her neighbors, to have had a visit from the
+hero of the day,&mdash;the fellow that all the print-shops are full of.
+Why, man, you are worth five hundred pounds to me. I 'm not sure I might
+not say double as much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In that case, sir, I 'm perfectly at your orders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And down they went, and arrived late on the day after this conversation at
+an old-fashioned manor-house, where Miss Dorothy Hunter had passed some
+sixty-odd years of her life. Though to Tom she seemed to bear a great
+resemblance to old Miss Barrington, there was really little likeness
+between them, beyond an inordinate pride of birth, and an intense
+estimation for the claims of family. Miss Hunter's essential
+characteristic was a passion for celebrities; a taste somewhat difficult
+to cultivate in a very remote and little visited locality. The result was
+that she consoled herself by portraits, or private letters, or autographs
+of her heroes, who ranged over every imaginable career in life, and of
+whom, by mere dint of iteration, she had grown to believe herself the
+intimate friend or correspondent.
+</p>
+<p>
+No sooner had she learned that her nephew was to be accompanied by the
+gallant young soldier whose name was in every newspaper than she made what
+she deemed the most suitable preparations for his reception. Her bedroom
+was hung round with portraits of naval heroes, or pictures of sea-fights.
+Grim old admirals, telescope in hand, or with streaming hair, shouting out
+orders to board the enemy, were on every side; while, in the place of
+honor, over the fireplace, hung a vacant frame, destined one day to
+contain the hero of the hour, Tom Dill himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+Never was a poor fellow in this world less suited to adulation of this
+sort. He was either overwhelmed with the flattery, or oppressed by a
+terror of what some sensible spectator&mdash;if such there were&mdash;would
+think of the absurd position in which he was forced to stand. And when he
+found himself obliged to inscribe his name in a long column of illustrious
+autographs, the sight of his own scarce legible characters filled up the
+measure of his shame.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He writes like the great Turenne,&rdquo; said Miss Dorothy; &ldquo;he always wrote
+from above downwards, so that no other name than his own could figure on
+the page.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I got many a thrashing for it at school, ma'am,&rdquo; said Tom, apologizing,
+&ldquo;and so I gave up writing altogether.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, yes! the men of action soon learn to despise the pen; they prefer to
+make history rather than record it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not easy for Hunter to steer his bashful friend through all the
+shoals and quicksands of such flattery; but, on the plea of his broken
+health and strength, he hurried him early to his bed, and returned to the
+fireside, where his aunt awaited him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's charming, if he were only not so diffident. Why will he not be more
+confiding, more at his ease with me,&mdash;like Mungo Park, or Sir Sidney
+Smith?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;After a while, so he will, aunt. You 'll see what a change there will be
+in him at our next visit All these flatteries he meets with are too much
+for him; but when we come down again, you 'll see him without these
+distracting influences. Then bear in mind his anxieties,&mdash;he has not
+yet seen his family; he is eager to be at home again. I carried him off
+here positively in spite of himself, and on the strict pledge of only for
+one day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One day! And do you mean that you are to go tomorrow?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No help for it, aunt. Tom is to be at Windsor on Saturday. But for that,
+he would already have been on his way to Ireland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then there's no time to be lost. What can we do for him? He'snot rich?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hasn't a shilling; but would reject the very shadow of such assistance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if a step were purchased for him; without his knowledge, I mean.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be impossible that he should not know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely there is some way of doing it A handsome sum to commemorate
+his achievement might be subscribed. I would begin it with a thousand
+pounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He'd not accept it. I know him thoroughly. There's only one road to him
+through which he would not deem a favor a burden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what of that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A kindness to his sister. I wish you saw her, aunt!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is she like him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like him? Yes; but very much better-looking. She's singularly handsome,
+and such a girl! so straightforward and so downright It is a positive
+luxury to meet her after all the tiresome conventionalities of the
+every-day young lady.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I ask her here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, if you would, aunt!&mdash;if you only would!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you may fall in love with her, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, aunt, that is done already.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think, sir, I might have been apprised of this attachment!&rdquo; said she,
+bridling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn't know it myself, aunt, till I was close to the Cape. I thought it
+a mere fancy as we dropped down Channel; grew more thoughtful over it in
+the Bay of Biscay; began to believe it as we discovered St. Helena; and
+came back to England resolved to tell you the whole truth, and ask you, at
+least, to see her and know her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I will, then. I 'll write and invite her here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You 're the best and kindest aunt in Christendom!&rdquo; said he, rushing over
+and kissing her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not going to let you read it, sir,&rdquo; said she, with a smile. &ldquo;If she
+show it to you, she may. Otherwise it is a matter between ourselves.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be it entirely as you wish, aunt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if all this goes hopefully on,&rdquo; said she, after a pause, &ldquo;is Aunt
+Dorothea to be utterly forgotten? No more visits here,&mdash;no happy
+summer evenings,&mdash;no more merry Christmases?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, aunt, I mean to be your neighbor. That cottage you have often
+offered me, near the rocks, I 'll not refuse it again,&mdash;that is, if
+you tempt me once more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is yours, and the farm along with it. Go to bed now, and leave me to
+write my note, which will require-some thought and reflection.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know you 'll do it well. I know none who could equal you in such a
+task.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll try and acquit myself with credit,&rdquo; said she, as she sat down to
+the writing-desk.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is all this about,&mdash;a letter from Miss Dorothea to Polly,&rdquo;
+said Tom, as they drove along the road back to town. &ldquo;Surely they never
+met?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never; but my aunt intends that they shall. She writes to ask your sister
+to come on a visit here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why not have told her the thing was impossible? You know us. You have
+seen the humble way we live,&mdash;how many a care it costs to keep up
+that little show of respectability that gets us sufferance in the world,
+and how one little attempt beyond this is quite out of our reach. Why not
+have told her frankly, sir, 'These people are not in our station'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just because I acknowledge no such distinction as you want to draw, my
+good fellow. If my aunt has asked your sister to come three hundred miles
+to see her, she has thought over her request with more foresight than you
+or I could have given it, take my word for it. When she means kindly, she
+plans thoughtfully. And now I will tell you what I never meant to have
+spoken of, that it was only last night she asked me how could she be of
+use to you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To <i>me!</i>&rdquo; said he, blushing, &ldquo;and why to <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you never be brought to see that you are a hero, Tom,&mdash;that all
+the world is talking of you just now, and people feel a pride in being
+even passingly mixed up with your name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If they only knew how much I have to be ashamed of before I can begin to
+feel vain, they 'd not be so ready with their praise or their flattery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll talk over all that with your sister Polly,&rdquo; said Hunter, gayly; for
+he saw the serious spirit that was gaining over the poor fellow.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do so, sir; and you'll soon see, if there's anything good or hopeful
+about me, where it comes from and who gave it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIX. FROM GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON
+</h2>
+<h3>
+Beddwys, N. Wales.
+</h3>
+<p>
+My dear Fred,&mdash;How happy I am that you are enjoying yourself; short
+of being with you, nothing could have given me greater pleasure than your
+letter. I like your portrait of the old lady, whose eccentricities are
+never inconsistent with some charming traits of disposition, and a nature
+eminently high-minded and honorable; but why not more about Josephine? She
+is surely oftener in your thoughts than your one brief paragraph would
+bespeak, and has her due share in making the cottage the delightful home
+you describe it to be. I entreat you to be more open and more explicit on
+this theme, for it may yet be many days before I can explore the matter
+for myself; since, instead of the brief absence I calculated on, we may,
+for aught I know, be detained here for some weeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is clear to me, from your last, a note of mine from Liverpool to you
+must have miscarried. You ask me where you are to address me next, and
+what is the nature of the business which has called me away so suddenly? I
+gave you in that letter all the information that I was myself possessed
+of, and which, in three words, amounted to this: Old Barrington, having
+involved himself in a serious personal quarrel with Stapylton, felt, or
+believed, that he ought to give him a meeting. Seeing how useless all
+attempt at dissuasion proved, and greatly fearing what hands he might fall
+into, I agreed to be his friend on the occasion; trusting, besides, that
+by a little exercise of tact and temper, extreme measures might be
+avoided, and the affair arranged. You may well believe, without my
+insisting further upon it, that I felt very painfully how we should both
+figure before the world,&mdash;a man of eighty-three or four, accompanied
+to the ground by another of sixty-odd! I know well how, in the changed
+temper of the age, such acts are criticised, and acquiesce, besides, in
+the wiser spirit that now prevails. However, as I said before, if
+Barrington must go on, it were better he should do so under the guidance
+of a sincere friend than of one casually elevated to act as such, in a
+moment of emergency.
+</p>
+<p>
+We left Dublin, by the mail-packet, on Wednesday; and after a rough
+passage of twenty-three hours, reached Liverpool too late to catch the
+evening coach. Thus detained, we only arrived here on Sunday night late.
+At my club I found a note from Stapylton, stating that he had daily called
+there to learn if we had come, but the boisterous state of the weather
+sufficiently explained our delay, and giving an address where he might be
+found, as well as that of &ldquo;his friend.&rdquo; Now, it so chanced that this
+friend was a very notorious person well known to me in India, where he had
+been tried for an unfair duel, and narrowly escaped&mdash;I should say
+unjustly escaped&mdash;being hanged. Though I had fully made up my mind
+not to be placed in any relations with such a man, I thought it would be
+as well that Barrington should know the character of his antagonist's
+friend from other sources, and so I invited an old Bengal companion of
+mine to dine with us the day after we arrived. Stamer was a judge of the
+criminal court, and tried Duff Brown, the man I speak of. As we sat over
+our wine together, we got upon this case, and Stamer declared that it was
+the only criminal cause in his whole life wherein he regretted the escape
+of the guilty party. &ldquo;The fellow,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;defended himself in a three
+hours' speech, ably and powerfully; but enunciated at times&mdash;as it
+were unconsciously&mdash;sentiments so abominable and so atrocious as to
+destroy the sympathy a part of his discourse excited. But somehow boldness
+has its fascination, and he was acquitted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington's old-fashioned notions were not, however, to be shocked even
+by this narrative, and he whispered to me, &ldquo;Unpleasant for <i>you</i>,
+Conyers. Wish it might have been otherwise, but it can't be helped.&rdquo; We
+next turned to discuss Duff Brown's friend, and Stamer exclaimed, &ldquo;Why,
+that's the man they have been making all this fuss about in India. He was,
+or he said he was, the adopted son of Howard Stapylton; but the family
+never believed the adoption, nor consented to receive him, and at this
+moment a Moonshee, who acted as Persian secretary to old Stapylton, has
+turned up with some curious disclosures, which, if true, would show that
+this young fellow held a very humble position in Stapylton's household,
+and never was in his confidence. This Moonshee was at Malta a few weeks
+ago, and may be, for aught I know, in England now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+I asked and obtained Barrington's permission to tell how we were ourselves
+involved with this Major Stapylton, and he quickly declared that, while
+the man stood thus accused, there could be no thought of according him a
+satisfaction. The opinion was not the less stringent that Stamer was
+himself an Irishman and of a fighting family.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am not very sure that we made Barrington a convert to our opinions, but
+we at least, as we separated for the night, left him doubtful and
+hesitating. I had not been in bed above an hour, when Mr. Withering awoke
+me. He had followed us from Dublin as soon as he learned our departure,
+and, going straight to a magistrate, swore informations against both
+Barrington and Stapylton. &ldquo;My old friend will never forgive me, I know,&rdquo;
+said he; &ldquo;but if I had not done this, I should never have forgiven
+myself.&rdquo; It was arranged between us that I was to mention the fact of such
+informations having been sworn, without stating by whom, to Barrington,
+and then persuade him to get privately away from town before a warrant
+could be served. I leave you to imagine that my task was not without its
+difficulties, but, before the day broke, I succeeded in inducing him to
+leave, and travelling by post without halt, we arrived at this quiet spot
+yesterday evening. Barrington, with all his good temper, is marvellously
+put out and irritable, saying, &ldquo;This is not the way such things were done
+once;&rdquo; and peevishly muttered, &ldquo;I wonder what poor Harry Beamish or Guy
+Hutchinson would say to it all?&rdquo; One thing is quite clear, we had got into
+a wasps' nest; Stapylton and his friend were both fellows that no
+honorable man would like to deal with, and we must wait with a little
+patience to find some safe road out of this troublesome affair.
+</p>
+<p>
+A letter came to B. from the India House the evening before we left town,
+but he handed it to me before he finished reading it, merely remarking,
+&ldquo;The old story, 'Yours of the ninth or nineteenth has duly been received,'
+&amp;c.&rdquo; But I found that it contained a distinct admission that his claim
+was not ill-founded, and that some arrangement ought to be come to.
+</p>
+<p>
+I now close my very lengthy epistle, promising, however, that as soon as I
+hear from town, either from Withering or Stamer, you shall have my news.
+We are, of course, close prisoners here for the present, for though the
+warrant would not extend to Ireland, Barrington's apprehensions of being
+&ldquo;served&rdquo; with such a writ at all would induce him to hide for six months
+to come.
+</p>
+<p>
+I scarcely ask you to write to me here, not knowing our probable stay; but
+to-morrow may, perhaps, tell us something on this head. Till when, believe
+me,
+</p>
+<p>
+Yours affectionately,
+</p>
+<p>
+Ormsby Conters.
+</p>
+<p>
+My most cordial greeting to Miss Barrington, and my love to her niece.
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO HIS SISTER MISS DINAH BARRINGTON.
+</p>
+<p>
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Dinah,&mdash;I hardly know how to tell you what has happened, or
+what is happening around me. I came over here to meet Major Stapylton, but
+find that there is no such person,&mdash;the man who calls himself so
+being a mere adventurer, who had taken the name, and, I believe, no small
+share of the goods, of its owner, got into the Bengal army, thence into
+our own service, and though not undistinguished for gallantry, seems to
+have led a life of ceaseless roguery and intrigue. He knew all about poor
+George's business, and was in correspondence with those we believe to be
+our friends in India, but who now turn out to be our inveterate enemies.
+This we have got at by the confession of one of those Oriental fellows
+they call Moonshees, who has revealed all their intercourse for years
+back, and even shown a document setting forth the number of rupees he was
+to receive when Stapylton had been married to Josephine. The Moonshee is
+very ill, and his examination can only be conducted at intervals; but he
+insists on a point of much importance to us, which is, that Stapylton
+induced him to tear out of the Rajah's Koran the page on which the
+adoption of George was written, and signed by the Meer himself. He
+received a large sum for this service, which, however, he evaded by a
+fraud, sending over to England not the real document itself, but a copy
+made by himself, and admirably counterfeited. It was the possession of
+this by Stapylton which enabled him to exercise a great control over our
+suit,&mdash;now averring that it was lost; now, under pledge of secrecy,
+submitting it to the inspection of some of the Indian authorities.
+Stapylton, in a word, saw himself in a position to establish our claim,
+whenever the time came that by making Josephine his wife, he could secure
+the fortune. This is all that we know up to this, but it is a great deal,
+and shows in what a maze of duplicity and treachery we have been involved
+for more than twenty years. The chief point, however, is that the real
+deed, written in the Meer's Koran, and torn out of it by the Moonshee, in
+his first impulse to forward it to Stapylton, is now extant, and the Koran
+itself is there to show the jagged margin of the torn-out leaf, and the
+corresponding page on the opposite side of the volume. Stapylton refuses
+to utter one word since the accusation against him has been made; and as
+the charges stand to falsifying documents, abstraction of funds, and other
+derelictions in India, he is now under a heavy bail to appear when called
+on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole business has made me so nervous and excitable that I cannot
+close my eyes at night, and I feel feverish and restless all day. It is
+very shocking to think of a man one has never injured, never heard of,
+animated with a spirit so inimical as to pass years of life in working ill
+to us. He would appear to have devoted himself to the task of blackening
+poor George's character and defaming him. It would seem that Mr. Howard
+Stapylton was one of those who took an active part against George. Whether
+this young fellow caught the contagion of this antipathy, or helped to
+feed it, I cannot tell; but it is certain that all the stories of cruelty
+and oppression the India Board used to trump up to us came from this one
+source; and at the end of all he seeks to be one of a family he has
+striven for years to ruin and to crush! I am lost in my efforts to
+understand this, though Stamer and Withering assure me they can read the
+man like print. Indeed, they see inferences and motives in fifty things
+which convey nothing to me; and whenever I feel myself stopped by some
+impassable barrier, to <i>them</i> it is only a bridge that conducts to a
+fresh discovery.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Stapyltons are all in arms now that another sportsman has winged the
+bird for them; and each day increases the number of accusations against
+this unfortunate fellow. It is true, dear Dinah, that our own prospects
+brighten through all this. I am constantly receiving civil messages and
+hopeful assurances; and even some of the directors have called to express
+sympathy and good wishes. But how chilled is the happiness that comes
+dashed with the misfortune of another! What a terrible deal it detracts
+from our joy to know that every throb of pleasure to ourselves has cost a
+pang of misery elsewhere! I wish this fellow could have gone his way,
+never minding us; or, if that could n't be, that he 'd have grown tired of
+persecuting those who had never harmed him, and given us up!
+</p>
+<p>
+They are now assailing him on all sides. One has found that he forged a
+will; another that he falsified a signature; and a miserable creature&mdash;a
+native Indian, who happened to be in that Manchester riot the other day&mdash;has
+now been ferreted out to swear that Stapylton followed him through a
+suburb, down a lane, and into a brick-field, where he cut him down and
+left him for dead. There seems a great deal of venom and acrimony in all
+this; and though the man is unquestionably not my friend, and I see that
+this persecution continues, I find it very hard not to stand by him.
+</p>
+<p>
+As for Withering, it has made the veteran ten years younger. He is up
+every morning at five, and I hear that he never goes to his room till long
+past midnight. These are the pastimes that to such men replace the sports
+of the field and the accidents of the chase. They have their vacillations
+of hope and fear, their moments of depression and of triumph in them; and
+they run a fellow-creature to earth with all the zest of a hard rider
+after a fox.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tell my darling Fifine that I am longing to be at home again,&mdash;longing
+for the quiet roof, and the roses at the window, and the murmur of the
+river, and her own sweet voice better than them all. And what a deal of
+happiness is in our power if we would only consent to enjoy it, without
+running after some imaginary good, some fancied blessing, which is to
+crown our wishes! If I could but only have guessed at the life of anxiety,
+doubt, and vacillation the pursuit of this claim would have cost me,&mdash;the
+twenty years of fever,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+I give you my word, Dinah, I 'd rather have earned my daily bread with a
+spade, or, when too old for that, taken to fishing for a livelihood.
+</p>
+<p>
+But why do I complain of anything at this moment? When have I been so
+truly happy for many a long year? Conyers never leaves me,&mdash;he talks
+of George from morning to night. And I now see that with all my affection
+for that dear boy, I only half knew his noble nature, his fine and
+generous character. If you only heard of the benevolent things he has
+done; the poor fellows he has sent home to their families at his own cost;
+the sums he has transmitted to wives and widows of soldiers in England;
+the children whose care and support he has provided for! These were the
+real drains on that fortune that the world thought wasted and squandered
+in extravagance. And do you know, Dinah, there is a vein of intense
+egotism in my heart that I never so much as suspected! I found it out by
+chance,&mdash;it was in marking how far less I was touched by the highest
+and best traits of my poor boy than by the signs of love to myself! and
+when Conyers said, &ldquo;He was always talking about you; he never did anything
+important without the question, 'How would &ldquo;Dad&rdquo; like this, I wonder?
+would &ldquo;Dad&rdquo; say &ldquo;God speed&rdquo; in this case?' And his first glass of wine
+every day was to the health of that dear old father over the seas.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+To you who loved him only a little less than myself, I have no shame in
+the confession of this weakness. I suppose Conyers, however, has hit upon
+it, for he harps on this theme continually, and, in sheer pride of heart,
+I feel ten years younger for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here comes Withering to say, &ldquo;Some more wonderful news;&rdquo; but I have begged
+him to keep it till I have sealed this letter, which if it grows any
+longer, I 'll never have courage to send to you. A dozen kisses to Fifine
+I can, however, transmit without any increase to the postage. Give my love
+to young Conyers; tell him I am charmed with his father,&mdash;I never met
+any one so companionable to me, and I only long for the day when the same
+roof shall cover all of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yours, my dearest sister, ever affectionately,
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM T. WITHERING, ESQ., TO MISS DINAH BARRINGTON, &ldquo;THE HOME.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Miss Barrington,&mdash;If your brother has deputed me to write to
+you, it is not that he is ill, but simply that the excitement caused by
+some late events here has so completely mastered him that he can neither
+sit quiet a moment, nor address him steadily to any task. Nor am I
+surprised it should be so. Old, weather-beaten sailor on the ocean of life
+as I am, I feel an amount of feverishness and anxiety I am half ashamed
+of. Truth is, my dear Miss Dinah, we lawyers get so much habituated to
+certain routine rogueries that we are almost shocked when we hear of a
+wickedness not designated by a statute. But I must not occupy your time
+with such speculations, the more since I have only a brief space to give
+to that report of proceedings to which I want your attention. And, first
+of all, I will entreat you to forgive me for all want of sequence or
+connection in what I may say, since events have grown so jumbled together
+in my mind, that it is perfectly impossible for me to be certain whether
+what I relate should come before or after some other recorded fact In a
+word, I mean to give you an outline of our discoveries, without showing
+the track of our voyage on the map, or even saying how we came by our
+knowledge.
+</p>
+<p>
+You are aware, Barrington tells me, how Stapylton came by the name he
+bears. Aware that he was for some of his earlier years domesticated with
+old Howard Stapylton at Ghurtnapore, in some capacity between confidential
+valet and secretary,&mdash;a position that was at once one of
+subordination and trust,&mdash;it would now appear that a Moonshee, who
+had long served Colonel Barrington as Persian correspondent, came into
+Howard Stapylton's service in the same capacity: how introduced, or by
+whom, we know not. With this Moonshee, the young fellow I speak of became
+an intimate and close friend, and it is supposed obtained from him all
+that knowledge of your nephew's affairs which enabled him to see to what
+his claim pretended, and what were its prospects of success. It is now
+clear enough that he only regarded this knowledge at first as a means of
+obtaining favor from the Indian Government. It was, in fact, by ceding to
+them in detail certain documents, that he got his first commission in the
+Madras Fusiliers, and afterwards his promotion in the same regiment; and
+when, grown more ambitious, he determined to enter the King's service, the
+money for purchase came from the same source. Being, however, a fellow of
+extravagant habits, his demands grew at last to be deemed excessive and
+importunate; and though his debts had been paid three several times, he
+was again found involving himself as before, and again requiring
+assistance. This application was, however, resisted; and it was apparently
+on the strength of that refusal that he suddenly changed his tactics,
+turned his attention towards us, and bethought him that by forwarding your
+grandniece's claim,&mdash;if he could but win her affections in the mean
+while,&mdash;he would secure as a wife one of the richest heiresses in
+Europe. An examination of dates proves this, by showing that his last
+application to the Indian Board was only a few weeks before he exchanged
+into the regiment of Hussars he lately served with, and just then ordered
+to occupy Kilkenny. In one word, when it was no longer profitable to
+oppose Josephine's claim, he determined to support it and make it his own.
+The &ldquo;Company,&rdquo; however, fully assured that by the papers in their
+possession they could prove their own cause against Colonel Barrington,
+resisted all his menaces,&mdash;when, what does he do? It was what only a
+very daring and reckless fellow would ever have thought of,&mdash;one of
+those insolent feats of boldness that succeed by the very shock they
+create. He goes to the Secret Committee at the India House and says: &ldquo;Of
+the eighteen documents I have given you, seven are false. I will not tell
+you which they are, but if you do not speedily compromise this claim and
+make a satisfactory settlement on Colonel Barrington's daughter, I'll
+denounce you, at all the peril it may be to myself.&rdquo; At first they agree,
+then they hesitate, then they treat again, and so does the affair proceed,
+till suddenly&mdash;no one can guess why&mdash;they assume a tone of open
+defiance, and flatly declare they will hold no further intercourse with
+him, and even threaten with exposure any demand on his part.
+</p>
+<p>
+This rejection of him came at a critical moment. It was just when the
+press had begun to comment on the cruelty of his conduct at Peterloo, and
+when a sort of cry was got up through the country to have him dismissed
+from the service. We all saw, but never suspected, why he was so terribly
+cut up at this time. It was hard to believe that he could have taken mere
+newspaper censure so much to heart. We never guessed the real cause, never
+saw that he was driven to his last expedient, and obliged to prejudice all
+his hope of success by precipitancy. If he could not make Josephine his
+wife at once, on the very moment, all was lost. He made a bold effort at
+this. Who knows if he might not have succeeded but for you, as Josephine
+was very young, my old friend himself utterly unfit to cope with anything
+but open hostility? I say again, I 'd not have answered for the result if
+you had not been in command of the fortress. At all events, he failed; and
+in the failure lost his temper so far as to force a quarrel upon your
+brother. He failed, however; and no sooner was he down, than the world was
+atop of him: creditors, Jews, bill-discounters, and, last of all, the
+Stapyltons, who, so long as he bore their family name thousands of miles
+off, or associated it with deeds of gallantry, said nothing; now, that
+they saw it held up to attack and insult, came forward to declare that he
+never belonged to them, and at length appealed formally to the Horse
+Guards, to learn under what designation he had entered the service, and at
+what period taken the name he went by.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton's application for leave to sell out had just been sent in; and
+once more the newspapers set up the cry that this man should not be
+permitted to carry away to Aix and Baden the proceeds of a sale which
+belonged to his &ldquo;creditors.&rdquo; You know the world, and I need not tell you
+all the pleasant things it told this fellow, for men are pretty nigh as
+pitiless as crows to their wounded. I thought the complication had reached
+its limit, when I learned yesterday evening that Stapylton had been
+summoned before a police magistrate for a case of assault committed by him
+when in command of his regiment at Manchester. The case had evidently been
+got up by a political party, who, seeing the casual unpopularity of the
+man, determined to profit by it. The celebrated radical barrister,
+Hesketh, was engaged for the plaintiff.
+</p>
+<p>
+When I arrived at the court, it was so full that it was with difficulty I
+got a passage to a seat behind the bench. There were crowds of
+fashionables present, the well-known men about town, and the idlers of the
+clubs, and a large sprinkling of military men, for the news of the case
+had got wind already.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton, dressed in black, and looking pale and worn, but still
+dignified and like a gentleman, had not a single friend with him. I own to
+you, I felt ashamed to be there, and was right glad when he did not
+recognize me.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the case opened by a declaration that this was no common assault
+case, wherein in a moment of passion a man had been betrayed into an
+excess, I knew the cant of my craft too well to lay any stress on such
+assertion, and received it as the ordinary exordium. As I listened,
+however, I was struck by hearing that the injured man was asserted to be
+one well known to Stapylton, with whom he had been for years in intimacy,
+and that the assault was in reality a deliberate attempt to kill, and not,
+as had been represented, a mere passing act of savage severity committed
+in hot blood. &ldquo;My client,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;will be brought before you; he is a
+Hindoo, but so long a resident of this country that he speaks our language
+fluently. You shall hear his story yourselves, and yourselves decide on
+its truthfulness. His wounds are, however, of so serious a nature that it
+will be advisable his statement should be a brief one.&rdquo; As he said this, a
+dark-complexioned fellow, with a look half-frightened, half defiant, was
+carried forwards in a chair, and deposited, as he sat, on the table. He
+gave his name as Lai Adeen, his age as forty-eight, his birthplace
+Majamarha, near Agra. He came to this country twelve years ago, as servant
+to an officer who had died on the passage, and after many hardships in his
+endeavor to earn a livelihood, obtained employment at Manchester in the
+mill of Brandling and Bennett, where he was employed to sweep the
+corridors and the stairs; his wages were nine shillings a week. All this,
+and much more of the same kind, he told simply and collectedly. I tried to
+see Stapylton while this was going on, but a pillar of the gallery,
+against which he leaned, concealed him from my view.
+</p>
+<p>
+I omit a great deal, not without its interest, but reserving it for
+another time, and come to his account of the night on which he was
+wounded. He said that as the cavalry marched on that morning into
+Manchester, he was struck by seeing at the head of the regiment one he had
+never set his eyes on for years, but whose features he knew too well to be
+deceived in.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tried to get near him, that he might recognize me,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but the
+crowd kept me back, and I could not. I thought, indeed, at one moment he
+had seen me, and knew me; but as he turned his head away, I supposed I was
+mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was on the following evening, when the riot broke out in Mill Street,
+that I saw him next. I was standing at the door of a chemist's shop when
+the cavalry rode by at a walk. There was a small body of them in front, at
+about forty or fifty paces, and who, finding a sort of barricade across
+the street, returned to the main body, where they seemed to be reporting
+this. A cry arose that the troops had been blocked up at the rear, and at
+the same instant a shower of stones came from the side-streets and the
+house-tops. Thinking to do him a service, I made my way towards him I
+knew, in order to tell him by what way he could make his escape; and
+jostled and pushed, and half ridden down, I laid my hand on his horse's
+shoulder to keep myself from falling. 'Stand back, you scoundrel!' said
+he, striking me with the hilt of his sword in the face. 'Don't you know
+me, master?' cried I, in terror. He bent down in his saddle till his face
+was almost close to mine, and then, reining his horse back to give him
+room for a blow, he aimed a desperate cut at me. I saw it coming, and
+threw myself down; but I rose the next instant and ran. The street was
+already so clear by this time, I got into Cleever's Alley, down Grange
+Street, up the lane that leads to the brick-fields, and at last into the
+fields themselves. I was just thinking I was safe, when I saw a horseman
+behind me. He saw me, and dashed at me. I fell upon my knees to ask mercy,
+and he gave me this;&rdquo; and he pointed to the bandages which covered his
+forehead, stained as they were with clotted blood. &ldquo;I fell on my face, and
+he tried to make his horse trample on me; but the beast would not, and he
+only touched me with his hoof as he sprang across me. He at last
+dismounted to see, perhaps, if I were dead; but a shout from some of the
+rioters warned him to mount again; and he rode away, and I lay there till
+morning. It is not true that I was in prison and escaped,&mdash;that I was
+taken to the hospital, and ran away from it. I was sheltered in one of the
+clay-huts of the brickmakers for several weeks, afraid to come abroad, for
+I knew that the Sahib was a great man and could take my life. It was only
+by the persuasions of others that I left my hiding-place and have come
+here to tell my story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+On being questioned why this officer could possibly desire to injure him,
+what grudge one in such a station could bear him, he owned he could not
+say; they had never been enemies, and, indeed, it was in the hope of a
+friendly recognition and assistance that he approached him in Mill Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton's defence was very brief, given in an off-hand, frank manner,
+which disposed many in his favor. He believed the fellow meant to attack
+him; he certainly caught hold of his bridle. It was not his intention to
+give him more than a passing blow; but the utterance of a Hindoo curse&mdash;an
+expression of gross outrage in the East&mdash;recalled prejudices long
+dormant, and he gave the rascal chase, and cut him over the head,&mdash;not
+a severe cut, and totally unaccompanied by the other details narrated.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As for our former acquaintance I deny it altogether. I have seen
+thousands of his countrymen, and may have seen him; but, I repeat, I never
+knew him, nor can he presume to say he knew me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The Hindoo smiled a faint, sickly smile, made a gesture of deep humility,
+and asked if he might put a few questions to the &ldquo;Sahib.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Were you in Naghapoor in the year of the floods?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Stapylton, firmly, but evidently with an effort to appear
+calm.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the service of the great Sahib, Howard Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In his service? Certainly not. I lived with him as his friend, and became
+his adopted heir.''
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What office did you fill when you first came to the 'Residence'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I assisted my friend in the duties of his government; I was a good
+Oriental scholar, and could write and speak a dialect he knew nothing of.
+But I submit to the court that this examination, prompted and suborned by
+others, has no other object than to insult me, by leading to disclosures
+of matters essentially private in their nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me ask but one question,&rdquo; said the barrister. &ldquo;What name did you bear
+before you took that of Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I refuse to submit to this insolence,&rdquo; said Stapylton, rising, angrily.
+&ldquo;If the laws of the country only can lend themselves to assist the
+persecutions of a rascally Press, the sooner a man of honor seeks another
+land the better. Adjudicate on this case, sirs; I will not stoop to bandy
+words with these men.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I now, sir,&rdquo; said Hesketh, opening his bag and taking out a roll of
+papers, &ldquo;am here to demand a committal for forgery against the person
+before you, passing under the name of Horace Stapylton, but whose real
+designation is Samuel Scott Edwardes, son of Samuel Edwardes, a name
+notorious enough once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot go on, my dear friend; the emotions that overpowered me at the
+time, and compelled me to leave the court, are again threatening me, and
+my brain reels at the recollection of a scene which, even to my
+fast-fading senses, was the most trying of my life.
+</p>
+<p>
+To General Conyers I must refer you for what ensued after I left. I cannot
+even say who came home with me to the hotel, though I am aware I owed that
+kindness to some one. The face of that unhappy man is yet before me, and
+all the calm in which I have written up to this leaves me, as I think over
+one of the most terrible incidents of my life.
+</p>
+<p>
+Your brother, shocked of course, bears up bravely, and hopes to write to
+you to-morrow.
+</p>
+<p>
+One word of good cheer before I close this miserable record. The Indian
+directors have written to offer excellent terms&mdash;splendidly liberal
+terms, Conyers calls them, and I agree with him. We have had a very busy
+week of it here, but it will be well requited if all that I now anticipate
+be confirmed to us. Barrington begs you will tell your neighbors, the
+Dills, that Tom&mdash;I think that is the name&mdash;has just arrived at
+Southampton with General Hunter, and will be here to-morrow evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have cut out a short passage from the newspaper to finish my narrative.
+I will send the full report, as published, to-morrow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Your attached friend,
+</p>
+<p>
+T. Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The chief police-office in Marlborough Street was yesterday the scene of
+a very shocking incident. The officer whose conduct at the head of his
+regiment in Manchester has of late called for the almost unanimous
+reprobation of the Press, was, while answering to a charge of aggravated
+assault, directly charged with forgery. Scarcely was the allegation made,
+than he drew a pistol from his pocket, and, placing the muzzle to his
+mouth, pulled the trigger. The direction of the weapon, however, was
+accidentally turned, and the ball, instead of proceeding upwards, passed
+through the lower jaw, fracturing the bone, and created a terrible wound.
+It is supposed that the large vessels are not injured, and that he may yet
+recover. All who witnessed the scene describe it as one of intense horror.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The unhappy man was at once removed to the Middlesex Hospital. He has not
+uttered a word since the event; and when asked if there were any relatives
+or friends whom he wished might be sent for, merely shook his head
+negatively. It is said that when the result of the consultation held on
+him was announced to him as favorable, he seemed rather grieved than
+otherwise at the tidings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO DINAH, HIS SISTER.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Dinah,&mdash;How glad am I to tell you that we leave this
+to-morrow, and a large party of us, too, all for &ldquo;The Home.&rdquo; Put young
+Conyers in my dressing-room, so that the large green bedroom can be free
+for the General, at least for one of the generals&mdash;for we have
+another here, Hunter, who will also be our guest. Then there will be
+Withering. As for myself, I can be stowed away anywhere. What happiness
+would there be to us all at such a meeting, if it were not for that poor
+wretch who lies in all his agony a few streets off, and who is never out
+of my thoughts. I went twice to the hospital to see him. The first time I
+lost courage, and came away. The second, I sent up my name, and asked if
+he would wish to see me. The only answer I got was my visiting-card torn
+in two! How hard it is for an injurer to forgive him he has injured! I
+have arranged with the Stapyltons, however, who instigated the charge of
+forgery, not to press it; at least, they are to take bail, and the bail
+will be forfeited, so I understand it; but Withering will explain all more
+clearly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our own affairs are all as bright and prosperous as our best wishes could
+desire. The Council have had all the evidence before them, and the
+Moonshee has produced his copy of the Koran, with the torn leaf fitting
+into the jagged margin, and George is vindicated at last in everything.
+His loyalty, his disinterestedness, his honesty, all established. The
+ceremony of his marriage has been fully recognized; and General Conyers
+tells me that the lowest estimate of our claim is a little short of a
+quarter of a million sterling. He counsels me not to be exigent in my
+terms; if he knew me better, perhaps, he would not have deemed the advice
+so necessary.
+</p>
+<p>
+What will Fifine say to all this wealth? Will she want to go back to
+India, and be a princess, and ride about on an elephant; or will she
+reconcile herself to such humble ways as ours? I am most eager to hear how
+she will take the tidings. Withering says it will not spoil her; that
+knowing nothing of life in its moneyed relations, she runs no risk of
+being carried away by any vulgar notions of her own importance through
+riches.
+</p>
+<p>
+Conyers has never once hinted at his son's pretensions since Fifine has
+become an heiress; and I fancy&mdash;it may be only fancy&mdash;is a shade
+or so cool towards me, so that I have not referred to them. But what can I
+do? I cannot offer him my granddaughter, nor&mdash;if what you tell me be
+true, that they are always quarrelling&mdash;would the proposal be a great
+kindness to either.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here is Tom Dill, too, and what a change! He is the image of Polly; and a
+fine, well-grown, straight-figured fellow, that looks you manfully in the
+face,&mdash;not the slouching, loutish, shamefaced creature you remember
+him. Hunter has had him gazetted to an Ensigncy in the 10th Foot, and he
+will, or I much mistake him, do honest credit to the recommendation.
+Hunter takes him about with him wherever he goes, telling all about the
+shipwreck and Tom's gallantry,&mdash;enough to turn the lad's head with
+vanity, but that he is a fine, simple-hearted creature, who thinks very
+little of himself or his achievement. He seems to have no other thought
+than what Polly, his sister, will say and think of him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He also will be one of our party; that is if I can persuade him to make
+&ldquo;The Home&rdquo; his headquarters while our friends are with us. What a strong
+muster we shall be; and how we 'll astonish that old bin of Madeira,
+Dinah! By the way, I have been rather boastful about it to Conyers, and
+let some bottles have the sun on them for a couple of hours every day.
+</p>
+<p>
+I should like to try my chance once more of seeing that poor fellow at the
+hospital, but Withering will not hear of it; he got positively
+ill-tempered at the bare mention of such a wish. Even Conyers says,
+&ldquo;Better not,&rdquo; with an air that may mean for the sick man's sake as much as
+my own.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little more of this life of noise, confusion, and excitement would
+finish me. This city existence, with its incessant events and its never
+ending anxieties, is like walking in a high wind with the chimney-pots
+falling and crashing on every side of one,&mdash;while I am pitying the
+fellow whose skull is just cracked, I am forced to remember that my own is
+in danger. And yet there are people who like it; who tell you that out of
+London there is no living; that the country is a grave, aggravated by the
+consciousness that one is dead and buried there!
+</p>
+<p>
+On Tuesday,&mdash;Wednesday, at farthest,&mdash;Dinah, look out for us. I
+do not believe there is that prize in the wheel that would tempt me again
+away from home! and till I reach it, believe, my dear Dinah,
+</p>
+<p>
+Your loving brother,
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have just seen Conyers. He met Sir Harvey Hethrington, the Home
+Secretary, this morning, and they got into a talk over our business, and
+H. said how cruelly I had been treated all this time back, and how
+unfairly poor George's memory was dealt with. &ldquo;We want,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to show
+your friend our respect and our sympathy, and we have thought of
+submitting his name to the King for a Baronetcy. How do you think Mr.
+Barrington himself would take our project?&rdquo; &ldquo;I 'll find out,&rdquo; said
+Conyers, as he told me of the conversation. &ldquo;If they don't let me off,
+Conyers,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;ask them to commute it to Knighthood, for the heralds'
+fees will be smaller; but I'll try, meanwhile, if I can't escape either.&rdquo;
+So that now, Dinah, you may expect me on Saturday. I told you what a place
+this was; you are never sure what may befall you from one moment to
+another!
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XX. THE END
+</h2>
+<h3>
+Fortune had apparently ceased to persecute Peter Barrington.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The Minister did not press honors upon him, and he was free to wait for
+his companions, and in their company he returned to Ireland.
+</p>
+<p>
+The news of his success&mdash;great as it was, magnified still more&mdash;had
+preceded him to his own country; and he was met, as all lucky men are met,
+and will be met to the end of time, by those who know the world and
+feelingly estimate that the truly profitable are the fortunate!
+</p>
+<p>
+Not that he remarked how many had suddenly grown so cordial; what troops
+of passing acquaintances had become in a moment warm friends, well-wishing
+and affectionate. He never so much as suspected that &ldquo;Luck&rdquo; is a deity
+worshipped by thousands, who even in the remotest way are not to be
+benefited by it. He had always regarded the world as a far better thing
+than many moralists would allow it to be,&mdash;unsteady, wilful,
+capricious, if you like&mdash;but a well-intentioned, kindly minded world,
+that would at all times, where passion or prejudice stood aloof,
+infinitely rather do the generous thing than the cruel one.
+</p>
+<p>
+Little wonder, then, if he journeyed in a sort of ovation! At every change
+of horses in each village they passed, there was sure to be some one who
+wanted to shake his hand. People hobbled out on crutches and quitted
+sick-beds to say how &ldquo;glad they were;&rdquo; mere acquaintances most of them,
+who felt a strange mysterious sort of self-consequence in fancying
+themselves for the moment the friends of Peter Barrington, the
+millionnaire! This is all very curious, but it is a fact,&mdash;a fact
+which I make no pretence to explain, however.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And here comes the heartiest well-wisher of them all!&rdquo; cried Barrington,
+as he saw his sister standing on the roadside, near the gate. With
+thoughtful delicacy, his companions lingered behind, while he went to meet
+and embraced her. &ldquo;Was I not a true prophet, Dinah dear? Did I not often
+foretell this day to you?&rdquo; said he, as he drew her arm, and led her along,
+forgetting all about his friends and companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have they paid the money, Peter?&rdquo; said she, sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course they have not; such things are not settled like the fare of a
+hackney-coach. But our claim is acknowledged, and, fifty thousand times
+better, George Barrington's name absolved from every shadow of an
+imputation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the amount they agree to give?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, I don't know,&mdash;that is, I don't recollect, there were
+so many interviews and such discussions; but Withering can tell you
+everything. Withering knows it all. Without <i>him</i> and Conyers I don't
+know how I could have got on. If you had heard how he spoke of George at
+the Council! 'You talk of <i>my</i> services,' said he; 'they are no more
+fit to be compared with those of Colonel Barrington, than are <i>my</i>
+petty grievances with the gross wrongs that lie on <i>his</i> memory.'
+Withering was there; he heard the words, and described the effect of them
+as actually overwhelming.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Withering believes the whole thing to be settled?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, he does! Why should he oppose his belief to that of the whole
+world? Why, my dear Dinah, it is not one, nor two, but some hundreds of
+people have come to wish me joy. They had a triumphal arch at Naas, with
+'Welcome to Barrington' over it. At Carlow, Fishbourne came out with the
+corporation to offer me congratulations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave a hasty, impatient shake of the head, but repressed the sharp
+reply that almost trembled on her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By George!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;it does one's heart good to witness such a burst
+of generous sentiment. You 'd have thought some great national benefit had
+befallen, or that some one&mdash;his country's idol&mdash;had just reaped
+the recompense of his great services. They came flocking out of the towns
+as we whirled past, cheering lustily, and shouting, 'Barrington forever!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I detest a mob!&rdquo; said she, pursing up her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;These were no mobs, Dinah; these were groups of honest fellows, with kind
+hearts and generous wishes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Another, but more decisive, toss of the head warned Peter that the
+discussion had gone far enough; indeed she almost said so, by asking
+abruptly, &ldquo;What is to be done about the boy Conyers? He is madly in love
+with Josephine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Marry her, I should say!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As a cure for the complaint, I suppose. But what if she will not have
+him? What if she declares that she 'd like to go back to the convent
+again,&mdash;that she hates the world, and is sorry she ever came out into
+it,&mdash;that she was happier with the sisters&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has she said all this to you, sister?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly not, Peter,&rdquo; said Dinah, bridling up. &ldquo;These were confidences
+imparted to the young man himself. It was he told me of them: he came to
+me last night in a state bordering on distraction. He was hesitating
+whether he would not throw himself into the river or go into a marching
+regiment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is only a laughing matter, then, Dinah?&rdquo; said Peter, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing of the kind, brother! He did not put the alternatives so much in
+juxtaposition as I have; but they lay certainly in that manner on his
+thoughts. But when do your friends arrive? I thought they were to have
+come with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a head I have, Dinah! They are all here; two carriages of them. I
+left them on the road when I rushed on to meet you. Oh, here they come!
+here they are!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother's good fortune, gentlemen, has made him seem to forget what
+adversity never did; but I believe you all know how welcome you are here?
+Your son, General Conyers, thought to meet you earlier, by taking boat
+down to the village, and the girls went with him. Your friend, Polly Dill,
+is one of them, General Hunter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Having thus, with one sweep of the scythe, cut down a little of all around
+her, she led the way towards the cottage, accepting the arm of General
+Conyers with an antiquated grace that sorely tried Hunter's good manners
+not to smile at.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know what you are looking at, what you are thinking of, Barrington,&rdquo;
+said Withering, as he saw the other stand a moment gazing at the landscape
+on the opposite side of the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think you do, Tom,&rdquo; said he, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were thinking of buying that mountain yonder. You were saying to
+yourself, 'I 'll be the owner of that beech wood before I'm a month
+older!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, you 're right! though I have n't the remotest notion of how
+you guessed it. The old fellow that owns it shall name his own terms
+to-morrow morning. Here come the girls, and they 've got Tom Dill with
+them. How the fellow rows! and Fifine is laughing away at Conyers's
+attempt to keep the boat straight. Look at Hunter, too; he 's off to meet
+them. Is he 'going in' for the great heiress prize, eh, Tom?&rdquo; said he,
+with a knowing smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Hunter assisted the ladies to land with becoming gallantry, he did
+not offer his arm to Josephine, but dropped behind, where Tom Dill brought
+up the rear with his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have no confidences that you may not listen to,&rdquo; said Polly, as she
+saw that he hesitated as to joining them. &ldquo;Tom, indeed, has been telling
+of yourself, and you may not care to hear your own praises.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If they come from <i>you</i>, I 'm all ears for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn't that pretty, Tom? Did you ever hear any one ask more candidly for&mdash;no,
+not flattery&mdash;what is it to be called?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom, however, could not answer, for he had stopped to shake hands with
+Darby, whose &ldquo;May I never!&rdquo; had just arrested him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an honest, fine-hearted fellow it is!&rdquo; said Hunter, as they moved
+on, leaving Tom behind.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if <i>you</i> had n't found it out, who would have known, or who
+acknowledged it? <i>I</i> know&mdash;for he has told me&mdash;all you have
+been to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pooh, pooh! nothing; less than nothing. He owes all that he is to
+himself. He is one of those fellows who, once they get into the right
+groove in life, are sure to go ahead. Not even <i>you</i> could make a
+doctor of him. Nature made him a soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly blushed slightly at the compliment to those teachings she believed a
+secret, and he went on,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has the world been doing here since I left?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pretty much what it did while you were here. It looked after its turnips
+and asparagus, took care of its young calves, fattened its chickens,
+grumbled at the dear-ness of everything, and wondered when Dr. Buck would
+preach a new sermon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No deaths,&mdash;no marriages?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;None. There was only one candidate for both, and he has done neither,&mdash;Major
+M'Cormick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Confound that old fellow! I had forgotten him. Do you remember the last
+day I saw you here? We were in the garden, talking, as we believed,
+without witnesses. Well, <i>he</i> overheard us. He heard every word we
+said, and a good deal more that we did not say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; so he informed me, a few days after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don't mean to say that he had the impertinence&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The frankness, General,&mdash;the charming candor,&mdash;to tell me that
+I was a very clever girl, and not to be discouraged by one failure or two;
+that with time and perseverance&mdash;I think he said perseverance&mdash;some
+one was sure to take a fancy to me: he might not, perhaps, be handsome,
+possibly not very young; his temper, too, might chance to be more tart
+than was pleasant; in a word, he drew such a picture that I had to stop
+him short, and ask was he making me a proposal? He has never spoken to me
+since!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I feel as if I could break his neck,&rdquo; muttered Hunter, below his breath;
+then added, &ldquo;Do you remember that I asked leave to write to you once,&mdash;only
+once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I remember it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you would not answer me. You shook your head, as though to say the
+permission would be of no service to me; that I might write, but, you
+understand, that it would only be to indulge in a delusion&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an expressive shake of the head that meant all that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! there it is again; never serious, never grave! And now I want you to
+be both. Since I landed in England, I ran down for a day to Devonshire. I
+saw an old aunt of mine, who, besides being very rich, has retained no
+small share of the romance of her life. She always had a dash of
+hero-worship about her, and so I took down Tom with me to show her the
+gallant fellow whose name was in all the newspapers, and of whom all the
+world was talking. She was charmed with him,&mdash;with his honest, manly
+simplicity, his utter want of all affectation. She asked me ten times a
+day, 'Can I not be of service to him? Is there no step he wishes to
+purchase? Is there nothing we can do for him?' 'Nothing,' said I; 'he is
+quite equal to his own fortune.' 'He may have brothers,' said she. 'He has
+a sister,' said I,&mdash;'a sister who has made him all that he is, and it
+was to repay her love and affection that he has shown himself to be the
+gallant fellow we have seen him.' 'Tell her to come and see me.&mdash;that
+is,' said she, correcting herself, 'give her a letter I shall write, and
+persuade her, if you can, to oblige me by doing what I ask.' Here is the
+letter; don't say no till you have read it. Nay, don't shake your head so
+deploringly; things may be hard without being impossible. At all events,
+read her note carefully. It's a droll old hand, but clear as print.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll read it,&rdquo; said she, looking at the letter; but the sorrowful tone
+revealed how hopelessly she regarded the task.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask Tom about her; and make Tom tell you what she is like. By Jove! he
+has such an admiration for the old damsel, I was half afraid he meant to
+be my uncle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+They reached the cottage laughing pleasantly over this conceit, and Polly
+hurried up to her room to read the letter. To her surprise, Josephine was
+there already, her eyes very red with crying, and her cheeks flushed and
+feverish-looking.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dearest Fifine, what is all this for, on the happiest day of your
+life?&rdquo; said she, drawing her arm around her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's all <i>your</i> fault,&mdash;all <i>your</i> doing,&rdquo; said the other,
+averting her head, as she tried to disengage herself from the embrace.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My fault,&mdash;my doing? What do you mean, dearest, what can I have done
+to deserve this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know very well what you have done. You knew all the time how it would
+turn out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly protested firmly that she could not imagine what was attributed to
+her, and only after a considerable time obtained the explanation of the
+charge. Indeed it was not at first easy to comprehend it, given, as it
+was, in the midst of tears, and broken at every word by sobs. The
+substance was this: that Fifine, in an attempted imitation of Polly's
+manner,&mdash;an effort to copy the coquetting which she fancied to be so
+captivating,&mdash;had ventured to trifle so far with young Conyers, that,
+after submitting to every alternative of hope and fear for weeks long, he
+at last gave way, and determined to leave the house, quit the country, and
+never meet her more. &ldquo;It was to be like you I did it,&rdquo; cried she, sobbing
+bitterly, &ldquo;and see what it has led me to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, dearest, be really like me for half an hour; that is, be very
+patient and very quiet. Sit down here, and don't leave this till I come
+back to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly kissed her hot cheek as she spoke; and the other sat down where she
+was bade, with the half-obedient sulkiness of a naughty child.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell young Mr. Conyers to come and speak to me. I shall be in the
+garden,&rdquo; said she to his servant; and before she had gone many paces he
+was beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Polly dearest! have you any hope for me?&rdquo; cried he, in agony. &ldquo;If you
+knew the misery I am enduring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come and take a walk with me,&rdquo; said she, passing her arm within his. &ldquo;I
+think you will like to hear what I have to tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The revelation was not a very long one; and as they passed beneath the
+room where Josephine sat, Polly called out, &ldquo;Come down here, Fifine, we
+are making a bouquet; try if you can find 'heart's-ease.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+What a happy party met that day at dinner! All were in their best spirits,
+each contented with the other. &ldquo;Have you read my aunt's note?&rdquo; whispered
+Hunter to Polly, as they passed into the drawing-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. I showed it also to Miss Dinah. I asked her advice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what did she say,&mdash;what did she advise?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She said she 'd think over it and tell me to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-morrow! Why not now,&mdash;why not at once?&rdquo; cried he, impatiently. &ldquo;I
+'ll speak to her myself;&rdquo; and he hurried to the little room where Miss
+Dinah was making tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not a very long interview; and Hunter returned, fond, radiant, and
+triumphant. &ldquo;She's the cleverest old woman I ever met in my life,&rdquo; said
+he; &ldquo;and the best, besides, after my Aunt Dorothy. She said that such an
+invitation as that was too cordial to be coldly declined; that it meant
+more&mdash;far more&mdash;than a politeness; that you ought to go, yes, by
+all means; and if there was any difficulty about the journey, or any
+awkwardness in travelling so far, why, there was an easy remedy for it, as
+well as for meeting my aunt a perfect stranger.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To go as her niece, dearest Polly,&mdash;to be the wife of a man who
+loves you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible that you have so much to say to each other that you won't
+take tea?&rdquo; cried Aunt Dinah; while she whispered to Withering, &ldquo;I declare
+we shall never have a sociable moment till they're all married off, and
+learn to conduct themselves like reasonable creatures.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not the best testimony we can give to happiness, that it is a thing
+to feel and not describe,&mdash;to be enjoyed, but not pictured? It is
+like a debt that I owe to my reader, to show him &ldquo;The Home&rdquo; as it was when
+blissful hearts were gathered under its roof; and yet, for the life of me,
+I cannot acquit myself of it. To say that there were old people with their
+memories of the past, and young ones with their hopes of the future; that
+there were bygones to sigh over, and vistas to gaze at, conveys but little
+of the kindliness by which heart opened to heart, and sorrow grew lighter
+by mutual endurance, and joys became brighter as they were imparted to
+another.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I find,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they sat at breakfast together, &ldquo;that
+Josephine insists on going back to the convent, and Fred is resolved on an
+exchange into the Infantry, and is off for Canada immediately.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a bit of it!&rdquo; broke in Hunter, who remarked nothing of the roguish
+drollery of old Peter's eye, nor even suspected that the speech was made
+in mockery. &ldquo;Master Fred is coming with me into Kilkenny this morning, for
+a visit to the Dean, or whatever he is, who dispenses those social
+handcuffs they call licenses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, they were quarrelling all the morning,&rdquo; repeated Harrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So we were, sir, and so we mean to do for many a year,&rdquo; said Josephine;
+&ldquo;and to keep us in countenance, I hear that General Hunter and Polly have
+determined to follow our example.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do I hear, Miss Dill?&rdquo; said Miss Barrington, with an affected
+severity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm afraid, madam, it is true; there has been what my father calls 'a
+contagious endemic' here lately, and we have both caught it; but ours are
+mild cases, and we hope soon to recover.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What's this I see here?&rdquo; cried Fred, who, to conceal his shame, had taken
+up the newspaper. &ldquo;Listen to this: 'The notorious Stapylton, <i>alias</i>
+Edwardes, whose case up to yesterday was reported all but hopeless, made
+his escape from the hospital, and has not since been heard of. It would
+appear that some of the officials had been bribed to assist his evasion,
+and a strict inquiry will be immediately set on foot into the affair.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think he has got over to France?&rdquo; whispered Peter to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course he has; the way was all open, and everything ready for him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I am thoroughly happy!&rdquo; cried Barrington, &ldquo;and there's not even the
+shadow of a cloud over our present sunshine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+THE END. <br /><br />
+</p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+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: Barrington
+ Volume II (of II)
+
+Author: Charles James Lever
+
+Illustrator: Phiz.
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34883]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+BARRINGTON
+
+Volume II.
+
+By Charles James Lever
+
+With Illustrations By Phiz.
+
+Boston: Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+1907.
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+
+VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I. FIFINE AND POLLY
+
+There are a few days in our autumnal season--very few and rare!--when we
+draw the curtain against the glare of the sun at breakfast, and yet in
+the evening are glad to gather around the cheerful glow of the fire.
+These are days of varied skies, with fleecy clouds lying low beneath a
+broad expanse of blue, with massive shadows on the mountains, and here
+and there over the landscape tips of sunlight that make the meanest
+objects pictures; and, with all these, a breezy wind that scatters the
+yellow leaves and shakes the tree-tops, while it curls the current of
+the bright river into mimic waves. The sportsman will tell you that on
+such days the birds are somewhat wild, and the angler will vow that no
+fish will rise to the fly, nor is it a scent-lying day for the harriers;
+and yet, with all this, there is a spring and elasticity in the air that
+impart themselves to the temperament, so that the active grow energetic,
+and even the indolent feel no touch of lassitude.
+
+It was on the morning of such a day that Barrington, with his sister
+and granddaughter, drew nigh the Home. Conyers had parted with them at
+Dublin, where his regiment was now stationed, but was to follow in a day
+or two. All the descriptions--descriptions which had taken the shape
+of warnings--which they had given Josephine of the cottage could not
+prevent her asking at each turn of the road if that large house yonder,
+if that sombre tower over the trees, if that massive gate-lodge were
+not theirs. "I know this is it, grandpapa," said she, clapping her
+hands with delight as they came opposite a low wall within which lay the
+spacious lawn of Cobham Park, a portion of the house itself being just
+visible through the trees; "don't tell me, aunt," cried she, "but let me
+guess it."
+
+"It is the seat of Sir Charles Cobham, child, one of the richest
+baronets in the kingdom."
+
+"There it is at last,--there it is!" cried she, straining oat of the
+carriage to see the handsome portico of a very large building, to which
+a straight avenue of oaks led up from the high-road. "My heart tells me,
+aunt, that this is ours!"
+
+"It was once on a time, Fifiue," said the old man, with a quivering
+voice, and a glassy film over his eyes; "it was once, but it is so no
+longer."
+
+"Barrington Hall has long ceased to belong to us," said Miss Dinah; "and
+after all the pains I have taken in description, I cannot see how you
+could possibly confound it with our little cottage."
+
+The young girl sat back without a word, and, whether from disappointment
+or the rebuke, looked forth no more.
+
+"We are drawing very near now, Fifine," said the old man, after a long
+silence, which lasted fully two miles of the way. "Where you see the
+tall larches yonder--not there--lower down, at the bend of the stream;
+those are the trees. I declare, Dinah, I fancy they have grown since we
+saw them last."
+
+"I have no doubt you do, Peter; not that you will find the cottage far
+more commodious and comfortable than you remembered it."
+
+"Ah, they've repaired that stile, I see," cried he; "and very well
+they've done it, without cutting away the ivy. Here we are, darling;
+here we are!" and he grasped the young girl's hand in one of his, while
+he drew the other across his eyes.
+
+"They 're not very attentive, I must say, brother Peter, or they would
+not leave us standing, with our own gate locked against us."
+
+"I see Darby running as fast as he can. Here he comes!"
+
+"Oh, by the powers, ye're welcome home, your honor's reverence, and the
+mistresses!" cried Darby, as he fumbled at the lock, and then failing in
+all his efforts,--not very wonderful, seeing that he had taken a wrong
+key,--he seized a huge stone, and, smashing the padlock at a blow, threw
+wide the gate to admit them.
+
+"You are initiated at once into our Irish ways, Fifine," said Miss
+Barrington. "All that you will see here is in the same style. Let that
+be repaired this evening, sir, and at your own cost," whispered she to
+Darby, into whose hand at the same moment Peter was pressing a crown
+piece.
+
+"'T is the light of my eyes to see your honors home again! 'Tis like
+rain to the new potatoes what I feel in my heart, and looking so fresh
+and well too! And the young lady, she isn't--"
+
+From what dread anticipation Darby's sudden halt saved him the
+expression is not for me to say, but that Peter Barrington guessed it is
+probable, for he lay back in the carriage and shook with laughter.
+
+"Drive on, sir," said Miss Dinah to the postilion, "and pull up at the
+stone cross."
+
+"You can drive to the door now, ma'am," said Darby, "the whole way; Miss
+Polly had the road made while you were away."
+
+"What a clever girl! Who could have thought it?" said Barrington.
+
+"I opine that we might have been consulted as to the change. On a matter
+as important as this, Peter, I think our voices might have been asked."
+
+"And how well she has done it too!" muttered he, half aloud; "never
+touched one of those copper beeches, and given us a peep of the bright
+river through the meadows."
+
+As the carriage rolled briskly along, Darby, who trotted alongside, kept
+up a current narrative of the changes effected during their absence.
+
+"The ould pigeon-house is tuck down, and an iligant new one put up in
+the island; and the calves' paddock is thrown into the flower-garden,
+and there's a beautiful flight of steps down to the river, paved with
+white stones,--sorrow one is n't white as snow."
+
+"It is a mercy we had not a sign over the door, brother Peter,"
+whispered Miss Dinah, "or this young lady's zeal would have had it
+emblazoned like a shield in heraldry."
+
+"Oh, how lovely, how beautiful, how exquisite!" cried Josephine, as they
+came suddenly round the angle of a copse and directly in front of the
+cottage.
+
+Nor was the praise exaggerated. It was all that she had said. Over
+a light trellis-work, carried along under the thatch, the roses and
+jessamine blended with the clematis and the passion-flower, forming
+a deep eave of flowers, drooping in heavy festoons across the spaces
+between the windows, and meeting the geraniums which grew below. Through
+the open sashes the rooms might be seen, looking more like beautifnl
+bowers than the chambers of a dwelling-house. And over all, in sombre
+grandeur, bent the great ilex-trees, throwing their grand and tranquil
+shade over the cottage and the little grass-plot and even the river
+itself, as it swept smoothly by. There was in the stillness of that
+perfumed air, loaded with the sweet-brier and the rose, a something of
+calm and tranquillity; while in the isolation of the spot there was a
+sense of security that seemed to fill op the measure of the young
+girl's hopes, and made her exclaim with rapture, "Oh, this, indeed, is
+beautiful!"
+
+"Yes, my darling Fifine!" said the old man, as he pressed her to his
+heart; "your home, your own home! I told you, my dear child, it was not
+a great castle, no fine chateau, like those on the Meuse and the Sambre,
+but a lowly cottage with a thatched roof and a rustic porch."
+
+"In all this ardor for decoration and smartness," broke in Miss Dinah,
+"it would not surprise me to find that the peacock's tail had been
+picked out in fresh colors and varnished."
+
+"Faix! your honor is not far wrong," interposed Darby, who had an Irish
+tendency to side with the majority. "She made us curry and wash ould
+Sheela, the ass, as if she was a race-horse."
+
+"I hope poor Wowsky escaped," said Barrington, laughing.
+
+"That's what he didn't! He has to be scrubbed with soap and water
+every morning, and his hair divided all the way down his back, like a
+Christian's, and his tail looks like a bunch of switch grass."
+
+"That 's the reason he has n't come out to meet me; the poor fellow
+is like his betters,--he's not quite sure that his altered condition
+improves him."
+
+"You have at least one satisfaction, brother Peter," said Miss Dinah,
+sharply; "you find Darby just as dirty and uncared for as you left him."
+
+"By my conscience, there 's another of us is n't much changed since we
+met last," muttered Darby, but in a voice only audible to himself.
+
+"Oh, what a sweet cottage! What a pretty summer-house!" cried Josephine,
+as the carriage swept round the copse, and drew short up at the door.
+
+"This summer-house is your home, Fifine," said Miss Barrington, tartly.
+
+"Home! home! Do you mean that we live here,--live here always, aunt?"
+
+"Most distinctly I do," said she, descending and addressing herself to
+other cares. "Where's Jane? Take these trunks round by the back door.
+Carry this box to the green-room,--to Miss Josephine's room," said she,
+with a stronger stress on the words.
+
+"Well, darling, it is a very humble, it is a very lowly," said
+Barrington, "but let us see if we cannot make it a very happy home;" but
+as he turned to embrace her, she was gone.
+
+"I told you so, brother Peter,--I told you so, more than once; but, of
+course, you have your usual answer, 'We must do the best we can!' which
+simply means, doing worse than we need do."
+
+Barrington was in no mood for a discussion; he was too happy to be once
+more at home to be ruffled by any provocation his sister could give him.
+Wherever he turned, some old familiar object met his eye and seemed
+to greet him, and he bustled in and out from his little study to the
+garden, and then to the stable, where he patted old Roger; and across
+to the cow-house, where Maggie knew him, and bent her great lazy eyes
+softly on him; and then down to the liver-side, where, in gilt letters,
+"Josephine" shone on the trim row-boat he had last seen half rotten on
+the bank; for Polly had been there too, and her thoughtful good-nature,
+forgetting nothing which might glad them on their coming.
+
+Meanwhile, Josephine had reached her chamber, and, locking the door,
+sat down and leaned her head on the table. Though no tears fell from
+her eyes, her bosom heaved and fell heavily, and more than one deep sigh
+escaped her. Was it disappointment that had so overcome her? Had she
+fancied something grander and more pretentious than this lonely
+cottage? Was it that Aunt Dinah's welcome was wanting in affection? What
+revulsion could it be that so suddenly overwhelmed her? Who can tell
+these things, who can explain how it is that, without any definite
+picture of an unexpected joy, imagination will so work upon us that
+reality will bring nothing but a blank? It is not that the object is
+less attractive than is hoped for, it is simply that a dark shadow has
+passed over our own hearts; the sense of enjoyment has been dulled, and
+we are sad without a reason. If we underrate sorrows of our youth,--and
+this is essentially one of them,--it is because our mature age leaves us
+nothing of that temperament on which such afflictions preyed.
+
+Josephine, without knowing why, without even a reason, wished herself
+back in the convent. There, if there was a life of sombre monotony and
+quietude, there was at least companionship; she had associates of her
+own age. They had pursuits in common, shared the same hopes and wishes
+and fears; but here--but here--Just as her thoughts had carried her so
+far, a tap--a very gentle tap--came to the door. Josephine heard it, but
+made no answer. It was repeated a little louder, and then a low pleasing
+voice she had never heard before said, "May I come in?"
+
+"No," said Josephine,--"yes--that is--who are you?"
+
+"Polly Dill," was the answer; and Josephine arose and unlocked the door.
+
+"Miss Barrington told me I might take this liberty," said Polly, with a
+faint smile. "She said, 'Go and make acquaintance for yourself; I never
+play master of the ceremonies.'"
+
+"And you are Polly,--the Polly Dill I have heard so much of?" said
+Josephine, regarding her steadily and fixedly.
+
+"How stranded your friends must have been for a topic when they talked
+of _me!_" said Polly, laughing.
+
+"It is quite true you have beautiful teeth,--I never saw such beautiful
+teeth," said Josephine to herself, while she still gazed earnestly at
+her.
+
+"And you," said Polly, "are so like what I had pictured you,--what I
+hoped you would be. I find it hard to believe I see you for the first
+time."
+
+"So, then, _you_ did not think the Rajah's daughter should be a
+Moor?" said Josephine, half haughtily. "It is very sad to see what
+disappointments I had caused." Neither the saucy toss of the head, nor
+the tone that accompanied these words, were lost upon Polly, who began
+to feel at once that she understood the speaker.
+
+"And your brother," continued Josephine, "is the famous Tom Dill I have
+heard such stories about?"
+
+"Poor Tom! he is anything rather than famous."
+
+"Well, he is remarkable; he is odd, original, or whatever you would call
+it. Fred told me he never met any one like him."
+
+"Tom might say as much of Mr. Conyers, for, in truth, no one ever showed
+him such kindness."
+
+"Fred told me nothing of that; but perhaps," added she, with a flashing
+eye, "you were more in his confidence than I was."
+
+"I knew very little of Mr. Conyers; I believe I could count on the
+fingers of one hand every time I met him."
+
+"How strange that you should have made so deep an impression, Miss
+Dill!"
+
+"I am flattered to hear it, but more surprised than flattered."
+
+"But I don't wonder at it in the least," said Josephine, boldly. "You
+are very handsome, you are very graceful, and then--" She hesitated and
+grew confused, and stammered, and at last said, "and then there is that
+about you which seems to say, 'I have only to wish, and I can do it.'"
+
+"I have no such gift, I assure you," said Polly, with a half-sad smile.
+
+"Oh, I know you are very clever; I have heard how accomplished you were,
+how beautifully you rode, how charmingly you sang. I wish he had not
+told me of it all--for if--for if--"
+
+"If what? Say on!"
+
+"If you were not so superior to me, I feel that I could love you;" and
+then with a bound she threw her arms around Polly's neck, and clasped
+her affectionately to her bosom.
+
+Sympathy, like a fashionable physician, is wonderfully successful where
+there is little the matter. In the great ills of life, when the
+real afflictions come down to crush, to wound, or to stun us, we are
+comparatively removed from even the kindest of our comforters. Great
+sorrows are very selfish things. In the lighter maladies, however, in
+the smaller casualties of fortune, sympathy is a great remedy, and we
+are certain to find that, however various our temperaments, it has a
+sort of specific for each. Now Josephine Barrington had not any great
+cares upon her heart; if the balance were to be struck between them,
+Polly Dill could have numbered ten, ay, twenty, for her one, but
+she thought hers was a case for much commiseration, and she liked
+commiseration, for there are moral hypochondrias as well as physical
+ones. And so she told Polly how she had neither father nor mother, nor
+any other belongings than "dear old grandpapa and austere Aunt Dinah;"
+that she had been brought up in a convent, never knowing one of the
+pleasures of youth, or her mind being permitted to stray beyond the
+dreary routine of prayer and penance. Of music she knew nothing but the
+solemn chants of the organ, and even flowers were to her eyes but the
+festal decorations of the high altar; and, lastly, she vaguely balanced
+between going back to the dismal existence of the cloister, or entering
+upon the troubled sea of life, so full of perils to one unpractised
+and unskilled as she was. Now Polly was a very pretty comforter through
+these afflictions; her own home experiences were not all rose-colored,
+but the physician who whispers honeyed consolations to the patient has
+often the painful consciousness of a deeper malady within than that for
+which he ministers. Polly knew something of a life of struggle and small
+fortune, with its daily incident of debt and dun. She knew what it was
+to see money mix itself with every phase of existence, throwing its
+damper over joy, arresting the hand of benevolence, even denying to the
+sick-bed the little comforts that help to cheat misery. She knew how
+penury can eat its canker into the heart till all things take the color
+of thrift, and life becomes at last the terrible struggle of a swimmer
+storm-tossed and weary; and yet, with all this experience in her heart,
+she could whisper cheerful counsels to Josephine, and tell her that
+the world had a great many pleasant paths through it, though one was
+occasionally footsore before reaching them; and in this way they talked
+till they grew very fond of each other, and Josephine was ready to
+confess that the sorrow nearest to her heart was parting with her. "But
+must you go, dearest Polly,--must you really go?"
+
+"I must, indeed," said she, laughing; "for if I did not, two little
+sisters of mine would go supperless to bed, not to speak of a small boy
+who is waiting for me with a Latin grammar before him; and the cook
+must get her orders for to-morrow; and papa must have his tea; and this
+short, stumpy little key that you see here unlocks the oat-bin, without
+which an honest old pony would share in the family fast: so that, all
+things considered, my absence would be far from advisable."
+
+"And when shall we meet again, Polly?"
+
+"Not to-morrow, dear; for to-morrow is our fair at Inistioge, and I have
+yarn to buy, and some lambs to sell."
+
+"And could you sell lambs, Polly?" said Josephine, with an expression of
+blank disappointment in her face.
+
+Polly smiled, but not without a certain sadness, as she said, "There are
+some sentimentalities which, to one in my condition, would just be as
+unsuitable as Brussels lace or diamonds. They are born of luxury and
+indolence, and pertain to those whose existence is assured to them; and
+my own opinion is, they are a poor privilege. At all events," added she,
+rapidly, "they are not for me, and I do not wish for them."
+
+"The day after to-morrow, then, you will come here,--promise me that."
+
+"It will be late, then, towards evening, for I have made an engagement
+to put a young horse in harness,--a three-year-old, and a sprightly one,
+they tell me,--so that I may look on the morning as filled. I see, my
+dear child, how shocked you are with all these unladylike cares and
+duties; but poor Tom and I used to weld our lives together, and while
+I took my share of boat-building one day, he helped me in the dairy the
+day after; but now that he is gone, our double functions devolve upon
+me."
+
+"How happy you must be!"
+
+"I think I am; at least, I have no time to spare for unhappiness."
+
+"If I could but change with you, Polly!"
+
+"Change what, my dear child?"
+
+"Condition, fortune, belongings,--everything."
+
+"Take my word for it, you are just as well as you are; but I suppose
+it's very natural for one to fancy he could carry another's burden
+easier than his own, for it was only a few moments back I thought how I
+should like to be you."
+
+"To be me,--to be me!"
+
+"Of course I was wrong, dearest. It was only a passing, fleeting
+thought, and I now see how absurd I was to wish to be very beautiful,
+dearly loved, and affectionately cared for, with a beautiful home to
+live in, and every hour free to be happy. Oh, what a sigh, dearest, what
+a sigh! but I assure you I have my calamities too; the mice have got at
+the seeds in my onion-bed, and I don't expect to see one come up."
+
+If Josephine's first impulse was to feel angry, her next was to laugh
+out, which she did heartily; and passing her arm fondly round Polly's
+waist, she said, "I 'll get used to your raillery, Polly, and not feel
+sore at it; but remember, too, it's a spirit I never knew before."
+
+"How good and generous, then, to bear it so well!" said Polly,
+affectionately; "your friend Mr. Conyers did not show the same
+patience."
+
+"You tried him, then?" said Josephine, with a half-eager glance.
+
+"Of course; I talked to him as I do to every one. But there goes your
+dinner-bell." Checking herself on a reflection over the pretension of
+this summons of three people to a family meal in a cottage, Polly tied
+on her bonnet and said "Good-bye."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. AT HOME AGAIN
+
+The Barringtons had not been quite a fortnight settled in their home,
+when a note came from Conyers, lamenting, in most feeling terms, that he
+could not pay them his promised visit. If the epistle was not very long,
+it was a grumble from beginning to end. "Nobody would know," wrote he,
+"it was the same regiment poor Colonel Hunter commanded. Our Major is
+now in command,--the same Stapylton you have heard me speak of; and if
+we never looked on him too favorably, we now especially detest him.
+His first step was to tell us we were disorderly, ill-dressed, and
+ill-disciplined; but we were even less prepared to hear that we could
+not ride. The result of all this is, we have gone to school again,--even
+old captains, who have served with distinction in the field, have been
+consigned to the riding-house; and we poor subs are treated as if we
+were the last refuse of all the regiments of the army, sent here to
+be reformed and corrected. We have incessant drills, parades, and
+inspections, and, worse again, all leave is stopped. If I was not in the
+best of temper with the service before, you may judge how I feel towards
+it now. In fact, if it were not that I expect my father back in England
+by the middle of May, I 'd send in my papers and leave at once. How I
+fall back now in memory to the happy days of my ramble with you, and
+wonder if I shall ever see the like again. And how I hate myself for not
+having felt at the time how immeasurably delightful they were! Trust me
+never to repeat the mistake if I have the opportunity given me. I asked
+this morning for three days--only three--to run down and see you once
+more before we leave,--for we are ordered to Honnslow,--and I was
+refused. But this was not all: not content with rejecting my request,
+he added what he called an expression of astonishment that an officer
+so deficient in his duties should care to absent himself from regimental
+discipline."
+
+"Poor boy!--this is, indeed, too bad," said Miss Dinah, as she had read
+thus far; "only think, Peter, how this young fellow, spoiled and petted
+as he was as a child,--denied nothing, pampered as though he were a
+prince,--should find himself the mark of so insulting a tyranny. Are you
+listening to me, Peter Barrington?"
+
+"Eh,--what? No, thank you, Dinah; I have made an excellent breakfast,"
+said Barrington, hurriedly, and again addressed himself to the letter he
+was reading. "That's what I call a Trump, Dinah,--a regular Trump."
+
+"Who is the especial favorite that has called for the very choice
+eulogy?" said she, bridling up.
+
+"Gone into the thing, too, with heart and soul,--a noble fellow!"
+continued Barrington.
+
+"Pray enlighten us as to the name that calls forth such enthusiasm."
+
+"Stapylton, my dear Dinah,--Major Stapylton. In all my life I do not
+remember one instance to parallel with this generous and disinterested
+conduct. Listen to what Withering says,--not a man given to take up rash
+impressions in favor of a stranger. Listen to this: 'Stapylton has been
+very active,--written to friends, both at Calcutta and Agra, and shown,
+besides, an amount of acuteness in pursuit of what is really important,
+that satisfies me a right good common lawyer has been lost by his being
+a soldier.' And here, again he recurs to him: it is with reference to
+certain documents: 'S. persists in believing that with proper diligence
+these may be recovered; he says that it is a common practice with the
+Moonshees to retain papers, in the hope of their being one day deemed
+of value; and he is fully persuaded that they have not been destroyed.
+There is that about the man's manner of examining a question,--his
+patience, his instinctive seizure of what is of moment, and his
+invariable rejection of whatever is immaterial; and, lastly, his
+thorough appreciation of the character of that evidence which would have
+most weight with the Indian Board, which dispose me to regard him as an
+invaluable ally to our cause.'"
+
+"Do me the favor to regard this picture of your friend now," said Miss
+Barrington, as she handed the letter from Conyers across the table.
+
+Barrington read it over attentively. "And what does this prove, my dear
+sister?" said he. "This is the sort of stereotyped complaint of every
+young fellow who has been refused a leave. I have no doubt Hunter was
+too easy-tempered to have been strict in discipline, and the chances
+are these young dogs had everything their own way till Stapylton
+came amongst them. I find it hard to believe that any man likes
+unpopularity."
+
+"Perhaps not, Peter Barrington; but he may like tyranny more than he
+hates unpopularity; and, for my own part, this man is odious to me."
+
+"Don't say so, Dinah,--don't say so, I entreat of you, for he will be
+our guest here this very day."
+
+"Our guest!--why, is not the regiment under orders to leave?"
+
+"So it is; but Withering says it would be a great matter if we could
+have a sort of consultation together before the Major leaves Ireland.
+There are innumerable little details which he sees ought to be discussed
+between us; and so he has persuaded him to give us a day,--perhaps two
+days,--no small boon, Dinah, from one so fully occupied as he is."
+
+"I wish he would not make the sacrifice, Peter."
+
+"My dear sister, are we so befriended by Fortune that we can afford to
+reject the kindness of our fellows?"
+
+"I'm no believer in chance friendships, Peter Barrington; neither you
+nor I are such interesting orphans as to inspire sympathy at first
+sight."
+
+Josephine could not help a laugh at Miss Dinah's illustration, and old
+Barriqgton himself heartily joined in the merriment, not sorry the while
+to draw the discussion into a less stern field. "Come, come, Dinah,"
+said he, gayly, "let us put out a few bottles of that old Madeira in
+the sun; and if Darby can find us a salmon-trout, we 'll do our best to
+entertain our visitors."
+
+"It never occurred to me to doubt the probability of their enjoying
+themselves, Peter; my anxieties were quite on another score."
+
+"Now, Fifine," continued Barrington, "we shall see if Polly Dill has
+really made you the perfect housekeeper she boasted. The next day or two
+will put your talents to the test."
+
+"Oh, if we could only have Polly herself here!"
+
+"What for?--on what pretext, Miss Barrington?" said Dinah, haughtily.
+"I have not, so far as I am aware, been accounted very ignorant of
+household cares."
+
+"Withering declares that your equal is not in Europe, Dinah."
+
+"Mr. Withering's suffrage can always be bought by a mock-turtle soup,
+and a glass of Roman punch after it."
+
+"How he likes it,--how he relishes it! He says that he comes back to the
+rest of the dinner with the freshness of a man at an assize case."
+
+"So like him!" said Dinah, scornfully; "he has never an illustration
+that is not taken from the Four Courts. I remember one day, when asking
+for the bill of fare, he said, 'Will you kindly let me look at the cause
+list.' Prepare yourself, Josephine, for an avalanche of law anecdotes
+and Old Bailey stories, for I assure you you will hear nothing for the
+next three days but drolleries that have been engrossed on parchment and
+paid stamp duty to the Crown."
+
+Barrington gave a smile, as though in protest against the speech, and
+left the room. In truth, he was very anxious to be alone, and to think
+over, at his leisure, a short passage in his letter which he had not
+summoned courage to read aloud. It was Withering's opinion that to
+institute the inquiries in India a considerable sum of money would be
+required, and he had left it for Barrington's consideration whether it
+were wiser to risk the great peril of this further involvement, or once
+more to try what chance there might be of a compromise. Who knows what
+success might have attended the suggestion if the old lawyer had but
+employed any other word! Compromise, however, sounded to his ears like
+an unworthy concession,--a surrender of George's honor. Compromise might
+mean money for his granddaughter, and shame to her father's memory. Not,
+indeed, that Withering was, as a man, one to counsel such a course, but
+Withering was a lawyer, and in the same spirit that he would have
+taken a verdict for half his claim if he saw an adverse feeling in the
+jury-box, so he would bow to circumstances that were stronger than him,
+and accept the best he could, if he might not have all that he ought But
+could Barrington take this view? He thought not. His conviction was that
+the main question to establish was the fair fame and honor of his son;
+his guide was, how George himself would have acted--would have felt--in
+the same contingency; and he muttered, "He'd have been a hardy fellow
+who would have hinted at compromise to _him_."
+
+The next point was how the means for the coming campaign were to be
+provided. He had already raised a small sum by way of mortgage on the
+"Home," and nothing remained but to see what further advance could be
+made on the same security. When Barrington was a great estated gentleman
+with a vast fortune at his command, it cost him wonderfully little
+thought to contract a loan, or even to sell a farm. A costly election,
+a few weeks of unusual splendor, an unfortunate night at play, had made
+such sacrifices nothing very unusual, and he would give his orders on
+this score as unconcernedly as he would bid his servant replenish his
+glass at table. Indeed, he had no more fear of exhausting his fortune
+than he felt as to out-drinking his cellar. There was enough there,
+as he often said, for those who should come after him. And now, what a
+change! He stood actually appalled at the thought of a mortgage for less
+than a thousand pounds. But so it is; the cockboat may be more to a man
+than was once the three-decker. The cottage was his all now; that lost,
+and they were houseless. Was it not a bold thing to risk everything on
+one more throw? There was the point over which he now pondered as he
+walked slowly along in the little shady alley between the laurel hedges.
+He had no friend nearer his heart than Withering, no one to whom he
+could unbosom himself so frankly and so freely, and yet this was a
+case on which he could not ask his counsel. All his life long he had
+strenuously avoided suffering a question of the kind to intervene
+between them. Of his means, his resources, his straits, or his demands,
+Withering knew positively nothing. It was with Barrington a point of
+delicacy to maintain this reserve towards one who was always his lawyer,
+and often his guest. The very circumstance of his turning innkeeper was
+regarded by Withering as savoring far more of caprice than necessity,
+and Barrington took care to strengthen this impression.
+
+If, then, Withering's good sense and worldly knowledge would have been
+invaluable aids to him in this conjunction, he saw he could not have
+them. The same delicacy which debarred him heretofore, would still
+interpose against his appeal to that authority. And then he thought
+how he had once troops of friends to whom he could address himself for
+counsel. There is nothing more true, indeed, than the oft-uttered scoff
+on the hollowness of those friendships which attach to the days of
+prosperous fortune, and the world is very prone to point to the utter
+loneliness of him who has been shipwrecked by Fate; but let us be just
+in our severity, and let us own that a man's belongings, his associates,
+his--what common parlance calls--friends, are the mere accidents of his
+station, and they no more accompany him in his fall than do the luxuries
+he has forfeited. From the level from which he has lapsed they have not
+descended. They are there, living to-day as they lived yesterday.
+If their sympathy is not with him, it is because neither are they
+themselves; they cross each other no more. Such friendships are like the
+contracts made with a crew for a particular voyage,--they end with the
+cruise. No man ever understood this better than Barrington; no man ever
+bore the world less of ill will for its part towards himself. If now
+and then a sense of sadness would cloud him at some mark of passing
+forgetfulness, he would not own to the gloomy feeling; while to any show
+of recognition, to any sign of a grateful remembrance of the past, he
+would grow boastful to very vanity. "Look there, Dinah," he would say,
+"what a noble-hearted fellow that is! I scarcely was more than commonly
+civil to him formerly, and you saw how courteous he was in making a
+place for us, how heartily he hoped I was in good health."
+
+"I'll send over to Dill and have a talk with him," was Barrington's last
+resolve, as he turned the subject over and over in his mind. "Dill 's a
+shrewd fellow, and I 'm not sure that he has not laid by a little
+money; he might feel no objection to a good investment for it, with such
+security." And he looked around as he spoke on the trees, some of which
+he planted, every one of which he knew, and sighed heavily. "He 'll
+scarce love the spot more than I did," muttered he, and walked along
+with his head down. After a while he took out Withering's letter from
+his pocket and re-read it. Somehow, it was hard to say why, it did not
+read so promisingly as at first. The difficulties to be encountered were
+very stubborn ones, so much so that he very palpably hinted how much
+better some amicable settlement would be than an open contest wherein
+legal subtlety and craft should be evoked. There was so much of that
+matter always taken for granted, to be proved, to be demonstrated true
+on evidence, that it actually looked appalling. "Of the searches and
+inquiries instituted in India," wrote Withering, "I can speak but
+vaguely; but I own the very distance magnifies them immensely to my
+eyes." "Tom is growing old, not a doubt of it," muttered Barrington;
+"these were not the sort of obstacles that could have terrified him once
+on a time. He 'd have said, 'If there 's evidence, we 'll have it; if
+there's a document, we 'll find it.' It's India, that far-away land,
+that has frightened him. These lawyers, like certain sportsmen, lose
+their nerve if you take them out of their own country. It 's the new
+style of fences they can't face. Well, thanks to him who gave it, I have
+my stout heart still, and I 'll go on."
+
+"Going on" was, however, not the easy task it first seemed, nor was
+the pleasantest part of it the necessity of keeping the secret from his
+sister. Miss Dinah had from the first discouraged the whole suit. The
+adversary was too powerful, the odds against them were too great; the
+India Board had only to protract and prolong the case and _they_ must
+be beaten from sheer exhaustion. How, then, should he reconcile her to
+mortgaging the last remnant of all their fortune for "one more throw on
+the table"? "No chance of persuading a woman that this would be wise,"
+said he. And he thought, when he had laid the prejudice of sex as the
+ground of error, he had completed his argument.
+
+"Going on" had its fine generous side about it, also, that cheered and
+elevated him. It was for George he was doing it, and that dear girl,
+whose every trait recalled her father; for let those explain it who can,
+she, who had never seen nor even heard of her father since her infancy,
+inherited all his peculiar ways and habits, and every trick of his
+manner. Let me own that these, even more than any qualities of sterling
+worth, endeared her to her grandfather; and just as he had often
+declared no rank or position that could befall George would have been
+above his deserts, so he averred that if Josephine were to be the
+greatest heiress in England to-morrow, she would be a grace and an
+ornament to the station. If Aunt Dinah would occasionally attempt to
+curb this spirit, or even limit its extravagance, his invariable answer
+was, "It may be all as you say, sister, but for the life of me I cannot
+think my swans to be geese."
+
+As he thus mused and meditated, he heard the wicket of the garden open
+and shut, and shortly afterwards a half-shambling shuffling step on the
+gravel. Before he had time to speculate on whose it should be, he saw
+Major M'Cormick limping laboriously towards him.
+
+"How is this, Major?" cried he; "has the change of weather disagreed
+with your rheumatism?"
+
+"It's the wound; it's always worse in the fall of the year," croaked the
+other. "I'd have been up to see you before but for the pains, and that
+old fool Dill--a greater fool myself for trusting him--made me put on
+a blister down what he calls the course of the nerve, and I never knew
+torture till I tried it."
+
+"My sister Dinah has, I verily believe, the most sovereign remedy for
+these pains."
+
+"Is it the green draught? Oh, don't I know it," burst out the Major.
+"You might hear my shouts the day I took it down at Inistioge. There was
+n't a bit of skin left on my lips, and when I wiped the perspiration off
+my head my hair came off too. Aquafortis is like egg-flip compared
+to that blessed draught; and I remember well how I crawled to my
+writing-desk and wrote, 'Have me opened,' for I knew I was poisoned."
+
+"Did you tell my sister of your sufferings?"
+
+"To be sure I did, and she only smiled and said that I took it when I
+was fasting, or when I was full, I forget which; and that I ought to
+have taken a brisk walk, and I only able to creep; and only one spoonful
+at a time, and it was the whole bottle I swallowed. In fact, she owned
+afterwards that nothing but the strength of a horse could have saved
+me."
+
+Peter found it very hard to maintain a decent gravity at the play of
+the Major's features, which during the narrative recalled every dire
+experience of his medicine.
+
+"Well, come into the house and we'll give you something better," said
+Barrington, at last.
+
+"I think I saw your granddaughter at the window as I came by,--a
+good-looking young woman, and not so dark as I suspected she 'd be."
+
+"There's not a handsomer girl in Ireland; and as to skin, she 's not as
+brown as her father."
+
+"It wouldn't be easy to be that; he was about three shades deeper than a
+Portuguese."
+
+"George Barrington was confessedly the finest-looking fellow in the
+King's army, and as English-looking a gentleman as any man in it."
+
+The tone of this speech was so palpably that of one who would not stand
+the very shadow of a rejoinder, that the Major held his peace, and
+shuffled along without a word. The thought, however, of administering a
+rebuke to any one within the precincts of his home was so repugnant to
+Barrington's nature, that he had scarcely uttered the words than he was
+eager to repair them, and with a most embarrassed humility he stammered
+out something about their recent tour abroad and all the enjoyment it
+had given them.
+
+"Maybe so," rejoined the other, dryly; "but I never saw any pleasure in
+spending money you could keep."
+
+"My dear Major, that is precisely the very money that does procure
+pleasure."
+
+"Wasn't that a post-chaise I saw through the trees? There it is again;
+it's making straight for the 'Home,'" said M'Cormick, pointing with his
+stick.
+
+"Yes," said Peter; "I was expecting a couple of friends to pass a day or
+so with me here. Will you excuse me if I hurry forward to welcome them?"
+
+"Don't make a stranger of me; I'll saunter along at my leisure," said
+the Major, as Barrington walked briskly on towards the cottage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III. A SMALL DINNER-PARTY
+
+Withering and Stapylton had arrived fully two hoars earlier than they
+were expected, and Miss Dinah was too deeply engaged in the household
+cares that were to do them honor to receive them. Josephine, too, was
+not less busily occupied, for her conventual education had made her
+wonderfully skilful in all sorts of confectionery, and she was mistress
+of devices in spun sugar and preserved fruits, which rose in Aunt
+Dinah's eyes to the dignity of high art. Barrington, however, was there
+to meet them, and with a cordial welcome which no man could express more
+gracefully. The luncheon hour passed pleasantly over, for all were in
+good humor and good spirits. Withering's holiday always found him ready
+to enjoy it, and when could old Peter feel so happy as when he had
+a guest beneath his roof who thoroughly appreciated the cottage, and
+entered into the full charm of its lovely scenery! Such was Stapylton;
+he blended a fair liking for the picturesque with a natural instinct for
+comfort and homeliness, and he saw in this spot what precisely embraced
+both elements. It was very beautiful; but, better still, it was very
+lovable. "It was so rare"--so, at least, he told Barrington--"to find
+a cottage wherein internal comfort had not been sacrificed to some
+requirement of outward show. There was only one way of doing this,"
+said he, as Barrington led him through the little flower-garden,
+giving glimpses of the rooms within as they passed,--"only one way, Mr.
+Barrington; a man must have consummate taste, and strong credit at his
+banker's." Barrington's cheek grew a thought redder, and he smiled that
+faint sad smile which now and then will break from one who feels that he
+could rebut what he has just heard, if it were but right or fitting he
+should do so. Of course, amongst really distressing sensations this has
+no place; but yet there is a peculiar pain in being complimented by your
+friend on the well-to-do condition of your fortune when your conscience
+is full of the long watching hours of the night, or, worse still, the
+first awaking thought of difficulties to which you open your eyes of
+a morning. It is not often, nor are there many to whom you can say, "I
+cannot tell the day or the hour when all this shall pass away from
+me; my head is racked with care, and my heart heavy with anxiety." How
+jarring to be told of all the things you ought to do! You who could
+so well afford it! And how trying to have to take shelter from your
+necessity under the shadow of a seeming stinginess, and to bear every
+reflection on your supposed thrift rather than own to your poverty!
+
+If Withering had been with them as they strolled, this, perhaps, might
+have been avoided; he had all a lawyer's technical skill to change a
+topic; but Withering had gone to take his accustomed midday nap, the
+greatest of all the luxuries his time of idleness bestowed upon him.
+
+Now, although Stapylton's alludings--and they were no more--to
+Barrington's gifts of fortune were such as perfectly consisted with
+good taste and good breeding, Barring-ton felt them all painfully, and
+probably nothing restrained him from an open disclaimer of their
+fitness save the thought that from a host such an avowal would sound
+ungracefully. "It is my duty now," reasoned he, "to make my guest feel
+that all the attentions he receives exact no sacrifice, and that the
+pleasure his presence affords is unalloyed by a single embarrassment.
+If he must hear of my difficulties, let it be when he is not beneath my
+roof." And so he let Stapylton talk away about the blessings of tranquil
+affluence, and the happiness of him whose only care was to find time
+for the enjoyments that were secured to him. He let him quote Pope and
+Wharton and Edmund Burke, and smiled the blandest concurrence with what
+was irritating him almost to fever.
+
+"This is Withering's favorite spot," said Peter, as they gained the
+shade of a huge ilex-tree, from which two distinct reaches of the river
+were visible.
+
+"And it shall be mine, too," said Stapylton, throwing himself down in
+the deep grass; "and as I know you have scores of things which claim
+your attention, let me release you, while I add a cigar--the only
+possible enhancement--to the delight of this glorious nook."
+
+"Well, it shall be as you wish. We dine at six. I 'll go and look after
+a fish for our entertainment;" and Barrington turned away into the
+copse, not sorry to release his heart by a heavy sigh, and to feel he
+was alone with his cares.
+
+Let us turn for a moment to M'Cormick, who continued to saunter slowly
+about the garden, in the expectation of Barrington's return. Wearied
+at length with waiting, and resolved that his patience should not go
+entirely unrequited, he turned into a little shady walk on which the
+windows of the kitchen opened. Stationing himself there, in a position
+to see without being seen, he took what he called an observation of all
+within. The sight was interesting, even if he did not bring to it the
+appreciation of a painter. There, upon a spacious kitchen table, lay a
+lordly sirloin, richly and variously colored, flanked by a pair of plump
+guinea-hens and a fresh salmon of fully twenty pounds' weight. Luscious
+fruit and vegetables were heaped and mingled in a wild profusion, and
+the speckled plumage of game was half hidden under the massive bunches
+of great hot-house grapes. It is doubtful if Sneyders himself could have
+looked upon the display with a higher sense of enjoyment It is, indeed,
+a question between the relative merits of two senses, and the issue lies
+between the eye and the palate.
+
+Wisely reasoning that such preparations were not made for common guests,
+M'Cormick ran over in his mind all the possible and impossible names he
+could think of, ending at last with the conviction it was some "Nob" he
+must have met abroad, and whom in a moment of his expansive hospitality
+he had invited to visit him. "Isn't it like them!" muttered he. "It
+would be long before they'd think of such an entertainment to an
+old neighbor like myself; but here they are spending--who knows how
+much?--for somebody that to-morrow or next day won't remember their
+names, or maybe, perhaps, laugh when they think of the funny old woman
+they saw,--the 'Fright' with the yellow shawl and the orange bonnet. Oh,
+the world, the world!"
+
+It is not for me to speculate on what sort of thing the world had been,
+if the Major himself had been intrusted with the control and fashion of
+it; but I have my doubts that we are just as well off as we are. "Well,
+though they haven't the manners to say 'M'Cormick; will you stop and
+dine?' they haven't done with me yet; not a bit!" And with this resolve
+he entered the cottage, and found his way to the drawing-room. It was
+unoccupied; so he sat himself down in a comfortable armchair, to await
+events and their issue. There were books and journals and newspapers
+about; but the Major was not a reader, and so he sat musing and
+meditating, while the time went by. Just as the clock struck five, Miss
+Dinah, whose various cares of housewifery had given her a very busy day,
+was about to have a look at the drawing-room before she went to dress,
+and being fully aware that one of her guests was asleep, and the other
+full stretched beside the river, she felt she could go her "rounds"
+without fear of being observed. Now, whatever had been the peculiar
+functions she was lately engaged in, they had exacted from her certain
+changes in costume more picturesque than flattering. In the first place,
+the sleeves of her dress were rolled up above the elbows, displaying
+arms more remarkable for bone than beauty. A similar curtailment of her
+petticoats exhibited feet and ankles which--not to be ungallant--might
+be called massive rather than elegant; and lastly, her two long curls
+of auburn hair--curls which, in the splendor of her full toilette,
+were supposed to be no mean aids to her captivating powers--were now
+tastefully festooned and fastened to the back of her head, pretty
+much as a pair of hawsers are occasionally disposed on the bow of a
+merchantman! Thus costumed, she had advanced into the middle of the room
+before she saw the Major.
+
+"A pleasure quite unexpected, sir, is this," said she, with a vigorous
+effort to shake out what sailors would call her "lower courses." "I was
+not aware that you were here."
+
+"Indeed, then, I came in myself, just like old times. I said this
+morning, if it 's fine to-day, I 'll just go over to the 'Fisherman's
+Home.'"
+
+"'The Home,' sir, if you please. We retain so much of the former name."
+But just as she uttered the correction, a chance look at the glass
+conveyed the condition of her head-gear,--a startling fact which made
+her cheeks perfectly crimson. "I lay stress upon the change of name,
+sir," continued she, "as intimating that we are no longer innkeepers,
+and expect something, at least, of the deference rendered to those who
+call their house their own."
+
+"To be sure, and why not?" croaked out the Major, with a malicious grin.
+"And I forgot all about it, little thinking, indeed, to surprise you in
+'dishabille,' as they call it."
+
+"_You_ surprise me, sir, every time we meet," said she, with flashing
+eyes. "And you make me feel surprised with myself for my endurance!"
+And so saying, she retired towards the door, covering her retreat as
+she went by every object of furniture that presented itself, and, like
+a skilful general, defending her rear by every artifice of the ground.
+Thus did she exit, and with a bang of the door--as eloquent as any
+speech--close the colloquy.
+
+"Faix! and the Swiss costume doesn't become you at all!" said the Major,
+as he sat back in his chair, and cackled over the scene.
+
+As Miss Barrington, boiling with passion, passed her brother's door, she
+stopped to knock.
+
+"Peter!" cried she. "Peter Barrington, I say!" The words were, however,
+not well out, when she heard a step ascending the stair. She could not
+risk another discovery like the last; so, opening the door, she said,
+"That hateful M'Cormick is below. Peter, take care that on no account--"
+
+There was no time to finish, and she had barely an instant to gain her
+own room, when Stapylton reached the corridor.
+
+Peter Barrington had, however, heard enough to inform him of his
+sister's high behest. Indeed, he was as quick at interpreting brief
+messages as people have grown in these latter days of telegraphic
+communication. Oracular utterings had been more than once in his life
+his only instructors, and he now knew that he had been peremptorily
+ordered not to ask the Major to dinner.
+
+There are, doubtless, people in this world--I almost fancy I have met
+one or two such myself--who would not have felt peculiar difficulty in
+obeying this command; who would have gone down to the drawing-room
+and talked coolly to the visitor, discussing commonplaces, easily and
+carelessly, noting the while how at every pause of the conversation each
+was dwelling on the self-same point, and yet, with a quiet abstinence,
+never touching it, till with a sigh, that was half a malediction, the
+uninvited would rise to take leave. Barrington was not of this number.
+The man who sat under his roof was sacred. He could have no faults; and
+to such a pitch had this punctilio carried him, that had an actual enemy
+gained the inside of his threshold, he would have spared nothing to
+treat him with honor and respect.
+
+"Well, well," muttered he, as he slowly descended the stairs, "it will
+be the first time in my life I ever did it, and I don't know how to go
+about it now."
+
+When a frank and generous man is about to do something he is ashamed
+of, how readily will a crafty and less scrupulous observer detect it!
+M'Cormick read Barrington's secret before he was a minute in the room.
+It was in vain Peter affected an off-hand easy manner, incidentally
+dropping a hint that the Attorney-General and another friend had just
+arrived,--a visit, a mere business visit it was, to be passed with
+law papers and parchments. "Poor fun when the partridges were in the
+stubble, but there was no help for it. Who knew, however, if he could
+not induce them to give him an extra day, and if I can, Major, you must
+promise to come over and meet them. You 'll be charmed with Withering,
+he has such a fund of agreeability. One of the old school, but not the
+less delightful to you and me. Come, now, give me your word--for--shall
+we say Saturday?--Yes, Saturday!"
+
+"I 've nothing to say against it," grumbled out M'Cormick, whose assent
+was given, as attorneys say, without prejudice to any other claim.
+
+"You shall hear from me in the morning, then," said Peter. "I 'll send
+you a line to say what success I have had with my friends."
+
+"Any time in the day will do," said the Major, unconcernedly; for, in
+truth, the future never had in his estimation the same interest as the
+present. As for the birds in the bush, he simply did not believe in them
+at all.
+
+"No, no," said Barrington, hurriedly. "You shall hear from me early,
+for I am anxious you should meet Withering and his companion, too,--a
+brother-soldier."
+
+"Who may he be?" asked M'Cormick.
+
+"That's my secret, Major,--that's my secret," said Peter, with a forced
+laugh, for it now wanted but ten minutes to six; "but you shall know all
+on Saturday."
+
+Had he said on the day of judgment, the assurance would have been as
+palatable to M'Cormick. Talking to him of Saturday on a Monday was
+asking him to speculate on the infinite. Meanwhile he sat on, as only
+they sit who understand the deep and high mystery of that process. Oh,
+if you who have your fortunes to make in life, without any assignable
+mode for so doing, without a craft, a calling, or a trade, knew what
+success there was to be achieved merely by sitting--by simply being
+"there," eternally "there"--a warning, an example, an illustration, a
+what you will, of boredom or infliction; but still "there." The butt
+of this man, the terror of that,--hated, feared, trembled at,--but yet
+recognized as a thing that must be, an institution that was, and is, and
+shall be, when we are all dead and buried.
+
+Long and dreary may be the days of the sitter, but the hour of his
+reward will come at last. There will come the time when some one--any
+one--will be wanted to pair off with some other bore, to listen to his
+stories and make up his whist-table; and then he will be "there." I knew
+a man who, merely by sitting on patiently for years, was at last chosen
+to be sent as a Minister and special Envoy to a foreign Court just
+to get rid of him. And for the women sitters,--the well-dressed
+and prettily got-up simperers, who have sat their husbands into
+Commissionerships, Colonial Secretaryships, and such like,--are they not
+written of in the Book of Beauty?
+
+"Here 's M'Cormick, Dinah," said Barrington, with a voice shaking with
+agitation and anxiety, "whom I want to pledge himself to us for Saturday
+next. Will you add your persuasions to mine, and see what can be done?"
+
+"Don't you think you can depend upon me?" cackled out the Major.
+
+"I am certain of it, sir; I feel your word like your bond on such a
+matter," said Miss Dinah. "My grandniece, Miss Josephine Barrington,"
+said she, presenting that young lady, who courtesied formally to the
+unprepossessing stranger.
+
+"I'm proud of the honor, ma'am," said M'Cormick, with a deep bow, and
+resumed his seat; to rise again, however, as Withering entered the room
+and was introduced to him.
+
+"This is intolerable, Peter," whispered Miss Barrington, while the
+lawyer and the Major were talking together. "You are certain you have
+not asked him?"
+
+"On my honor, Dinah! on my honor!"
+
+"I hope I am not late?" cried Stapylton, entering; then turning hastily
+to Barrington, said, "Pray present me to your niece."
+
+"This is my sister, Major Stapylton; this is my granddaughter;" and the
+ladies courtesied, each with a degree of satisfaction which the reader
+shall be left to assign them.
+
+After a few words of commonplace civility, uttered, however, with
+a courtesy and tact which won their way for the speaker, Stapylton
+recognized and shook hands with M'Cormick.
+
+"You know my neighbor, then?" said Barrington, in some surprise.
+
+"I am charmed to say I do; he owes me the _denouement_ of a most amusing
+story, which was suddenly broken off when we last parted, but which I
+shall certainly claim after dinner."
+
+"He has been kind enough to engage himself to us for Saturday," began
+Dinah. But M'Cormick, who saw the moment critical, stepped in,--
+
+"You shall hear every word of it before you sleep. It's all about
+Walcheren, though they think Waterloo more the fashion now."
+
+"Just as this young lady might fancy Major Stapylton a more interesting
+event than one of us," said Withering, laughing. "But what 's become of
+your boasted punctuality, Barrington? A quarter past,--are you waiting
+for any one?"
+
+"Are we, Dinah?" asked Barrington, with a look of sheepishness.
+
+"Not that I am aware of, Peter. There is no one to _come_;" and she
+laid such an emphasis on the word as made the significance palpable.
+
+To Barrington it was painful as well as palpable; so painful, indeed,
+that he hurriedly rang the bell, saying, in a sharp voice, "Of course,
+we are all here,--there are six of us. Dinner, Darby!"
+
+The Major had won, but he was too crafty to show any triumph at his
+victory, and he did not dare even to look towards where Miss Barrington
+stood, lest he should chance to catch her eye. Dinner was at length
+announced. Withering gave his arm to Miss Barrington, Stapylton took
+charge of Josephine, and old Peter, pleasantly drawing his arm within
+M'Cormick's, said, "I hope you 've got a good appetite, Major, for I
+have a rare fish for you to-day, and your favorite sauce, too,--smelt,
+not lobster."
+
+Poor Barrington! it was a trying moment for him, that short walk into
+the dinner-room, and he felt very grateful to M'Cormick that he said
+nothing peevish or sarcastic to him on the way. Many a dinner begins in
+awkwardness, but warms as it proceeds into a pleasant geniality. Such
+was the case here. Amongst those, besides, who have not the ties of
+old friendship between them, or have not as yet warmed into that genial
+good-fellowship which is, so to say, its foster-brother, a character of
+the M'Cormick class is not so damaging an element as might be imagined,
+and at times there is a positive advantage in having one of whose
+merits, by a tacit understanding, all are quite agreed. Withering
+and Stapylton both read the man at once, and drew out his salient
+points--his parsimony, his malice, and his prying curiosity--in various
+ways, but so neatly and so advisedly as to make him fancy he was the
+attacking party, and very successful, too, in his assaults upon the
+enemy. Even Barrington, in the honest simplicity of his nature, was
+taken in, and more than once thought that the old Major was too severe
+upon the others, and sat in wondering admiration of their self-command
+and good temper. No deception of this sort prevailed with Miss
+Barrington, who enjoyed to the fullest extent the subtle raillery with
+which they induced him to betray every meanness of his nature, and yet
+never suffered the disclosure to soar above the region of the ludicrous.
+
+"You have been rather hard upon them, Major," said Barrington, as they
+strolled about on the greensward after dinner to enjoy their coffee and
+a cigar. "Don't you think you have been a shade too severe?"
+
+"It will do them good. They wanted to turn me out like a bagged fox, and
+show the ladies some sport; but I taught them a thing or two."
+
+"No, no, M'Cormick, you wrong them there; they had no such intentions,
+believe me."
+
+"I know that _you_ did n't see it," said he, with emphasis, "but your
+sister did, and liked it well, besides; ay, and the young one joined in
+the fun. And, after all, I don't see that they got much by the victory,
+for Withering was not pleased at my little hit about the days when he
+used to be a Whig and spout liberal politics; and the other liked just
+as little my remark about the fellows in the Company's service, and how
+nobody knew who they were or where they came from. He was in the Madras
+army himself, but I pretended not to know it; but I found his name
+written on the leaf of an old book he gave me, and the regiment he was
+in: and did you see how he looked when I touched on it? But here he
+comes now."
+
+"Make your peace with him, M'Cormick, make your peace!" said Barrington,
+as he moved away, not sorry, as he went, to mark the easy familiarity
+with which Stapylton drew his arm within the other's, and walked along
+at his side.
+
+"Wasn't that a wonderful dinner we had to-day, from a man that hasn't a
+cross in his pocket?" croaked out M'Cormick to Stapylton.
+
+"Is it possible?"
+
+"Sherry and Madeira after your soup, then Sauterne,--a thing I don't
+care for any more than the oyster patties it came with; champagne next,
+and in tumblers too! Do you ever see it better done at your mess? Or
+where did you ever taste a finer glass of claret?"
+
+"It was all admirable."
+
+"There was only one thing forgotten,--not that it signifies to me."
+
+"And what might that be?"
+
+"It was n't paid for! No, nor will it ever be!"
+
+"You amaze me, Major. My impression was that our friend here was,
+without being rich, in very comfortable circumstances; able to live
+handsomely, while he carried on a somewhat costly suit."
+
+"That 's the greatest folly of all," broke out M'Cormick; "and it's to
+get money for that now that he's going to mortgage this place here,--ay,
+the very ground under our feet!" And this he said with a sort of
+tremulous indignation, as though the atrocity bore especially hard upon
+_them_. "Kinshela, the attorney from Kilkenny, was up with me about it
+yesterday. 'It's an elegant investment, Major,' says he, 'and you 're
+very likely to get the place into your hands for all the chance old
+Peter has of paying off the charge. His heart is in that suit, and he
+'ll not stop as long as he has a guinea to go on with it.'
+
+"I said, 'I 'd think of it: I 'd turn it over in my mind;' for there's
+various ways of looking at it."
+
+"I fancy I apprehend one of them," said Stapylton, with a half-jocular
+glance at his companion. "You have been reflecting over another
+investment, eh? Am I not right? I remarked you at dinner. I saw how the
+young brunette had struck you, and I said to myself, 'She has made a
+conquest already!'"
+
+"Not a bit of it; nothing of the kind," said M'Cormick, awkwardly. "I 'm
+too 'cute to be caught that way."
+
+"Yes, but remember it might be a very good catch. I don't speak of the
+suit, because I agree with you, the chances in that direction are very
+small, indeed, and I cannot understand the hopeful feeling with which
+he prosecutes it; but she is a fine, handsome girl, very attractive in
+manner, and equal to any station."
+
+"And what's the good of all that to me? Wouldn't it be better if she
+could make a pease-pudding, like Polly Dill, or know how to fatten a
+turkey, or salt down a side of bacon?"
+
+"I don't think so; I declare, I don't think so," said Stapylton, as he
+lighted a fresh cigar. "These are household cares, and to be bought with
+money, and not expensively, either. What a man like you or I wants is
+one who should give a sort of tone,--impart a degree of elegance to his
+daily life. We old bachelors grow into self-indulgence, which is only
+another name for barbarism. With a mistaken idea of comfort we neglect
+scores of little observances which constitute the small currency of
+civilization, and without which all intercourse is unpleasing and
+ungraceful."
+
+"I'm not quite sure that I understand you aright, but there's one thing
+I know, I 'd think twice of it before I 'd ask that young woman to be
+Mrs. M'Cormick. And, besides," added he, with a sly side-look, "if it's
+so good a thing, why don't you think of it for yourself?"
+
+"I need not tell an old soldier like _you_ that full pay and a wife are
+incompatible. Every wise man's experience shows it; and when a fellow
+goes to the bishop for a license, he should send in his papers to the
+Horse Guards. Now, I 'm too poor to give up my career. I have not, like
+you, a charming cottage on a river's bank, and a swelling lawn dotted
+over with my own sheep before my door. I cannot put off the harness."
+
+"Who talks of putting off the harness?" cried Withering, gayly, as he
+joined them. "Who ever dreamed of doing anything so ill-judging and so
+mistaken? Why, if it were only to hide the spots where the collar has
+galled you, you ought to wear the trappings to the last. No man ever
+knew how to idle, who had n't passed all his life at it! Some go so far
+as to say that for real success a man's father and grandfather should
+have been idlers before him. But have you seen Barrington? He has been
+looking for you all over the grounds."
+
+"No," said Stapylton; "my old brother-officer and myself got into
+pipeclay and barrack talk, and strolled away down here unconsciously."
+
+"Well, we 'd better not be late for tea," broke in the Major, "or we
+'ll hear of it from Miss Dinah!" And there was something so comic in
+the seriousness of his tone, that they laughed heartily as they turned
+towards the house.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. A MOVE IN ADVANCE
+
+How pleasantly did the next day break on the "Home"! Polly Dill arrived
+in the best of possible spirits. A few lines from Tom had just reached
+them. They were written at sea; but the poor fellow's notions of
+latitude and longitude were so confused that it was not easy to say from
+whence. They were cheery, however, he was in good health, his comrades
+were kind-hearted creatures, and evidently recognized in him one of
+a station above their own. He said that he could have been appointed
+hospital sergeant-if he liked, but that whatever reminded him of his old
+calling was so distasteful that he preferred remaining as he was, the
+rather as he was given to believe he should soon be a corporal.
+
+"Not that I mean to stop there, Polly; and now that I have n't got to
+study for it, I feel a courage as to the future I never knew before.
+Give my love to Mr. Conyers, and say that I 'm never tired of thinking
+over the last night I saw him, and of all his good nature to me, and
+that I hope I 'll see his father some day or other to thank him. I
+suppose father does n't miss me? I 'm sure mother does n't; and it
+'s only yourself, Polly, will ever feel a heavy heart for the poor
+castaway! But cheer up! for as sure as my name is Tom, I 'll not bring
+discredit on you, and you 'll not be ashamed to take my arm down the
+main street when we meet. I must close now, for the boat is going.
+
+"P. S. I dreamed last night you rode Sid Davis's brown mare over the
+Millrace at Graigue. Would n't it be strange if it came true? I wish I
+could know it."
+
+"May I show this to my friend here, Polly?" said Barrington, pointing
+to Withering. "It's a letter he 'd like to read; and as she nodded
+assent, he handed it across the breakfast-table.
+
+"What is your brother's regiment, Miss Dill?" said Stapylton, who had
+just caught a stray word or two of what passed.
+
+"The Forty-ninth."
+
+"The Forty-ninth," said he, repeating the words once or twice. "Let me
+see,--don't I know some Forty-ninth men? To be sure I do. There's Rep
+ton and Hare. Your brother will be delighted with Hare."
+
+"My brother is in the ranks, Major Stapylton," said she, flushing a deep
+scarlet; and Barrington quickly interposed,--
+
+"It was the wild frolic of a young man to escape a profession he had no
+mind for."
+
+"But in foreign armies every one does it," broke in Stapylton,
+hurriedly. "No matter what a man's rank may be, he must carry the
+musket; and I own I like the practice,--if for nothing else for that
+fine spirit of _camaraderie_ which it engenders."
+
+Fifine's eyes sparkled with pleasure at what she deemed the well-bred
+readiness of this speech, while Polly became deadly pale, and seemed
+with difficulty to repress the repartee that rose to her mind. Not so
+Miss Dinah, who promptly said, "No foreign customs can palliate a breach
+of our habits. We are English, and we don't desire to be Frenchmen or
+Germans."
+
+"Might we not occasionally borrow from our neighbors with advantage?"
+asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+"I agree with Miss Barrington," said Withering,--"I agree with Miss
+Barrington, whose very prejudices are always right. An army formed by a
+conscription which exempts no man is on a totally different footing from
+one derived from voluntary enlistment."
+
+"A practice that some say should be reserved for marriage," said
+Barrington, whose happy tact it was to relieve a discussion by a ready
+joke.
+
+They arose from table soon after,--Polly to accompany Miss Barrington
+over the garden and the shrubberies, and show all that had been done
+in their absence, and all that she yet intended to do, if approved of;
+Withering adjourned to Barrington's study to pore over parchments; and
+Stapylton, after vainly seeking to find Josephine in the drawing-room,
+the flower-garden, or the lawn, betook himself with a book, the first he
+could find on the table, to the river's side, and lay down, less to read
+than to meditate and reflect.
+
+A breezy morning of a fine day in early autumn, with slow sailing clouds
+above and a flickering sunlight on the grass below, besides a rippling
+river, whose banks are glowing with blue and purple heath-bells,--all
+these and a Waverley novel were not enough to distract Stapylton from
+the cares that pressed upon his mind; for so it is, look where we may on
+those whom Fortune would seem to have made her especial favorites, and
+we shall find some unsatisfied ambition, some craving wish doomed to
+disappointment, some hope deferred till the heart that held it has
+ceased to care for its accomplishment. To the world's eyes, here was a
+man eminently fortunate: already high up in the service, with health,
+vigor, and good looks, a reputation established for personal gallantry
+in the field, and an amount of capacity that had already won for him
+more than one distinction, and yet all these, great and solid advantages
+as they are, were not sufficient to give the ease of mind we call
+happiness.
+
+He had debts, some of them heavy debts, but these sat lightly on him.
+He was one of those men creditors never crush, some secret consciousness
+seeming to whisper that, however ill the world may go with them for a
+while, in the long run they must triumph; and thus Mr. Hirman Davis, to
+whom he owed thousands, would have cashed him another bill to-morrow,
+all on the faith of that future which Stapylton talked about with the
+careless confidence of a mind assured.
+
+He had enemies, too,--powerful and determined enemies,--who opposed his
+advancement for many a year, and were still adverse to him; but, like
+the creditors, they felt he was not a man to be crushed, and so he and
+his ill-wishers smiled blandly when they met, exchanged the most
+cordial greetings, and even imparted little confidences of their
+several fortunes with all that well-bred duplicity which so simulates
+friendship.
+
+He had been crossed,--no, not in love, but in his ambition to marry one
+greatly above him in station; but her subsequent marriage had been so
+unfortunate that he felt in part recompensed for the slight she passed
+upon him; so that, taking it all and all, fate had never been cruel to
+him without a compensation.
+
+There are men who feel their whole existence to be a hand-to-hand
+struggle with the world, who regard the world as an adversary to be
+worsted, and all whose efforts are devoted to reach that point upon
+which they can turn round and say, "You see that I have won the game.
+I was unknown, and I am famous; I was poor, and I am rich; I was passed
+over and ignored, and now the very highest are proud to recognize me!"
+Stapylton was one of these. All the egotism of his nature took this
+form, and it was far more in a spirit against his fellows than in any
+indulgence of himself he fought and struggled with Fortune. Intrusted by
+Withering with much of the secret history of Barring-ton's claim against
+the India Company, he had learned considerably more through inquiries
+instituted by himself, and at length arrived at the conclusion that if
+old Barring-ton could be persuaded to limit his demands within moderate
+bounds, and not insist upon the details of that personal reparation
+which he assumed so essential to his son's honor, a very ample
+recompense would not be refused him. It was to induce Barrington to take
+this course Stapylton had consented to come down with Withering,--so, at
+least, he said, and so Withering believed. Old lawyer that he was,
+with a hundred instincts of distrust about him, he had conceived a real
+liking for Stapylton, and a great confidence in his judgment. "We shall
+have to divide our labors here, Major," said he, as they travelled along
+together; "I will leave the ladies to your care. Barrington shall be
+mine." A very brief acquaintance with Miss Dinah satisfied Stapylton
+that she was one to require nice treatment, and what he called "a
+very light hand." The two or three little baits he had thrown out
+took nothing; the stray bits of sentimentality, or chance scraps of
+high-toned principle he had addressed to her, had failed. It was
+only when he had with some sharpness hit off some small meanness
+in M'Cormick's nature that she had even vouchsafed him so much as
+a half-smile of approval, and he saw that even then she watched him
+closely.
+
+"No," said he, half aloud to himself, "that old woman is not one easily
+to be dealt with; and the younger one, too, would have a will of her own
+if she had but the way to use it. If Polly had been in her place,--the
+clever, quickwitted Polly,--she would have gone with me in my plans,
+associated herself in all my projects, and assured their success. Oh for
+a good colleague just to keep the boat's head straight when one is weary
+of rowing!"
+
+"Would I do?" said a low voice near. And, on looking up, he saw
+Josephine standing over him, with an arch smile on her face as though
+she had surprised him in a confession.
+
+"How long have you been there?" asked he, hurriedly.
+
+"A few seconds.''
+
+"And what have you heard me say?"
+
+"That you wanted a colleague, or a companion of some sort; and as I was
+the only useless person here, I offered myself."
+
+"In good faith?"
+
+"In good faith!--why not? I am more likely to gain by the association
+than you are; at least, if you can only be as pleasant of a morning as
+you were yesterday at dinner."
+
+"I 'll try," said he, springing to his feet; "and as a success in these
+efforts is mainly owing to the amount of zeal that animates them, I am
+hopeful."
+
+"Which means a flattery at the outset," said she, smiling.
+
+"Only as much as your friend Mr. Withering would throw out to dispose
+the court in his favor; and now, which way shall we walk? Are you to be
+the guide, or I?"
+
+"You, by all means, since you know nothing of the locality."
+
+"Agreed. Well, here is my plan. We cross the river in this boat, and
+take that path yonder that leads up by the waterfall. I know, from the
+dark shadow of the mountain, that there is a deep glen, very wild, very
+romantic, and very solemn, through which I mean to conduct you."
+
+"All this means a very long excursion, does it not?"
+
+"You have just told me that you were free from all engagement."
+
+"Yes; but not from all control. I must ask Aunt Dinah's leave before I
+set out on this notable expedition."
+
+"Do nothing of the kind. It would be to make a caprice seem a plan. Let
+us go where you will,--here, along the river's side; anywhere, so that
+we may affect to think that we are free agents, and not merely good
+children sent out for a walk."
+
+"What a rebel against authority you are for one so despotic yourself!"
+
+"I despotic! Who ever called me so?"
+
+"Your officers say as much."
+
+"I know from what quarter that came," said he; and his bronzed face grew
+a shade deeper. "That dilettante soldier, young Conyers, has given me
+this character; but I 'd rather talk of you than myself. Tell me all
+about your life. Is it as delightful as everything around would bespeak
+it? Are these trees and flowers, this sunny bank, this perfumed sward,
+true emblems of the existence they embellish, or is Paradise only a
+cheat?"
+
+"I don't think so. I think Paradise is very like what it looks, not but
+I own that the garden is pleasanter with guests in it than when only
+Adam and Eve were there. Mr. Withering is charming, and you can be very
+agreeable."
+
+"I would I knew how to be so," said he, seriously, "just at this moment;
+for I am going away from Ireland, and I am very desirous of leaving a
+good impression behind me."
+
+"What could it signify to you how you were thought of in this lonely
+spot?"
+
+"More than you suspect,--more than you would, perhaps, credit," said he,
+feelingly.
+
+There was a little pause, during which they walked along side by side.
+
+"What are you thinking of?" said she, at last
+
+"I was thinking of a strange thing,--it was this: About a week ago there
+was no effort I was not making to obtain the command of my regiment. I
+wanted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; and so bent was I on gaining my object,
+that if giving away three or four years of that life that I may hope for
+would have done it, I 'd have closed the bargain; and now the ambition
+is gone, and I am speculating whether I 'll not take the cottage of your
+friend Major M'Cormick,--he offered it to me last night,--and become
+your neighbor. What say _you_ to the project?"
+
+"For us the exchange will be all a gain."
+
+"I want your opinion,--your own," said he, with a voice reduced to a
+mere whisper.
+
+"I'd like it of all things; although, if I were your sister or your
+daughter, I'd not counsel it."
+
+"And why not, if you were my sister?" said he, with a certain constraint
+in his manner.
+
+"I'd say it was inglorious to change from the noble activity of a
+soldier's life to come and dream away existence here."
+
+"But what if I have done enough for this same thing men call fame?
+I have had my share of campaigning, and as the world looks there is
+wondrous little prospect of any renewal of it. These peace achievements
+suit your friend Conyers better than me."
+
+"I think you are not just to him. If I read him aright, he is burning
+for an occasion to distinguish himself."
+
+A cold shrug of the shoulders was his only acknowledgment of this
+speech, and again a silence fell between them.
+
+"I would rather talk of _you_, if you would let me," said he, with much
+significance of voice and manner. "Say would you like to have me for
+your neighbor?"
+
+"It would be a pleasant exchange for Major M'Cormick," said she,
+laughing.
+
+"I want you to be serious now. What I am asking you interests me too
+deeply to jest over."
+
+"First of all, is the project a serious one?"
+
+"It is."
+
+"Next, why ask advice from one as inexperienced as I am?"
+
+"Because it is not counsel I ask,--it is something more. Don't look
+surprised, and, above all, don't look angry, but listen to me. What I
+have said now, and what more I would say, might more properly have been
+uttered when we had known each other longer; but there are emergencies
+in life which give no time for slow approaches, and there are men,
+too, that they suit not. Imagine such now before you,--I mean, both the
+moment and the man. Imagine one who has gone through a great deal in
+life, seen, heard, and felt much, and yet never till now, never till
+this very morning, understood what it was to know one whose least word
+or passing look was more to him than ambition, higher than all the
+rewards of glory."
+
+"We never met till yesterday," said she, calmly.
+
+"True; and if we part to-morrow, it will be forever. I feel too
+painfully," added he, with more eagerness, "how I compromise all that I
+value by an avowal abrupt and rash as this is; but I have had no choice.
+I have been offered the command of a native force in India, and must
+give my answer at once. With hope--the very faintest, so that it be
+hope--I will refuse. Remember I want no pledge, no promise; all I
+entreat is that you will regard me as one who seeks to win your favor.
+Let time do the rest."
+
+"I do not think I ought to do this--I do not know if you should ask it."
+
+"May I speak to your grandfather--may I tell him what I have told
+you--may I say, 'It is with Josephine's permission--'"
+
+"I am called Miss Barrington, sir, by all but those of my own family."
+
+"Forgive me, I entreat you," said he, with a deep humility in his tone.
+"I had never so far forgotten myself if calm reason had not deserted me.
+I will not transgress again."
+
+"This is the shortest way back to the cottage," said she, turning into a
+narrow path in the wood.
+
+"It does not lead to my hope," said he, despondingly; and no more was
+uttered between them for some paces.
+
+"Do not walk so very fast, Miss Barrington," said he, in a tone which
+trembled slightly. "In the few minutes--the seconds you could accord
+me--I might build the whole fortune of my life. I have already
+endangered my hopes by rashness; let me own that it is the fault I have
+struggled against in vain. This scar"--and he showed the deep mark of a
+sabre-wound on the temple--"was the price of one of my offendings; but
+it was light in suffering to what I am now enduring."
+
+"Can we not talk of what will exact no such sacrifice?" said she,
+calmly.
+
+"Not now, not now!" said he, with emotion; "if you pass that porch
+without giving me an answer, life has no longer a tie for me. You
+know that I ask for no pledge, no promise, merely time,--no more than
+time,--a few more of those moments of which you now would seem eager to
+deny me. Linger an instant here, I beseech you, and remember that what
+to _you_ may be a caprice may to _me_ be a destiny."
+
+"I will not hear more of this," said she, half angrily. "If it were not
+for my own foolish trustfulness, you never would have dared to address
+such words to one whom you met yesterday for the first time."
+
+"It is true your generous frankness, the nature they told me you
+inherited, gives me boldness, but it might teach you to have some pity
+for a disposition akin to it. One word,--only one word more."
+
+"Not one, sir! The lesson my frankness has taught me is, never to incur
+this peril again."
+
+"Do you part from me in anger?"
+
+"Not with _you_; but I will not answer for myself if you press me
+further."
+
+"Even this much is better than despair," said he, mournfully; and
+she passed into the cottage, while he stood in the porch and bowed
+respectfully as she went by. "Better than I looked for, better than
+I could have hoped," muttered he to himself, as he strolled away and
+disappeared in the wood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. A CABINET COUNCIL
+
+"What do you think of it, Dinah?" said Barrington, as they sat in
+conclave the next morning in her own sitting-room.
+
+She laid down a letter she had just finished reading on the table,
+carefully folding it, like one trying to gain time before she spoke:
+"He's a clever man, and writes well, Peter; there can be no second
+opinion upon that."
+
+"But his proposal, Dinah,--his proposal?"
+
+"Pleases me less the more I think of it. There is great disparity of
+age,--a wide discrepancy in character. A certain gravity of demeanor
+would not be undesirable, perhaps, in a husband for Josephine, who has
+her moments of capricious fancy; but if I mistake not, this man's nature
+is stern and unbending."
+
+"There will be time enough to consider all that, Dinah. It is, in fact,
+to weigh well the chances of his fitness to secure her happiness that he
+pleads; he asks permission to make himself known to her, rather than to
+make his court."
+
+"I used to fancy that they meant the same thing,--I know that they did
+in my day, Peter," said she, bridling; "but come to the plain question
+before us. So far as I understand him, his position is this: 'If I
+satisfy you that my rank and fortune are satisfactory to you, have I
+your permission to come back here as your granddaughter's suitor?'"
+
+"Not precisely, Dinah,--not exactly this. Here are his words: 'I am well
+aware that I am much older than Miss Barrington, and it is simply to
+ascertain from herself if, in that disparity of years, there exists that
+disparity of tastes and temper which would indispose her to regard me as
+one to whom she would intrust her happiness. I hope to do this without
+any offence to her delicacy, though not without peril to my own
+self-love. Have I your leave for this experiment?'"
+
+"Who is he? Who are his friends, connections, belongings? What is his
+station independently of his military rank, and what are his means? Can
+you answer these questions?"
+
+"Not one of them. I never found myself till to-day in a position to
+inquire after them."
+
+"Let us begin, then, by that investigation, Peter. There is no such
+test of a man as to make him talk of himself. With you alone the matter,
+perhaps, would not present much difficulty to him, but I intend that Mr.
+Withering's name and my own shall be on the committee; and, take _my_
+word for it, we shall sift the evidence carefully."
+
+"Bear in mind, sister Dinah, that this gentleman is, first of all, our
+guest."
+
+"The first of all that I mean to bear in mind is, that he desires to be
+your grandson."
+
+"Of course,--of course. I would only observe on the reserve that should
+be maintained towards one who honors us with his presence."
+
+"Peter Barrington, the Arabs, from whom you seem to borrow your notions
+on hospitality, seldom scruple about cutting a guest's head off when he
+passes the threshold; therefore I would advise you to adopt habits that
+may be more suited to the land we live in."
+
+"All I know is," said Barrington, rising and pacing the room, "that I
+could no more put a gentleman under my roof to the question as to his
+father and mother and his fortune, than I could rifle his writing-desk
+and read his letters."
+
+"Brother Peter, the weakness of your disposition has cost you one of
+the finest estates in your country, and if it could be restored to you
+to-morrow, the same imbecility would forfeit it again. I will, however,
+take the matter into my own hands."
+
+"With Withering, I suppose, to assist you?"
+
+"Certainly not. I am perfectly competent to make any inquiry I deem
+requisite without a legal adviser. Perhaps, were I to be so accompanied,
+Major Stapylton would suppose that he, too, should appear with his
+lawyer."
+
+Barrington smiled faintly at the dry jest, but said nothing.
+
+"I see," resumed she, "that you are very much afraid about my want of
+tact and delicacy in this investigation. It is a somewhat common belief
+amongst men that in all matters of business women err on the score of
+hardness and persistence. I have listened to some edifying homilies from
+your friend Withering on female incredulity and so forth,--reproaches
+which will cease to apply when men shall condescend to treat us as
+creatures accessible to reason, and not as mere dupes. See who is
+knocking at the door, Peter," added she, sharply. "I declare it recalls
+the old days of our innkeeping, and Darby asking for the bill of the
+lame gentleman in No. 4."
+
+"Upon my life, they were pleasant days, too," said Barrington, but in a
+tone so low as to be unheard by his sister.
+
+"May I come in?" said Withering, as he opened the door a few inches,
+and peeped inside. "I want to show you a note I have just had from
+Kinshela, in Kilkenny."
+
+"Yes, yes; come in," said Miss Barrington. "I only wish you had arrived
+a little earlier. What is your note about?"
+
+"It's very short and very purpose-like. The first of it is all about
+Brazier's costs, which it seems the taxing-officer thinks fair and
+reasonable,--all excepting that charge for the additional affidavits.
+But here is what I want to show you. 'Major M'Cormick, of M'Cormick's
+Grove, has just been here; and although I am not entitled to say as much
+officially on his part, I entertain no doubt whatever but that he is
+ready to advance the money we require. I spoke of fifteen hundred, but
+said twelve might possibly be taken, and twelve would be, I imagine, his
+limit, since he held to this amount in all our conversation afterwards.
+He appears to be a man of strange and eccentric habits, and these
+will probably be deemed a sufficient excuse for the singular turn
+our interview took towards its conclusion. I was speaking of Mr.
+Barrington's wish for the insertion in the deed of a definite period for
+redemption, and he stopped me hastily with, "What if we could strike out
+another arrangement? What if he was to make a settlement of the place
+on his granddaughter? I am not too old to marry, and I 'd give him
+the money at five per cent." I have been careful to give you the very
+expressions he employed, and of which I made a note when he left the
+office; for although fully aware how improper it would be in me to
+submit this proposal to Mr. Barrington, I have felt it my duty to put
+you in possession of all that has passed between us.'"
+
+"How can you laugh, Peter Barrington?--how is it possible you can laugh
+at such an insult,--such an outrage as this? Go on, sir," said she,
+turning to Withering; "let us hear it to the end, for nothing worse can
+remain behind."
+
+"There is no more; at least, there is not anything worth hearing.
+Kinshela winds up with many apologies, and hopes that I will only use
+his communication for my own guidance, and not permit it in any case to
+prejudice him in your estimation." As he spoke, he crumpled up the note
+in his hand in some confusion.
+
+"Who thinks of Mr. Kinshela, or wants to think of him, in the matter?"
+said she, angrily. "I wish, however, I were a man for a couple of hours,
+to show Major M'Cormick the estimate I take of the honor he intends us."
+
+"After all, Dinah, it is not that he holds us more cheaply, but rates
+himself higher."
+
+"Just so," broke in Withering; "and I know, for my own part, I have
+never been able to shake off the flattery of being chosen by the most
+nefarious rascal to defend him on his trial. Every man is a great
+creature in his own eyes."
+
+"Well, sir, be proud of your client," said she, trembling with anger.
+
+"No, no,--he 's no client of mine, nor is this a case I would plead for
+him. I read you Kinshela's note because I thought you were building too
+confidently on M'Cormick's readiness to advance this money."
+
+"I understood what that readiness meant, though my brother did not.
+M'Cormick looked forward to the day--and not a very distant day did he
+deem it--when he should step into possession of this place, and settle
+down here as its owner."
+
+Barrington's face grew pale, and a glassy film spread over his eyes,
+as his sister's words sunk into his heart. "I declare, Dinah," said he,
+falteringly, "that never did strike me before."
+
+"'It never rains but it pours,' says the Irish adage," resumed she. "My
+brother and I were just discussing another proposal of the same kind
+when you knocked. Read that letter. It is from a more adroit courtier
+than the other, and, at least, he does n't preface his intentions with a
+bargain." And she handed Stapylton's letter to Withering.
+
+"Ah!" said the lawyer, "this is another guess sort of man, and a very
+different sort of proposal."
+
+"I suspected that he was a favorite of yours," said Miss Dinah,
+significantly.
+
+"Well, I own to it. He is one of those men who have a great attraction
+for me,--men who come out of the conflict of life and its interests
+without any exaggerated notions of human perfectibility or the opposite,
+who recognize plenty of good and no small share of bad in the world,
+but, on the whole, are satisfied that, saving ill health, very few of
+our calamities are not of our own providing."
+
+"All of which is perfectly compatible with an odious egotism, sir," said
+she, warmly; "but I feel proud to say such characters find few admirers
+amongst women."
+
+"From which I opine that he is not fortunate enough to number Miss Dinah
+Barrington amongst his supporters?"
+
+"You are right there, sir. The prejudice I had against him before we met
+has been strengthened since I have seen him."
+
+"It is candid of you, however, to call it a prejudice," said he, with a
+smile.
+
+"Be it so, Mr. Withering; but prejudice is only another word for an
+instinct."
+
+"I 'm afraid if we get into ethics we 'll forget all about the
+proposal," said Barrington.
+
+"What a sarcasm!" cried Withering, "that if we talk of morals we shall
+ignore matrimony."
+
+"I like the man, and I like his letter," said Barrington.
+
+"I distrust both one and the other," said Miss Dinah.
+
+"I almost fancy I could hold a brief on either side," interposed
+Withering.
+
+"Of course you could, sir; and if the choice were open to you, it would
+be the defence of the guilty."
+
+"My dear Miss Barrington," said Withering, calmly, "when a great legal
+authority once said that he only needed three lines of any man's writing
+'to hang him,' it ought to make us very lenient in our construction of a
+letter. Now, so far as I can see in this one before us, he neither asks
+nor protests too much. He begs simply for time, he entreats leave to
+draw a bill on your affections, and he promises to meet it."
+
+"No, sir, he wishes to draw at sight, though he has never shown us the
+letter of credit."
+
+"I vow to Heaven it is hopeless to expect anything practical when you
+two stand up together for a sparring-match," cried Barrington.
+
+"Be practical, then, brother Peter, and ask this gentleman to give you a
+quarter of an hour in your study. Find out who he is; I don't expect you
+to learn what he is, but what he has. With his fortune we shall get the
+clew to himself."
+
+"Yes," chimed in Withering, "all that is very businesslike and
+reasonable."
+
+"And it pledges us to nothing," added she. "We take soundings, but we
+don't promise to anchor."
+
+"If you go off again with your figures of speech, Dinah, there is an
+end of me, for I have one of those unhappy memories that retain the
+illustration and forget what it typified. Besides this, here is a man
+who, out of pure good nature and respect for poor George's memory, has
+been doing us most important services, written letters innumerable, and
+taken the most active measures for our benefit. What sort of a figure
+shall I present if I bring him to book about his rental and the state of
+his bank account?"
+
+"With the exercise of a little tact, Barrington,--a little management--"
+
+"Ask a man with a club-foot to walk gingerly! I have no more notion of
+getting at anything by address than I have of tying the femoral artery."
+
+"The more blunt the better, Peter Barrington. You may tumble into the
+truth, though you'd never pick your way into it. Meanwhile, leave me to
+deal with Major M'Cor-mick."
+
+"You'll do it courteously, Dinah; you'll bear in mind that he is a
+neighbor of some twenty years' standing?" said Barrington, in a voice
+of anxiety.
+
+"I 'll do it in a manner that shall satisfy _my_ conscience and _his_
+presumption."
+
+She seated herself at the table as she said this, and dashed off a few
+hasty lines. Indeed, so hurried was the action, that it looked far more
+like one of those instances of correspondence we see on the stage than
+an event of real life.
+
+"Will that do?" said she, showing the lines to Withering.
+
+The old lawyer read them over to himself, a faint twitching of the mouth
+being the only sign his face presented of any emotion. "I should say
+admirably,--nothing better."
+
+"May I see it, Dinah?" asked Peter.
+
+"You shall hear it, brother," said she, taking the paper and reading,--
+
+"'Miss Barrington informs Mr. Kinshela that if he does not at once
+retract his epistle of this morning's date, she will place it in the
+hands of her legal adviser, and proceed against it as a threatening
+letter.'"
+
+"Oh, sister, you will not send this?"
+
+"As sure as my name is Dinah Barrington."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. AN EXPRESS
+
+In the times before telegraphs,--and it is of such I am writing,--a
+hurried express was a far more stirring event than in these our days
+of incessant oracles. While, therefore, Barrington and his sister and
+Withering sat in deep consultation on Josephine's fate and future, a
+hasty summons arrived from Dublin, requiring the instantaneous departure
+of Stapylton, whose regiment was urgently needed in the north of
+England, at that time agitated by those disturbances called the Bread
+Riots. They were very formidable troubles, and when we look back upon
+them now, with the light which the great events of later years on the
+Continent afford us, seem more terrible still. It was the fashion,
+however, then, to treat them lightly, and talk of them contemptuously;
+and as Stapylton was eating a hasty luncheon before departure, he
+sneered at the rabble, and scoffed at the insolent pretension of their
+demands. Neither Barrington nor Withering sympathized with the spirit
+of the revolt, and yet each felt shocked at the tone of haughty contempt
+Stapylton assumed towards the people. "You'll see," cried he, rising,
+"how a couple of brisk charges from our fellows will do more to bring
+these rascals to reason than all the fine pledges of your Parliament
+folk; and I promise you, for my own part, if I chance upon one of their
+leaders, I mean to lay my mark on him."
+
+"I fear, sir, it is your instinctive dislike to the plebeian that moves
+you here," said Miss Dinah. "You will not entertain the question whether
+these people may not have some wrongs to complain of."
+
+"Perhaps so, madam," said he; and his swarthy face grew darker as he
+spoke. "I suppose this is the case where the blood of a gentleman boils
+indignantly at the challenge of the _canaille_."
+
+"I will not have a French word applied to our own people, sir," said
+she, angrily.
+
+"Well said," chimed in Withering. "It is wonderful how a phrase can seem
+to carry an argument along with it."
+
+And old Peter smiled, and nodded his concurrence with this speech.
+
+"What a sad minority do I stand in!" said Stapylton, with an effort to
+smile very far from successful. "Will not Miss Josephine Barrington have
+generosity enough to aid the weaker side?"
+
+"Not if it be the worst cause," interposed Dinah. "My niece needs not to
+be told she must be just before she is generous."
+
+"Then it is to your own generosity I will appeal," said Stapylton,
+turning to her; "and I will ask you to ascribe some, at least, of my
+bitterness to the sorrow I feel at being thus summoned away. Believe me
+it is no light matter to leave this place and its company."
+
+"But only for a season, and a very brief season too, I trust," said
+Barrington. "You are going away in our debt, remember."
+
+"It is a loser's privilege, all the world over, to withdraw when he has
+lost enough," said Stapylton, with a sad smile towards Miss Dinah; and
+though the speech was made in the hope it might elicit a contradiction,
+none came, and a very awkward silence ensued.
+
+"You will reach Dublin to-night, I suppose?" said Withering, to relieve
+the painful pause in the conversation.
+
+"It will be late,--after midnight, perhaps."
+
+"And embark the next morning?"
+
+"Two of our squadrons have sailed already; the others will, of course,
+follow to-morrow."
+
+"And young Conyers," broke in Miss Dinah,--"he will, I suppose,
+accompany this--what shall I call it?--this raid?"
+
+"Yes, madam. Am I to convey to him your compliments upon the first
+opportunity to flesh his maiden sword?"
+
+"You are to do nothing of the kind, sir; but tell him from me not to
+forget that the angry passions of a starving multitude are not to be
+confounded with the vindictive hate of our natural enemies."
+
+"Natural enemies, my dear Miss Barrington! I hope you cannot mean that
+there exists anything so monstrous in humanity as a natural enemy?"
+
+"I do, sir; and I mean all those whose jealousy of us ripens into
+hatred, and who would spill their heart's blood to see us humbled. When
+there exists a people like this, and who at every fresh outbreak of a
+war with us have carried into the new contest all the bitter animosities
+of long past struggles as debts to be liquidated, I call these
+natural enemies; and, if you prefer a shorter word for it, I call them
+Frenchmen."
+
+"Dinah, Dinah!"
+
+"Peter, Peter! don't interrupt me. Major Stapylton has thought to tax me
+with a blunder, but I accept it as a boast!"
+
+"Madam, I am proud to be vanquished by you," said Stapylton, bowing low.
+
+"And I trust, sir," said she, continuing her speech, and as if heedless
+of his interruption, "that no similarity of name will make you behave at
+Peterloo--if that be the name--as though you were at Waterloo."
+
+"Upon my life!" cried he, with a saucy laugh, "I don't know how I am
+to win your good opinion, except it be by tearing off my epaulettes, and
+putting myself at the head of the mob."
+
+"You know very little of my sister, Major Stapylton," said Barrington,
+"or you would scarcely have selected that mode of cultivating her
+favor."
+
+"There is a popular belief that ladies always side with the winning
+cause," said Stapylton, affecting a light and easy manner; "so I must
+do my best to be successful. May I hope I carry your _good_ wishes away
+with me?" said he, in a lower tone to Josephine.
+
+"I hope that nobody will hurt you, and you hurt nobody," said she,
+laughingly.
+
+"And this, I take it, is about as much sympathy as ever attends a man
+on such a campaign. Mr. Barrington, will you grant me two minutes
+of conversation in your own room?" And, with a bow of acquiescence,
+Barrington led the way to his study.
+
+"I ought to have anticipated your request, Major Stapyl-ton," said
+Barrington, when they found themselves alone. "I owe you a reply to your
+letter, but the simple fact is, I do not know what answer to give it;
+for while most sensible of the honor you intend us, I feel still there
+is much to be explained on both sides. We know scarcely anything of each
+other, and though I am conscious of the generosity which prompts a
+man with _your_ prospects and in _your_ position to ally himself with
+persons in _ours_, yet I owe it to myself to say, it hangs upon a
+contingency to restore us to wealth and station. Even a portion of what
+I claim from the East India Company would make my granddaughter one of
+the richest heiresses in England."
+
+Stapylton gave a cold, a very cold smile, in reply to this speech. It
+might mean that he was incredulous or indifferent, or it might imply
+that the issue was one which need not have been introduced into the
+case at all. Whatever its signification, Barrington felt hurt by it, and
+hastily said,--
+
+"Not that I have any need to trouble you with these details: it is
+rather my province to ask for information regarding _your_ circumstances
+than to enter upon a discussion of _ours_."
+
+"I am quite ready to give you the very fullest and clearest,--I mean
+to yourself personally, or to your sister; for, except where the lawyer
+intervenes of necessity and _de droit_, I own that I resent his
+presence as an insult. I suppose few of us are devoid of certain
+family circumstances which it would be more agreeable to deal with in
+confidence; and though, perhaps, I am as fortunate as most men in this
+respect, there are one or two small matters on which I would ask your
+attention. These, however, are neither important nor pressing. My first
+care is to know,--and I hope I am not peremptory in asking it,--have I
+your consent to the proposition contained in my letter; am I at liberty
+to address Miss Barrington?"
+
+Barrington flushed deeply and fidgeted; he arose and sat down
+again,--all his excitement only aggravated by the well-bred composure
+of the other, who seemed utterly unconscious of the uneasiness he was
+causing.
+
+"Don't you think, Major, that this is a case for a little time to
+reflect,--that in a matter so momentous as this, a few days at least are
+requisite for consideration? We ought to ascertain something at least of
+my granddaughter's own sentiments,--I mean, of course, in a general way.
+It might be, too, that a day or two might give us some better insight
+into her future prospects."
+
+"Pardon my interrupting you; but, on the last point, I am perfectly
+indifferent. Miss Barrington with half a province for her dower, would
+be no more in my eyes than Miss Barrington as she sat at breakfast
+this morning. Nor is there anything of high-flown sentiment in this
+declaration, as my means are sufficiently ample for all that I want or
+care."
+
+"There, at least, is one difficulty disposed of. You are an eldest son?"
+said he; and he blushed at his own boldness in making the inquiry.
+
+"I am an only son."
+
+"Easier again," said Barrington, trying to laugh off the awkward moment.
+"No cutting down one's old timber to pay off the provisions for younger
+brothers."
+
+"In my case there is no need of this."
+
+"And your father. Is he still living, Major Stapylton?"
+
+"My father has been dead some years."
+
+Barrington fidgeted again, fumbled with his watch-chain and his
+eye-glass, and would have given more than he could afford for any
+casualty that should cut short the interview. He wanted to say, "What is
+the amount of your fortune? What is it? Where is it? Are you Wiltshire
+or Staffordshire? Who are your uncles and aunts, and your good friends
+that you pray for, and where do you pray for them?" A thousand questions
+of this sort arose in his mind, one only more prying and impertinent
+than another. He knew he ought to ask them; he knew Dinah would have
+asked them. Ay, and would have the answers to them as plain and palpable
+as the replies to a life assurance circular; but he could n't do it. No;
+not if his life depended on it.
+
+He had already gone further in his transgression of good manners than it
+ever occurred to him before to do, and he felt something between a holy
+inquisitor and a spy of the police.
+
+Stapylton looked at his watch, and gave a slight start.
+
+"Later than you thought, eh?" cried Peter, overjoyed at the diversion.
+
+Stapylton smiled a cold assent, and put up his watch without a word. He
+saw all the confusion and embarrassment of the other, and made no effort
+to relieve him. At last, but not until after a considerable pause,
+he said,--"I believe, Mr. Barrington,--I hope, at least,--I have
+satisfactorily answered the questions which, with every right on your
+part, you have deemed proper to put to me. I cannot but feel how painful
+the task has been to you, and I regret it the more, since probably
+it has set a limit to inquiries which you are perfectly justified in
+making, but which closer relations between us may make a matter far less
+formidable one of these days."
+
+"Yes, yes,--just so; of course," said Barrington, hurriedly assenting to
+he knew not what.
+
+"And I trust I take my leave of you with the understanding that when
+we meet again, it shall be as in the commencement of these pleasanter
+relations. I own to you I am the more eager on this point, that
+I perceive your sister, Miss Barrington, scarcely regards me very
+favorably, and I stand the more in need of your alliance."
+
+"I don't think it possible, Major Stapylton," said Barrington, boldly,
+"that my sister and I could have two opinions upon anything or anybody."
+
+"Then I only ask that she may partake of yours on this occasion," said
+Stapylton, bowing. "But I must start; as it is, I shall be very late in
+Dublin. Will you present my most respectful adieux to the ladies, and
+say also a goodbye for me to Mr. Withering?"
+
+"You'll come in for a moment to the drawing-room, won't you?" cried
+Barrington.
+
+"I think not. I opine it would be better not. There would be a certain
+awkwardness about it,--that is, until you have informed Miss Dinah
+Barrington of the extent to which you have accorded me your confidence,
+and how completely I have opened every detail of my circumstances.
+I believe it would be in better taste not to present myself. Tell
+Withering that if he writes, Manchester will find me. I don't suspect
+he need give himself any more trouble about establishing the proofs of
+marriage. They will scarcely contest that point. The great question will
+and must be, to ascertain if the Company will cease to oppose the claim
+on being fully convinced that the letter to the Meer Busherat was a
+forgery, and that no menace ever came from Colonel Barrington's hand as
+to the consequences of opposing his rule. Get them to admit this,--let
+the issue rest upon this,--and it will narrow the whole suit within
+manageable limits."
+
+"Would you not say this much to him before you go? It would come with so
+much more force and clearness from yourself."
+
+"I have done so till I was wearied. Like a true lawyer, he insists upon
+proving each step as he goes, and will not condescend to a hypothetical
+conclusion, though I have told him over and over again we want a
+settlement, not a victory. Good-bye, good-bye! If I once launch out into
+the cause, I cannot tear myself away again."
+
+"Has your guest gone, Peter?" said Miss Dinah, as her brother re-entered
+the drawing-room.
+
+"Yes; it was a hurried departure, and he had no great heart for it,
+either. By the way, Withering, while it is fresh in my head, let me tell
+you the message he has sent you."
+
+"Was there none for _me_, Peter?" said she, scofflngly.
+
+"Ay, but there was, Dinah! He left with me I know not how many polite
+and charming things to say for him."
+
+"And am I alone forgotten in this wide dispensation of favors?" asked
+Josephine, smiling.
+
+"Of course not, dear," chimed in Miss Dinah. "Your grandpapa has been
+charged with them all. You could not expect a gentleman so naturally
+timid and bashful as our late guest to utter them by his own lips."
+
+"I see," said Withering, laughing, "that you have not forgiven the
+haughty aristocrat for his insolent estimate of the people!"
+
+"He an aristocrat! Such bitter words as his never fell from any man who
+had a grandfather!"
+
+"Wrong for once, Dinah," broke in Barrington. "I can answer for it that
+you are unjust to him."
+
+"We shall see," said she. "Come, Josephine, I have a whole morning's
+work before me in the flower-garden, and I want your help. Don't forget,
+Peter, that Major M'Cormick's butler, or boatman, or bailiff, whichever
+he be, has been up here with a present of seakale this morning. Give him
+something as you pass the kitchen; and you, Mr. Withering, whose trade
+it is to read and unravel mysteries, explain if you can the meaning of
+this unwonted generosity."
+
+"I suppose we can all guess it," said he, laughing. "It's a custom that
+begins in the East and goes round the whole world till it reaches the
+vast prairie in the Far West."
+
+"And what can that custom be, Aunt Dinah?" asked Josephine, innocently.
+
+"It's an ancient rite Mr. Withering speaks, of, child, pertaining to the
+days when men offered sacrifices. Come along; I 'm going!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. CROSS-EXAMININGS.
+
+While Barrington and his lawyer sat in conclave over the details of the
+great suit, Stapylton hurried along his road with all the speed he could
+summon. The way, which for some miles led along the river-side, brought
+into view M'Cormick's cottage, and the Major himself, as he stood
+listlessly at his door.'
+
+Halting his carriage for a moment, Stapylton jumped out and drew nigh
+the little quickset hedge which flanked the road.
+
+"What can I do for you in the neighborhood of Manchester, Major? We are
+just ordered off there to ride down the Radicals."
+
+"I wish it was nearer home you were going to do it," said he, crankily.
+"Look here,"--and he pointed to some fresh-turned earth,--"they were
+stealing my turnips last night."
+
+"It would appear that these fellows in the North are growing dangerous,"
+said Stapylton.
+
+"'T is little matter to us," said M'Cormick, sulkily. "I'd care more
+about a blight in the potatoes than for all the politics in Europe."
+
+"A genuine philosopher! How snug you are here, to be sure! A man in a
+pleasant nook like this can well afford to smile at the busy ambitions
+of the outer world. I take it you are about the very happiest fellow I
+know?"
+
+"Maybe I am, maybe I'm not," said he, peevishly.
+
+"This spot only wants what I hinted to you t'other evening, to be
+perfection."
+
+"Ay!" said the other, dryly.
+
+"And you agree with me heartily, if you had the candor to say it. Come,
+out with it, man, at once. I saw your gardener this morning with a great
+basketful of greenery, and a large bouquet on the top of it,--are not
+these significant signs of a projected campaign? You are wrong, Major,
+upon my life you are wrong, not to be frank with me. I could, by a
+strange hazard, as the newspapers say, 'tell you something to your
+advantage.'"
+
+"About what?"
+
+"About the very matter you were thinking of as I drove up. Come, I will
+be more generous than you deserve." And, laying his arm on M'Cormick's
+shoulder, he halt whispered in his ear; "It is a good thing,--a deuced
+good thing! and I promise you, if I were a marrying man, you 'd have a
+competitor. I won't say she 'll have one of the great fortunes people
+rave about, but it will be considerable,--very considerable."
+
+"How do you know, or what do you know?"
+
+"I 'll tell you in three words. How I know is, because I have been the
+channel for certain inquiries they made in India. What I know is, the
+Directors are sick of the case, they are sorely ashamed of it, and not a
+little uneasy lest it should come before the public, perhaps before the
+Parliament. Old Barrington has made all negotiation difficult by the
+extravagant pretensions he puts forward about his son's honor, and so
+forth. If, however, the girl were married, her husband would be
+the person to treat with, and I am assured with him they would deal
+handsomely, even generously."
+
+"And why would n't all this make a marrying man of you, though you were
+n't before?"
+
+"There's a slight canonical objection, if you must know," said
+Stapylton, with a smile.
+
+"Oh, I perceive,--a wife already! In India, perhaps?"
+
+"I have no time just now for a long story, M'Cormick," said he,
+familiarly, "nor am I quite certain I 'd tell it if I had. However, you
+know enough for all practical purposes, and I repeat to you this is a
+stake I can't enter for,--you understand me?"
+
+"There's another thing, now," said M'Cormick; "and as we are talking so
+freely together, there's no harm in mentioning it. It 's only the other
+day, as I may call it, that we met for the first time?"
+
+"Very true: when I was down here at Cobham."
+
+"And never heard of each other before?"
+
+"Not to my knowledge, certainly."
+
+"That being the case, I 'm curious to hear how you took this wonderful
+interest in me. It wasn't anything in my appearance, I 'm sure, nor my
+manner; and as to what you 'd hear about me among those blackguards down
+here, there's nothing too bad to say of me."
+
+"I'll be as frank as yourself," said Stapylton, boldly; "you ask for
+candor, and you shall have it. I had n't talked ten minutes with you
+till I saw that you were a thorough man of the world; the true old
+soldier, who had seen enough of life to know that whatever one gets for
+nothing in this world is just worth nothing, and so I said to myself,
+'If it ever occurs to me to chance upon a good opportunity of which I
+cannot from circumstances avail myself, there's my man. I'll go to him
+and say, "M'Cormick, that's open to you, there's a safe thing!" And when
+in return he 'd say, "Stapylton, what can I do for you?" my answer would
+be, "Wait till you are satisfied that I have done you a good turn; be
+perfectly assured that I have really served you." And then, if I
+wanted a loan of a thousand or fifteen hundred to lodge for the
+Lieutenant-Colonelcy, I 'd not be ashamed to say, "M'Cormick, let me
+have so much."'"
+
+"That's _it_, is it?" said M'Cormick, with a leer of intense cunning.
+"Not a bad bargain for _you_, anyhow. It is not every day that a man can
+sell what is n't his own."
+
+"I might say, it's not every day that a man regards a possible loan as
+a gift, but I 'm quite ready to reassure all your fears on that score;
+I'll even pledge myself never to borrow a shilling from you."
+
+"Oh, I don't mean that; you took me up so quick," said the old fellow,
+reddening with a sense of shame he had not felt for many a year. "I may
+be as stingy as they call me, but for all that I 'd stand to a man who
+stands to _me_."
+
+"Between gentlemen and men of the world these things are better left
+to a sense of an honorable understanding than made matters of compact.
+There is no need of another word on the matter. I shall be curious,
+however, to know how your project speeds. Write to me,--you have plenty
+of time,--and write often. I 'm not unlikely to learn something about
+the Indian claim, and if I do, you shall hear of it."
+
+"I'm not over good at pen and ink work; indeed, I haven't much practice,
+but I'll do my best."
+
+"Do, by all means. Tell me how you get on with Aunt Dinah, who, I
+suspect, has no strong affection for either of us. Don't be precipitate;
+hazard nothing by a rash step; secure your way by intimacy, mere
+intimacy: avoid particular attentions strictly; be always there, and on
+some pretext or other--But why do I say all this to an old soldier, who
+has made such sieges scores of times?"
+
+"Well, I think I see my way clear enough," said the old fellow, with a
+grin. "I wish I was as sure I knew why you take such an interest in me."
+
+"I believe I have told you already; I hope there is nothing so strange
+in the assurance as to require corroboration. Come, I must say
+good-bye; I meant to have said five words to you, and I have stayed here
+five-and-twenty minutes."
+
+"Would n't you take something?--could n't I offer you anything?" said
+M'Cormick, hesitatingly.
+
+"Nothing, thanks. I lunched before I started; and although old Dinah
+made several assaults upon me while I ate, I managed to secure two
+cutlets and part of a grouse-pie, and a rare glass of Madeira to wash
+them down."
+
+"That old woman is dreadful, and I'll take her down a peg yet, as sure
+as my name is Dan."
+
+"No, don't, Major; don't do anything of the kind. The people who tame
+tigers are sure to get scratched at last, and nobody thanks them for
+their pains. Regard her as the sailors do a fire-ship; give her a wide
+berth, and steer away from her."
+
+"Ay, but she sometimes gives chase."
+
+"Strike your flag, then, if it must be; for, trust me, you 'll not
+conquer _her_."
+
+"We 'll see, we 'll see," muttered the old fellow, as he waved his
+adieux, and then turned back into the house again.
+
+As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering
+a malediction on the "dear friend" he had just parted with. When the
+_bourgeois gentilhomme_ objected to his adversary pushing him _en
+tierce_ while he attacked him _en quarte_, he was expressing a great
+social want, applicable to those people who in conversation will persist
+in saying many things which ought not to be uttered, and expressing
+doubts and distrusts which, however it be reasonable to feel, are an
+outrage to avow.
+
+"The old fox," said Stapylton, aloud, "taunted me with selling what did
+not belong to me; but he never suspects that I have bought something
+without paying for it, and that something himself! Yes, the mock siege
+he will lay to the fortress will occupy the garrison till it suits me
+to open the real attack, and I will make use of him, besides, to learn
+whatever goes on in my absence. How the old fellow swallowed the bait!
+What self-esteem there must be in such a rugged nature, to make him
+imagine he could be successful in a cause like this! He is, after all,
+a clumsy agent to trust one's interest to. If the choice had been given
+me, I'd far rather have had a woman to watch over them. Polly Dill, for
+instance, the very girl to understand such a mission well. How adroitly
+would she have played the game, and how clearly would her letters have
+shown me the exact state of events!"
+
+Such were the texts of his musings as he drove along, and deep as were
+his thoughts, they never withdrew him, when the emergency called,
+from attention to every detail of the journey, and he scrutinized the
+post-horses as they were led out, and apportioned the rewards to the
+postilions as though no heavier care lay on his heart than the road and
+its belongings. While he rolled thus smoothly along, Peter Barrington
+had been summoned to his sister's presence, to narrate in full all that
+he had asked, and all that he had learned of Stapylton and his fortunes.
+
+Miss Dinah was seated in a deep armchair, behind a formidable
+embroidery-frame,--a thing so complex and mysterious in form as to
+suggest an implement of torture. At a short distance off sat Withering,
+with pen, ink, and paper before him, as if to set down any details of
+unusual importance; and into this imposing presence poor Barrington
+entered with a woful sense of misgiving and humiliation.
+
+"We have got a quiet moment at last, Peter," said Miss Barrington. "I
+have sent the girls over to Brown's Barn for the tulip-roots, and I have
+told Darby that if any visitors came they were to be informed we were
+particularly occupied by business, and could see no one."
+
+"Just so," added Withering; "it is a case before the Judge in Chamber."
+
+"But what have we got to hear?" asked Barrington, with an air of
+innocence.
+
+"We have got to hear your report, brother Peter; the narrative of your
+late conversation with Major Stapylton; given, as nearly as your memory
+will serve, in the exact words and in the precise order everything
+occurred."
+
+"October the twenty-third," said Withering, writing as he spoke; "minute
+of interview between P. B. and Major S. Taken on the same morning it
+occurred, with remarks and observations explanatory."
+
+"Begin," said Dinah, imperiously, while she worked away without lifting
+her head. "And avoid, so far as possible, anything beyond the precise
+expression employed."
+
+"But you don't suppose I took notes in shorthand of what we said to each
+other, do you?"
+
+"I certainly suppose you can have retained in your memory a conversation
+that took place two hours ago," said Miss Dinah, sternly.
+
+"And can relate it circumstantially and clearly," added Withering.
+
+"Then I 'm very sorry to disappoint you, but I can do nothing of the
+kind."
+
+"Do you mean to say that you had no interview with Major Stapylton,
+Peter?"
+
+"Or that you have forgotten all about it?" said Withering.
+
+"Or is it that you have taken a pledge of secrecy, brother Peter?"
+
+"No, no, no! It is simply this, that though I retain a pretty fair
+general impression of what I said myself, and what he said afterwards,
+I could no more pretend to recount it accurately than I could say off by
+heart a scene in 'Romeo and Juliet.'"
+
+"Why don't you take the 'Comedy of Errors' for your illustration, Peter
+Barrington? I ask you, Mr. Withering, have you in all your experience
+met anything like this?"
+
+"It would go hard with a man in the witness-box to make such a
+declaration, I must say."
+
+"What would a jury think of, what would a judge say to him?" said she,
+using the most formidable of all penalties to her brother's imagination.
+"Wouldn't the court tell him that he would be compelled to speak out?"
+
+"They'd have it out on the cross-examination, at all events, if not on
+the direct."
+
+"In the name of confusion, what do you want with me?" exclaimed Peter,
+in despair.
+
+"We want everything,--everything that you heard about this man. Who he
+is, what he is; what by the father's side, what by the mother's; what
+are his means, and where; who knows him, who are his associates. Bear in
+mind that to us, here, he has dropped out of the clouds."
+
+"And gone back there too," added Withering.
+
+"I wish to Heaven he had taken me with him!" sighed Peter, drearily.
+
+"I think in this case, Miss Barrington," said Withering, with a
+well-affected gravity, "we had better withdraw a juror, and accept a
+nonsuit."
+
+"I have done with it altogether," said she, gathering up her worsted and
+her needles, and preparing to leave the room.
+
+"My dear Dinah," said Barrington, entreatingly, "imagine a man as
+wanting in tact as I am,--and as timid, too, about giving casual
+offence,--conducting such an inquiry as you committed to my hands. Fancy
+how, at every attempt to obtain information, his own boldness, I might
+call it rudeness, stared him in the face, till at last, rather than
+push his investigations, he grew puzzled how to apologize for his prying
+curiosity."
+
+"Brother, brother, this is too bad! It had been better to have thought
+more of your granddaughter's fate and less of your own feelings." And
+with this she flounced out of the room, upsetting a spider-table, and a
+case of stuffed birds that stood on it, as she passed.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+"I don't doubt but she 's right, Tom," said Peter, when the door closed.
+
+"Did he not tell you who he was, and what his fortune? Did you really
+learn nothing from him?"
+
+"He told me everything; and if I had not been so cruelly badgered, I
+could have repeated every word of it; but you never made a hound true to
+the scent by flogging him, Tom,--is n't that a fact, eh?" And consoled
+by an illustration that seemed so pat to his case, he took his hat and
+strolled out into the garden.
+
+[Illustration: 410]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. GENERAL CONYERS
+
+In a snug little room of the Old Ship Hotel, at Dover, a large, heavy
+man, with snow-white hair, and moustaches,--the latter less common in
+those days than the present,--sat at table with a younger one, so like
+him that no doubt could have existed as to their being father and son.
+They had dined, and were sitting over their wine, talking occasionally,
+but oftener looking fondly and affectionately at each other; and once,
+by an instinct of sudden love, grasping each other's hand, and sitting
+thus several minutes without a word on either side.
+
+"You did not expect me before to-morrow, Fred," said the old man, at
+last.
+
+"No, father," replied young Conyers. "I saw by the newspapers that you
+were to dine at the Tuileries on Tuesday, and I thought you would not
+quit Paris the same evening."
+
+"Yes; I started the moment I took off my uniform. I wanted to be with
+you, my boy; and the royal politeness that detained me was anything but
+a favor. How you have grown, Fred,--almost my own height, I believe."
+
+"The more like you the better," said the youth, as his eyes ran over,
+and the old man turned away to hide his emotion.
+
+After a moment he said: "How strange you should not have got my letters,
+Fred; but, after all, it is just as well as it is. I wrote in a very
+angry spirit, and was less just than a little cool reflection might have
+made me. They made no charges against me, though I thought they had.
+There were grumblings and discontents, and such-like. They called me a
+Rajah, and raked up all the old stories they used to circulate once on a
+time about a far better fellow--"
+
+"You mean Colonel Barrington, don't you?" said Fred.
+
+"Where or how did you hear of that name?" said the old man, almost
+sternly.
+
+"An accident made me the guest of his family, at a little cottage they
+live in on an hish river. I passed weeks there, and, through the favor
+of the name I bore, I received more kindness than I ever before met in
+life."
+
+"And they knew you to be a Conyers, and to be my son?"
+
+"It was Colonel Barrington's aunt was my hostess, and she it was who,
+on hearing my name, admitted me at once to all the privileges of old
+friendship. She told me of the close companionship which once subsisted
+between you and her nephew, and gave me rolls of his letters to read
+wherein every line spoke of you."
+
+"And Mr. Barrington, the father of George, how did he receive you?"
+
+"At first with such coolness that I could n't bring myself to recross
+his threshold. He had been away from home when I arrived, and the day
+of his return I was unexpectedly presented to him by his sister, who
+evidently was as unprepared as myself for the reception I met with."
+
+"And what was that reception,--how was it? Tell me all as it happened."
+
+"It was the affair of a moment. Miss Barrington introduced me, saying,
+'This is the son of poor George's dearest friend,--this is a Conyers;'
+and the old man faltered, and seemed like to faint, and after a moment
+stammered out something about an honor he had never counted upon,--a
+visit he scarcely could have hoped for; and, indeed, so overcome was he
+that he staggered into the house only to take to his bed, where he lay
+seriously ill for several days after."
+
+"Poor fellow! It was hard to forgive,--very hard."
+
+"Ay, but he has forgiven it--whatever it was--heartily, and wholly
+forgiven it. We met afterwards by a chance in Germany, and while I was
+hesitating how to avoid a repetition of the painful scene which marked
+our first meeting, he came manfully towards me with his hand out, and
+said, 'I have a forgiveness to beg of you; and if you only know how I
+long to obtain it, you would scarce say me no.'"
+
+"The worthy father of poor George! I think I hear him speak the very
+words himself. Go on, Fred,--go on, and tell me further."
+
+"There is no more to tell, sir, unless I speak of all the affectionate
+kindness he has shown,--the trustfulness and honor with which he has
+treated me. I have been in his house like his own son."
+
+"Ah! if you had known that son! If you had seen what a type of a soldier
+he was! The most intrepid, the boldest fellow that ever breathed; but
+with a heart of childlike simplicity and gentleness. I could tell
+you traits of him, of his forbearance, his forgiveness, his generous
+devotion to friendship, that would seem to bespeak a nature that had no
+room for other than soft and tender emotion; and yet, if ever there was
+a lion's heart within a man's bosom it was his." For a moment or two
+the old man seemed overcome by his recollections, and then, as if by an
+effort, rallying himself, he went on: "You have often heard the adage,
+Fred, that enjoins watching one's pennies and leaving the pounds to take
+care of themselves; and yet, trust me, the maxim is truer as applied
+to our morals than our money. It is by the smaller, finer, and least
+important traits of a man that his fate in life is fashioned. The
+caprices we take no pains to curb, the tempers we leave unchecked, the
+petty indulgences we extend to our vanity and self-love,--these are the
+great sands that wreck us far oftener than the more stern and formidable
+features of our character. I ought to know this truth; I myself lost the
+best and truest and the noblest friend that ever man had, just from the
+exercise of a spirit of bantering and ridicule which amused those about
+me, and gave me that pre-eminence which a sarcastic and witty spirit
+is sure to assert. You know already how George Barrington and I lived
+together like brothers. I do not believe two men ever existed more
+thoroughly and sincerely attached to each other. All the contrarieties
+of our dispositions served but to heighten the interest that linked us
+together. As for myself, I was never wearied in exploring the strange
+recesses of that great nature that seemed to unite all that could be
+daring and dashing in man with the tenderness of a woman. I believe I
+knew him far better than he knew himself. But to come to what I wanted
+to tell you, and which is an agony to me to dwell on. Though for a long
+while our close friendship was known in the regiment, and spoken of as a
+thing incapable of change, a sort of rumor--no, not even a rumor, but an
+impression--seemed to gain, that the ties between us were looser on my
+side than his; that George looked up to _me_, and that I, with the pride
+of a certain superiority, rather lorded it over _him_. This feeling
+became painfully strengthened when it got about that Barrington had lent
+me the greater part of the purchase-money for my troop,--a promotion, by
+the way, which barred his own advancement,--and it was whispered, so
+at least I heard, that Barrington was a mere child in my hands, whom I
+rebuked or rewarded at pleasure. If I could have traced these rumors to
+any direct source, I could have known how to deal with them. As it was,
+they were vague, shadowy, and unreal; and their very unsubstantiality
+maddened me the more. To have told George of them would have been rasher
+still. The thought of a wrong done to _me_ would have driven him beyond
+all reason, and he would infallibly have compromised himself beyond
+recall. It was the very first time in my life I had a secret from him,
+and it eat into my heart like a virulent disease. The consciousness that
+I was watched, the feeling that eyes were upon me marking all I did, and
+tongues were commenting on all I said, exasperated me, and at one moment
+I would parade my friendship for Barrington in a sort of spirit of
+defiance, and at another, as though to give the lie to my slanderers,
+treat him with indifference and carelessness, as it were, to show that I
+was not bound to him by the weight of a direct obligation, and that our
+relations involved nothing of dependence. It was when, by some cruel
+mischance, I had been pursuing this spirit to its extreme, that the
+conversation one night at mess turned upon sport and tiger-hunting.
+Many stories were told, of course, and we had the usual narratives of
+hairbreadth escapes and perils of the most appalling kind; till, at
+length, some one--I forget exactly who it was--narrated a single-handed
+encounter with a jaguar, which in horror exceeded anything we had heard
+before. The details were alone not so terrible, but the circumstances so
+marvellous, that one and all who listened cried out, 'Who did it?'
+
+"'The man who told me the tale,' replied the narrator, 'and who will
+probably be back to relate it here to you in a few days,--Colonel
+Barrington.'
+
+"I have told you the devilish spirit which had me in possession. I have
+already said that I was in one of those moods of insolent mockery in
+which nothing was sacred to me. No sooner, then, did I hear Barrington's
+name than I burst into a hearty laugh, and said, 'Oh! if it was one of
+George Barrington's tigers, you ought to have mentioned that fact at the
+outset. You have been exciting our feelings unfairly.'
+
+"'I assume that his statement was true,' said the other, gravely.
+
+"'Doubtless; just as battle-pieces are true, that is, pic-torially
+true. The tiger did nothing that a tiger ought not to do, nor did George
+transgress any of those "unities" which such combats require. At the
+same time, Barring-ton's stories have always a something about them that
+stamps the authorship, and you recognize this trait just as you do a
+white horse in a picture by Wouvermans.'
+
+"In this strain I went on, heated by my own warmed imagination, and the
+approving laughter of those around me. I recounted more than one feat
+of Barrington's,--things which I knew he had done, some of them almost
+incredible in boldness. These I told with many a humorous addition and
+many an absurd commentary, convulsing the listeners with laughter, and
+rendering my friend ridiculous.
+
+"He came back from the hills within the week, and before he was two
+hours in his quarters he had heard the whole story. We were at luncheon
+in the mess-room when he entered, flushed and excited, but far more
+moved by emotion than resentment.
+
+"'Ormsby,' said he, 'you may laugh at me to your heart's content and
+I'll never grumble at it; but there are some young officers here who,
+not knowing the ties that attach us, may fancy that these quizzings
+pass the limits of mere drollery, and even jeopardize something of my
+truthfulness. _You_, I know, never meant this any more than I have felt
+it, but others might, and might, besides, on leaving this and sitting at
+other tables, repeat what they had heard here. Tell them that you spoke
+of me as you have a free right to do, in jest, and that your ridicule
+was the good-humored banter of a friend,--of a friend who never did,
+never could, impugn my honor.'
+
+"His eyes were swimming over, and his lips trembling, as he uttered the
+last words. I see him now, as he stood there, his very cheek shaking
+in agitation. That brave, bold fellow, who would have marched up to a
+battery without quailing, shook like a sickly girl.
+
+"'Am I to say that you never draw the long-bow, George?' asked I, half
+insolently.
+
+"'You are to say, sir, that I never told a lie,' cried he, dark with
+passion.
+
+"'Oh, this discussion will be better carried on elsewhere,' said I, as I
+arose and left the room.
+
+"As I was in the wrong, totally in the wrong, I was passionate and
+headstrong. I sat down and wrote a most insolent letter to Barrington. I
+turned all the self-hate that was consuming _me_ against my friend, and
+said I know not what of outrage and insult. I did worse; I took a copy
+of my letter, and declared that I would read it to the officers in the
+mess-room. He sent a friend to me to beg I would not take this course of
+open insult. My answer was, 'Colonel Barrington knows his remedy.' When
+I sent this message, I prepared for what I felt certain would follow. I
+knew Barrington so well that I thought even the delay of an hour, then
+two hours, strange. At length evening drew nigh, and, though I sat
+waiting in my quarters, no one came from him,--not a letter nor a line
+apprised me what course he meant to take.
+
+"Not caring to meet the mess at such a moment, I ordered my horses and
+drove up to a small station about twenty miles off, leaving word where
+I was to be found. I passed three days there in a state of fevered
+expectancy. Barrington made no sign, and, at length, racked and
+distressed by the conflict with myself,--now summoning up an insolent
+spirit of defiance to the whole world, now humbling myself in a
+consciousness of the evil line I had adopted,--I returned one night to
+my quarters. The first news that greeted me was that Barrington had left
+us. He had accepted the offer of a Native command which had been made to
+him some months before, and of which we had often canvassed together
+all the advantages and disadvantages. I heard that he had written
+two letters to me before he started, and torn them up after they were
+sealed. I never heard from him, never saw him more, till I saw his dead
+body carried into camp the morning he fell.
+
+"I must get to the end of this quickly, Fred, and I will tell you all at
+once, for it is a theme I will never go back on. I came to England with
+despatches about two years after Barrington's death. It was a hurried
+visit, for I was ordered to hold myself in readiness to return almost
+as soon as I arrived. I was greatly occupied, going about from place
+to place, and person to person, so many great people desired to have a
+verbal account of what was doing in India, and to hear confidentially
+what I thought of matters there. In the midst of the mass of letters
+which the post brought me every morning, and through which, without the
+aid of an officer on the staff, I could never have got through, there
+came one whose singular address struck me. It was to 'Captain Ormsby
+Conyers, 22d Light Dragoons,' a rank I had held fourteen years before
+that time in that same regiment. I opined at once that my correspondent
+must have been one who had known me at that time and not followed me
+in the interval. I was right. It was from old Mr. Barrington,--George
+Barrington's father. What version of my quarrel with his son could have
+reached him, I cannot even guess, nor by what light he read my conduct
+in the affair; but such a letter I never read in my life. It was a
+challenge to meet him anywhere, and with any weapon, but couched in
+language so insulting as to impugn my courage, and hint that I would
+probably shelter myself behind the pretext of his advanced age. 'But
+remember,' said he, 'if God has permitted me to be an old man, it is
+_you_ who have made me a childless one!'"
+
+For a few seconds he paused, overcome by emotion, and then went on:
+"I sat down and wrote him a letter of contrition, almost abject in its
+terms. I entreated him to believe that for every wrong I had done his
+noble-hearted son, my own conscience had repaid me in misery ten times
+told; that if he deemed my self-condemnation insufficient, it was open
+to him to add to it whatever he wished of obloquy or shame; that if he
+proclaimed me a coward before the world, and degraded me in the eyes of
+men, I would not offer one word in my defence. I cannot repeat all that
+I said in my deep humiliation. His answer came at last, one single line,
+re-enclosing my own letter to me: 'Lest I should be tempted to make use
+of this letter, I send it back to you; there is no need of more between
+us.'
+
+"With this our intercourse ceased. When a correspondence was published
+in the 'Barrington Inquiry,' as it was called, I half hoped he would
+have noticed some letters of mine about George; but he never did, and in
+his silence I thought I read his continued unforgiveness."
+
+"I hope, father, that you never believed the charges that were made
+against Captain Barrington?"
+
+"Not one of them; disloyalty was no more his than cowardice. I never
+knew the Englishman with such a pride of country as he had, nor could
+you have held out a greater bribe to him, for any achievement of peril,
+than to say, 'What a gain it would be for England!'"
+
+"How was it that such a man should have had a host of enemies?"
+
+"Nothing so natural. Barrington was the most diffident of men; his
+bashfulness amounted to actual pain. With strangers, this made him
+cold to very sternness, or, as is often seen in the effort to conquer
+a natural defect, gave him a manner of over-easy confidence that looked
+like impertinence. And thus the man who would not have wounded the
+self-love of the meanest beggar, got the reputation of being haughty,
+insolent, and oppressive. Besides this, when he was in the right, and
+felt himself so, he took no pains to convince others of the fact. His
+maxim was,--have I not heard it from his lips scores of times,--'The end
+will show.'"
+
+"And yet the end will not show, father; his fame has not been
+vindicated, nor his character cleared."
+
+"In some measure the fault of those who took up his cause. They seemed
+less to insist on reparation than punishment. They did not say, 'Do
+justice to this man's memory;' but, 'Come forward and own you wronged
+him, and broke his heart.' Now, the accusation brought against George
+Barrington of assuming sovereign power was not settled by his death;
+his relatives forgot this, or merged it in their own charge against the
+Company. They mismanaged everything."
+
+"Is it too late to put them on the right track, father; or could you do
+it?" asked the youth, eagerly.
+
+"It is not too late, boy! There is time for it yet. There is, however,
+one condition necessary, and I do not see how that is to be secured."
+
+"And what is that?"
+
+"I should see Mr. Barrington and confer with him alone; he must admit me
+to his confidence, and I own to you, I scarcely deem that possible."
+
+"May I try--may I attempt this?"
+
+"I do not like to refuse you, Fred: but if I say Yes, it will be to
+include you in my own defeated hopes. For many a year Mr. Barrington
+has refused to give one sign of his forgiveness; for in his treatment of
+you I only recognize the honorable feeling of exempting the son from
+the penalty due to the father. But perhaps defeat is better than
+self-reproach, and as I have a strong conviction I could serve him, I am
+ready to risk a failure."
+
+"I may make the attempt, then?" said Fred, eagerly. "I will write to
+Miss Barrington to-day."
+
+"And now of yourself. What of your career? How do you like soldiering,
+boy?"
+
+"Less than ever, sir; it is only within the last week or two that we
+have seen anything beyond barrack or parade duty. Now, however, we have
+been called to repress what are called risings in the northern shires;
+and our task has been to ride at large unarmed mobs and charge down
+masses, whose grape-shot are brickbats. Not a very glorious campaign!"
+
+The old man smiled, but said nothing for a moment.
+
+"Your colonel is on leave, is he not?" asked he.
+
+"Yes. We are commanded by that Major Stapylton I told you of."
+
+"A smart officer, but no friend of yours, Fred," said the General,
+smiling.
+
+"No, sir; certainly no friend of mine," said the young man, resolutely.
+"To refuse me a week's leave to go and meet my father, whom I have not
+seen for years, and, when pressed, to accord me four days, is to disgust
+me with himself and the service together."
+
+"Well, as you cannot be my guest, Fred, I will be yours. I 'll go back
+with you to headquarters. Stapylton is a name I used to be familiar with
+long ago. It may turn out that I know his family; but let us talk of
+Barrington. I have been thinking it would be better not to link any
+question of his own interests with my desire to meet him, but simply to
+say I 'm in England, and wish to know if he would receive me."
+
+"It shall be as you wish, sir. I will write to his sister by this post."
+
+"And after one day in town, Fred, I am ready to accompany you anywhere."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. MAJOR M'CORMICK'S LETTER
+
+As it was not often that Major M'Cormick performed the part of a
+letter-writer, perhaps my reader will pardon me if I place him before
+him on one of these rare occasions. If success would always respond to
+labor, his would have been a real triumph; for the effort cost him many
+days, two sleepless nights, a headache, and half a quire of paper.
+
+Had not Stapylton retained him by an admirably selected hamper of good
+things from a celebrated Italian warehouse in the Strand, I am
+afraid that M'Cormick's zeal might have cooled down to the zero of
+forgetfulness; but the reindeer hams and the Yarmouth bloaters, the
+potted shrimps and the preserved guavas, were an appeal that addressed
+themselves to that organ which with him paid the double debt of
+digestion and emotion. He felt that such a correspondent was worth a
+sacrifice, and he made it That my reader may appreciate the cost of the
+achievement, I would have him imagine how a mason about to build a wall
+should be obliged to examine each stone before he laid it, test its
+constituent qualities, its shape and its size,--for it was thus that
+almost every word occasioned the Major a reference to the dictionary,
+spelling not having been cultivated in his youth, nor much practised in
+his riper years. Graces of style, however, troubled him little; and,
+to recur to my figure of the stone-mason, if he was embarrassed in
+his search for the materials, he cared wonderfully little for the
+architecture. His letter ran thus, and the reader will perceive that it
+must have been written some weeks after the events recorded in the last
+chapter:--
+
+"Mac's Nest, October, Thursday.
+
+"Dear S.,--A touch of my old Walcheren complaint has laid me up since
+Tuesday, and if the shakes make me illegible now, that's the reason
+why. Besides this the weather is dreadful; cold east winds and rains,
+sometimes sleet, every day; and the turf so wet, it 's only smoke, not
+fire. I believe it is the worst climate in Europe, and it gets wetter
+every year.
+
+"The hamper came to hand, but though it was marked 'Carriage paid, this
+side up,' they upset it and broke two bottles, and charged seven and
+fourpence-halfpenny for the bringing it, which is, I think, enormous; at
+least, Tim Hacket got over a thrashing-machine from Scotland last spring
+for twelve and four, and there 's no comparison between the two. Thanks
+to you, however, all the same; but if you can get any of this charge
+reduced, so much the better, not to speak of the bottles,--both mixed
+pickles--which they ought to make good.
+
+"I am glad to see you are touching up the Radicals in the North;
+powder and ball will do more to bring them to reason than spouting
+in Parliament. The papers say there was nine killed and twenty-three
+wounded; and one fellow, the 'Stockport Bee,' says, that 'if the Butcher
+that led the dragoons is n't turned out of the service with disgrace no
+gentleman will degrade himself by entering the army.' Isn't the Butcher
+yourself? Miss Barrington, always your friend, says it is; and that if
+the account of another paper, called the 'AEgis,' be true, you 'll have
+to go to a court-martial. I stood stoutly to you through it all, and
+declared that when the niggers was up at Jamaica, we had n't time to
+take the names of the prisoners, and we always cut one of their ears off
+to know them again. Old Peter laughed till the tears ran down his face,
+but Dinah said, 'If I did not suppose, sir, that you were inventing a
+very graceless joke, I'd insist on your leaving this room and this house
+on the instant.' It was ten o'clock at night, and raining hard; so you
+may guess I gave in. Bad as she is, the young one is her equal, and
+I gave up all thoughts of what you call 'prosecuting my suit' in that
+quarter. She isn't even commonly civil to me, and when I ask her for,
+maybe, the mustard at dinner, she turns away her head, and says, 'Darby,
+give Major M'Cormick the salt.' That's French politeness, perhaps; but
+I'll pay them all off yet, for they can't get sixpence on the mortgage,
+and I 'm only drinking out that bin of old Madeira before I tell them
+that I won't advance the money. Why should I? The women treat me worse
+than a dog, and old B. is neither more nor less than a fool. Dill, the
+doctor, however he got it, says it's all up about the suit with the
+India Company; that there's no proof of the Colonel's marriage at all,
+that the charges against him were never cleared up, and that nothing can
+come out of it but more disgrace and more exposure.
+
+"I wish you 'd send me the correct account of what took place between
+you and one of your subalterns, for old Dinah keeps harping on it in a
+sort of mysterious and mischievous way of her own, that provokes me. Was
+it that he refused to obey orders, or that _you_, as _she_ says, used
+such language towards him that he wrote to report you? Give it to me
+in black and white, and maybe I won't try her temper with it. At
+all events, make out some sort of a case, for the old woman is now
+intolerable. She said yesterday, 'Major Stapylton, to whom I write
+by this post, will see that his visit here must be preceded by an
+explanation.' There's her words for you, and I hope you like them!
+
+"I think you are right to be in no hurry about purchasing, for many
+say the whole system will be changed soon, and the money would be clean
+thrown away. Besides this, I have been looking over my bauk-book, and
+I find I could n't help you just now. Two bad harvests, and the smut in
+the wheat last year, are running me mighty close. I won't finish this
+till to-morrow, for I 'm going to dine at 'The Home' to-day. It is the
+granddaughter's birthday, and there was a regular shindy about who was
+going to be asked. Old Peter was for a grand celebration, and inviting
+the Admiral, and the Gores, and God knows who besides; and Dinah was for
+what she called a family party, consisting, I suppose, of herself and
+Darby. I 'll be able, before I close this, to tell you how it was ended;
+for I only know now that Dill and his daughter are to be there.
+
+"Wednesday.--I sit down with a murdering headache to finish this letter.
+Maybe it was the pickled lobster, or the ice punch, or the other drink
+they called champagne-cup that did it. But I never passed such a night
+since I was in the trenches, and I am shaking still, so that I can
+scarce hold the pen. It was a grand dinner, to be sure, for ruined
+people to give. Venison from Carrick Woods, and game of every kind, with
+all kinds of wine; and my Lord Car-rickmore talking to Miss Dinah, and
+the Admiral following up with the niece, and Tom Brabazon, and Dean of
+Deanspark, and the devil knows who besides, bringing up the rear, with
+Dill and your obedient servant. Every dish that came in, and every
+bottle that was uncorked, I said to myself, 'There goes another strap on
+the property;' and I felt as if we were eating the trees and the timber
+and the meadows all the time at table.
+
+"It 's little of the same sympathy troubled the others. My Lord was as
+jolly as if he was dining with the King; and old Cobham called for more
+of the Madeira, as if it was an inn; and Peter himself--the heartless
+old fool--when he got up to thank the company for drinking his
+granddaughter's health, said, 'May I trust that even at my advanced age
+this may not be the last time I may have to speak my gratitude to you
+all for the generous warmth with which you have pledged this toast; but
+even should it be so, I shall carry away with me from this evening's
+happiness a glow of pleasure that will animate me to the last. It
+was only this morning I learned what I know you will all hear with
+satisfaction, that there is every probability of a speedy arrangement of
+my long-pending suit with the Company, and that my child here will
+soon have her own again.' Grand applause and huzzas, with a noise that
+drowned 'Bother!' from myself, and in the middle of the row up jumps the
+Admiral, and cries out, 'Three cheers more for the Rajah's daughter!' I
+thought the old roof would come down; and the blackguards in the kitchen
+took up the cry and shouted like mad, and then we yelled again, and this
+went on for maybe five minutes. 'What does it all mean,' says I, 'but
+a cheer for the Court of Bankruptcy, and Hip, hip, hurray! for
+the Marshalsea Prison!' After that, he had half an hour or more of
+flatteries and compliments. My Lord was so happy, and Peter Barrington
+so proud, and the Admiral so delighted, and the rest of us so much
+honored, that I could n't stand it any longer, but stole away, and got
+into the garden, to taste a little fresh air and quietness. I had n't
+gone ten paces, when I came plump upon Miss Dinah, taking her coffee
+under a tree. 'You are a deserter, I fear, sir,' said she, in her own
+snappish way; so I thought I 'd pay her off, and I said, 'To tell you
+the truth, Miss Barrington, at our time of life these sort of things are
+more full of sadness than pleasure. We know how hollow they are, and how
+little heart there is in the cheers of the people that are so jolly
+over your wine, but would n't stop to talk to you when you came down to
+water!'
+
+"'The worse we think of the world, Major M'Cormick,' says she, 'the more
+risk we run of making ourselves mean enough to suit it.'
+
+"'I don't suspect, ma'am,' says I, 'that when people have known it so
+long as you and I, that they are greatly in love with it.'
+
+"'They may, however, be mannerly in their dealings with it, sir,' said
+she, fiercely; and so we drew the game, and settled the men for another
+battle.
+
+"'Is there anything new, ma'am?' says I, after a while.
+
+"'I believe not, sir. The bread riots still continue in the North, where
+what would seem the needless severity of some of the military commanders
+has only exasperated the people. You have heard, I suppose, of Major
+Stapylton's business?'
+
+"'Not a word, ma'am,' says I; 'for I never see a paper.'
+
+"'I know very little of the matter myself,' says she. 'It was, it would
+appear, at some night assemblage at a place called Lund's Common. A
+young officer sent forward by Major Stapylton to disperse the people,
+was so struck by the destitution and misery he witnessed, and the
+respectful attitude they exhibited, that he hesitated about employing
+force, and restricted himself to counsels of quietness and submission.
+He did more,--not perhaps very prudently, as some would say,--he
+actually emptied his pockets of all the money he had, giving even his
+watch to aid the starving horde before him. What precise version of
+his conduct reached his superior, I cannot say; but certainly Major
+Stapylton commented on it in terms of the harshest severity, and he even
+hinted at a reason for the forbearance too offensive for any soldier to
+endure.'
+
+"She did not seem exactly to know what followed after this, but some
+sort of inquiry appeared to take place, and witnesses were examined as
+to what really occurred at Lund's Common; and amongst others, a Lascar,
+who was one of the factory hands,--having come to England a great many
+years before with an officer from India. This fellow's evidence was
+greatly in favor of young Conyers, and was subjected to a very severe
+cross-examination from yourself, in the middle of which he said
+something in Hindostanee that nobody in the court understood but you;
+and after this he was soon dismissed and the case closed for that day.
+
+"'What do you think, Major M'Cormick,' said she, 'but when the court of
+inquiry opened the next morning, Lal-Adeen, the Lascar, was not to be
+found high or low. The court have suspended their sittings to search for
+him; but only one opinion prevails,--that Major Stapylton knows more of
+this man's escape than he is likely to tell.' I have taken great pains
+to give you her own very words in all this business, and I wrote them
+down the moment I got home, for I thought to myself you 'd maybe write
+about the matter to old Peter, and you ought to be prepared for the
+way they look at it; the more because Miss Dinah has a liking for young
+Conyers,--what she calls a motherly affection; but I don't believe in
+the motherly part of it! But of course you care very little what the
+people here say about you at all. At least, I know it would n't trouble
+_me_ much, if I was in your place. At all events, whatever you do,
+do with a high hand, and the Horse Guards is sure to stand to you.
+Moderation may be an elegant thing in civil life, but I never knew it
+succeed in the army. There's the rain coming on again, and I just sent
+out six cars to the bog for turf; so I must conclude, and remain, yours
+sincerely,
+
+"Daniel T. M'Cormick.
+
+"I 'm thinking of foreclosing the small mortgage I hold on 'The Home,'
+but as they pay the interest regularly, five per cent, I would n't do it
+if I knew things were going on reasonably well with them; send me a line
+about what is doing regarding the 'claim,' and it will guide me."
+
+While Major M'Cormick awaited the answer to his postscript, which to
+him--as to a lady--was the important part of his letter, a short note
+arrived at 'The Home' from Mr. Withering, enclosing a letter he had just
+received from Major Stapylton. Withering's communication was in answer
+to one from Barrington, and ran thus:--
+
+"Dear B.,--All things considered, I believe you are right in not
+receiving General Conyers at this moment. It would probably, as you
+suspect, enable calumnious people to say that you could make your
+resentments play second when they came in the way of your interests.
+If matters go on well, as I have every hope they will, you can make
+the _amende_ to him more satisfactorily and more gracefully hereafter.
+Buxton has at length consented to bring the case before the House;
+of course it will not go to a division, nor, if it did, could it be
+carried; but the discussion will excite interest, the Press will take
+it up, and after a few regretful and half-civil expressions from the
+Ministry, the India Board will see the necessity of an arrangement.
+
+"It is somewhat unfortunate and _mal a propos_ that Stapylton should at
+this moment have got into an angry collision with young Conyers. I have
+not followed the case closely, but, as usual in such things, they seem
+each of them in the wrong,--the young sub wanting to make his generous
+sympathy supply the place of military obedience, and the old officer
+enforcing discipline at the cost of very harsh language. I learn this
+morning that Conyers has sold out, intending to demand a personal
+satisfaction. You will see by S.'s letter that he scarcely alludes to
+this part of the transaction at all. S. feels very painfully the attacks
+of the Press, and sees, perhaps, more forcibly than I should in his
+place, the necessity of an exchange. Read attentively the portion I have
+underlined."
+
+It is to this alone I have to direct my readers' attention, the first
+two sides of the letter being entirely filled with details about the
+"claim":--
+
+"'The newspapers have kept me before you for some days back, much more,
+I doubt not, to their readers' amusement than to my own gratification. I
+could, if I pleased, have told these slanderers that I did not charge a
+crowd of women and children,--that I did not cut down an elderly man
+at his own door-sill,--that I did not use language "offensive and
+unbecoming" to one of my officers, for his having remonstrated in the
+name of humanity against the cruelty of my orders. In a word, I might
+have shown the contemptible scribblers that I knew how to temper duty
+with discretion, as I shall know how, when the occasion offers, to make
+the punishment of a calumniator a terror to his colleagues. However,
+there is a very absurd story going about of a fellow whose insolence I
+certainly _did_ reply to with the flat of my sabre, and whom I should
+be but too happy to punish legally, if he could be apprehended. That he
+made his escape after being captured, and that I connived at or assisted
+in it,--I forget which,--you have probably heard. In fact, there is
+nothing too incredible to say of me for the moment; and what is worse,
+I begin to suspect that the Home Secretary, having rather burned his
+fingers in the business, will not be very sorry to make an Admiral
+Byng of a Major of Hussars. For each and all these reasons I mean to
+exchange, and, if possible, into a regiment in India. This will, of
+course, take some time; meanwhile, I have asked for and obtained some
+months' leave. You will be surprised at my troubling you with so much
+of purely personal matters, but they are the necessary preface to what
+I now come. You are aware of the letter I wrote some time back to Mr.
+Barrington, and the request it preferred. If the reply I received was
+not discouraging, neither was it conclusive. The ordinary commonplaces
+as to the shortness of our acquaintance, the want of sufficient
+knowledge of each other's tastes, characters, &c, were duly dwelt upon;
+but I could not at the end say, was I an accepted or a rejected suitor.
+Now that the critical moment of my life draws nigh,--for such I feel
+the present emergency,--an act of confidence in me would have more than
+double value. Can you tell me that this is the sentiment felt towards
+me, or am I to learn that the yells of a rabble have drowned the voices
+of my friends? In plain words, will Miss Josephine Barrington accept
+my offer? Will she intrust her happiness to my keeping, and change
+the darkest shadow that ever lowered over my life into a gleam of
+unspeakable brightness? You have given me too many proofs of a friendly
+disposition towards me, not to make me feel that you are the best fitted
+to bring this negotiation to a good issue. If I do not mistake you much,
+you look with favor on my suit and wish it success. I am ashamed to say
+how deeply my hopes have jeopardized my future happiness, but I tell you
+frankly life has no such prize to my ambition, nor, in fact, any such
+alternative of despair before me.'
+
+"Now, my dear Barrington," continued Withering's letter, "there is a
+great deal in this that I like, and something with which I am not so
+much pleased. If, however, I am not the Major's advocate to the extent
+he asks, or expects me, it is because I feel that to be unjustly dealt
+with is a stronger claim on _your_ heart than that of any other man I
+ever met with, and the real danger here would be that you should
+suffer that feeling to predominate over all others. Consult your
+granddaughter's interests, if you can, independently of this; reflect
+well if the plan be one likely to promise her happiness. Take your
+sensible, clear-headed sister into your counsels; but, above all,
+ascertain Josephine's own sentiments, and do nothing in direct
+opposition to them."
+
+"There, Dinah," said Barrington, placing the letter in her hands, "this
+is as much to your address as to mine. Read it over carefully, and
+you'll find me in the garden when you have done."
+
+Miss Barrington laid down her great roll of worsted work, and began
+her task without a word. She had not proceeded very far, however, when
+Josephine entered in search of a book. "I beg pardon, aunt, if I derange
+you."
+
+"We say disturb, or inconvenience, in English, Miss Barrington. What is
+it you are looking for?"
+
+"The 'Legend of Montrose,' aunt. I am so much amused by that Major
+Dalgetty that I can think of nothing but him."
+
+"Umph!" muttered the old lady. "It was of a character not altogether
+dissimilar I was thinking myself at that moment. Sit down here, child,
+and let me talk to you. This letter that I hold here, Josephine,
+concerns you."
+
+"Me, aunt--concerns _me?_ And who on earth could have written a letter
+in which I am interested?"
+
+"You shall hear it." She coughed only once or twice, and then went on:
+"It's a proposal of marriage,--no less. That gallant soldier who left
+us so lately has fallen in love with you,--so he says, and of course he
+knows best. He seems fully aware that, being older than you, and graver
+in temperament, his offer must come heralded with certain expressions
+almost apologetic; but he deals with the matter skillfully, and tells
+us that being well off as regards fortune, of good blood, and with fair
+prospects before him, he does not wish to regard his suit as hopeless.
+Your grandfather was minded to learn how you might feel disposed to
+accept his addresses by observing your demeanor, by watching what
+emotion mention of him might occasion, by seeing how far you felt
+interested in his good or ill repute. I did not agree with him. I am
+never for the long road when there is a short one, and therefore I mean
+to let you hear his letter. This is what he writes." While Miss Dinah
+read the extract which the reader has just seen, she never noticed, or,
+if noticed, never attended to, the agitation in her niece's manner, or
+seemed to remark that from a deep-crimson at first her cheeks grew pale
+as death, and her lips-tremulous. "There, child," said Miss Dinah, as
+she finished--"there are his own words; very ardent words, but withal
+respectful. What do you think of them,--of them and of him?"
+
+Josephine hung down her head, and with her hands firmly clasped
+together, she sat for a few moments so motionless that she seemed
+scarcely to breathe.
+
+"Would you like to think over this before you speak of it, Josephine?
+Would you like to take this letter to your room and ponder over it
+alone?" No answer came but a low, half-subdued sigh.
+
+"If you do not wish to make a confidante of me, Josephine, I am sorry
+for it, but not offended."
+
+"No, no, aunt, it is not that," burst she in; "it is to _you_ and you
+alone, I wish to speak, and I will be as candid as yourself. I am not
+surprised at the contents of this letter. I mean, I was in a measure
+prepared for them."
+
+"That is to say, child, that he paid you certain attentions?"
+
+She nodded assent.
+
+"And how did you receive them? Did you let him understand that you were
+not indifferent to him,--that his addresses were agreeable to you?"
+
+Another, but shorter, nod replied to this question.
+
+"I must confess," said the old lady, bridling up, "all this amazes me
+greatly. Why, child, it is but the other day you met each other for the
+first time. How, when, and where you found time for such relations as
+you speak of, I cannot imagine. Do you mean to tell me, Josephine, that
+you ever talked alone together?"
+
+"Constantly, aunt!"
+
+"Constantly!"
+
+"Yes, aunt. We talked a great deal together."
+
+"But how, child,--where?"
+
+"Here, aunt, as we used to stroll together every morning through
+the wood or in the garden; then as we went on the river or to the
+waterfall."
+
+"I can comprehend nothing of all this, Josephine. I know you mean to
+deal openly with me; so say at once, how did this intimacy begin?"
+
+"I can scarcely say how, aunt, because I believe we drifted into it. We
+used to talk a great deal of ourselves, and at length we grew to talk of
+each other,--of our likings and dislikings, our tastes and our tempers.
+And these did not always agree!"
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"No, aunt," said she, with a heavy sigh. "We quarrelled very often; and
+once,--I shall not easily forget it,--once seriously."
+
+"What was it about?"
+
+"It was about India, aunt; and he was in the wrong, and had to own it
+afterwards and ask pardon."
+
+"He must know much more of that country than you, child. How came it
+that you presumed to set up your opinion against his?"
+
+"The presumption was his," said she, haughtily. "He spoke of _his_
+father's position as something the same as _my_ father's. He talked of
+him as a Rajah!"
+
+"I did not know that he spoke of his father," said Miss Dinah,
+thoughtfully.
+
+"Oh, he spoke much of him. He told me, amongst other things, how he had
+been a dear friend of papa's; that as young men they lived together
+like brothers, and never were separate till the fortune of life divided
+them."
+
+"What is all this I am listening to? Of whom are you telling me,
+Josephine?"
+
+"Of Fred, Aunt Dinah; of Fred, of course."
+
+"Do you mean young Conyers, child?"
+
+"Yes. How could I mean any other?"
+
+"Ta, ta, ta!" said the old lady, drumming with her heel on the floor
+and her fingers on the table. "It has all turned out as I said it would!
+Peter, Peter, will you never be taught wisdom? Listen to me, child!"
+said she, turning almost sternly towards Josephine. "We have been at
+cross-purposes with each other all this time. This letter which I have
+just read for you--" She stopped suddenly as she reached thus far,
+and after a second's pause, said, "Wait for me here; I will be back
+presently. I have a word to say to your grandfather."
+
+Leaving poor Josephine in a state of trepidation and
+bewilderment,--ashamed at the confession she had just made, and
+trembling with a vague sense of some danger that impended over
+her,--Miss Dinah hurried away to the garden.
+
+"Here's a new sort of worm got into the celery, Dinah," said he, as
+she came up, "and a most destructive fellow he is. He looks like a mere
+ruffling of the leaf, and you 'd never suspect him."
+
+"It is your peculiarity never to suspect anything, brother Peter, even
+after you have had warning of peril. Do you remember my telling you,
+when we were up the Rhine, what would come of that intimacy between
+Conyers and Josephine?"
+
+"I think I do," said he, making what seemed an effort of memory.
+
+"And can you recall the indolent slipshod answer you made me about it?
+But of course you cannot. It was an old-maid's apprehensions, and you
+forgot the whole thing. Well, Peter, I was right and you were wrong."
+
+"Not the first time that the double event has come off so!" said he,
+smiling.
+
+"You are too fond of that cloak of humility, Peter Barrington. The plea
+of Guilty never saved any one from transportation!" Waiting a moment to
+recover her breath after this burst of passion, she went on: "After I
+had read that letter you gave me, I spoke to Josephine; I told her in a
+few words how it referred to her, and frankly asked her what she thought
+of it. She was very candid and very open, and, I must say, also very
+collected and composed. Young ladies of the present day possess that
+inestimable advantage over their predecessors. Their emotions do not
+overpower them." This was the second time of "blowing off the steam,"
+and she had to wait a moment to rally. "She told me, frankly, that she
+was not unprepared for such an offer; that tender passages had already
+been exchanged between them. The usual tomfoolery, I conclude,--that
+supreme effort of selfishness people call love,--in a word, Peter, she
+was in no wise disinclined to the proposal; the only misfortune was, she
+believed it came from young Conyers."
+
+Barrington would have laughed, and laughed heartily, if he dared. As it
+was, the effort to restrain himself sent the blood to his head, and made
+his eyes run over.
+
+"You may well blush, Peter Barrington," said she, shaking her finger at
+him. "It's all your own doing."
+
+"And when you undeceived her, Dinah, what did she say?"
+
+"I have not done so yet; but my impression is that so susceptible
+a young lady should find no great difficulty in transferring her
+affections. For the present I mean to limit myself to declaring that
+this offer is not from Conyers; if she has curiosity to know the writer,
+she shall learn it. I always had my doubts about these convents Bread
+and water diet makes more epicures than abstinents!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. INTERCHANGED CONFESSIONS
+
+Miss Barrington, with Josephine at one side and Polly Dill on the other,
+sat at work in her little room that opened on the garden. Each was
+engaged in some peculiar task, and each seemed bent upon her labor in
+that preoccupied way which would imply that the cares of needlework make
+no mean call upon human faculties. A close observer would, however, have
+remarked that though Miss Barrington stitched vigorously away at the
+background for a fierce tiger with measly spots over him, Polly seemed
+oftener to contemplate than continue her handiwork; while Josephine's
+looks strayed constantly from the delicate tracery she was following, to
+the garden, where the roses blended with the jasmine, and the drooping
+honeysuckles hung listlessly over the boughs of the apple-tree.
+
+"If your work wearies you, Fifine," said Miss Dinah, "you had better
+read for us."
+
+"Oh no, not at all, aunt; I like it immensely. I was only wondering why
+one should devise such impossible foliage, when we have the real thing
+before us, in all its grace and beauty."
+
+"Humph!" said the old lady; "the sight of a real tiger would not put me
+out of countenance with my own."
+
+"It certainly ought not, ma'am," said Polly; while she added, in a faint
+whisper, "for there is assuredly no rivalry in the case."
+
+"Perhaps Miss Dill is not too absorbed in her study of nature, as
+applied to needlework, to read out the newspaper."
+
+"I will do it with pleasure, ma'am. Where shall I begin?"
+
+"Deaths and marriages first, of course, child. Then fashion and
+varieties; take the accidents afterwards, and close with anything
+remarkable in politics, or any disastrous occurrence in high life."
+
+Polly obeyed to the letter; once only straying into an animated account
+of a run with the Springfield fox-hounds, where three riders out of a
+large field came in at the death; when Miss Dinah stopped her abruptly,
+saying, "I don't care for the obituary of a fox, young lady. Go on with
+something else."
+
+"Will you have the recent tragedy at Ring's End, ma'am?"
+
+"I know it by heart Is there nothing new in the fashions,--how are
+bonnets worn? What's the latest sleeve? What's the color in vogue?"
+
+"A delicate blue, ma'am; a little off the sky, and on the hyacinth."
+
+"Very becoming to fair people," said Miss Dinah, with a shake of her
+blond ringlets.
+
+"'The Prince's Hussars!' Would you like to hear about _them_, ma'am?"
+
+"By all means."
+
+"It's a very short paragraph. 'The internal troubles of this unhappy
+regiment would seem to be never ending. We last week informed our
+readers that a young subaltern of the corps, the son of one of our most
+distinguished generals, had thrown up his commission and repaired to
+the Continent, to enable him to demand a personal satisfaction from
+his commanding officer, and we now learn that the Major in question is
+precluded from accepting the gage of battle by something stronger than
+military etiquette.'"
+
+"Read it again, child; that vile newspaper slang always puzzles me."
+
+Polly recited the passage in a clear and distinct voice.
+
+"What do you understand by it, Polly?"
+
+"I take it to mean nothing, madam. One of those stirring pieces of
+intelligence which excites curiosity, and are no more expected to be
+explained than a bad riddle."
+
+"It cannot surely be that he shelters himself under his position towards
+us? That I conclude is hardly possible!"
+
+Though Miss Barrington said this as a reflection, she addressed herself
+almost directly to Josephine.
+
+"As far as I am concerned, aunt," answered Josephine, promptly, "the
+Major may fight the monster of the Drachenfels to-morrow, if he wishes
+it."
+
+"Oh, here is another mystery apparently on the same subject. 'The
+Lascar, Lal-Adeen, whom our readers will remember as having figured in a
+police-court a few days back, and was remanded till the condition of
+his wound--a severe sabre-cut on the scalp--should permit his further
+examination, and on the same night made his escape from the hospital,
+has once again, and very unexpectedly, turned up at Boulogne-sur-Mer.
+His arrival in this country--some say voluntarily, others under a
+warrant issued for his apprehension--will probably take place to-day or
+to-morrow, and, if report speak truly, be followed by some of the most
+singular confessions which the public has heard for a long time back.'
+'The Post' contradicts the statement, and declares 'no such person has
+ever been examined before the magistrate, if he even have any existence
+at all.'"
+
+"And what interest has all this for us?" asked Miss Dinah, sharply.
+
+"You do not forget, ma'am, that this is the same man Major Stapylton was
+said to have wounded; and whose escape scandal hinted he had connived
+at, and who now 'does not exist.'"
+
+"I declare Miss Dill, I remember no such thing; but it appears to me
+that Major Stapylton occupies a very considerable space in your own
+thoughts."
+
+"I fancy Polly likes him, aunt," said Josephine, with a slight smile.
+
+"Well, I will own he interests me; there is about him a mysterious
+something that says, 'I have more in my head and on my heart than you
+think of, and more, perhaps, than you could carry if the burden were
+yours.'"
+
+"A galley-slave might say the same, Miss Dill."
+
+"No doubt of it, ma'am; and if there be men who mix in the great world,
+and dine at grand houses, with something of the galley-slave on their
+conscience, they assuredly impress us with an amount of fear that is
+half a homage. One dreads them as he does a tiger, but the terror is
+mingled with admiration."
+
+"This is nonsense, young lady, and baneful nonsense, too, begotten of
+French novels and a sickly sentimentality. I hope Fifine despises it as
+heartily as I do." The passionate wrath which she displayed extended to
+the materials of her work-basket, and while rolls of worsted were
+upset here, needles were thrown there; and at last, pushing her
+embroidery-frame rudely away, she arose and left the room.
+
+"Dearest Polly, how could you be so indiscreet! You know, far better
+than I do, how little patience she has with a paradox."
+
+"My sweet Fifine," said the other, in a low whisper, "I was dying to get
+rid of her, and I knew there was only one way of effecting it. You
+may remark that whenever she gets into a rage, she rushes out into the
+flower-garden, and walks round and round till she's ready to drop. There
+she is already; you may gauge her anger by the number of her revolutions
+in a minute."
+
+"But why did you wish her away, Polly?"
+
+"I'll tell you why; that is, there is a charming French word for what
+I mean, the verb 'agacer,' all untranslatable as it is. Now there
+are moments when a person working in the same room--reading, writing,
+looking out of the window--becomes an insupportable infliction. You
+reason, and say, 'How absurd, how childish, how ungenerous,' and so
+forth. It won't do; for as you look round he is there still, and by his
+mere presence keeps up the ferment in your thoughts. You fancy, at last,
+that he stands between you and your inner self, a witness that won't let
+your own conscience whisper to you, and you come in the end to hate him.
+Your dear aunt was on the high-road to this goal, when I bethought me of
+my expedient! And now we are all alone, dearest, make me a confession."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"You do not like Major Stapylton?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And you do like somebody else?"
+
+"Perhaps," said she, slowly, and dividing the syllables as she spoke
+them.
+
+"That being the case, and seeing, as you do, that your aunt is entirely
+of your own mind, at least as to the man you do not care for, why don't
+you declare as much frankly to your grandfather, and break off the
+negotiation at once?"
+
+"Just because that dear old grandpapa asked me not to be precipitate,
+not to be rash. He did not tell me that I must love Major Stapylton, or
+must marry him; but he said, 'If you only knew, Fifine, what a change in
+our fortune would come of a change in _your_ feelings; if you could but
+imagine, child, how the whole journey of life might be rendered easier,
+all because you took the right-hand road instead of the left; if you
+could guess these things, and what might follow them--'" She stopped.
+
+"Well, go on."
+
+"No. I have said all that he said; he kissed my cheek as he got thus
+far, and hurried away from the room."
+
+"And you, like a sweet, obedient child, hastened away to yours; wrote a
+farewell, a heart-broken farewell, to Fred Conyers; and solemnly swore
+to your own conscience you 'd marry a man you disliked. These are the
+sort of sacrifices the world has a high admiration for; but do you know,
+Fifine, the world limps a little in its morality sometimes, and is not
+one-half the fine creature it thinks itself. For instance, in the midst
+of all its enthusiasm for you, it has forgotten that in accepting for
+your husband a man you do not love, you are doing a dishonesty; and
+that, besides this, you really love another. It is what the French call
+the aggravating circumstance."
+
+"I mean to do nothing of the kind!" broke in Fifine, boldly. "Your
+lecture does not address itself to _me_."
+
+"Do not be angry, Fifine," said the other, calmly.
+
+"It is rather too hard to be rebuked for the faults one might have, but
+has not committed. It's like saying how wet you 'd have been had you
+fallen into that pool!"
+
+"Well, it also means, don't fall into the pool!"
+
+"Do you know, Polly," said Josephine, archly, "I have a sort of
+suspicion that you don't dislike this Major yourself! Am I right?"
+
+"I'm not say you were altogether wrong; that is, he interests me, or,
+rather, he puzzles me, and it piques my ingenuity to read him, just as
+it would to make out a cipher to which I had only one-half the key."
+
+"Such a feeling as that would never inspire a tender interest, at least,
+with _me_."
+
+"Nor did I say it was, Fifine. I have read in some book of my father's
+how certain physicians inoculated themselves with plague, the better
+to note the phenomena, and trace the course; and I own I can understand
+their zeal, and I 'd risk something to decipher this man."
+
+"This may be very nice in medicine, Polly, but very bad in morals! At
+all events, don't catch the plague for the sake of saving _me?_"
+
+"Oh! I assure you any step I take shall be done in the interests of
+science solely; not but that I have a small debt to acquit towards the
+gallant Major."
+
+"You have! What can it possibly be?"
+
+"Well, it was this wise," said she, with a half-sigh. "We met at
+a country-house here, and he paid me certain attentions, made me
+compliments on my riding, which I knew to be good, and my singing, which
+was just tolerable; said the usual things which mean nothing, and a few
+of those more serious ones which are supposed to be more significant;
+and then he asked my father's leave to come and visit him, and actually
+fixed a day and an hour. And we, poor people, all delighted with the
+flattery of such high notice, and thinking of the effect upon our
+neighbors so splendid a visitor would produce, made the most magnificent
+preparations to receive him,--papa in a black satin waistcoat, mamma in
+her lilac ribbons. I myself,--having put the roof on a pigeon-pie,
+and given the last finishing touch to a pagoda of ruby jelly,--I, in a
+charming figured muslin and a blush rose in my hair, awaited the hour of
+attack! And, after all, he never came. No, Fifine, never came! He forgot
+us, or he changed his mind, or something else turned up that he liked
+better; or--which is just as likely as any of the three--he thought
+it would be a charming piece of impertinence to pass off on such small
+folk, who presumed to fancy themselves company for him. At all events,
+Fifine, we saw him no more. He went his way somewhere, and we were left
+lamenting."
+
+"And you really liked him, Polly?"
+
+"No, of the two, I disliked him; but I wished very much that he might
+like _me!_ I saw him very overbearing and very insolent to those
+who were certainly his equals, assuming a most offensive superiority
+everywhere and to any one, and I thought what an awful humiliation it
+would be if so great a personage were to be snubbed by the doctor's
+daughter. I wanted to give a lesson which could only be severe if it
+came from one humble as myself; but he defeated me, Fifine, and I am
+still his debtor! If I did not like him before, you may believe that
+I hate him now; and I came off here this morning, in hot haste, for no
+other purpose than to set you against him, and induce you to regard him
+as I do."
+
+"There was little need," said Fifine, calmly; "but here comes my aunt
+back again. Make your submission quickly, Polly, or it will be too late
+to expect mercy."
+
+"I 'll do better," said Polly, rising. "I 'll let my trial go on in my
+absence;" and with this she stepped out of the window as Miss Barrington
+entered by the door.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. STAPYLTON'S VISIT AT "THE HOME"
+
+So secretly had Barrington managed, that he negotiated the loan of five
+hundred pounds on a mortgage of the cottage without ever letting his
+sister hear of it; and when she heard on a particular day that her
+brother expected Mr. Kinshela, the attorney, from Kilkenny, on business,
+she made the occasion the pretext of a visit to Dr. Dill, taking
+Josephine with her, to pass the day there.
+
+Barrington was therefore free to receive his lawyer at his ease, and
+confer with him alone. Not that he cared much for his company; he
+felt towards the attorney pretty much as an ardent soldier feels to
+a non-combatant, the commissary, or the paymaster. Had he been a
+barrister, indeed, old Peter would have welcomed him with the zest of
+true companionship; he would have ransacked his memory for anecdotes,
+and prepared for the meeting as for an encounter of sharp wits. Now it
+is no part of my task to present Mr. Kinshela more than passingly to
+my reader, and I will merely say that he was a shrewd, commonplace
+man, whose practice rarely introduced him to the higher classes of his
+county, and who recognized Barrington, even in his decline, as a person
+of some consideration.
+
+They had dined well, and sat over their wine in the little dining-room
+over the river, a favorite spot of Barrington's when he wished to be
+confidential, for it was apart from the rest of the cottage, and removed
+from all intrusion.
+
+"So, you won't tell me, Kinshela, who lent us this money?" said the old
+man, as he passed the decanter across the table.
+
+"It is not that I won't, sir, but I can't. It was in answer to an
+advertisement I inserted in the 'Times,' that I got an application from
+Granger and Wood to supply particulars; and I must say there was
+no unnecessary security on their part. It was as speedily settled a
+transaction as I ever conducted, and I believe in my heart we might have
+had a thousand pounds on it just as easily as five hundred."
+
+"As well as it is, Kinshela. When the day of repayment comes round, I'll
+perhaps find it heavy enough;" and he sighed deeply as he spoke.
+
+"Who knows, sir? There never was a time that capital expended on land
+was more remunerative than the present."
+
+Now, Mr. Kinshela well knew that the destination of the money they
+spoke of was not in this direction, and that it had as little to say to
+subsoil drainage or top dressing as to the conversion of the heathen;
+but he was angling for a confidence, and he did not see how to attain
+it.
+
+Barrington smiled before he answered,--one of those sad, melancholy
+smiles which reveal a sorrow a man is not able to suppress,--and then he
+said, "I 'm afraid, Kinshela, I 'll not test the problem this time."
+
+"It will be better employed, perhaps, sir. You mean, probably, to take
+your granddaughter up to the drawing-room at the Castle?"
+
+"I never so much as thought of it, Joe Kinshela; the fact is, that money
+is going where I have sent many a hundred before it,--in law! I have had
+a long, wearisome, costly suit, that has well-nigh beggared me; and of
+that sum you raised for me I don't expect to have a shilling by this day
+week."
+
+"I heard something about that, sir," said the other, cautiously.
+
+"And what was it you heard?"
+
+"Nothing, of course, worth repeating; nothing from any one that knew the
+matter himself; just the gossip that goes about, and no more."
+
+"Well, let us hear the gossip that goes about, and I'll promise to tell
+you if it's true."
+
+"Well, indeed," said Kinshela, drawing a long breath, "they say that
+your claim is against the India Board."
+
+Barring ton nodded.
+
+"And that it is a matter little short of a million is in dispute."
+
+He nodded again twice.
+
+"And they say, too,--of course, on very insufficient knowledge,--that
+if you would have abated your demands once on a time, you might readily
+have got a hundred thousand pounds, or even more."
+
+"That's not impossible," muttered Barrington.
+
+"But that, now--" he stammered for an instant, and then stopped.
+
+"But now? Go on."
+
+"Sure, sir, they can know nothing about it; it's just idle talk, and no
+more."
+
+"Go on, and tell me what they say _now_," said Barrington, with a strong
+force on the last word.
+
+"They say you 'll be beaten, sir," said he, with an effort.
+
+"And do they say why, Kinshela?"
+
+"Yes, sir; they say you won't take advice; and no matter what Mr.
+Withering counsels, or is settled in consultation, you go your own way
+and won't mind them; and that you have been heard to declare you 'll
+have all, or nothing."
+
+"They give me more credit than I deserve, Kinshela. It is, perhaps, what
+I ought to have said, for I have often _thought it_. But in return for
+all the kind interest my neighbors take about me, let them know that
+matters look better for us than they once did. Perhaps," added he, with
+a laugh,--"perhaps I have overcome my obstinacy, or perhaps my opponents
+have yielded to it. At all events, Joe, I believe I see land at last,
+and it was a long 'lookout' and many a fog-bank I mistook for it."
+
+"And what makes you think now you'll win?" said the other, growing
+bolder by the confidence reposed in him.
+
+Barrington half started at the presumption of the question; but
+he suddenly remembered how it was he himself who had invited the
+discussion, so he said calmly,--
+
+"My hope is not without a foundation. I expect by the mail to-night a
+friend who may be able to tell me that I have won, or as good as won."
+
+Kinshela was dying to ask who the friend was, but even his curiosity had
+its prudential limits; so he merely took out his watch, and, looking at
+it, remarked that the mail would pass in about twenty minutes or so.
+
+"By the way, I must n't forget to send a servant to wait on the
+roadside;" and he rang the bell and said, "Let Darby go up to the road
+and take Major Stapylton's luggage when he arrives."
+
+"Is that the Major Stapylton is going to be broke for the doings at
+Manchester, sir?" asked Kinshela.
+
+"He is the same Major Stapylton that a rascally press is now libelling
+and calumniating," said Barrington, hotly. "As to being broke, I
+don't believe that we have come yet to that pass in England that
+the discipline of our army is administered by every scribbler in a
+newspaper."
+
+"I humbly crave your pardon, sir, if I have said the slightest thing
+to offend; but I only meant to ask, was he the officer they were making
+such a fuss about?" "He is an officer of the highest distinction, and a
+wellborn gentleman to boot,--two admirable reasons for the assaults of a
+contemptible party. Look you, Kinshela; you and I are neither of us very
+young or inexperienced men, but I would ask you, have we learned
+any wiser lesson from our intercourse with life than to withhold our
+judgment on the case of one who rejects the sentence of a mob, and
+appeals to the verdict of his equals?"
+
+"But if he cut the people down in cold blood,--if it be true that he
+laid open that poor black fellow's cheek from the temple to the chin--"
+
+"If he did no such thing," broke in Barrington; "that is to say, if
+there is no evidence whatever that he did so, what will your legal mind
+say then, Joe Kinshela?"
+
+"Just this, sir. I'd say--what all the newspapers are saying--that he
+got the man out of the way,--bribed and sent him off."
+
+"Why not hint that he murdered him, and buried him within the precincts
+of the jail? I declare I wonder at your moderation."
+
+"I am sure, sir, that if I suspected he was an old friend of yours--"
+
+"Nothing of the kind,--a friend of very short standing; but what has
+that to say to it? Is he less entitled to fair play whether he knew me
+or not?"
+
+"All I know of the case is from the newspapers; and as I scarcely see
+one word in his favor, I take it there is not much to be said in his
+defence."
+
+"Well, if my ears don't deceive me, that was the guard's horn I heard
+then. The man himself will be here in five minutes or so. You shall
+conduct the prosecution, Kinshela, and I 'll be judge between you."
+
+"Heaven forbid, sir; on no account whatever!" said Kinshela, trembling
+all over. "I'm sure, Mr. Barrington, you couldn't think of repeating
+what I said to you in confidence--"
+
+"No, no, Kinshela. You shall do it yourself; and it's only fair to tell
+you that he is a right clever fellow, and fully equal to the task of
+defending himself." Peter arose as he spoke, and walked out upon the
+lawn, affectedly to meet his coming guest, but in reality to cover a
+laugh that was half smothering him, so comical was the misery expressed
+in the attorney's face, and so ludicrous was his look of terror.
+
+Of course I need not say that it never occurred to Barrington to realize
+his threat, which he merely uttered in the spirit of that quizzing habit
+that was familiar to him. "Yes, Kinshela," cried he, "here he comes.
+I recognize his voice already;" and Barrington now walked forward to
+welcome his friend.
+
+It was not till after some minutes of conversation, and when the light
+fell strongly on Stapylton's features, that Barrington saw how changed
+a few weeks of care had made him. He looked at the least ten years older
+than before. His eyes had lost their bold and daring expression, too,
+and were deep sunk, and almost furtive in their glance.
+
+"You are tired, I fear," said Barrington, as the other moved his hand
+across his forehead, and, with a slight sigh, sank down upon a sofa.
+
+"Less tired than worried,--harassed," said he, faintly. "Just as at a
+gaming-table a man may lose more in half an hour's high play than years
+of hard labor could acquire, there are times of life when we dissipate
+more strength and vigor than we ever regain. I have had rough usage
+since I saw you last," said he, with a very sickly smile. "How are the
+ladies,--well, I hope?"
+
+"Perfectly well. They have gone to pass the day with a neighbor, and
+will be home presently. By the way, I left a friend here a few moments
+ago. What can have become of him?" and he rang the bell hastily.
+"Where's Mr. Kinshela, Darby?"
+
+"Gone to bed, sir. He said he 'd a murthering headache, and hoped your
+honor would excuse him."
+
+Though Barrington laughed heartily at this message, Stapylton never
+asked the reason, but sat immersed in thought and unmindful of all
+around him.
+
+"I half suspect you ought to follow his good example, Major," said
+Peter. "A mug of mulled claret for a nightcap, and a good sleep, will
+set you all right."
+
+"It will take more than that to do it," said the Major, sadly. Then
+suddenly rising, and pacing the room with quick, impatient steps, he
+said, "What could have induced you to let them bring your claim before
+the House? They are going to do so, ain't they?"
+
+"Yes. Tom Withering says that nothing will be so effectual, and I
+thought you agreed with him."
+
+"Never. Nothing of the kind. I said, threaten it; insist that if they
+continue the opposition, that you will,--that you must do so; but I
+never was the fool to imagine that it could really be a wise step. What
+'s the fate of all such motions? I ask you. There's a speech--sometimes
+an able one--setting forth a long catalogue of unmerited injuries and
+long suffering. There's a claim made out that none can find a flaw in,
+and a story that, if Parliament was given to softness, might move men
+almost to tears, and at the end of it up rises a Minister to say how
+deeply he sympathizes with the calamity of the case, but that this
+house is, after all, not the fitting locality for a discussion which is
+essentially a question of law, and that, even if it were, and if all
+the allegations were established,--a point to which he by no means gave
+adhesion,--there was really no available fund at the disposal of the
+Crown to make reparation for such losses. Have you not seen this,
+or something like this, scores of times? Can you tell me of one that
+succeeded?"
+
+"A case of such wrong as this cannot go without reparation," said Peter,
+with emotion. "The whole country will demand it."
+
+"The country will do no such thing. If it were a question of penalty
+or punishment,--yes! the country would demand it. Fine, imprison,
+transport, hang him! are easy words to utter, and cheap ones; but
+pay him, reinstate him, reward him! have a very different sound and
+significance. They figure in the budget, and are formidable on the
+hustings. Depend on it, Mr. Barrington, the step will be a false one."
+
+"It has been my fate never to have got the same advice for two weeks
+together since the day I entered on this weary suit," said Barrington,
+with a peevishness not natural to him.
+
+"I may as well tell you the whole truth at once," said Stapylton. "The
+Board have gone back of all their good intentions towards us; some
+recent arrivals from India, it is said, have kindled again the old
+fire of opposition, and we are to be met by a resistance bold and
+uncompromising. They are prepared to deny everything we assert; in fact,
+they have resolved to sweep all the pieces off the board and begin the
+whole game again, and all because you have taken this unfortunate course
+of appeal to Parliament."
+
+"Have you told Withering this?"
+
+"Yes; I have talked the matter over for nearly four hours with him.
+Like a lawyer, he was most eager to know from what source came the new
+evidence so damaging to us. I could only guess at this."
+
+"And your guess was--"
+
+"I scarcely like to own to you that I take a less favorable view of
+mankind than you do, who know it better; but in this case my suspicion
+attaches to a man who was once your son's dearest friend, but grew to be
+afterwards his deadliest enemy."
+
+"I will not have this said, Major Stapylton. I know whom you mean, and I
+don't believe a word of it."
+
+Stapylton simply shrugged his shoulders, and continued to pace the room
+without speaking, while Barrington went on muttering, half aloud: "No,
+no, impossible; quite impossible. These things are not in nature. I
+don't credit them."
+
+"You like to think very well of the world, sir!" said the Major, with a
+faint scorn, so faint as scarcely to color his words.
+
+"Think very badly of it, and you 'll soon come down to the level you
+assign it," said Peter, boldly.
+
+"I 'm afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best
+suffrages. You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I
+have met with from the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous
+usage,--not very just. Well! what will you say when I tell you that I
+have been refused an inquiry into my conduct at Manchester; that the
+Government is of opinion that such an investigation might at the
+moment be prejudicial to the public peace, without any counterbalancing
+advantage on the score of a personal vindication; that they do not deem
+the time favorable for the calm and unbiassed judgment of the country;
+in one short word, sir, they 'd rather ruin a Major of Hussars than risk
+a Cabinet. I am to exchange into any corps or any service I can;
+and they are to tide over these troubles on the assumption of having
+degraded me."
+
+"I hope you wrong them,--I do hope you wrong them!" cried Barrington,
+passionately.
+
+"You shall see if I do," said he, taking several letters from his
+pocket, and searching for one in particular. "Yes, here it is. This is
+from Aldridge, the private secretary of the Commander-in-chief. It is
+very brief, and strictly secret:--
+
+"'Dear S.,--The "Chief" does not like your scrape at all. You did rather
+too much, or too little,--a fatal mistake dealing with a mob. You must
+consent--there's no help for it--to be badly used, and an injured man.
+If you don't like the half-pay list,--which would, in my mind, be the
+best step,--there 's the Seventeenth ordered to Baroda, and Maidstone
+refuses to go. This, or the Second West India, are the only things open.
+Above all, don't show fight; don't rally a party round you, for there
+is not a man in England whose influence is sufficiently great to stand
+between you and the public. A conple of years' patience and a hot
+climate will set all right, and reinstate you everywhere. Come over here
+at once and I 'll do my best for you.
+
+"'Yours ever,
+
+"'St. George Aldridge.'
+
+"This is a friend's letter," said Stapylton, with a sneer; "and he
+has no better counsel to give me than to plead guilty, and ask for a
+mitigated punishment."
+
+Harrington was silenced; he would not by any expression of indignation
+add to the great anger of the other, and he said nothing. At last he
+said, "I wish from my heart--I wish I could be of any service to you."
+
+"You are the only man living who can," was the prompt answer.
+
+"How so--in what way? Let me hear."
+
+"When I addressed a certain letter to you some time back, I was in a
+position both of fortune and prospect to take at least something from
+the presumption of my offer. Now, though my fortune remains, my future
+is more than clouded, and if I ask you to look favorably on my cause
+now, it is to your generosity I must appeal; I am, in fact, asking you
+to stand by a fallen man."
+
+This speech, uttered in a voice slightly shaken by agitation, went to
+Barrington's heart. There was not a sentiment in his nature so certain
+to respond to a call upon it as this one of sympathy with the beaten
+man; the weaker side was always certain of his adherence. With a nice
+tact Stapylton said no more, but, pushing open the window, walked out
+upon the smooth sward, on which a faint moonlight flickered. He had shot
+his bolt, and saw it as it quivered in his victim's flesh. Barrington
+was after him in an instant, and, drawing an arm within his he said in
+a low voice, "You may count upon me."
+
+Stapylton wrung his hand warmly, without speaking. After walking for
+a few moments, side by side, he said: "I must be frank with you, Mr.
+Barrington. I have little time and no taste for circumlocution; I cannot
+conceal from myself that I am no favorite with your sister. I was not
+as eager as I ought to have been to cultivate her good opinion; I was
+a little piqued at what I thought mere injustices on her part,--small
+ones, to be sure, but they wounded me, and with a temper that always
+revolted against a wrong, I resented them, and I fear me, in doing so,
+I jeopardized her esteem. If she is as generous as her brother, she will
+not remember these to me in my day of defeat. Women, however, have their
+own ideas of mercy, as they have of everything, and she may not choose
+to regard me as you have done."
+
+"I suspect you are wrong about this," said Harrington, breaking in.
+
+"Well, I wish I may be; at all events, I must put the feeling to
+the test at once, for I have formed my plan, and mean to begin it
+immediately."
+
+"And what is it?"
+
+"Very few words will tell it. I intend to go on half-pay, or sell out if
+that be refused me; set out for India by the next mail, and, with what
+energy remains to me, vindicate your son's claim. I have qualifications
+that will make me better than a better man. I am well versed in
+Hindostanee, and a fair Persian scholar; I have a wide acquaintance with
+natives of every rank, and I know how and where to look for information.
+It is not my disposition to feel over-sanguine, but I would stake all I
+possess on my success, for I see exactly the flaws in the chain, and I
+know where to go to repair them. You have witnessed with what ardor I
+adopted the suit before; but you cannot estimate the zeal with which I
+throw myself into it now--_now_ that, like George Barring-ton himself,
+I am a man wronged, outraged, and insulted." For a few seconds be seemed
+overcome by passion and unable to continue; then he went on: "If your
+granddaughter will accept me, it is my intention to settle on her all I
+possess. Our marriage can be private, and she shall be free to accompany
+me or to remain here, as she likes."
+
+"But how can all this be done so hurriedly? You talk of starting at
+once."
+
+"I must, if I would save your son's cause. The India Board are sending
+out their emissaries to Calcutta, and I must anticipate them--if I
+cannot do more, by gaining them over to us on the voyage out. It is a
+case for energy and activity, and I want to employ both."
+
+"The time is very short for all this," said Barrington, again.
+
+"So it is, sir, and so are the few seconds which may rescue a man from
+drowning! It is in the crisis of my fate that I ask you to stand by me."
+
+"But have you any reason to believe that my granddaughter will hear you
+favorably? You are almost strangers to each other?"
+
+"If she will not give me the legal right to make her my heir, I mean to
+usurp the privilege. I have already been with a lawyer for that purpose.
+My dear sir," added he, passionately, "I want to break with the past
+forever! When the world sets up its howl against a man, the odds are too
+great! To stand and defy it he must succumb or retreat. Now, I mean to
+retire, but with the honors of war, mark you."
+
+"My sister will never consent to it," muttered Barrington.
+
+"Will you? Have I the assurance of _your_ support?"
+
+"I can scarcely venture to say 'yes,' and yet I can't bear to say 'no'
+to you!"
+
+"This is less than I looked for from you," said Stapylton, mournfully.
+
+"I know Dinah so well. I know how hopeless it would be to ask her
+concurrence to this plan."
+
+"She may not take the generous view of it; but there is a worldly one
+worth considering," said Stapylton, bitterly.
+
+"Then, sir, if you count on _that_, I would not give a copper half-penny
+for your chance of success!" cried Barrington, passionately.
+
+"You have quite misconceived me; you have wronged me altogether," broke
+in Stapylton, in a tone of apology; for he saw the mistake he had made,
+and hastened to repair it. "My meaning was this--"
+
+"So much the better. I'm glad I misunderstood you. But here come the
+ladies. Let us go and meet them."
+
+"One word,--only one word. Will you befriend me?"
+
+"I will do all that I can,--that is, all that I ought," said Barrington,
+as he led him away, and re-entered the cottage.
+
+"I will not meet them to-night," said Stapylton, hurriedly. "I am
+nervous and agitated. I will say good-night now."
+
+This was the second time within a few days that Stapylton had shown an
+unwillingness to confront Miss Barrington, and Peter thought over it
+long and anxiously. "What can he mean by it?" said he, to himself. "Why
+should he be so frank and outspoken with me, and so reserved with her?
+What can Dinah know of him? What can she suspect, that is not known
+to me? It is true they never did like each other,--never 'hit it off'
+together; but that is scarcely _his_ fault. My excellent sister throws
+away little love on strangers, and opens every fresh acquaintance with
+a very fortifying prejudice against the newly presented. However it
+happens," muttered he, with a sigh, "_she_ is not often wrong, and _I_
+am very seldom right;" and, with this reflection, he turned once again
+to resume his walk in the garden.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT
+
+Stapylton did not make his appearance at breakfast; he sent down a
+message that he had passed a feverish night, and begged that Dr. Dill
+might be sent for. Though Barrington made two attempts to see his
+guest, the quietness of the room on each occasion implied that he was
+asleep, and, fearing to disturb him, he went downstairs again on tiptoe.
+
+"This is what the persecution has done, Dinah," said he. "They have
+brought that stout-hearted fellow so low that he may be the victim of a
+fever to-morrow."
+
+"Nonsense, Peter. Men of courage don't fall sick because the newspapers
+calumniate them. They have other things on their minds than such puny
+attacks."
+
+"So he may, likely enough, too. He is bent heart and soul on what I
+told you last night, and I 'm not surprised if he never closed his eyes
+thinking of it."
+
+"Neither did I!" said she, curtly, and left the room.
+
+The doctor was not long in arriving, and, after a word or two with
+Barrington, hastened to the patient's room.
+
+"Are we alone?" asked Stapylton, cutting short the bland speech with
+which Dill was making his approaches. "Draw that curtain a bit, and take
+a good look at me. Are my eyes bloodshot? Are the pupils dilated? I had
+a bad sunstroke once; see if there be any signs of congestion about me."
+
+"No, I see none. A little flushed; your pulse, too, is accelerated, and
+the heart's action is labored--"
+
+"Never mind the heart; if the head be well, it will take care of it.
+Reach me that pocket-book; I want to acquit one debt to you before I
+incur another. No humbug between us;" and he pressed some notes into the
+other's palm as he spoke. "Let us understand each other fully, and at
+once. I 'm not very ill; but I want _you_."
+
+"And I am at your orders."
+
+"Faithfully,--loyally?"
+
+"Faithfully,--loyally!" repeated the other after him.
+
+[Illustration: 454]
+
+"You've read the papers lately,--you've seen these attacks on me?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, what do they say and think here--I mean in this house--about
+them? How do they discuss them? Remember, I want candor and frankness;
+no humbug. I'll not stand humbug."
+
+"The women are against you."
+
+"Both of them?"
+
+"Both."
+
+"How comes that?--on what grounds?"
+
+"The papers accused you of cruelty; they affirmed that there was no
+cause for the measures of severity you adopted; and they argued--"
+
+"Don't bore me with all that balderdash. I asked you how was it that
+these women assumed I was in the wrong?"
+
+"And I was about to tell you, if you had not interrupted me."
+
+"That is, they believed what they read in the newspapers?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And, of course, swallowed that fine story about the Hindoo fellow that
+I first cut down, and afterwards bribed to make his escape from the
+hospital?"
+
+"I suspect they half believed it."
+
+"Or rather, believed half of it, the cutting down part! Can you tell me
+physiologically,--for I think it comes into that category,--why it is
+that women not otherwise ill-natured, in nine cases out of ten take the
+worst alternative as the credible one? But never mind that. They condemn
+me. Is n't it so?"
+
+"Yes; and while old Barrington insists--"
+
+"Who cares what he insists? Such advocacy as his only provokes attack,
+and invites persecution. I 'd rather have no such allies!"
+
+"I believe you are right."
+
+"I want fellows like yourself, doctor,--sly, cautious, subtle
+fellows,--accustomed to stealing strong medicines into the system in
+small doses; putting the patient, as you call it in your slang, 'under
+the influence' of this, that, and t'other,--eh?"
+
+Dill smiled blandly at the compliment to his art, and Stapylton went
+on:--
+
+"Not that I have time just now for this sort of chronic treatment. I
+need a heroic remedy, doctor. I 'm in love."
+
+"Indeed!" said Dill, with an accent nicely balanced between interest and
+incredulity.
+
+"Yes, and I want to marry!
+
+"Miss Barrington?"
+
+"The granddaughter. There is no need, I hope, to make the distinction,
+for I don't wish to be thought insane. Now you have the case. What 's
+your prescription?"
+
+"Propose for her!"
+
+"So I have, but they hesitate. The old man is not unfavorable; he is,
+perhaps, more: he is, in a measure, friendly; but what avails such
+advocacy? I want another guess sort of aid,--a clever man; or, what is
+better still, a clever woman, to befriend me."
+
+He waited some seconds for a reply, but Dill did not speak; so he went
+on: "A clever woman, to take a woman's view of the case, balancing this
+against that, never ignoring an obstacle, but inquiring what there may
+be to compensate for it Do you know such a one, doctor?"
+
+"Perhaps I may; but I have my doubts about securing her services."
+
+"Even with a retainer?"
+
+"Even with a retainer. You see, Major,"--here Dill dropped his voice to
+a most confidential whisper,--"my daughter Polly,--for I know we both
+have her in mind,--Polly is a strange sort of girl, and very hard to
+understand; for while, if the case were her own, she 'd no more think
+of romance than she would of giving ten guineas for a dress, if she was
+advising another whose position and prospects were higher than hers,
+it's the romantic part of it she'd lay all the stress on."
+
+"From which I gather that my suit will not stand this test!" said
+Stapylton, with a peculiar smile. "Eh, is n't that your meaning?"
+
+"You are certainly some years older than the lady," said Dill, blandly.
+
+"Not old enough to be, as the world would surely say, 'her father,' but
+fully old enough to give license for sarcasm."
+
+"Then, as she will be a great fortune--"
+
+"Not a sixpence,--she'll not have sixpence, doctor. That bubble has
+burst at last, and can never be blown again. The whole claim has been
+rejected, refused, thrown out, and there 's an end of it. It amuses
+the old man to sit on the wreck and fancy he can repair the shattered
+timbers and make them seaworthy; and, for the time he is likely to
+last, it is only kindness to leave him to his delusion; but he is
+ruined,--ruined beyond recall, and as I have told you, the girl will
+have nothing."
+
+"Do they know this,--has Barrington heard it?"
+
+"Yes, I broke it to him last night, but I don't think he fully realized
+the tidings; he has certain reserves--certain little conceits of his
+own--which are to supply him with a sort of hope; but let us talk of
+something more practical. How can we secure Miss Dill's services?"
+
+"A few days ago, the easiest way would have been to offer to befriend
+her brother, but this morning brings us news that this is not
+needed,--he is coming home."
+
+"How so?"
+
+"It is a great event in its way; at least, it may be for Tom. It seems
+there was a collision at sea, somewhere near the Cape, between the ship
+'St. Helen's,' that carried out General Hunter and his staff, and
+the 'Regulus,' with the Forty-ninth on board. It was at night, and a
+terrible sea on at the time. In the shock the 'St. Helen's' took fire;
+and as the two ships were inextricably locked together, the danger was
+common to each. While the boats were being lowered and manned,--for it
+was soon seen the vessel could not be saved,--a cry was raised that the
+fire was gaining on the fore-hold, and would soon reach the magazine.
+The woful news spread at once, and many jumped overboard in their
+terror. Just then Tom heard that there was a means of drowning the
+powder by opening a certain sluice, and, without waiting for more, he
+clambered across into the sinking vessel, made his way through smoke and
+fire, gained the spot, and succeeded, just as the very ladder itself
+had caught the flames. How he got back he cannot tell, for the vessel
+foundered in a few minutes, and he was so burned--face, cheek, and
+one shoulder--that he was unconscious of everything; and even when the
+account came, was still in bed, and not able to see."
+
+"He was a wild sort of lad, was he not,--a scamp, in short?"
+
+"No, not exactly that; idle--careless--kept bad company at times."
+
+"These are the fellows who do this kind of thing once in their
+lives,--mark you, never twice. They never have more than one shot in
+their locker, but it will suffice in this case."
+
+Though the worthy doctor was very far from enthusiastic about his son's
+gallantry, there was a degree of coolness in the Major's estimate of
+it that almost shocked him; and he sat staring steadily at the stern
+bronzed face, and the hard lineaments of the man, and wondering of what
+strange stuff such natures were fashioned.
+
+"It's quite clear, then, that for Master Tom we can do nothing half
+so good as chance has done for him," said Stapylton, after a short
+interval.
+
+"Chance and himself too," added the doctor.
+
+Stapylton made no answer, but, covering his eyes with his hand, lay deep
+in thought.
+
+"If you only had the Attorney-General, Mr. Withering, on your side,"
+said Dill. "There is no man has the same influence over this family."
+
+"It is not what _you_ call influence I want, my good sir. It is a far
+more subtle and more delicate agent. I require the sort of aid, in fact,
+which your daughter could supply, if she would. An appointment awaits
+me in India, but I must occupy it at once. I have no time for a long
+courtship. I 'm just as hurried as that boy of yours was when he swamped
+the powder-magazine. It's a skirmish where I can't wait for the heavy
+artillery, but must do my best with the light field-guns,--do you
+understand me?"
+
+Dill nodded, and Stapylton resumed: "The thing can be done just by the
+very road that you have pronounced impossible,--that is, by the romantic
+side of it,--making it a case of violent love at first sight, the
+passion of a man past the heyday of youth, but yet young enough to
+feel a most ardent affection. I am, besides," said he, laughing with a
+strange blending of levity and sarcasm, "a sort of Brummagem hero; have
+been wounded, led assaults, and that kind of thing, to a degree that
+puffery can take the benefit of. And, last of all, doctor, I am rich
+enough to satisfy greater ambitions than ought to live under such a roof
+as this. Do you see the part your daughter can take in this drama?"
+
+"Perhaps I do."
+
+"And could you induce her to accept it?"
+
+"I'm not very certain,--I'd be slow to pledge myself to it."
+
+"Certainly," said Stapylton, mockingly; "the passing glimpses we
+bachelors obtain of the working of that vaunted institution, The Family,
+fail to impress us with all its imputed excellence; you are, it seems to
+me, just as powerless within your own doors as I am regarding what goes
+on in a neighbor's house. I take it, however, that it can't be helped.
+Children, like colonies, are only governable when helpless."
+
+"I suspect you are wrong, sir; at least, I fancy I have as much of the
+sort of influence you speak of as others; but still, I think, here, in
+this particular case, you would yourself be your best ambassador, if you
+were strong enough to come down with me in the boat to-day."
+
+"Of course I am!" cried Stapylton, starting up to a sitting posture;
+"and what then?"
+
+"You would be better in my house than this," said Dill, mysteriously.
+
+"Speak out, and speak clearly, doctor; I have very little the matter
+with me, and am in no want of change of air. What I need is the
+assistance of one dexterous enough to advocate my plans with persons
+and in places to which I have no access. Your daughter is just such a
+one,--will she do it?"
+
+"We can ask her."
+
+"Well, how will you explain my absence to these people here? What will
+you say for my not appearing at breakfast, and yet being able to take an
+airing with you?"
+
+"I will put it on hygienic grounds," said Dill, smiling acutely. "My
+profession has a number of sanctuaries the profane vulgar can never
+enter. I 'll just step down now and ask Barrington to lend me his boat,
+and I 'll throw out a dark hint that I 'd like to manage a consultation
+on your case without alarming you, for which purpose I 'd ask Dr. Tobin
+to be at my house, when we arrive there, by mere accident, so that a
+conference would follow as a matter of course."
+
+"Very wily,--very subtle all this, doctor. Do you know, I 'm half
+frightened at the thought of trusting myself to such a master of
+intrigue and mystification."
+
+"Have no fears; I reserve all my craft for my clients." And with this he
+left the room, but only for a few minutes; for he met Barrington on the
+stairs, and speedily obtained permission to take his boat to Inistioge,
+having first pledged himself to come back with Stapylton to dinner.
+
+"We shall see, we shall see," muttered Stapylton to himself. "Your
+daughter must decide where I am to dine today."
+
+By the way--that is, as they glided along the bright river--Dill tried
+to prepare Stapylton for the task before him, by sundry hints as to
+Polly's temper and disposition, with warnings against this, and cautions
+about that. "Above all," said he, "don't try to overreach her."
+
+"Perfect frankness--candor itself--is my device. Won't that do?"
+
+"You must first see will she believe it," said the doctor, slyly; and
+for the remainder of the way there was a silence between them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII. CROSS-PURPOSES
+
+"Where 's Miss Polly?" said Dill, hastily, as he passed his threshold.
+
+"She's making the confusion of roses in the kitchen, sir," said the
+maid, whose chemistry had been a neglected study.
+
+"Tell her that I have come back, and that there is a gentleman along
+with me," said he, imperiously, as he led the way into his study. "I
+have brought you into this den of mine, Major, because I would just say
+one word more by way of caution before you see Polly. You may imagine,
+from the small range of her intercourse with the world, and her village
+life, that her acuteness will not go very far; don't be too sure of
+that,--don't reckon too much on her want of experience."
+
+"I suppose I have encountered as sharp wits as hers before this time
+o' day," replied he, half peevishly; and then, with an air of better
+temper, added, "I have no secrets to hide, no mystery to cloak. If
+I want her alliance, she shall herself dictate the terms that shall
+requite it."
+
+The doctor shook his head dubiously, but was silent.
+
+"I half suspect, my good doctor," said Stapylton, laughing, "that your
+charming daughter is a little, a very little, of a domestic despot; you
+are all afraid of her; never very sure of what she will say or do or
+think on any given circumstances, and nervously alive to the risk of her
+displeasure."
+
+"There is something in what you say," remarked Dill, with a sigh; "but
+it was always my mistake to bring up my children with too much liberty
+of action. From the time they were so high"--and he held his hand out
+about a yard above the floor--"they were their own masters."
+
+Just as the words had fallen from him, a little chubby, shock-headed
+fellow, about five years old, burst into the room, which he believed
+unoccupied, and then, suddenly seeing his papa, set up a howl of terror
+that made the house ring.
+
+"What is it, Jimmy,--what is it, my poor man?" said Polly, rushing with
+tucked-up sleeves to the spot; and, catching him up in her arms, she
+kissed him affectionately.
+
+"Will you take him away?--will you take him out of that?" hissed out
+Dill between his teeth. "Don't you see Major Stapylton here?"
+
+"Oh, Major Stapylton will excuse a toilette that was never intended for
+his presence."
+
+"I will certainly say there could not be a more becoming one, nor a more
+charming tableau to display it in!"
+
+"There, Jimmy," said she, laughing; "you must have some bread and jam
+for getting me such a nice compliment."
+
+And she bore away the still sobbing urchin, who, burying his head in her
+bosom, could never summon courage to meet his father's eye.
+
+"What a spacious garden you appear to have here!" said Stapylton, who
+saw all the importance of a diversion to the conversation.
+
+"It is a very much neglected one," said Dill, pathetically. "My poor
+dear boy Tom used to take care of it when he was here; he had a perfect
+passion for flowers."
+
+Whether that Tom was associated in the Major's mind with some other very
+different tastes or not, Stapylton smiled slightly, and after a moment
+said, "If you permit me, I 'll take a stroll through your garden, and
+think over what we have been talking of."
+
+"Make yourself at home in every respect," said Dill. "I have a few
+professional calls to make in the village, but we 'll meet at luncheon."
+
+"He's in the garden, Polly," said Dill, as he passed his daughter on the
+stairs; "he came over here this morning to have a talk with you."
+
+"Indeed, sir!"
+
+"Yes; he has got it into his head that you can be of service to him."
+
+"It is not impossible, sir; I think I might."
+
+"I'm glad to bear it, Polly; I'm delighted to see you take a good
+sensible view of things. I need not tell you he's a knowing one."
+
+"No, sir. But, as I have heard you card-players say, 'he shows his
+hand.'"
+
+"So he does, Polly; but I have known fellows do that just to mislead the
+adversary."
+
+"Sorry adversaries that could be taken in so easily." And with a saucy
+toss of her head she passed on, scarcely noticing the warning gesture of
+her father's finger as she went.
+
+When she had found her work-basket and supplied herself with the means
+of occupying her fingers for an hour or so, she repaired to the garden
+and took her seat under a large elm, around whose massive trunk a mossy
+bench ran, divided by rustic-work into a series of separate places.
+
+"What a churlish idea it was to erect these barricades, Miss Dill!" said
+Stapylton as he seated himself at her side; "how unpicturesque and how
+prudish!"
+
+"It was a simple notion of my brother Tom's," said she, smiling, "who
+thought people would not be less agreeable by being reminded that
+they had a place of their own, and ought not to invade that of their
+neighbor."
+
+"What an unsocial thought!"
+
+"Poor Tom! A strange reproach to make against _you_," said she, laughing
+out.
+
+"By the way, has n't he turned out a hero,--saved a ship and all she
+carried from the flames,--and all at the hazard of his own life?"
+
+"He has done a very gallant thing; and, what's more, I 'll venture to
+say there is not a man who saw it thinks so little of it as himself."
+
+"I suppose that every brave man has more or less of that feeling."
+
+"I'm glad to learn this fact from such good authority," said she, with a
+slight bend of the head.
+
+"A prettily turned compliment, Miss Dill. Are you habitually given to
+flattery?"
+
+"No? I rather think not. I believe the world is pleased to call me more
+candid than courteous."
+
+"Will you let me take you at the world's estimate,--that is, will you
+do me the inestimable favor to bestow a little of this same candor upon
+_me?_"
+
+"Willingly. What is to be the subject of it?"
+
+"The subject is a very humble one,--myself!"
+
+"How can I possibly adjudicate on such a theme?"
+
+"Better than you think for, perhaps!" And for a moment he appeared
+awkward and ill at ease. "Miss Dill," said he, after a pause, "fortune
+has been using me roughly of late; and, like all men who deem themselves
+hardly treated, I fly at once to any quarter where I fancy I have found
+a more kindly disposition towards me. Am I indulging a self-delusion in
+believing that such sentiments are yours?"
+
+Polly Dill, with her own keen tact, had guessed what was the real object
+of Stapylton's visit. She had even read in her father's manner how he
+himself was a shareholder in the scheme, and she had made up her mind
+for a great frankness on each side; but now, seeing the diplomatic
+mys-teriousness with which the Major opened his attack, that love of
+mischievous drollery which entered into her nature suggested a very
+different line. She determined, in fact, to seem to accept the Major's
+speech as the preliminary to an offer of his hand. She therefore merely
+turned her head slightly, and in a low voice said, "Continue!"
+
+"I have not deceived myself, then," said he, with more warmth of manner.
+"I have secured one kind heart in my interest?"
+
+"You must own," said she, with a half-coquettish look of pique, "that
+you scarcely deserve it."
+
+"How,--in what way?" asked he, in astonishment.
+
+"What a very short memory you are blessed with! Must I, then, remind you
+of a certain evening at Cobham? Must I recall what I thought at the time
+very particular, as they certainly were very pleasant, attentions on
+your part? Must I, also, bring to mind a certain promised visit from
+you, the day and hour all named by yourself,--a visit which never came
+off? And after all this, Major, are you not really a bold man to come
+down and take up your negotiation where you dropped it? Is there not
+in this a strong conviction of the greatness of Major Stapylton and the
+littleness of the doctor's daughter?"
+
+Stapylton was struck dumb. When a general sees that what he meant as
+a feint has been converted into a real attack, the situation is often
+imminent; but what comparison in difficulty is there between that
+mistake and that of him who assails what he never desired to conquer?
+How he inwardly cursed the stupidity with which he had opened his
+negotiation!
+
+"I perceive," said she, triumphing over his confusion, "that your calmer
+judgment does not reassure you. You feel that there is a certain levity
+in this conduct not quite excusable! Own it frankly, and at once!"
+
+"I will own, if you like, that I was never in a situation of greater
+embarrassment!"
+
+"Shall I tell you why?"
+
+"You couldn't; it would be totally impossible."
+
+"I will try, however, if you permit me. You do! Then here goes. You no
+more intended anything to come of your little flirtation at Cobham than
+you now do of a more serious blunder. You never came here this morning
+to make your court to _me_, You are much pained at the awkwardness of
+a situation so naturally wounding to me, and for the life of you, you
+cannot imagine what escape there is out of such a difficulty."
+
+"You are wonderfully clever, Miss Dill," said he; and there was an
+honest admiration in his look that gave the words a full significance.
+
+"No," said she, "but I am wonderfully good-natured. I forgive you what
+is the hardest thing in the world to forgive!"
+
+"Oh! if you would but be my friend," cried he, warmly.
+
+"What a want of tact there was in that speech, Major Stapylton!" said
+she, with a laugh; "but perhaps you wanted to reverse the line of our
+dear little poet, who tells of some one 'that came but for Friendship,
+and took away Love'!"
+
+"How cruel you are in all this mockery of me!"
+
+"Does not the charge of cruelty come rather ill from _you?--you_, who
+can afford to sport with the affections of poor village maidens. From
+the time of that 'Major bold of Halifax' the song tells of, I never
+heard your equal."
+
+"Could you prevail upon yourself to be serious for a few minutes?" said
+he, gravely.
+
+"I think not,--at least not just now; but why should I make the
+attempt?"
+
+"Because I would wish your aid in a serious contingency,--a matter in
+which I am deeply interested, and which involves probably my future
+happiness."
+
+"Ah, Major! is it possible that you are going to trifle with my feelings
+once more?"
+
+"My dear Miss Dill, must I plead once more for a little mercy?"
+
+"No, don't do any such thing; it would seem ungenerous to refuse, and
+yet I could not accord it."
+
+"Fairly beaten," said he, with a sigh; "there is no help for it. You are
+the victor!"
+
+"How did you leave our friends at 'The Home'?" said she, with an easy
+indifference in her tone.
+
+"All well, perfectly well; that is to say, I believe so, for I only saw
+my host himself."
+
+"What a pleasant house; how well they understand receiving their
+friends!"
+
+"It is so peaceful and so quiet!" said he, with an effort to seem at
+ease.
+
+"And the garden is charming!"
+
+"And all this is perfectly intolerable," said he, rising, and speaking
+in a voice thick with suppressed anger. "I never came here to play a
+part in a vaudeville! Your father led me to believe, Miss Dill, that you
+might not be indisposed to lend me your favoring aid in a suit which
+I am interested in. He told me I should at least find you frank and
+outspoken; that if you felt inclined to assist me, you'd never enhance
+the service by a seeming doubt or hesitation--"
+
+"And if I should not feel so inclined, what did he then give you to
+expect?"
+
+"That you'd say so!"
+
+"So I do, then, clearly and distinctly tell you, if my counsels offer a
+bar to your wishes, they are all enlisted against you."
+
+"This is the acme of candor. You can only equal it by saying how I could
+have incurred your disfavor."
+
+"There is nothing of disfavor in the matter. I think you charming. You
+are a hero,--very clever, very fascinating, very accomplished; but
+I believe it would be a great mistake for Fifine to marry you. Your
+tempers have that sort of resemblance that leave no reliefs in their
+mutual play. You are each of you hot and hasty, and a little imperious;
+and if she were not very much in love, and consequently disposed to
+think a great deal of you and very little of herself, these traits that
+I speak of would work ill. But if every one of them were otherwise,
+there would still be one obstacle worse than all!"
+
+"And that is--"
+
+"Can you not guess what I mean, Major Stapylton? You do not, surely,
+want confidences from me that are more than candor!"
+
+"Do I understand you aright?" said he, growing red and pale by turns, as
+passion worked within him; "do I apprehend you correctly? These people
+here are credulous enough to be influenced by the shadowy slanders of
+the newspapers, and they listen to the half-muttered accusations of a
+hireling press?"
+
+"They do say very awkward things in the daily press, certainly," said
+she, dryly; "and your friends marvel at the silence with which you treat
+them."
+
+"Then I _have_ divined your meaning," said he. "It is by these cowardly
+assailants I am supposed to be vanquished. I suspect, however, that
+Colonel Barrington himself was, once on a time, indulged with the same
+sort of flattery. They said that he had usurped a sovereignty, falsified
+documents, purloined jewels of immense value. I don't know what they did
+not charge him with. And what do they say of me? That I exhibited great
+severity--cruelty, if you will--towards a mob in a state of rebellion;
+that I reprimanded a very silly subaltern for a misplaced act of
+humanity. That I have been cashiered, too, they assert, in face of the
+'Gazette,' which announces my appointment to an unattached majority. In
+a word, the enormity of the falsehood has never stayed their hand, and
+they write of me whatever their unthinking malevolence can suggest to
+them. You have, perhaps, seen some of these paragraphs?"
+
+"Like every one else, I have read them occasionally; not very
+attentively, indeed. But, in truth, I'm not a reader of newspapers.
+Here, for instance, is this morning's as it came from Dublin, still
+unopened;" and she handed it as she spoke.
+
+"Let us see if I be still honored with their notice," said he, unfolding
+the paper, and running his eyes hastily over it. "Debate on the Sugar
+Bill--Prison Reforms--China--Reinforcements for Canada--Mail Service to
+the Colonies--Bankruptcy Court. Oh, here we have it--here it is!" and he
+crushed the paper while he folded down one part of it. "Shall I read it
+for you? The heading is very tempting: 'Late Military Scandal.--A very
+curious report is now going through our West-end Clubs, and especially
+such as are the resort of military officers. It is to the purport that a
+certain Field-officer of Cavalry--whose conduct has been the subject of
+severe strictures from the Press--will speedily be called to answer for
+a much graver offence than the transgression of regimental discipline.
+The story which has reached us is a very strange one, and we should call
+it incredible, if we were not informed, on author-ity, that one of our
+most distinguished Indian generals has declared himself fully satisfied
+of its truth in every particular.' Can you fancy anything worse than
+that, Miss Dill? An unknown somebody is alleged to be convinced of an
+unknown something that attaches to me; for, of course, I am designated
+as the 'Field-officer of Cavalry,' and the public is graciously pleased
+to hold me in abhorrence till I have found out my calumniator and
+refuted him!"
+
+"It seems very hard. Who do you suspect is the Indian General alluded
+to?"
+
+"Tell me, first of all,--does he exist?" "And this, too, you will not
+reply to, nor notice?" "Not, certainly, through such a channel as it
+reaches me. If the slanderer will stand forth and avow himself, I may
+know how to deal with him. But what has led us into this digression? I
+am sure it is as little to your taste as to mine. I have failed in my
+mission, and if I were able to justify every act of my life, what would
+it avail me? You have pronounced against me; at least, you will not take
+my brief."
+
+"What if I were retained by the other side?" said she, smiling.
+
+"I never suspected that there was another side," said he, with an air of
+extreme indifference. "Who is my formidable rival?"
+
+"I might have told you if I saw you were really anxious on the subject."
+
+"It would be but hypocrisy in me to pretend it. If, for example, Major
+McCormick--"
+
+"Oh, that is too bad!" cried Polly, interrupting. "This would mean an
+impertinence to Miss Barrington."
+
+"How pleasant we must have been! Almost five o'clock, and I scarcely
+thought it could be three!" said he, with an affected languor.
+
+"'Time's foot is not heard when he treads upon flowers,'" said she,
+smiling.
+
+"Where shall I find your father, Miss Dill? I want to tell him what a
+charming creature his daughter is, and how wretched I feel at not being
+able to win her favor."
+
+"Pray don't; or he might fall into my own mistake, and imagine that you
+wanted a lease of it for life."
+
+"Still cruel, still inexorable!" said he, with a mockery of affliction
+in his tone. "Will you say all the proper things--the regrets, and
+such like--I feel at not meeting him again; and if he has asked me to
+dinner--which I really forget--will you make the fitting apology?"
+
+"And what is it, in the present case?"
+
+"I 'm not exactly sure whether I am engaged to dine elsewhere, or too
+ill to dine at all."
+
+"Why not say it is the despair at being rejected renders you unequal to
+the effort? I mean, of course, by myself, Major Stapylton."
+
+"I have no objection; say so, if you like," said he, with an insulting
+indifference. "Good-day, Miss Dill. This is the way to the road, I
+believe;" and, with a low bow, very deferential but very distant, he
+turned away to leave the garden. He had not, however, gone many
+paces, when he stopped and seemed to ponder. He looked up at the sky,
+singularly clear and cloudless as it was, without a breath of wind in
+the air; he gazed around him on every side, as if in search of an object
+he wanted; and then, taking out his purse, he drew forth a shilling and
+examined it. "Yes," muttered he, "Chance has been my only counsellor for
+many a year, and the only one that never takes a bribe! And yet, is it
+not taking to the raft before the ship has foundered? True; but shall
+I be sure of the raft if I wait for the shipwreck? She is intensely
+crafty. She has that sort of head that loves a hard knot to unravel!
+Here goes! Let Destiny take all the consequences!" and as he flung up
+the piece of money in the air, he cried, "Head!" It was some minutes
+ere he could discover where it had fallen, amongst the close leaves of a
+border of strawberries. He bent down to look, and exclaimed, "Head! she
+has won!" Just as he arose from his stooping attitude he perceived that
+Polly was engaged in the adjoining walk, making a bouquet of roses. He
+sprang across the space, and stood beside her.
+
+"I thought you had been a mile off by this time, at least," said she,
+calmly.
+
+"So I meant, and so I intended; but just as I parted from you, a thought
+struck me--one of those thoughts which come from no process of reasoning
+or reflection, but seem impelled by a force out of our own natures--that
+I would come back and tell you something that was passing in my mind.
+Can you guess it?"
+
+"No; except it be that you are sorry for having trifled so unfeelingly
+with my hopes, and have come back to make the best reparation in your
+power, asking me to forgive and accept you."
+
+"You have guessed aright; it was for that I returned."
+
+"What a clever guess I made! Confess I am very ready-witted!"
+
+"You are; and it is to engage those ready wits in my behalf that I am
+now before you."
+
+"'At my feet,' sir, is the appropriate expression. I wonder how a
+gentleman so suited to be the hero of a story could forget the language
+of the novel."
+
+"I want you to be serious," said he, almost sternly.
+
+"And why should that provoke seriousness from _me_ which only costs
+_you_ levity?"
+
+"Levity!--where is the levity?"
+
+"Is it not this instant that you flung a shilling in the air, and cried
+out, as you looked on it, 'She has won'? Is it not that you asked Chance
+to decide for you what most men are led to by their affections, or at
+least their interests; and if so, is levity not the name for this?"
+
+"True in part, but not in whole; for I felt it was _I_ who had won when
+'head' came uppermost."
+
+"And yet you have lost."
+
+"How so! You refuse me?"
+
+"I forgive your astonishment. It is really strange, but I do refuse
+you."
+
+"But why? Are you piqued with me for anything that occurred this
+morning? Have I offended you by anything that dropped from me in that
+conversation? Tell me frankly, that I may, if in my power, rectify it."
+
+"No; I rather felt flattered at the notion of being consulted. I thought
+it a great tribute to my clear-headedness and my tact."
+
+"Then tell me what it was."
+
+"You really wish it?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Insist upon it?"
+
+"I insist upon it."
+
+"Well, it was this. Seeing that you were intrusting your future fortune
+to chance, I thought that I would do the same, and so I tossed up
+whether, opportunity serving, I should accept you or a certain other,
+and the other won!"
+
+"May I ask for the name of my fortunate rival?"
+
+"I don't think it is very fair, perhaps not altogether delicate of you;
+and the more since he has not proposed, nor possibly ever may. But no
+matter, you shall hear his name. It was Major McCormick."
+
+"McCormick! You mean this for an insult to me, Miss Dill?"
+
+[Illustration: 472]
+
+"Well, it certainly is open to that objection," said she, with a very
+slight closure of her eyes, and a look of steady, resolute defiance.
+
+"And in this way," continued he, "to throw ridicule over the offer I
+have made you?"
+
+"Scarcely that; the proposition was in itself too ridiculous to require
+any such aid from me."
+
+For a moment Stapylton lost his self-possession, and he turned on her
+with a look of savage malignity.
+
+"An insult, and an intentional insult!" said he; "a bold thing to avow."
+
+"I don't think so, Major Stapylton. We have been playing a very rough
+game with each other, and it is not very wonderful if each of us should
+have to complain of hard treatment."
+
+"Could not so very clever a person as Miss Dill perceive that I was only
+jesting?" said he, with a cutting insolence in his tone.
+
+"I assure you that I did not," said she, calmly; "had I known or even
+suspected it was a jest, I never should have been angry. That the
+distinguished Major Stapylton should mock and quiz--or whatever be the
+name for it--the doctor's daughter, however questionable the good taste,
+was, after all, only a passing slight. The thought of asking her to
+marry him was different,--that was an outrage!"
+
+"You shall pay for this one day, perhaps," said he, biting his lip.
+
+"No, Major Stapylton," said she, laughing; "this is not a debt of honor;
+you can afford to ignore it."
+
+"I tell you again, you shall pay for it."
+
+"Till then, sir!" said she, with a courtesy; and without giving him
+time for another word, she turned and re-entered the house.
+
+Scarcely had Stapylton gained the road when he was joined by McCormick.
+"Faith, you didn't get the best of that brush, anyhow," said he, with a
+grin.
+
+"What do you mean, sir?" replied Stapylton, savagely.
+
+"I mean that I heard every word that passed between you, and I would n't
+have been standing in your shoes for a fifty-pound note."
+
+"How is your rheumatism this morning?" asked Stapylton, blandly.
+
+"Pretty much as it always is," croaked out the other.
+
+"Be thankful to it, then; for if you were not a cripple, I 'd throw you
+into that river as sure as I stand here to say it."
+
+Major McCormick did not wait for a less merciful moment, but hobbled
+away from the spot with all the speed he could muster.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV. STORMS
+
+When Stapylton stepped out of his boat and landed at "The Home," the
+first person he saw was certainly the last in his wishes. It was Miss
+Dinah who stood at the jetty, as though awaiting him. Scarcely deigning
+to notice, beyond a faint smile of acquiescence, the somewhat bungling
+explanation he gave of his absence, she asked if he had met her brother.
+
+"No," said he. "I left the village a couple of hours ago; rather
+loitering, as I came along, to enjoy the river scenery."
+
+"He took the road, and in this way missed you," said she, dryly.
+
+"How unfortunate!--for me, I mean, of course. I own to you, Miss
+Barrington, wide as the difference between our ages, I never yet met any
+one so thoroughly companionable to me as your brother. To meet a man
+so consummately acquainted with the world, and yet not soured by his
+knowledge; to see the ripe wisdom of age blended with the generous
+warmth of youth; to find one whose experiences only make him more
+patient, more forgiving, more trustful--"
+
+"Too trustful, Major Stapylton, far too trustful." And her bold gray
+eyes were turned upon him as she spoke, with a significance that could
+not be mistaken.
+
+"It is a noble feeling, madam," said he, haughtily.
+
+"It is a great misfortune to its possessor, sir."
+
+"Can we deem that misfortune, Miss Barrington, which enlarges the
+charity of our natures, and teaches us to be slow to think ill?"
+
+Not paying the slightest attention to his question, she said,--
+
+"My brother went in search of you, sir, to place in your hands some
+very urgent letters from the Horse Guards, and which a special messenger
+brought here this morning."
+
+"Truly kind of him. They relate, I have no doubt, to my Indian
+appointment. They told me I should have news by to-day or to-morrow."
+
+"He received a letter also for himself, sir, which he desired to show
+you."
+
+"About his lawsuit, of course? It is alike a pleasure and a duty to me
+to serve him in that affair."
+
+"It more nearly concerns yourself, sir," said she, in the same cold,
+stern tone; "though it has certainly its bearing on the case you speak
+of."
+
+"More nearly concerns myself!" said he, repeating her words slowly. "I
+am about the worst guesser of a riddle in the world, Miss Barrington.
+Would you kindly relieve my curiosity? Is this letter a continuation of
+those cowardly attacks which, in the want of a worthier theme, the Press
+have amused themselves by making upon me? Is it possible that some enemy
+has had the malice to attack me through my friends?"
+
+"The writer of the letter in question is a sufficient guarantee for its
+honor, Mr. Withering."
+
+"Mr. Withering!" repeated he, with a start, and then, as suddenly
+assuming an easy smile, added: "I am perfectly tranquil to find myself
+in such hands as Mr. Withering's. And what, pray, does _he_ say of me?"
+
+"Will you excuse me, Major Stapylton, if I do not enter upon a subject
+on which I am not merely very imperfectly informed, but on which so
+humble a judgment as mine would be valueless? My brother showed me the
+letter very hurriedly; I had but time to see to what it referred, and to
+be aware that it was his duty to let you see it at once,--if possible,
+indeed, before you were again under his roof."
+
+"What a grave significance your words have, Miss Barrington!" said he,
+with a cold smile. "They actually set me to think over all my faults and
+failings, and wonder for which of them I am now arraigned."
+
+"We do not profess to judge you, sir."
+
+By this time they had sauntered up to the little garden in front of
+the cottage, within the paling of which Josephine was busily engaged
+in training a japonica. She arose as she heard the voices, and in her
+accustomed tone wished Stapylton good-evening. "_She_, at least, has
+heard nothing of all this," muttered he to himself, as he saluted
+her. He then opened the little wicket; and Miss Barrington passed
+in, acknowledging his attention by a short nod, as she walked hastily
+forward and entered the cottage. Instead of following her, Stapylton
+closed the wicket again, remaining on the outside, and leaning his arm
+on the upper rail.
+
+"Why do you perform sentry? Are you not free to enter the fortress?"
+said Fifine.
+
+"I half suspect not," said he, in a low tone, and to hear which she was
+obliged to draw nigher to where he stood.
+
+"What do you mean? I don't understand you!"
+
+"No great wonder, for I don't understand myself. Your aunt has, however,
+in her own most mysterious way, given me to believe that somebody has
+written something about me to somebody else, and until I clear up what
+in all probability I shall never hear, that I had better keep to what
+the Scotch call the 'back o' the gate.'"
+
+"This is quite unintelligible."
+
+"I hope it is, for it is almost unendurable. I am sorely afraid," added
+he, after a minute, "that I am not so patient as I ought to be under
+Miss Barrington's strictures. I am so much more in the habit of command
+than of obedience, that I may forget myself now and then. To _you_,
+however, I am ready to submit all my past life and conduct. By you I am
+willing to be judged. If these cruel calumnies which are going the round
+of the papers on me have lowered me in your estimation, my case is a
+lost one; but if, as I love to think, your woman's heart resents an
+injustice,--if, taking counsel of your courage and your generosity,
+you feel it is not the time to withdraw esteem when the dark hour of
+adversity looms over a man,--then, I care no more for these slanders
+than for the veriest trifles which cross one's every-day life. In one
+word,--your verdict is life or death to me."
+
+"In that case," said she, with an effort to dispel the seriousness of
+his manner, "I must have time to consider my sentence."
+
+"But that is exactly what you cannot have, Josephine," said he; and
+there was a certain earnestness in his voice and look, which made her
+hear him call her by her name without any sense of being off ended.
+"First relieve the suffering; there will be ample leisure to question
+the sufferer afterwards. The Good Samaritan wasted few words, and asked
+for no time. The noblest services are those of which the cost is never
+calculated. Your own heart can tell you: can you befriend me, and will
+you?"
+
+"I do not know what it is you ask of me," said she, with a frank
+boldness which actually disconcerted him. "Tell me distinctly, what is
+it?"
+
+"I will tell you," said he, taking her hand, but so gently, so
+respectfully withal, that she did not at first withdraw it,--"I will
+tell you. It is that you will share that fate on which fortune is now
+frowning; that you will add your own high-couraged heart to that of one
+who never knew a fear till now; that you will accept my lot in this the
+day of my reverse, and enable me to turn upon my pursuers and scatter
+them. To-morrow or next day will be too late. It is now, at this hour,
+that friends hold back, that one more than friend is needed. Can you be
+that, Josephine?"
+
+"No!" said she, firmly. "If I read your meaning aright, I cannot."
+
+"You cannot love me, Josephine," said he, in a voice of intense emotion;
+and though he waited some time for her to speak, she was silent. "It
+is true, then," said he, passionately, "the slanderers have done their
+work!"
+
+"I know nothing of these calumnies. When my grandfather told me that
+they accused you falsely, and condemned you unfairly, I believed him.
+I am as ready as ever to say so. I do not understand your cause; but I
+believe you to be a true and gallant gentleman!"
+
+"But yet, not one to love!" whispered he, faintly.
+
+Again she was silent, and for some time he did not speak.
+
+"A true and gallant gentleman!" said he, slowly repeating her own words;
+"and if so, is it an unsafe keeping to which to intrust your happiness?
+It is no graceful task to have oneself for a theme; but I cannot help
+it. I have no witnesses to call to character; a few brief lines in an
+army list, and some scars--old reminders of French sabres--are poor
+certificates, and yet I have no others."
+
+There was something which touched her in the sadness of his tone as he
+said these words, and if she knew how, she would have spoken to him in
+kindliness. He mistook the struggle for a change of purpose, and with
+greater eagerness continued: "After all I am scarcely more alone in the
+world than you are! The dear friends who now surround you cannot be long
+spared, and what isolation will be your fate then! Think of this, and
+think, too, how, in assuring your own future, you rescue mine."
+
+Very differently from his former speech did the present affect her;
+and her cheeks glowed and her eyes flashed as she said, "I have never
+intrusted my fate to your keeping, sir; and you may spare yourself all
+anxiety about it."
+
+"You mistake me. You wrong me, Josephine--"
+
+"You wrong yourself when you call me by my Christian name; and you arm
+me with distrust of one who would presume upon an interest he has not
+created."
+
+"You refuse me, then?" said he, slowly and calmly.
+
+"Once, and forever!"
+
+"It may be that you are mistaken, Miss Barrington. It may be that this
+other affection, which you prefer to mine, is but the sickly sentiment
+of a foolish boy, whose life up to this has not given one single
+guarantee, nor shown one single trait of those which make 'true and
+gallant gentlemen.' But you have made your choice."
+
+"I have," said she, with a low but firm voice.
+
+"You acknowledge, then, that I was right," cried he, suddenly; "there is
+a prior attachment? Your heart is not your own to give?"
+
+"And by what right do you presume to question me? Who are you, that
+dares to do this?"
+
+"Who am I?" cried he, and for once his voice rose to the discordant ring
+of passion.
+
+"Yes, that was my question," repeated she, firmly.
+
+"So, then, you have had your lesson, young lady," said he; and the words
+came from him with a hissing sound, that indicated intense anger. "Who
+am I? You want my birth, my parentage, my bringing up! Had you no friend
+who could have asked this in your stead? Or were all those around you
+so bereft of courage that they deputed to a young girl what should have
+been the office of a man?"
+
+Though the savage earnestness of his manner startled, it did not
+affright her; and it was with a cold quietness she said, "If you had
+known my father, Major Stapylton, I suspect you would not have accused
+his daughter of cowardice!"
+
+"Was he so very terrible?" said he, with a smile that was half a sneer.
+
+"He would have been, to a man like you."
+
+"To a man like me,--a man like me! Do you know, young lady, that either
+your words are very idle words or very offensive ones?"
+
+"And yet I have no wish to recall them, sir."
+
+"It would be better you could find some one to sustain them.
+Unfortunately, however, you cannot ask that gallant gentleman we were
+just talking of; for it is only the other day, and after passing over
+to Calais to meet me, his friends pretend that there is some obstacle
+to our meeting. I owe my tailor or my bootmaker something; or I have
+not paid my subscription to a club; or I have left an unsettled bill ar
+Baden. I really forget the precise pretext; but it was one which to them
+seemed quite sufficient to balk me of a redress, and at the same time to
+shelter their friend."
+
+"I will not believe one word of it, sir!"
+
+"Well, we have at least arrived at a perfect frankness in our
+intercourse. May I ask you, young lady, which of your relatives has
+suggested your present course! Is it to your aunt or to your grandfather
+I must go for an explanation?"
+
+"I suspect it is to me, Major Stapylton," said Barrington, as he came
+from behind Josephine. "It is to me you must address yourself. Fifine,
+my dear, your aunt is looking for you; go and tell her, too, that I am
+quite ready for tea, and you will find me here when it is ready. Major
+Stapylton and I will take a stroll along the river-side." Now this last
+was less an invitation than a sort of significant hint to Stapylton that
+his host had no intention to ask him to cross his threshold, at least
+for the present; and, indeed, as Barrington passed out and closed the
+wicket after him, he seemed as though closing the entrance forever.
+
+With a manner far more assured thau his wont, Barrington said: "I have
+been in pursuit of you, Major Stapylton, since four o'clock. I missed
+you by having taken the road instead of the river; and am much grieved
+that the communication I have to make you should not take place anywhere
+rather than near my roof or within my own gates."
+
+"I am to suppose from your words, sir, that what you are about to say
+can scarcely be said to a friend; and if so, cannot you hit upon a more
+convenient mode of making your communication?"
+
+"I think not. I believe that I shall be dealing more fairly with you by
+saying what I have to say in person."
+
+"Go on," said Stapylton, calmly, as the other paused.
+
+"You are aware," continued Barrington, "that the chief obstacle to a
+settlement of the claims I have long preferred against the India Company
+has been a certain document which they possess, declaring that a
+large portion of the territory held by the Rajah of Luckerabad was not
+amenable to the laws that regulate succession, being what is called
+'Lurkar-teea,'--conquered country,--over which, under no circumstances,
+could the Rajah exercise prospective rights. To this deed, for their
+better protection, the Company obtained the signature and seal of the
+Rajah himself, by means which, of course, we could never discover; but
+they held it, and always declared that no portion of my son's claim
+could extend to these lands. Now, as they denied that he could
+succeed to what are called the 'Turban lands,' meaning the right of
+sovereignty--being a British subject--on the one hand, and rejected
+his claim to these conquered countries on the other,--they excluded him
+altogether."
+
+"My dear sir," said Stapylton, mildly, "I'm shocked to interrupt you,
+but I am forced to ask, what is the intimate bearing of all this upon
+me, or on your position towards me?"
+
+"Have a little patience, sir, and suffer me to proceed. If it should
+turn out that this document--I mean that which bears the signature and
+seal of the Rajah--should be a forgery; if, I say, it could be shown
+that what the India Board have long relied on to sustain their case and
+corroborate their own view could be proved false, a great point would be
+gained towards the establishment of our claim."
+
+"Doubtless," said Stapylton, with the half-peevish indifference of one
+listening against his will.
+
+"Well, there is a good prospect of this," said Barring-ton, boldly.
+"Nay, more, it is a certainty."
+
+"Mr. Barrington," said Stapylton, drawing himself haughtily up, "a few
+hours ago this history would have had a very great interest for me. My
+hopes pointed to a very close relationship with your family; the last
+hour has sufficed to dispel those hopes. Your granddaughter has rejected
+me so decidedly that I cannot presume to suppose a change in her opinion
+possible. Let me not then, obtain any share in your confidence to which
+I have no right whatever."
+
+"What I am about to say will have more interest for you, sir," continued
+Barrington. "I am about to mention a name that you will recognize,--the
+Moonshee, Ali Gohur."
+
+Stapylton started, and dropped the cigar he was smoking. To take out
+another and light it, however, sufficed to employ him, as he murmured
+between his teeth, "Go on."
+
+"This man says--" continued Barrington.
+
+"Said, perhaps, if you like," broke in Stapylton, "for he died some
+months ago."
+
+"No; he is alive at this hour. He was on board the Indiaman that was run
+down by the transport. He was saved and carried on board the 'Regulus'
+by the intrepidity of young Dill. He is now recovering rapidly from the
+injuries he received, and at the date of the letter which I hold here,
+was able to be in daily communication with Colonel Hunter, who is the
+writer of this."
+
+"I wish the gallant Colonel honester company. Are you aware, Mr.
+Barrington, that you are speaking of one of the greatest rascals of a
+country not famed for its integrity?"
+
+"He lays no claim to such for the past; but he would seem desirous to
+make some reparation for a long course of iniquity."
+
+"Charmed for his sake, and that of his well-wishers, if he have any.
+But, once again, sir, and at all the risk of appearing very impatient,
+what concern has all this for me?"
+
+"A great deal, sir. The Moonshee declares that he has been for years
+back in close correspondence with a man we long since believed dead,
+and that this man was known to have communicated constantly with the
+law advisers of the India Board in a manner adverse to us, he being
+none other than the son of the notorious Sam Edwardes, whom he always
+addressed under cover to Captain Horace Stapylton, Prince's Hussars."
+
+"This is--strange enough, when one thinks of the quarter it comes
+from--perfectly true. I came to know Edwardes when on my voyage home,
+invalided. He took immense trouble about me, nursed and tended me,
+and, in return, asked as a favor to have some letters he was expecting
+addressed to my care. I neither knew who he was, nor cared. He got
+his letters, and I suppose read them; but of their contents, I, it is
+needless to say, know nothing. I am speaking of a dozen years ago, or,
+at least, eight or ten, for since that time I have never heard of either
+Edwardes or his friend."
+
+"He tells a different story. He asserts that to his letters, forwarded
+to the same address up to the period of last March, he regularly
+received replies; but at last finding that the writer was disposed to
+get rid of him, he obtained means to circulate a report of his death,
+and sailed for Europe to prefer his claims, whatever they be, in
+person."
+
+"And if every word of this were true, Mr. Barrington, which I don't
+suspect it is, how, in the name of common sense, does it concern me? I
+don't suppose I ever took my own letters at a post-office twice in my
+life. My servant, who has lived with me fourteen years, may, for aught I
+know, have been bribed to abstract these letters on their arrival; they
+would be easily recognized by the very superscription. This is one way
+the thing might have been done. There may have been fifty more, for
+aught I know or care."
+
+"But you don't deny that you knew Edwardes, and had a close intimacy
+with him?--a circumstance which you never revealed to Withering or
+myself."
+
+"It is not at all improbable I may have known half a dozen of that name.
+It is by no means an uncommon one, not to say that I have a singularly
+infelicitous memory for people's names. But for the last time, sir, I
+must protest against this conversation going any further. You have taken
+upon you, I would hope without intending it, the tone of a French _Juge
+d'Instruction_ in the interrogation of a prisoner. You have questioned
+and cross-questioned me, asking how I can account for this, or explain
+that. Now, I am ready to concede a great deal to your position as my
+host, and to your years, but really I must entreat of you not to push my
+deference for these beyond the limits of the respect I owe myself. You
+very properly warned me at the opening of this conversation that it
+ought not to have the sanction of your roof-tree. I have only to beg
+that if it is to go any further, that it be conducted in such a shape
+as is usual between gentlemen who have an explanation to ask, or a
+satisfaction to demand."
+
+There was consummate craft in giving the discussion this turn. Stapylton
+well knew the nature of the man he was addressing, and that after the
+passing allusion to his character as a host, he only needed to hint at
+the possibility of a meeting to recall him to a degree of respect only
+short of deference for his opponent.
+
+"I defer to you at once, Major Stapylton," said the old man, with a
+bland courtesy, as he uncovered and bowed. "There was a time when I
+should scarcely have required the admonition you have given me."
+
+"I am glad to perceive that you understand me so readily," said
+Stapylton, who could scarcely repress the joy he felt at the success of
+his diversion; "and that nothing may mar our future understanding, this
+is my address in London, where I shall wait your orders for a week."
+
+Though the stroke was shrewdly intended, and meant to throw upon
+Barrington all the onus of the provocation, the Major little suspected
+that it was the one solitary subject of which his opponent was a master.
+On the "duello" Barrington was an authority beyond appeal, and no
+subtlety, however well contrived, could embarrass or involve him.
+
+"I have no satisfaction to claim at your hands, Major Stapylton," said
+he, calmly. "My friend, Mr. Withering, when he sent me these letters,
+knew you were my guest, and he said, 'Read them to Major Stapylton. Let
+him know what is said of him, and who says it.'"
+
+"And, perhaps, you ought to add, sir, who gives it the sanction of his
+belief," broke in Stapylton, angrily. "You never took the trouble to
+recite these charges till they obtained your credence."
+
+"You have said nothing to disprove them," said the old man, quickly.
+
+"That is enough,--quite enough, sir; we understand each other perfectly.
+You allege certain things against me as injuries done you, and you wait
+for _me_ to resent the imputation. I 'll not balk you, be assured of it.
+The address I have given you in London will enable you to communicate
+with me when you arrive there; for I presume this matter had better be
+settled in France or Holland."
+
+"I think so," said Barrington, with the air of a man thoroughly at his
+ease.
+
+"I need not say, Mr. Barrington, the regret it gives me that it was not
+one of my detractors himself, and not their dupe, that should occupy
+this place."
+
+"The dupe, sir, is very much at your service."
+
+"Till we meet again," said Stapylton, raising his hat as he turned away.
+In his haste and the confusion of the moment, he took the path that
+led towards the cottage; nor did he discover his mistake till he heard
+Barrington's voice calling out to Darby,--
+
+"Get the boat ready to take Major Stapylton to Inistioge."
+
+"You forget none of the precepts of hospitality," said Stapylton,
+wheeling hastily around, and directing his steps towards the river.
+
+Barrington looked after him as he went, and probably in his long and
+varied life, crossed with many a care and many troubles, he had never
+felt the pain of such severe self-reproach as in that moment. To see his
+guest, the man who had sat at his board and eaten his salt, going out
+into the dreary night without one hospitable effort to detain him,
+without a pledge to his health, without a warm shake of his hand, or one
+hearty wish for his return.
+
+"Dear, dear!" muttered he, to himself, "what is the world come to! I
+thought I had no more experiences to learn of suffering; but here is
+a new one. Who would have thought to see the day that Peter Barrington
+would treat his guest this fashion?"
+
+"Are you coming in to tea, grandpapa?" cried Josephine, from the garden.
+
+"Here I am, my dear!"
+
+"And your guest, Peter, what has become of him?" said Dinah.
+
+"He had some very urgent business at Kilkenny; something that could not
+admit of delay, I opine."
+
+"But you have not let him go without his letters, surely. Here are all
+these formidable-looking despatches, on his Majesty's service, on the
+chimney-piece."
+
+"How forgetful of me!" cried he, as, snatching them up, he hastened down
+to the river-side. The boat, however, had just gone; and although he
+shouted and called at the top of his voice, no answer came, and he
+turned back at last, vexed and disappointed.
+
+"I shall have to start for Dublin to-morrow, Dinah," said he, as he
+walked thoughtfully up and down the room. "I must have Withering's
+advice on these letters. There are very pressing matters to be thought
+of here, and I can take Major Stapylton's despatches with me. I am
+certain to hear of him somewhere."
+
+Miss Barrington turned her eyes full upon him, and watched him narrowly.
+She was a keen detector of motives, and she scanned her brother's
+face with no common keenness, and yet she could see nothing beyond the
+preoccupation she had often seen. There was no impatience, no anxiety. A
+shade more thoughtful, perhaps, and even that passed off, as he sat down
+to his tea, and asked Fifine what commissions she had for the capital.
+
+"You will leave by the evening mail, I suppose?" said Miss Barrington.
+
+"No, Dinah, night travelling wearies me. I will take the coach as it
+passes the gate to-morrow at five; this will bring me in time to catch
+Withering at his late dinner, and a pleasanter way to finish a day's
+travel no man need ask for."
+
+Nothing could be more easily spoken than these words, and Miss Dinah
+felt reassured by them, and left the room to give some orders about his
+journey.
+
+"Fifine, darling," said Barrington, after a pause, "do you like your
+life here?"
+
+"Of course I do, grandpapa. How could I wish for one more happy?"
+
+"But it is somewhat dull for one so young,--somewhat solitary for a
+fair, bright creature, who might reasonably enough care for pleasure and
+the world."
+
+"To me it is a round of gayety, grandpapa; so that I almost felt
+inclined yesterday to wish for some quiet davs with aunt and
+yourself,--some of those dreamy days like what we had in Germany."
+
+"I fear me much, darling, that I contribute but little to the pleasure.
+My head is so full of one care or another, I am but sorry company,
+Fifine."
+
+"If you only knew how dull we are without you! How heavily the day drags
+on even with the occupations you take no share in; how we miss your
+steps on the stairs and your voice in the garden, and that merry laugh
+that sets ourselves a-laughing just by its own ring."
+
+"And you would miss me, then?" said he, as he pushed the hair from her
+temples, and stared steadfastly at her face,--"you would miss me?"
+
+"It would only be half life without you," cried she, passionately.
+
+"So much the worse,--so much the worse!" muttered he; and he turned
+away, and drew his hand across his eyes. "This life of ours, Fifine, is
+a huge battle-field; and though the comrades fall fast around him, the
+brave soldier will fight on to the last."
+
+"You don't want a dress-coat, brother Peter, to dine with Withering,
+so I have just put up what will serve you for three days, or four, at
+furthest," said Dinah, entering. "What will be the extent of your stay?"
+
+"Let me have a black coat, Dinah; there 's no saying what great man may
+not ask for my company; and it might be a week before I get back again."
+
+"There's no necessity it should be anything of the kind, Peter; and with
+your habits an hotel life is scarcely an economy. Come, Fifine, get to
+bed, child. You'll have to be up at daybreak. Your grandpapa won't think
+his coffee drinkable, if it is not made by your hands."
+
+And with this remark, beautifully balanced between a reproof and
+a flattery, she proceeded to blow out the candles, which was her
+accustomed mode of sending her company to their rooms.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV. THE OLD LEAVEN
+
+Withering arrived at his own door just as Barrington drove up to it. "I
+knew my letter would bring you up to town, Barrington," said he; "and I
+was so sure of it that I ordered a saddle of mutton for your dinner, and
+refused an invitation to the Chancellor's."
+
+"And quite right too. Iam far better company, Tom. Are we to be all
+alone?"
+
+"All alone."
+
+"That was exactly what I wanted. Now, as I need a long evening with you,
+the sooner they serve the soup the better; and be sure you give your
+orders that nobody be admitted."
+
+If Mr. Withering's venerable butler, an official long versed in the
+mysteries of his office, were to have been questioned on the subject,
+it is not improbable he would have declared that he never assisted at a
+pleasanter tete-a tete than that day's dinner. They enjoyed their good
+dinner and their good wine like men who bring to the enjoyment a ripe
+experience of such pleasures, and they talked with the rare zest of good
+talkers and old friends.
+
+"We are in favor with Nicholas," said Withering, as the butler withdrew,
+and left them alone, "or he would never have given us that bottle of
+port. Do you mark, Barrington, it's the green seal that John Bushe
+begged so hard for one night, and all unsuccessfully."
+
+"It is rare stuff!" said Barrington, looking at it between him and the
+light.
+
+"And it was that story of yours of the Kerry election that won it. The
+old fellow had to rush out of the room to have his laugh out."
+
+"Do you know, Tom," said Barrington, as he sipped his wine, "I believe,
+in another generation, nobody will laugh at all. Since you and I were
+boys, the world has taken a very serious turn. Not that it is much
+wiser, or better, or more moral, or more cultivated, but it is graver.
+The old jollity would be now set down simply for vulgarity, and with
+many people a joke is only short of an insult."
+
+"Shall I tell you why, Peter? We got our reputation for wit, just as we
+made our name for manufacture, and there sprung up a mass of impostors
+in consequence,--fellows who made poor jokes and rotten calicoes, that
+so disgusted the world that people have gone to France for their fun,
+and to Germany for their furniture. That is, to my taking, the reason of
+all this social reaction."
+
+"Perhaps you are right, Tom. Old Joe Millers are not unlike cloth made
+out of devil's dust. One can't expect much wear out of either."
+
+"We must secure another bottle from that bin before Nicholas changes his
+mind," said Withering, rising to ring the bell.
+
+"No, Tom, not for me. I want all the calm and all the judgment I can
+muster, and don't ask me to take more wine. I have much to say to you."
+
+"Of course you have. I knew well that packet of letters would bring you
+up to town; but you have had scarcely time to read them."
+
+"Very hurriedly, I confess. They reached me yesterday afternoon; and
+when I had run my eyes hastily over them, I said, 'Stapylton must see
+this at once.' The man was my guest,--he was under my roof,--there could
+not be a question about how to deal with him. He was out, however, when
+the packet reached my hands; and while the pony was being harnessed, I
+took another look over that letter from Colonel Hunter. It shocked
+me, Tom, I confess; because there flashed upon me quite suddenly the
+recollection of the promptitude with which the India Board at home here
+were provided with an answer to each demand we made. It was not merely
+that when we advanced a step they met us; but we could scarcely meditate
+a move that they were not in activity to repel it."
+
+"I saw that, too, and was struck by it," said Withering.
+
+"True enough, Tom. I remember a remark of yours one day. 'These people,'
+said you, 'have our range so accurately, one would suspect they
+had stepped the ground.'" The lawyer smiled at the compliment to
+his acuteness, and the other went on: "As I read further, I thought
+Stapylton had been betrayed,--his correspondent in India had shown
+his letters. 'Our enemies,' said I, 'have seen our despatches, and are
+playing with our cards on the table.' No thought of distrust,--not a
+suspicion against his loyalty had ever crossed me till I met him. I came
+unexpectedly upon him, however, before the door, and there was a ring
+and resonance in his voice as I came up that startled me! Passion
+forgets to shut the door sometimes, and one can see in an angry mind
+what you never suspected in the calm one. I took him up at once, without
+suffering him to recover his composure, and read him a part of Hunter's
+letter. He was ready enough with his reply; he knew the Moonshee by
+reputation as a man of the worst character, but had suffered him to
+address certain letters under cover to him, as a convenience to the
+person they were meant for, and who was no other than the son of the
+notorious Sam Edwardes. 'Whom you have known all this while,' said I,
+'without ever acknowledging to us?'
+
+"'Whom I did know some years back,' replied he, 'but never thought of
+connecting with the name of Colonel Barrington's enemy.' All this was
+possible enough, Tom; besides, his manner was frank and open in
+the extreme. It was only at last, as I dwelt, what he deemed too
+pertinaciously, on this point, that he suddenly lost control of
+himself, and said, 'I will have no more of this'--or, 'This must go no
+further'--or some words to that effect."
+
+"Ha! the probe had touched the sore spot, eh?" cried Withering. "Go on!"
+
+"'And if you desire further explanations from me, you must ask for them
+at the price men pay for inflicting unmerited insult.'"
+
+"Cleverly turned, cleverly done," said Withering; "but you were not to
+be deceived and drawn off by that feint, eh?"
+
+"Feint or not, it succeeded, Tom. He made me feel that I had injured
+him; and as he would not accept of my excuses,--as, in fact, he did not
+give me time to make them--"
+
+"He got you into a quarrel, is n't that the truth?" asked Withering,
+hotly.
+
+"Come, come, Tom, be reasonable; he had perfect right on his side. There
+was what he felt as a very grave imputation upon him; that is, I had
+made a charge, and his explanation had not satisfied me,--or, at all
+events, I had not said I was satisfied,--and we each of us, I take it,
+were somewhat warmer than we need have been."
+
+"And you are going to meet him,--going to fight a duel?"
+
+"Well, if I am, it will not be the first time."
+
+"And can you tell for what? Will you be able to make any man of common
+intelligence understand for what you are going out?"
+
+"I hope so. I have the man in my eye. No, no, don't make a wry face,
+Tom. It's another old friend I was thinking of to help me through this
+affair, and I sincerely trust he will not be so hard to instruct as you
+imagine."
+
+"How old are you, Barrington?"
+
+"Dinah says eighty-one; but I suspect she cheats me. I think I am
+eighty-three."
+
+"And is it at eighty-three that men fight duels?"
+
+"' Not if they can help it, Tom, certainly. I have never been out since
+I shot Tom Connelly in the knee, which was a matter of forty years ago,
+and I had good hopes it was to be my last exploit of this kind. But what
+is to be done if a man tells you that your age is your protection; that
+if it had not been for your white hairs and your shaking ankles, that
+he 'd have resented your conduct or your words to him? Faith, I think it
+puts a fellow on his mettle to show that his heart is all right, though
+his hand may tremble."
+
+"I 'll not take any share in such a folly. I tell you, Barrington, the
+world for whom you are doing this will be the very first to scout its
+absurdity. Just remember for a moment we are not living in the old days
+before the Union, and we have not the right, if we had the power, to
+throw our age back into the barbarism it has escaped from."
+
+"Barbarism! The days of poor Yelverton, and Ponsonby, and Harry Grattan,
+and Parsons, and Ned Lysaght, barbarism! Ah! my dear Tom, I wish we had
+a few of such barbarians here now, and I 'd ask for another bottle or
+two of that port."
+
+"I'll not give it a milder word; and what's more, I'll not suffer you to
+tarnish a time-honored name by a folly which even a boy would be blamed
+for. My dear old friend, just grant me a little patience."
+
+"This is cool, certainly," said Barrington, laughing. "You have said all
+manner of outrageous things to me for half an hour unopposed, and now
+you cry have patience."
+
+"Give me your honor now that this shall not go further."
+
+"I cannot, Tom,--I assure you, I cannot."
+
+"What do you mean by 'you cannot'?" cried Withering, angrily.
+
+"I mean just what I said. If you had accepted a man's brief, Tom
+Withering, there is a professional etiquette which would prevent your
+giving it up and abandoning him; and so there are situations between
+men of the world which claim exactly as rigid an observance. I told
+Stapylton I would be at his orders, and I mean to keep my word."
+
+"Not if you had no right to pledge it; not if I can prove to you that
+this quarrel was a mere got-up altercation to turn you from an inquiry
+which this man dare not face."
+
+"This is too subtle for me, Withering,--far too subtle."
+
+"No such thing, Barrington; but I will make it plainer. How if the man
+you are going to meet had no right to the name he bears?"
+
+"What do I care for his name?"
+
+"Don't you care for the falsehood by which he has assumed one that is
+not his own?"
+
+"I may be sorry that he is not more clean-handed; but I tell you again,
+Tom, they never indulged such punctilios in our young days, and I 'm too
+old to go to school again!"
+
+"I declare, Barrington, you provoke me," said the lawyer, rising, and
+pacing the room with hasty strides. "After years and years of weary
+toil, almost disheartened by defeat and failure, we at last see the
+outline of land; a few more days--or it may be hours--of perseverance
+may accomplish our task. Since I arose this morning I have learned more
+of our case, seen my way more clearly through matters which have long
+puzzled me, than the cost of years has taught me. I have passed four
+hours with one who would give his life to serve you, but whose name
+I was not at liberty to divulge, save in the last necessity, and the
+reasons for which reserve I heartily concur in; and now, by a rash and
+foolish altercation, you would jeopardy everything. Do you wonder if I
+lose temper?"
+
+"You have got me into such a state of bewilderment, Tom, that I don't
+know what I am asked to agree to. But who is your friend,--is n't it a
+woman?"
+
+"It is not a woman."
+
+"I'd have bet five pounds it was! When as sharp a fellow as you takes
+the wrong line of country, it's generally a woman is leading the way
+over the fences."
+
+"This time your clever theory is at fault."
+
+"Well, who is it? Out with him, Tom. I have not so many stanch friends
+in the world that I can afford to ignore them."
+
+"I will tell you his name on one condition."
+
+"I agree. What is the condition?"
+
+"It is this: that when you hear it you will dismiss from your
+mind--though it be only for a brief space--all the prejudices that years
+may have heaped against him, and suffer me to show you that _you_, with
+all your belief in your own fairness, are not just; and with a firm
+conviction in your own generosity, might be more generous. There 's my
+condition!"
+
+"Well, it must be owned I am going to pay pretty smartly for my
+information," said Barrington, laughing. "And if you are about to
+preach to me, it will not be a 'charity' sermon; but, as I said before,
+I agree to everything."
+
+Withering stopped his walk and resumed it again. It was evident he had
+not satisfied himself how he should proceed, and he looked agitated and
+undecided. "Barrington," said he, at last, "you have had about as many
+reverses in life as most men, and must have met with fully your share of
+ingratitude and its treatment. Do you feel, now, in looking back, that
+there are certain fellows you cannot forgive?"
+
+"One or two, perhaps, push me harder than the rest; but if I have no
+gout flying about me, I don't think I bear them any malice."
+
+"Well, you have no gouty symptoms now, I take it?"
+
+"Never felt better for the last twenty years."
+
+"That is as it should be; for I want to talk to you of a man who, in all
+our friendship, you have never mentioned to me, but whose name I know
+will open an old wound,--Ormsby Conyers."
+
+Barrington laid down the glass he was lifting to his lips, and covered
+his face with both his hands, nor for some moments did he speak a word.
+"Withering," said he, and his voice trembled as he spoke, "even your
+friendship has scarcely the right to go this far. The injury the man you
+speak of did me meets me every morning as I open my eyes, and my first
+prayer each day is that I may forgive him, for every now and then, as my
+lone lot in life comes strongly before me, I have need to pray for this;
+but I have succeeded at last,--I have forgiven him from my heart; but,
+dear friend, let us not talk of what tears open wounds that bleed afresh
+at a touch. I beseech you, let all that be a bygone."
+
+"That is more than I can do, Barrington; for it is not to me you must
+acknowledge you have forgiven this man,--you must tell it to himself."
+
+"That is not needed, Tom. Thousands of long miles separate us, and will
+in all likelihood separate us to the last. What does he want with my
+forgiveness, which is less a question between him and me than between me
+and my own heart?"
+
+"And yet it is what he most desires on earth; he told me so within an
+hour!"
+
+"Told you so,--and within an hour?"
+
+"Yes, Barrington, he is here. Not in the house," added he, hastily,
+for the suddenness of the announcement had startled the old man, and
+agitated him greatly. "Be calm, my dear friend," said Withering, laying
+a hand on the other's shoulder. "He who is now come to claim your
+forgiveness has never injured you to the extent you believe. He asks it
+as the last tribute to one he loved only less than you loved him. He has
+told me everything; never sparing himself, nor seeking by any subtlety
+to excuse a particle of his conduct. Let me tell you that story as I
+heard it. It will be some solace to you to know that your noble-hearted
+son inspired a friendship which, after the long lapse of years, extracts
+such an atonement as one act of disloyalty to it could demand. This
+was Ormsby Conyers's one and only treason to the love that bound them.
+Listen to it!"
+
+Barrington tried to speak, but could not; so he nodded an assent, and
+Withering continued. His story was that which the reader has already
+heard from the lips of Conyers himself, and the old lawyer told it well.
+If he did not attempt to extenuate the offence and wrong of Conyers, he
+showed the power and strength of an affection which could make one of
+the haughtiest of men come forward to accuse himself, and at every cost
+of humiliation vindicate the noble nature of his friend.
+
+"And why not have avowed all this before?--why not have spared himself
+years of self-accusing, and me years of aggravated misery?" cried
+Barrington.
+
+"He did make the attempt. He came to England about eighteen years ago,
+and his first care was to write to you. He asked to be allowed to see
+you, and sent you at the same time an admission that he had injured you,
+and was come to seek your forgiveness."
+
+"That's true, Tom; all strictly true. I remember all about it. His
+letter was such a one as an enemy might have used to crush him. My own
+temper at the time was not to be trusted too far; sorrow was making
+me cruel, and might make me vindictive; so I sent it back to him, and
+hinted it was safer in _his_ hands than _mine_."
+
+"And he has never forgotten your generosity. He said, 'It was what well
+became the father of George Barrington. '"
+
+"If he is here in this city, now, let me see him. Remember, Withering,
+when a man comes to my age his time is short. Cannot we go to him at
+once?"
+
+"Not feeling certain of your coming up to town to-day, I had arranged
+with Conyers to start for 'The Home' tomorrow; we were to await the post
+hour, and, if no letter came from you, to leave at ten o'clock. I was
+to take him up at Elvidge's Hotel. What say you if I drive him down to
+Reynolds's? You stop there, I know."
+
+"With all my heart, Tom. I am fully as impatient as he can be to sign
+and seal our reconciliation. Indeed, I feel myself already less sinned
+against than sinning; and an act of forgiveness is only an exchange of
+prisoners between us. If you knew how young I feel again at all this,
+Withering," said he, grasping his friend's hand. "What a happiness to
+know that poor George's memory is so revered that one who has failed
+towards him in fidelity should come to expiate the wrong thus openly! My
+fine noble-hearted boy deserved this tribute! And he told you how they
+loved each other; in what a brotherhood they lived; and what a glorious
+fellow George was? Did he tell you of his gentleness?--womanly softness
+it was, Tom. A careless observer might have said there was no stuff in
+him to make a soldier, and yet where was there his equal? You heard what
+he did at Naghapoor and Meerutan, where he held a mountain-pass with
+three squadrons against a whole army corps, and never owned to being
+wounded till he fell fainting from his horse on the retreat. Oh, let me
+not speak of these things, or my heart will burst I must leave you, old
+friend; this agitation will unfit me for much that is before me; let me
+go, I beseech you, and when you see me to-morrow, you 'll find I am all
+myself again."
+
+It was in silence they grasped each other's hand, and parted.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI. A HAPPY MEETING
+
+Barrington scarcely closed his eyes that night after he had parted with
+Withering, so full was he of thinking over all he had heard. "It was,"
+as he repeated to himself over and over again, "'such glorious news' to
+hear that it was no long-laid plot, no dark treachery, had brought poor
+George to his grave, and that the trusted friend had not turned out a
+secret enemy. How prone we are," thought he, "to suffer our suspicions
+to grow into convictions, just by the mere force of time. Conyers was
+neither better nor worse than scores of young fellows entering on life,
+undisciplined in self-restraint, and untutored by converse with the
+world; and in his sorrow and repentance he is far and away above most
+men. It was fine of him to come thus, and become his own accuser, rather
+than suffer a shade of reproach to rest upon the fame of his friend. And
+this reparation he would have made years ago, but for my impatience. It
+was I that would not listen,--would not admit it.
+
+"I believe in my heart, then, this confession has a higher value for
+me than would the gain of our great suit. It is such a testimony to my
+brave boy as but one man living could offer. It is a declaration to the
+world that says, 'Here am I, high in station, covered with dignities
+and rich in rewards; yet there was a man whose fate has never interested
+you, over whose fall you never sorrowed; hundreds of times my superior.'
+What a reward is this for all my life of toil and struggle,--what a
+glorious victory, when the battle looked so doubtful! People will see at
+last it is not an old man's phantasy; it is not the headlong affection
+of a father for his son has made me pursue this reparation for him here.
+There is a witness 'come to judgment,' who will tell them what George
+Barrington was; how noble as a man, how glorious as a soldier."
+
+While the old man revelled in the happiness of these thoughts, so
+absorbed was he by them that he utterly forgot the immediate object
+which had occasioned his journey,--forgot Stapylton and the meeting, and
+all that had led to it. Thus passed the hours of the night; and as the
+day broke, he arose, impatient to actual feverishness for the coming
+interview. He tried by some occupation to fill up the time. He sat down
+to write to his sister an account of all Withering had told him, leaving
+the rest to be added after the meeting; but he found, as he read it
+over, that after the mention of George's name, nothing dropped from
+his pen but praises of him. It was all about his generosity, his
+open-heartedness, and his bravery. "This would seem downright
+extravagant," said he, as he crushed the paper in his hand, "till she
+hears it from the lips of Conyers himself." He began another letter, but
+somehow again he glided into the self-same channel.
+
+"This will never do," said he; "there's nothing for it but a brisk
+walk." So saying he sallied out into the deserted streets, for few
+were about at that early hour. Barrington turned his steps towards the
+country, and soon gained one of those shady alleys which lead towards
+Finglas. It was a neighborhood he had once known well, and a favorite
+resort of those pleasant fellows who thought they compensated for a hard
+night at Daly's by sipping syllabub of a morning on a dewy meadow. He
+once had rented a little cottage there; a fancy of poor George's it
+was, that there were some trout in the stream beside it; and Barrington
+strolled along till he came to a little mound, from which he could see
+the place, sadly changed and dilapidated since he knew it. Instead of
+the rustic bridge that crossed the river, a single plank now spanned the
+stream, and in the disorder and neglect of all around, it was easy to
+see it had fallen to the lot of a peasant to live in it. As
+Barrington was about to turn away, he saw an old man--unmistakably a
+gentleman--ascending the hill, with a short telescope in his hand.
+As the path was a narrow one, he waited, therefore, for the other's
+arrival, before he began to descend himself. With a politeness which in
+his younger days Irish gentlemen derived from intercourse with France,
+Barring-ton touched his hat as he passed the stranger, and the other, as
+if encouraged by the show of courtesy, smiled as he returned the salute,
+and said,--
+
+"Might I take the liberty to ask you if you are acquainted with this
+locality?"
+
+"Few know it better, or, at least, knew it once," said Barrington.
+
+"It was the classic ground of Ireland in days past," said the stranger.
+"I have heard that Swift lived here."
+
+"Yes; but you cannot see his house from this. It was nearer to Santry,
+where you see that wood yonder. There was, however, a celebrity once
+inhabited that small cottage before us. It was the home of Parnell."
+
+"Is that Parnell's cottage?" asked the stranger, with eagerness; "that
+ruined spot, yonder?"
+
+"Yes. It was there he wrote some of his best poems. I knew the room well
+he lived in."
+
+"How I would like to see it!" cried the other.
+
+"You are an admirer of Parnell, then?" said Barrington, with a smile of
+courteous meaning.
+
+"I will own to you, sir, it was less of Parnell I was thinking than of
+a dear friend who once talked to me of that cottage. He had lived there,
+and cherished the memory of that life when far away from it; and so
+well had he described every walk and path around it, each winding of the
+river, and every shady nook, that I had hoped to recognize it without a
+guide."
+
+"Ah, it is sadly changed of late. Your friend had not probably seen it
+for some years?"
+
+"Let me see. It was in a memorable year he told me he lived there,--when
+some great demonstration was made by the Irish volunteers, with the
+Bishop of Down at their head. The Bishop dined there on that day."
+
+"The Earl of Bristol dined that day with me, there," said Barrington,
+pointing to the cottage.
+
+"May I ask with whom I have the honor to speak, sir?" said the stranger,
+bowing.
+
+"Was it George Barrington told you this?" said the old man, trembling
+with eagerness: "was it he who lived here? I may ask, sir, for I am his
+father!"
+
+"And I am Ormsby Conyers," said the other; and his face became pale, and
+his knees trembled as he said it.
+
+"Give me your hand, Conyers," cried Barrington,--"the hand that my dear
+boy has so often pressed in friendship. I know all that you were to each
+other, all that you would be to his memory."
+
+"Can you forgive me?" said Conyers.
+
+"I have, for many a year. I forgave you when I thought you had been his
+enemy. I now know you had only been your own to sacrifice such love,
+such affection as he bore you."
+
+"I never loved him more than I have hated myself for my conduct towards
+him."
+
+"Let us talk of George,--he loved us both," said Barrington, who still
+held Conyers by the hand. "It is a theme none but yourself can rival me
+in interest for."
+
+It was not easy for Conyers to attain that calm which could enable him
+to answer the other's questions; but by degrees he grew to talk freely,
+assisted a good deal by the likeness of the old man to his son,--a
+resemblance in manner even as much as look,--and thus, before they
+reached town again, they had become like familiar friends.
+
+Barrington could never hear enough of George; even of the incidents he
+had heard of by letter, he liked to listen to the details again, and to
+mark how all the traits of that dear boy had been appreciated by others.
+
+"I must keep you my prisoner," said Barrington, as they gained the door
+of his hotel. "The thirst I have is not easily slaked; remember that for
+more than thirty years I have had none to talk to me of my boy! I know
+all about your appointment with Withering; he was to have brought you
+here this morning to see me, and my old friend will rejoice when he
+comes and finds us here together."
+
+"He was certain you would come up to town," said Conyers, "when you got
+his letters. You would see at once that there were matters which should
+be promptly dealt with; and he said, 'Barrington will be my guest at
+dinner to-morrow.'"
+
+"Eh?--how?--what was it all about? George has driven all else out of my
+head, and I declare to you that I have not the very vaguest recollection
+of what Wither-ing's letters contained. Wait a moment; a light is
+breaking on me. I do remember something of it all now. To be sure! What
+a head I have! It was all about Stapylton. By the way, General, how you
+would have laughed had you heard the dressing Withering gave me last
+night, when I told him I was going to give Stapylton a meeting."
+
+"A hostile meeting?"
+
+"Well, if you like to give it that new-fangled name, General, which I
+assure you was not in vogue when I was a young man. Withering rated me
+soundly for the notion, reminded me of my white hairs and such other
+disqualifications, and asked me indignantly, 'What the world would say
+when they came to hear of it?' 'What would the world say if they heard
+I declined it, Tom?' was my answer. Would they not exclaim, 'Here is one
+of that fire-eating school who are always rebuking us for our laxity in
+matters of honor; look at him and say, are these the principles of his
+sect?'"
+
+Conyers shook his head dissentingly, and smiled.
+
+"No, no!" said Barrington, replying to the other's look, "you are
+just of my own mind! A man who believes you to have injured him claims
+reparation as a matter of right. I could not say to Stapylton, 'I will
+not meet you!'"
+
+"I _did_ say so, and that within a fortnight."
+
+"You said so, and under what provocation?"
+
+"He grossly insulted my son, who was his subaltern; he outraged him by
+offensive language, and he dared even to impugn his personal courage. It
+was in one of those late riots where the military were called out; and
+my boy, intrusted with the duty of dispersing an assemblage, stopped
+to remonstrate where he might have charged, and actually relieved
+the misery he had his orders to have trampled under the feet of
+his squadron. Major Stapylton could have reprimanded, he might have
+court-martialled him; he had no right to attempt to dishonor him. My son
+left the service,--I made him leave on the spot,--and we went over to
+France to meet this man. I sent for Proctor to be my boy's friend, and
+my letter found him at Sir Gilbert Stapylton's, at Hollowcliffe. To
+explain his hurried departure, Proctor told what called him away. 'And
+will you suffer your friend to meet that adventurer,' said Sir Gilbert,
+'who stole my nephew's name if he did not steal more?' To be brief, he
+told that this fellow had lived with Colonel Howard Stapylton, British
+Resident at Ghurtnapore, as a sort of humble private secretary. 'In
+the cholera that swept the district Howard died, and although his will,
+deposited at Calcutta, contained several legacies, the effects to redeem
+them were not to be discovered. Meanwhile this young fellow assumed the
+name of Stapylton, gave himself out for his heir, and even threatened
+to litigate some landed property in England with Howard's brother. An
+intimation that if he dared to put his menace in action a full inquiry
+into his conduct should be made, stopped him, and we heard no more of
+him,--at least, for a great many years. When an old Madras friend of
+Howard's who came down to spend his Christmas, said, "Who do you think
+I saw in town last week, but that young scamp Howard used to call his
+Kitmagar, and who goes by the name of Stapylton?" we were so indignant
+at first that we resolved on all manner of exposures; but learning that
+he had the reputation of a good officer, and had actually distinguished
+himself at Waterloo, we relented. Since that, other things have come to
+our knowledge to make us repent our lenity. In fact, he is an adventurer
+in its very worst sense, and has traded upon a certain amount of
+personal courage to cover a character of downright ignominy.' Proctor,
+on hearing all this, recalled me to England; and declared that he had
+traced enough to this man's charge to show he was one whom no gentleman
+could meet. It would appear that some recent discoveries had been made
+about him at the Horse Guards also; for when Proctor asked for a certain
+piece of information from one of his friends in office there, he heard,
+for answer, 'We hope to know that, and more, in a day or two.'"
+
+"Do you know that I 'm sorry for it,--heartily sorry?" said Barrington.
+"The fellow had that stamp of manliness about him that would seem the
+pledge of a bold, straightforward nature."
+
+"I have a high value for courage, but it won't do everything."
+
+"More 's the pity, for it renders all that it aids of tenfold more
+worth."
+
+"And on the back of all this discovery comes Hunter's letter, which
+Withering has sent you, to show that this Stapylton has for years
+back been supplying the Indian Directors with materials to oppose your
+claims."
+
+"Nothing ever puzzled us so much as the way every weak point of our
+case was at once seized upon, and every doubt we ourselves entertained
+exaggerated into an impassable barrier. Withering long suspected that
+some secret enemy was at work within our own lines, and repeatedly said
+that we were sold. The difficulty is, why this man should once have been
+our enemy, and now should strive so eagerly to be not alone our friend,
+but one of us. You have heard he proposed for my granddaughter?"
+
+"Fred suspected his intentions in that quarter, but we were not certain
+of them."
+
+"And it is time I should ask after your noble-hearted boy. How is he,
+and where?"
+
+"He is here, at my hotel, impatiently waiting your permission to go down
+to 'The Home.' He has a question to ask there, whose answer will be his
+destiny."
+
+"Has Josephine turned another head then?" said Barring-ton, laughing.
+
+"She has won a very honest heart; as true and as honorable a nature as
+ever lived," said Conyers, with emotion. "Your granddaughter does not
+know, nor needs ever to know, the wrong I have done her father; and if
+you have forgiven me, you will not remember it against my boy."
+
+"But what do you yourself say to all this? You have never seen the
+girl?"
+
+"Fred has."
+
+"You know nothing about her tastes, her temper, her bringing up."
+
+"Fred does."
+
+"Nor are you aware that the claim we have so long relied on is almost
+certain to be disallowed. I have scarcely a hope now remaining with
+regard to it."
+
+"I have more than I need; and if Fred will let me have a bungalow in his
+garden, I'll make it all over to him tomorrow."
+
+"It is then with your entire consent he would make this offer?"
+
+"With my whole heart in it! I shall never feel I have repaired the
+injury I have done George Barrington till I have called his daughter my
+own."
+
+Old Barrington arose, and walked up and down with slow and measured
+steps. At last he halted directly in front of General Conyers, and
+said,--
+
+"If you will do me one kindness, I will agree to everything. What am I
+saying? I agree already; and I would not make a bargain of my consent;
+but you will not refuse me a favor?"
+
+"Ask me anything, and I promise it on the faith of a gentleman."
+
+"It is this, then; that you will stand by me in this affair of
+Stapylton's. I have gone too far for subtleties or niceties. It is no
+question of who was his father, or what was his own bringing up. I have
+told him I should be at his orders, and don't let me break my word."
+
+"If you choose me for your friend, Barrington, you must not dictate how
+I am to act for you."
+
+"That is quite true; you are perfectly correct there," said the other,
+in some confusion.
+
+"On that condition, then, that I am free to do for you what I would
+agree to in my own case, I accept the charge."
+
+"And there is to be no humbug of consideration for my age and my white
+hairs; none of that nonsense about a fellow with one leg in the grave.
+Mark you, Conyers, I will stand none of these; I have never taken a writ
+of ease not to serve on a jury, nor will I hear of one that exempts me
+from the rights of a gentleman."
+
+"I have got your full powers to treat, and you must trust me. Where are
+we to find Stapylton's friend?"
+
+"He gave me an address which I never looked at. Here it is!" and he drew
+a card from his pocket.
+
+"Captain Duff Brown, late Fifth Fusiliers, Holt's Hotel, Charing Cross."
+
+"Do you know him?" asked Barrington, as the other stood silently
+re-reading the address.
+
+"Yes, thoroughly," said he, with a dry significance. "The man who
+selects Duff Brown to act for him in an affair of honor must be in a
+sore strait. It is a sorry indorsement to character. He had to leave the
+service from the imputation of foul play in a duel himself; and I took
+an active part against him."
+
+"Will this make your position unpleasant to you,--would you rather not
+act for me?"
+
+"Quite the reverse. It is more than ever necessary you should have some
+one who not only knows the men he is to deal with, but is known himself
+to them. It is a preliminary will save a world of trouble."
+
+"When can we set out?"
+
+"To-night by the eight-o'clock packet, we can sail for Liverpool; but
+let us first of all despatch Fred to 'The Home.' The poor boy will be
+half dead with anxiety till he knows I have your permission."
+
+"I 'll accredit him with a letter to my sister; not that he needs
+it, for he is one of her prime favorites. And now for another point.
+Withering must be made believe that we are all off together for the
+country this evening. He is so opposed to this affair with Stapylton,
+that he is in a mood to do anything to prevent it."
+
+"Well thought of; and here comes the man himself in search of us."
+
+"I have been half over the town after you this morning, General," said
+Withering, as he entered; "and your son, too, could make nothing of your
+absence. He is in the carriage at the door now, not knowing whether he
+ought to come up."
+
+"I 'll soon reassure him on that score," said Barrington, as he left the
+room, and hastened downstairs with the step of one that defied the march
+of time.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. MEET COMPANIONSHIP
+
+In a very modest chamber of a house in one of the streets which lead
+from the Strand to the Thames, two persons sat at supper. It is no time
+for lengthened introductions, and I must present Captain Duff Brown very
+hurriedly to my reader, as he confronted his friend Stapylton at table.
+The Captain was a jovial-looking, full-whiskered, somewhat corpulent
+man, with a ready reply, a ready laugh, and a hand readier than either,
+whether the weapon wielded was a billiard-cue or a pistol.
+
+The board before them was covered with oysters and oyster-shells, porter
+in its pewter, a square-shaped decanter of gin, and a bundle of cigars.
+The cloth was dirty, the knives unclean, and the candles ill-matched and
+of tallow; but the guests did not seem to have bestowed much attention
+to these demerits, but ate and drank like men who enjoyed their fare.
+
+"The best country in Europe,--the best in the world,--I call England
+for a fellow who knows life," cried the Captain. "There is nothing you
+cannot do; nothing you cannot have in it."
+
+"With eight thousand a year, perhaps," said Stapylton, sarcastically.
+
+"No need of anything like it. Does any man want a better supper than
+we have had to-night? What better could he have? And the whole cost not
+over five, or at most six shillings for the pair of us."
+
+"You may talk till you are hoarse, Duff, but I'll not stay in it When
+once I have settled these two or three matters I have told you of, I'll
+start for--I don't much care whither. I'll go to Persia, or perhaps to
+the Yankees."
+
+"_I_ always keep America for the finish!" said the other. "It is to
+the rest of the world what the copper hell is to Crockford's,--the last
+refuge when one walks in broken boots and in low company. But tell me,
+what have you done to-day; where did you go after we parted?"
+
+"I went to the Horse Guards, and saw Blanchard,--pompous old humbug
+that he is. I told him that I had made up my mind to sell out; that I
+intended to take service in a foreign army,--he hates foreigners,--and
+begged he would expedite my affairs with his Royal Highness, as my
+arrangements could not admit of delay."
+
+"And he told you that there was an official routine, out of which no
+officer need presume to expect his business could travel?"
+
+"He told me no such thing. He flatly said, 'Your case is already before
+the Commander-in-Chief, Major Stapylton, and you may rely on it there
+will be no needless delay in dealing with it."
+
+"That was a threat, I take it."
+
+"Of course it was a threat; and I only said, 'It will be the first
+instance of the kind, then, in the department,' and left him."
+
+"Where to, after that?"
+
+"I next went to Gregory's, the magistrate of police. I wanted to see the
+informations the black fellow swore to; and as I knew a son of Gregory's
+in the Carbiniers, I thought I could manage it; but bad luck would have
+it that the old fellow should have in his hands some unsettled bills
+with my indorsements on them,--fact; Gregory and I used to do a little
+that way once,--and he almost got a fit when he heard my name."
+
+"Tried back after that, eh?"
+
+"Went on to Renshaw's and won fifty pounds at hazard, took Blake's odds
+on Diadem, and booked myself for a berth in the Boulogne steamer, which
+leaves at two this morning."
+
+"You secured a passport for me, did n't you?"
+
+"No. You'll have to come as my servant. The Embassy fellows were all
+strangers to me, and said they would not give a separate passport
+without seeing the bearer."
+
+"All right. I don't dislike the second cabin, nor the ladies'-maids.
+What about the pistols?"
+
+[Illustration: 508]
+
+"They are yonder under the great-coat. Renshaw lent them. They are not
+very good, he says, and one of them hangs a little in the fire."
+
+"They 'll be better than the old Irishman's, that's certain. You may
+swear that his tools were in use early in the last century."
+
+"And himself, too; that's the worst of it all. I wish it was not a
+fellow that might be my grandfather."
+
+"I don't know. I rather suspect, if I was given to compunctions, I'd
+have less of them for shaking down the rotten ripe fruit than the
+blossom."
+
+"And he 's a fine old fellow, too," said Stapylton, half sadly.
+
+"Why didn't you tell him to drop in this evening and have a little
+_ecarte?_"
+
+For a while Stapylton leaned his head on his hand moodily, and said
+nothing.
+
+"Cheer up, man! Taste that Hollands. I never mixed better," said Brown.
+
+"I begin to regret now, Duff, that I did n't take your advice."
+
+"And run away with her?"
+
+"Yes, it would have been the right course, after all!"
+
+"I knew it. I always said it. I told you over and over again what would
+happen if you went to work in orderly fashion. They 'd at once say, 'Who
+are your people,--where are they,--what have they?' Now, let a man be as
+inventive as Daniel Defoe himself, there will always slip out some flaw
+or other about a name, or a date,--dates are the very devil! But when
+you have once carried her off, what can they do but compromise?"
+
+"She would never have consented."
+
+"I 'd not have asked her. I 'd have given her the benefit of the
+customs of the land she lived in, and made it a regular abduction. Paddy
+somebody and Terence something else are always ready to risk their necks
+for a pint of whiskey and a breach of the laws."
+
+"I don't think I could have brought myself to it."
+
+"_I_ could, I promise you."
+
+"And there 's an end of a man after such a thing."
+
+"Yes, if he fails. If he's overtaken and thrashed, I grant you he not
+only loses the game, but gets the cards in his face, besides. But why
+fail? Nobody fails when he wants to win,--when he determines to win.
+When I shot De Courcy at Asterabad--"
+
+"Don't bring up that affair, at least, as one of precedent, Duff. I
+neither desire to be tried for a capital felony, nor to have committed
+one."
+
+"Capital fiddlesticks! As if men did not fight duels every day of the
+week; the difference between guilt and innocence being that one fellow's
+hand shook, and the other's was steady. De Courcy would have 'dropped'
+me, if I'd have Jet him."
+
+"And so _you_ would have carried her off, Master Duff?" said Stapylton,
+slowly.
+
+"Yes; if she had the pot of money you speak of, and no Lord Chancellor
+for a guardian. I 'd have made the thing sure at once."
+
+"The money she will and must have; so much is certain."
+
+"Then I 'd have made the remainder just as certain."
+
+"It is a vulgar crime, Duff; it would be very hard to stoop to it."
+
+"Fifty things are harder,--no cash, no credit are harder. The Fleet is
+harder. But what is that noise? Don't you hear a knock at the door? Yes,
+there's some one without who hasn't much patience." So saying, he arose
+and walked to the door. As he opened it, he started back a little with
+surprise, for it was a police constable stood before him.
+
+"Not you, Captain, not _you_, sir! it's another gentleman I want. I
+see him at the table there,--Major Stapylton." By this time the man
+had entered the room and stood in front of the fire. "I have a warrant
+against you, Major," said he, quietly. "Informations have been sworn
+before Mr. Colt that you intend to fight a duel, and you must appear at
+the office to-morrow, to enter into your bond, and to give securities to
+keep the peace."
+
+"Who swore the informations?" cried Brown.
+
+"What have we to do with that?" said Stapylton, impatiently. "Isn't the
+world full of meddling old women? Who wants to know the names?"
+
+"I 'll lay the odds it was old Conyers; the greatest humbug in that land
+of humbugs,--Bengal. It was he that insisted on my leaving the Fifth.
+Come, Sergeant, out with it. This was General Conyers's doing?"
+
+"I'm sorry to be obliged to declare you in custody, Major," said
+the policeman; "but if you like to come over to Mr. Colt's private
+residence, I 'm sure he 'd settle the matter this evening."
+
+"He'll do no such thing, by George!" cried Brown. "The sneaking dogs
+who have taken this shabby course shall be exposed in open court. We
+'ll have the names in full, and in every newspaper in England. Don't
+compromise the case, Stapylton; make them eat the mess they have cooked,
+to the last mouthful. We 'll show the world what the fighting Irishman
+and his gallant friend are made of. Major Stapylton is your prisoner,
+Sergeant?"
+
+The man smiled slightly at the passionate energy of the speaker, and
+turned to Stapylton. "There 's no objection to your going to your
+lodgings, Major. You 'll be at the chief office by ten to-morrow."
+
+Stapylton nodded assent, and the other retired and closed the door.
+
+"What do you say now?" cried Brown, triumphantly. "Did n't I tell you
+this? Did n't I say that when old Con-yers heard my name, he 'd say,
+'Oh, there 'll be no squaring this business'?"
+
+"It's just as likely that he said, 'I 'll not confer with that man; he
+had to leave the service.'"
+
+"More fool you, then, not to have had a more respectable friend. Had you
+there, Stapylton,--eh?"
+
+"I acknowledge that. All I can say in extenuation is, that I hoped old
+Barrington, living so long out of the world, would have selected another
+old mummy like himself, who had never heard of Captain Duff Brown, nor
+his famous trial at Calcutta."
+
+"There's not a man in the kingdom has not heard of me. I 'm as well
+known as the first Duke in the land."
+
+"Don't boast of it, Duff; even notoriety is not always a cheap luxury."
+
+"Who knows but you may divide it with me to-morrow or next day?"
+
+"What do you mean, sir?--what do you mean?" cried Stapylton, slapping
+the table with his clenched hand.
+
+"Only what I said,--that Major Stapylton may furnish the town with a
+nine-days wonder, _vice_ Captain Duff Brown, forgotten."
+
+Evidently ashamed of his wrath, Stapylton tried to laugh off the
+occasion of it, and said, "I suppose neither of us would take the matter
+much to heart."
+
+"I 'll not go to the office with you to-morrow, Stapylton," added
+he, after a pause; "that old Sepoy General would certainly seize the
+opportunity to open some old scores that I'd as soon leave undisturbed."
+
+"All right, I think you are prudent there."
+
+"But I 'll be of use in another way. I 'll lay in wait for that fellow
+who reports for the 'Chronicle,' the only paper that cares for these
+things, and I 'll have him deep in the discussion of some devilled
+kidneys when your case is called on."
+
+"I fancy it does not matter what publicity it obtains."
+
+"Ah, I don't know that. Old Braddell, our major, used to say,
+'Reputation, after forty, is like an old wall. If you begin to break a
+hole in it, you never know how much will come away.'"
+
+"I tell you again, Duff, I'm past scandalizing; but have your way, if
+you will 'muzzle the ox,' and let us get away from this as soon as may
+be. I want a little rest after this excitement."
+
+"Well, I 'm pretty much in the same boot myself, though I don't
+exactly know where to go. France is dangerous. In Prussia there are two
+sentences recorded against me. I 'm condemned to eight years' hard
+labor in Wurtemberg, and pronounced dead in Austria for my share in that
+Venetian disturbance."
+
+"Don't tell me of these rascalities. Bad enough when a man is driven to
+them, but downright infamy to be proud of."
+
+"Have you never thought of going into the Church? I 've a notion you 'd
+be a stunning preacher."
+
+"Give up this bantering, Duff, and tell me how I shall get hold of
+young Conyers. I 'd rather put a ball in that fellow than be a
+Lieutenant-General. He has ever been my rock ahead. That silly coxcomb
+has done more to mar my destiny than scores of real enemies. To shoot
+him would be to throw a shell in the very midst of them."
+
+"I 'd rather loot him, if I had the choice; the old General has lots of
+money. Stapylton, scuttle the ship, if you like, but first let _me_ land
+the cargo. Of all the vengeances a man can wreak on another the weakest
+is to kill him. For my part, I 'd cherish the fellow that injured me.
+I 'd set myself to study his tastes and learn his ambitions. I 'd
+watch over him and follow him, being, as it were, his dearest of all
+friends,--read backwards!"
+
+"This is tiresome scoundrelism. I'll to bed," said Stapylton, taking a
+candle from the table.
+
+"Well, if you must shoot this fellow, wait till he's married; wait for
+the honeymoon."
+
+"There's some sense in that. I 'll go and sleep over it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. AUNT DOROTHEA.
+
+"You must come down with me for one day, Tom, to see an old aunt of mine
+at Bournemouth," said Hunter to young Dill. "I never omitted going to
+see her the first thing whenever I landed in England, and she 'll not
+forgive me if I were to do so now."
+
+"But why should I go, sir? My presence would only trouble the comfort of
+a family meeting."
+
+"Quite the reverse. She 'll be delighted to see you. It will be such a
+triumph to her, amongst all her neighbors, to have had a visit from the
+hero of the day,--the fellow that all the print-shops are full of. Why,
+man, you are worth five hundred pounds to me. I 'm not sure I might not
+say double as much."
+
+"In that case, sir, I 'm perfectly at your orders."
+
+And down they went, and arrived late on the day after this conversation
+at an old-fashioned manor-house, where Miss Dorothy Hunter had passed
+some sixty-odd years of her life. Though to Tom she seemed to bear
+a great resemblance to old Miss Barrington, there was really little
+likeness between them, beyond an inordinate pride of birth, and an
+intense estimation for the claims of family. Miss Hunter's essential
+characteristic was a passion for celebrities; a taste somewhat difficult
+to cultivate in a very remote and little visited locality. The result
+was that she consoled herself by portraits, or private letters, or
+autographs of her heroes, who ranged over every imaginable career in
+life, and of whom, by mere dint of iteration, she had grown to believe
+herself the intimate friend or correspondent.
+
+No sooner had she learned that her nephew was to be accompanied by the
+gallant young soldier whose name was in every newspaper than she made
+what she deemed the most suitable preparations for his reception. Her
+bedroom was hung round with portraits of naval heroes, or pictures of
+sea-fights. Grim old admirals, telescope in hand, or with streaming
+hair, shouting out orders to board the enemy, were on every side; while,
+in the place of honor, over the fireplace, hung a vacant frame, destined
+one day to contain the hero of the hour, Tom Dill himself.
+
+Never was a poor fellow in this world less suited to adulation of this
+sort. He was either overwhelmed with the flattery, or oppressed by a
+terror of what some sensible spectator--if such there were--would think
+of the absurd position in which he was forced to stand. And when
+he found himself obliged to inscribe his name in a long column of
+illustrious autographs, the sight of his own scarce legible characters
+filled up the measure of his shame.
+
+"He writes like the great Turenne," said Miss Dorothy; "he always wrote
+from above downwards, so that no other name than his own could figure on
+the page."
+
+"I got many a thrashing for it at school, ma'am," said Tom, apologizing,
+"and so I gave up writing altogether."
+
+"Ah, yes! the men of action soon learn to despise the pen; they prefer
+to make history rather than record it."
+
+It was not easy for Hunter to steer his bashful friend through all the
+shoals and quicksands of such flattery; but, on the plea of his broken
+health and strength, he hurried him early to his bed, and returned to
+the fireside, where his aunt awaited him.
+
+"He's charming, if he were only not so diffident. Why will he not be more
+confiding, more at his ease with me,--like Mungo Park, or Sir Sidney
+Smith?"
+
+"After a while, so he will, aunt. You 'll see what a change there will
+be in him at our next visit All these flatteries he meets with are too
+much for him; but when we come down again, you 'll see him without these
+distracting influences. Then bear in mind his anxieties,--he has not yet
+seen his family; he is eager to be at home again. I carried him off here
+positively in spite of himself, and on the strict pledge of only for one
+day."
+
+"One day! And do you mean that you are to go tomorrow?"
+
+"No help for it, aunt. Tom is to be at Windsor on Saturday. But for
+that, he would already have been on his way to Ireland."
+
+"Then there's no time to be lost. What can we do for him? He'snot rich?"
+
+"Hasn't a shilling; but would reject the very shadow of such
+assistance."
+
+"Not if a step were purchased for him; without his knowledge, I mean."
+
+"It would be impossible that he should not know it."
+
+"But surely there is some way of doing it A handsome sum to commemorate
+his achievement might be subscribed. I would begin it with a thousand
+pounds."
+
+"He'd not accept it. I know him thoroughly. There's only one road to him
+through which he would not deem a favor a burden."
+
+"And what of that?"
+
+"A kindness to his sister. I wish you saw her, aunt!"
+
+"Is she like him?"
+
+"Like him? Yes; but very much better-looking. She's singularly handsome,
+and such a girl! so straightforward and so downright It is a positive
+luxury to meet her after all the tiresome conventionalities of the
+every-day young lady."
+
+"Shall I ask her here?"
+
+"Oh, if you would, aunt!--if you only would!"
+
+"That you may fall in love with her, I suppose?"
+
+"No, aunt, that is done already."
+
+"I think, sir, I might have been apprised of this attachment!" said she,
+bridling.
+
+"I didn't know it myself, aunt, till I was close to the Cape. I thought
+it a mere fancy as we dropped down Channel; grew more thoughtful over it
+in the Bay of Biscay; began to believe it as we discovered St. Helena;
+and came back to England resolved to tell you the whole truth, and ask
+you, at least, to see her and know her."
+
+"So I will, then. I 'll write and invite her here."
+
+"You 're the best and kindest aunt in Christendom!" said he, rushing
+over and kissing her.
+
+"I'm not going to let you read it, sir," said she, with a smile. "If she
+show it to you, she may. Otherwise it is a matter between ourselves."
+
+"Be it entirely as you wish, aunt."
+
+"And if all this goes hopefully on," said she, after a pause, "is Aunt
+Dorothea to be utterly forgotten? No more visits here,--no happy summer
+evenings,--no more merry Christmases?"
+
+"Nay, aunt, I mean to be your neighbor. That cottage you have often
+offered me, near the rocks, I 'll not refuse it again,--that is, if you
+tempt me once more."
+
+"It is yours, and the farm along with it. Go to bed now, and leave me to
+write my note, which will require-some thought and reflection."
+
+"I know you 'll do it well. I know none who could equal you in such a
+task."
+
+"I 'll try and acquit myself with credit," said she, as she sat down to
+the writing-desk.
+
+"And what is all this about,--a letter from Miss Dorothea to Polly,"
+said Tom, as they drove along the road back to town. "Surely they never
+met?"
+
+"Never; but my aunt intends that they shall. She writes to ask your
+sister to come on a visit here."
+
+"But why not have told her the thing was impossible? You know us. You
+have seen the humble way we live,--how many a care it costs to keep up
+that little show of respectability that gets us sufferance in the world,
+and how one little attempt beyond this is quite out of our reach. Why
+not have told her frankly, sir, 'These people are not in our station'?"
+
+"Just because I acknowledge no such distinction as you want to draw,
+my good fellow. If my aunt has asked your sister to come three hundred
+miles to see her, she has thought over her request with more foresight
+than you or I could have given it, take my word for it. When she means
+kindly, she plans thoughtfully. And now I will tell you what I never
+meant to have spoken of, that it was only last night she asked me how
+could she be of use to you?"
+
+"To _me!_" said he, blushing, "and why to _me?_"
+
+"Can you never be brought to see that you are a hero, Tom,--that all the
+world is talking of you just now, and people feel a pride in being even
+passingly mixed up with your name?"
+
+"If they only knew how much I have to be ashamed of before I can
+begin to feel vain, they 'd not be so ready with their praise or their
+flattery."
+
+"I 'll talk over all that with your sister Polly," said Hunter, gayly;
+for he saw the serious spirit that was gaining over the poor fellow.
+
+"Do so, sir; and you'll soon see, if there's anything good or hopeful
+about me, where it comes from and who gave it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX. FROM GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON
+
+Beddwys, N. Wales.
+
+My dear Fred,--How happy I am that you are enjoying yourself; short of
+being with you, nothing could have given me greater pleasure than your
+letter. I like your portrait of the old lady, whose eccentricities
+are never inconsistent with some charming traits of disposition, and
+a nature eminently high-minded and honorable; but why not more about
+Josephine? She is surely oftener in your thoughts than your one brief
+paragraph would bespeak, and has her due share in making the cottage the
+delightful home you describe it to be. I entreat you to be more open and
+more explicit on this theme, for it may yet be many days before I can
+explore the matter for myself; since, instead of the brief absence
+I calculated on, we may, for aught I know, be detained here for some
+weeks.
+
+It is clear to me, from your last, a note of mine from Liverpool to you
+must have miscarried. You ask me where you are to address me next, and
+what is the nature of the business which has called me away so suddenly?
+I gave you in that letter all the information that I was myself
+possessed of, and which, in three words, amounted to this: Old
+Barrington, having involved himself in a serious personal quarrel with
+Stapylton, felt, or believed, that he ought to give him a meeting.
+Seeing how useless all attempt at dissuasion proved, and greatly
+fearing what hands he might fall into, I agreed to be his friend on
+the occasion; trusting, besides, that by a little exercise of tact and
+temper, extreme measures might be avoided, and the affair arranged. You
+may well believe, without my insisting further upon it, that I felt
+very painfully how we should both figure before the world,--a man of
+eighty-three or four, accompanied to the ground by another of sixty-odd!
+I know well how, in the changed temper of the age, such acts are
+criticised, and acquiesce, besides, in the wiser spirit that now
+prevails. However, as I said before, if Barrington must go on, it were
+better he should do so under the guidance of a sincere friend than of
+one casually elevated to act as such, in a moment of emergency.
+
+We left Dublin, by the mail-packet, on Wednesday; and after a rough
+passage of twenty-three hours, reached Liverpool too late to catch the
+evening coach. Thus detained, we only arrived here on Sunday night late.
+At my club I found a note from Stapylton, stating that he had daily
+called there to learn if we had come, but the boisterous state of the
+weather sufficiently explained our delay, and giving an address where he
+might be found, as well as that of "his friend." Now, it so chanced that
+this friend was a very notorious person well known to me in India, where
+he had been tried for an unfair duel, and narrowly escaped--I should say
+unjustly escaped--being hanged. Though I had fully made up my mind not
+to be placed in any relations with such a man, I thought it would be
+as well that Barrington should know the character of his antagonist's
+friend from other sources, and so I invited an old Bengal companion of
+mine to dine with us the day after we arrived. Stamer was a judge of the
+criminal court, and tried Duff Brown, the man I speak of. As we sat over
+our wine together, we got upon this case, and Stamer declared that it
+was the only criminal cause in his whole life wherein he regretted the
+escape of the guilty party. "The fellow," said he, "defended himself in
+a three hours' speech, ably and powerfully; but enunciated at times--as
+it were unconsciously--sentiments so abominable and so atrocious as
+to destroy the sympathy a part of his discourse excited. But somehow
+boldness has its fascination, and he was acquitted."
+
+Barrington's old-fashioned notions were not, however, to be shocked
+even by this narrative, and he whispered to me, "Unpleasant for _you_,
+Conyers. Wish it might have been otherwise, but it can't be helped." We
+next turned to discuss Duff Brown's friend, and Stamer exclaimed, "Why,
+that's the man they have been making all this fuss about in India. He
+was, or he said he was, the adopted son of Howard Stapylton; but the
+family never believed the adoption, nor consented to receive him, and at
+this moment a Moonshee, who acted as Persian secretary to old Stapylton,
+has turned up with some curious disclosures, which, if true, would
+show that this young fellow held a very humble position in Stapylton's
+household, and never was in his confidence. This Moonshee was at Malta a
+few weeks ago, and may be, for aught I know, in England now."
+
+I asked and obtained Barrington's permission to tell how we were
+ourselves involved with this Major Stapylton, and he quickly declared
+that, while the man stood thus accused, there could be no thought of
+according him a satisfaction. The opinion was not the less stringent
+that Stamer was himself an Irishman and of a fighting family.
+
+I am not very sure that we made Barrington a convert to our opinions,
+but we at least, as we separated for the night, left him doubtful and
+hesitating. I had not been in bed above an hour, when Mr. Withering
+awoke me. He had followed us from Dublin as soon as he learned our
+departure, and, going straight to a magistrate, swore informations
+against both Barrington and Stapylton. "My old friend will never forgive
+me, I know," said he; "but if I had not done this, I should never have
+forgiven myself." It was arranged between us that I was to mention the
+fact of such informations having been sworn, without stating by whom, to
+Barrington, and then persuade him to get privately away from town before
+a warrant could be served. I leave you to imagine that my task was not
+without its difficulties, but, before the day broke, I succeeded in
+inducing him to leave, and travelling by post without halt, we arrived
+at this quiet spot yesterday evening. Barrington, with all his good
+temper, is marvellously put out and irritable, saying, "This is not the
+way such things were done once;" and peevishly muttered, "I wonder what
+poor Harry Beamish or Guy Hutchinson would say to it all?" One thing
+is quite clear, we had got into a wasps' nest; Stapylton and his friend
+were both fellows that no honorable man would like to deal with, and
+we must wait with a little patience to find some safe road out of this
+troublesome affair.
+
+A letter came to B. from the India House the evening before we left
+town, but he handed it to me before he finished reading it, merely
+remarking, "The old story, 'Yours of the ninth or nineteenth has duly
+been received,' &c." But I found that it contained a distinct admission
+that his claim was not ill-founded, and that some arrangement ought to
+be come to.
+
+I now close my very lengthy epistle, promising, however, that as soon
+as I hear from town, either from Withering or Stamer, you shall have
+my news. We are, of course, close prisoners here for the present,
+for though the warrant would not extend to Ireland, Barrington's
+apprehensions of being "served" with such a writ at all would induce him
+to hide for six months to come.
+
+I scarcely ask you to write to me here, not knowing our probable stay;
+but to-morrow may, perhaps, tell us something on this head. Till when,
+believe me,
+
+Yours affectionately,
+
+Ormsby Conters.
+
+My most cordial greeting to Miss Barrington, and my love to her niece.
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO HIS SISTER MISS DINAH BARRINGTON.
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Dinah,--I hardly know how to tell you what has happened, or what
+is happening around me. I came over here to meet Major Stapylton, but
+find that there is no such person,--the man who calls himself so being a
+mere adventurer, who had taken the name, and, I believe, no small share
+of the goods, of its owner, got into the Bengal army, thence into our
+own service, and though not undistinguished for gallantry, seems to have
+led a life of ceaseless roguery and intrigue. He knew all about poor
+George's business, and was in correspondence with those we believe to be
+our friends in India, but who now turn out to be our inveterate enemies.
+This we have got at by the confession of one of those Oriental fellows
+they call Moonshees, who has revealed all their intercourse for years
+back, and even shown a document setting forth the number of rupees
+he was to receive when Stapylton had been married to Josephine. The
+Moonshee is very ill, and his examination can only be conducted at
+intervals; but he insists on a point of much importance to us, which is,
+that Stapylton induced him to tear out of the Rajah's Koran the page
+on which the adoption of George was written, and signed by the Meer
+himself. He received a large sum for this service, which, however, he
+evaded by a fraud, sending over to England not the real document itself,
+but a copy made by himself, and admirably counterfeited. It was the
+possession of this by Stapylton which enabled him to exercise a great
+control over our suit,--now averring that it was lost; now, under
+pledge of secrecy, submitting it to the inspection of some of the
+Indian authorities. Stapylton, in a word, saw himself in a position to
+establish our claim, whenever the time came that by making Josephine his
+wife, he could secure the fortune. This is all that we know up to
+this, but it is a great deal, and shows in what a maze of duplicity and
+treachery we have been involved for more than twenty years. The chief
+point, however, is that the real deed, written in the Meer's Koran, and
+torn out of it by the Moonshee, in his first impulse to forward it to
+Stapylton, is now extant, and the Koran itself is there to show the
+jagged margin of the torn-out leaf, and the corresponding page on the
+opposite side of the volume. Stapylton refuses to utter one word since
+the accusation against him has been made; and as the charges stand to
+falsifying documents, abstraction of funds, and other derelictions in
+India, he is now under a heavy bail to appear when called on.
+
+The whole business has made me so nervous and excitable that I cannot
+close my eyes at night, and I feel feverish and restless all day. It is
+very shocking to think of a man one has never injured, never heard of,
+animated with a spirit so inimical as to pass years of life in working
+ill to us. He would appear to have devoted himself to the task of
+blackening poor George's character and defaming him. It would seem that
+Mr. Howard Stapylton was one of those who took an active part against
+George. Whether this young fellow caught the contagion of this
+antipathy, or helped to feed it, I cannot tell; but it is certain that
+all the stories of cruelty and oppression the India Board used to trump
+up to us came from this one source; and at the end of all he seeks to be
+one of a family he has striven for years to ruin and to crush! I am lost
+in my efforts to understand this, though Stamer and Withering assure
+me they can read the man like print. Indeed, they see inferences and
+motives in fifty things which convey nothing to me; and whenever I feel
+myself stopped by some impassable barrier, to _them_ it is only a bridge
+that conducts to a fresh discovery.
+
+The Stapyltons are all in arms now that another sportsman has winged the
+bird for them; and each day increases the number of accusations against
+this unfortunate fellow. It is true, dear Dinah, that our own prospects
+brighten through all this. I am constantly receiving civil messages
+and hopeful assurances; and even some of the directors have called to
+express sympathy and good wishes. But how chilled is the happiness that
+comes dashed with the misfortune of another! What a terrible deal it
+detracts from our joy to know that every throb of pleasure to ourselves
+has cost a pang of misery elsewhere! I wish this fellow could have gone
+his way, never minding us; or, if that could n't be, that he 'd have
+grown tired of persecuting those who had never harmed him, and given us
+up!
+
+They are now assailing him on all sides. One has found that he forged a
+will; another that he falsified a signature; and a miserable creature--a
+native Indian, who happened to be in that Manchester riot the other
+day--has now been ferreted out to swear that Stapylton followed him
+through a suburb, down a lane, and into a brick-field, where he cut
+him down and left him for dead. There seems a great deal of venom
+and acrimony in all this; and though the man is unquestionably not my
+friend, and I see that this persecution continues, I find it very hard
+not to stand by him.
+
+As for Withering, it has made the veteran ten years younger. He is up
+every morning at five, and I hear that he never goes to his room till
+long past midnight. These are the pastimes that to such men replace
+the sports of the field and the accidents of the chase. They have
+their vacillations of hope and fear, their moments of depression and of
+triumph in them; and they run a fellow-creature to earth with all the
+zest of a hard rider after a fox.
+
+Tell my darling Fifine that I am longing to be at home again,--longing
+for the quiet roof, and the roses at the window, and the murmur of the
+river, and her own sweet voice better than them all. And what a deal of
+happiness is in our power if we would only consent to enjoy it, without
+running after some imaginary good, some fancied blessing, which is
+to crown our wishes! If I could but only have guessed at the life of
+anxiety, doubt, and vacillation the pursuit of this claim would have
+cost me,--the twenty years of fever,--
+
+I give you my word, Dinah, I 'd rather have earned my daily bread with a
+spade, or, when too old for that, taken to fishing for a livelihood.
+
+But why do I complain of anything at this moment? When have I been so
+truly happy for many a long year? Conyers never leaves me,--he talks of
+George from morning to night. And I now see that with all my affection
+for that dear boy, I only half knew his noble nature, his fine and
+generous character. If you only heard of the benevolent things he has
+done; the poor fellows he has sent home to their families at his own
+cost; the sums he has transmitted to wives and widows of soldiers in
+England; the children whose care and support he has provided for! These
+were the real drains on that fortune that the world thought wasted and
+squandered in extravagance. And do you know, Dinah, there is a vein of
+intense egotism in my heart that I never so much as suspected! I found
+it out by chance,--it was in marking how far less I was touched by the
+highest and best traits of my poor boy than by the signs of love to
+myself! and when Conyers said, "He was always talking about you; he
+never did anything important without the question, 'How would "Dad" like
+this, I wonder? would "Dad" say "God speed" in this case?' And his first
+glass of wine every day was to the health of that dear old father over
+the seas."
+
+To you who loved him only a little less than myself, I have no shame
+in the confession of this weakness. I suppose Conyers, however, has hit
+upon it, for he harps on this theme continually, and, in sheer pride of
+heart, I feel ten years younger for it.
+
+Here comes Withering to say, "Some more wonderful news;" but I have
+begged him to keep it till I have sealed this letter, which if it grows
+any longer, I 'll never have courage to send to you. A dozen kisses to
+Fifine I can, however, transmit without any increase to the postage.
+Give my love to young Conyers; tell him I am charmed with his father,--I
+never met any one so companionable to me, and I only long for the day
+when the same roof shall cover all of us.
+
+Yours, my dearest sister, ever affectionately,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+
+FROM T. WITHERING, ESQ., TO MISS DINAH BARRINGTON, "THE HOME."
+
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+
+My dear Miss Barrington,--If your brother has deputed me to write to
+you, it is not that he is ill, but simply that the excitement caused by
+some late events here has so completely mastered him that he can neither
+sit quiet a moment, nor address him steadily to any task. Nor am I
+surprised it should be so. Old, weather-beaten sailor on the ocean of
+life as I am, I feel an amount of feverishness and anxiety I am half
+ashamed of. Truth is, my dear Miss Dinah, we lawyers get so much
+habituated to certain routine rogueries that we are almost shocked when
+we hear of a wickedness not designated by a statute. But I must not
+occupy your time with such speculations, the more since I have only a
+brief space to give to that report of proceedings to which I want your
+attention. And, first of all, I will entreat you to forgive me for all
+want of sequence or connection in what I may say, since events have
+grown so jumbled together in my mind, that it is perfectly impossible
+for me to be certain whether what I relate should come before or after
+some other recorded fact In a word, I mean to give you an outline of our
+discoveries, without showing the track of our voyage on the map, or even
+saying how we came by our knowledge.
+
+You are aware, Barrington tells me, how Stapylton came by the name he
+bears. Aware that he was for some of his earlier years domesticated
+with old Howard Stapylton at Ghurtnapore, in some capacity between
+confidential valet and secretary,--a position that was at once one of
+subordination and trust,--it would now appear that a Moonshee, who
+had long served Colonel Barrington as Persian correspondent, came into
+Howard Stapylton's service in the same capacity: how introduced, or
+by whom, we know not. With this Moonshee, the young fellow I speak of
+became an intimate and close friend, and it is supposed obtained from
+him all that knowledge of your nephew's affairs which enabled him to see
+to what his claim pretended, and what were its prospects of success. It
+is now clear enough that he only regarded this knowledge at first as a
+means of obtaining favor from the Indian Government. It was, in fact,
+by ceding to them in detail certain documents, that he got his first
+commission in the Madras Fusiliers, and afterwards his promotion in the
+same regiment; and when, grown more ambitious, he determined to enter
+the King's service, the money for purchase came from the same source.
+Being, however, a fellow of extravagant habits, his demands grew at last
+to be deemed excessive and importunate; and though his debts had been
+paid three several times, he was again found involving himself as
+before, and again requiring assistance. This application was, however,
+resisted; and it was apparently on the strength of that refusal that
+he suddenly changed his tactics, turned his attention towards us, and
+bethought him that by forwarding your grandniece's claim,--if he could
+but win her affections in the mean while,--he would secure as a wife one
+of the richest heiresses in Europe. An examination of dates proves this,
+by showing that his last application to the Indian Board was only a few
+weeks before he exchanged into the regiment of Hussars he lately served
+with, and just then ordered to occupy Kilkenny. In one word, when it
+was no longer profitable to oppose Josephine's claim, he determined to
+support it and make it his own. The "Company," however, fully assured
+that by the papers in their possession they could prove their own cause
+against Colonel Barrington, resisted all his menaces,--when, what does
+he do? It was what only a very daring and reckless fellow would ever
+have thought of,--one of those insolent feats of boldness that succeed
+by the very shock they create. He goes to the Secret Committee at the
+India House and says: "Of the eighteen documents I have given you,
+seven are false. I will not tell you which they are, but if you do not
+speedily compromise this claim and make a satisfactory settlement on
+Colonel Barrington's daughter, I'll denounce you, at all the peril it
+may be to myself." At first they agree, then they hesitate, then they
+treat again, and so does the affair proceed, till suddenly--no one can
+guess why--they assume a tone of open defiance, and flatly declare
+they will hold no further intercourse with him, and even threaten with
+exposure any demand on his part.
+
+This rejection of him came at a critical moment. It was just when the
+press had begun to comment on the cruelty of his conduct at Peterloo,
+and when a sort of cry was got up through the country to have him
+dismissed from the service. We all saw, but never suspected, why he was
+so terribly cut up at this time. It was hard to believe that he could
+have taken mere newspaper censure so much to heart. We never guessed
+the real cause, never saw that he was driven to his last expedient,
+and obliged to prejudice all his hope of success by precipitancy. If he
+could not make Josephine his wife at once, on the very moment, all was
+lost. He made a bold effort at this. Who knows if he might not have
+succeeded but for you, as Josephine was very young, my old friend
+himself utterly unfit to cope with anything but open hostility? I say
+again, I 'd not have answered for the result if you had not been in
+command of the fortress. At all events, he failed; and in the failure
+lost his temper so far as to force a quarrel upon your brother. He
+failed, however; and no sooner was he down, than the world was atop
+of him: creditors, Jews, bill-discounters, and, last of all, the
+Stapyltons, who, so long as he bore their family name thousands of miles
+off, or associated it with deeds of gallantry, said nothing; now, that
+they saw it held up to attack and insult, came forward to declare that
+he never belonged to them, and at length appealed formally to the Horse
+Guards, to learn under what designation he had entered the service, and
+at what period taken the name he went by.
+
+Stapylton's application for leave to sell out had just been sent in;
+and once more the newspapers set up the cry that this man should not be
+permitted to carry away to Aix and Baden the proceeds of a sale which
+belonged to his "creditors." You know the world, and I need not tell you
+all the pleasant things it told this fellow, for men are pretty nigh
+as pitiless as crows to their wounded. I thought the complication had
+reached its limit, when I learned yesterday evening that Stapylton had
+been summoned before a police magistrate for a case of assault committed
+by him when in command of his regiment at Manchester. The case had
+evidently been got up by a political party, who, seeing the casual
+unpopularity of the man, determined to profit by it. The celebrated
+radical barrister, Hesketh, was engaged for the plaintiff.
+
+When I arrived at the court, it was so full that it was with difficulty
+I got a passage to a seat behind the bench. There were crowds of
+fashionables present, the well-known men about town, and the idlers of
+the clubs, and a large sprinkling of military men, for the news of the
+case had got wind already.
+
+Stapylton, dressed in black, and looking pale and worn, but still
+dignified and like a gentleman, had not a single friend with him. I own
+to you, I felt ashamed to be there, and was right glad when he did not
+recognize me.
+
+Though the case opened by a declaration that this was no common assault
+case, wherein in a moment of passion a man had been betrayed into an
+excess, I knew the cant of my craft too well to lay any stress on such
+assertion, and received it as the ordinary exordium. As I listened,
+however, I was struck by hearing that the injured man was asserted to
+be one well known to Stapylton, with whom he had been for years in
+intimacy, and that the assault was in reality a deliberate attempt to
+kill, and not, as had been represented, a mere passing act of savage
+severity committed in hot blood. "My client," said he, "will be brought
+before you; he is a Hindoo, but so long a resident of this country that
+he speaks our language fluently. You shall hear his story yourselves,
+and yourselves decide on its truthfulness. His wounds are, however, of
+so serious a nature that it will be advisable his statement should be
+a brief one." As he said this, a dark-complexioned fellow, with a look
+half-frightened, half defiant, was carried forwards in a chair, and
+deposited, as he sat, on the table. He gave his name as Lai Adeen, his
+age as forty-eight, his birthplace Majamarha, near Agra. He came to this
+country twelve years ago, as servant to an officer who had died on the
+passage, and after many hardships in his endeavor to earn a livelihood,
+obtained employment at Manchester in the mill of Brandling and Bennett,
+where he was employed to sweep the corridors and the stairs; his wages
+were nine shillings a week. All this, and much more of the same kind,
+he told simply and collectedly. I tried to see Stapylton while this
+was going on, but a pillar of the gallery, against which he leaned,
+concealed him from my view.
+
+I omit a great deal, not without its interest, but reserving it for
+another time, and come to his account of the night on which he was
+wounded. He said that as the cavalry marched on that morning into
+Manchester, he was struck by seeing at the head of the regiment one he
+had never set his eyes on for years, but whose features he knew too well
+to be deceived in.
+
+"I tried to get near him, that he might recognize me," said he; "but the
+crowd kept me back, and I could not. I thought, indeed, at one moment he
+had seen me, and knew me; but as he turned his head away, I supposed I
+was mistaken.
+
+"It was on the following evening, when the riot broke out in Mill
+Street, that I saw him next. I was standing at the door of a chemist's
+shop when the cavalry rode by at a walk. There was a small body of them
+in front, at about forty or fifty paces, and who, finding a sort of
+barricade across the street, returned to the main body, where they
+seemed to be reporting this. A cry arose that the troops had been
+blocked up at the rear, and at the same instant a shower of stones came
+from the side-streets and the house-tops. Thinking to do him a service,
+I made my way towards him I knew, in order to tell him by what way he
+could make his escape; and jostled and pushed, and half ridden down, I
+laid my hand on his horse's shoulder to keep myself from falling. 'Stand
+back, you scoundrel!' said he, striking me with the hilt of his sword in
+the face. 'Don't you know me, master?' cried I, in terror. He bent down
+in his saddle till his face was almost close to mine, and then, reining
+his horse back to give him room for a blow, he aimed a desperate cut at
+me. I saw it coming, and threw myself down; but I rose the next instant
+and ran. The street was already so clear by this time, I got into
+Cleever's Alley, down Grange Street, up the lane that leads to the
+brick-fields, and at last into the fields themselves. I was just
+thinking I was safe, when I saw a horseman behind me. He saw me, and
+dashed at me. I fell upon my knees to ask mercy, and he gave me this;"
+and he pointed to the bandages which covered his forehead, stained as
+they were with clotted blood. "I fell on my face, and he tried to make
+his horse trample on me; but the beast would not, and he only touched
+me with his hoof as he sprang across me. He at last dismounted to see,
+perhaps, if I were dead; but a shout from some of the rioters warned him
+to mount again; and he rode away, and I lay there till morning. It is
+not true that I was in prison and escaped,--that I was taken to the
+hospital, and ran away from it. I was sheltered in one of the clay-huts
+of the brickmakers for several weeks, afraid to come abroad, for I knew
+that the Sahib was a great man and could take my life. It was only by
+the persuasions of others that I left my hiding-place and have come here
+to tell my story."
+
+On being questioned why this officer could possibly desire to injure
+him, what grudge one in such a station could bear him, he owned he could
+not say; they had never been enemies, and, indeed, it was in the hope
+of a friendly recognition and assistance that he approached him in Mill
+Street.
+
+Stapylton's defence was very brief, given in an off-hand, frank manner,
+which disposed many in his favor. He believed the fellow meant to attack
+him; he certainly caught hold of his bridle. It was not his intention
+to give him more than a passing blow; but the utterance of a Hindoo
+curse--an expression of gross outrage in the East--recalled prejudices
+long dormant, and he gave the rascal chase, and cut him over the
+head,--not a severe cut, and totally unaccompanied by the other details
+narrated.
+
+"As for our former acquaintance I deny it altogether. I have seen
+thousands of his countrymen, and may have seen him; but, I repeat, I
+never knew him, nor can he presume to say he knew me!"
+
+The Hindoo smiled a faint, sickly smile, made a gesture of deep
+humility, and asked if he might put a few questions to the "Sahib."
+
+"Were you in Naghapoor in the year of the floods?"
+
+"Yes," said Stapylton, firmly, but evidently with an effort to appear
+calm.
+
+"In the service of the great Sahib, Howard Stapylton?"
+
+"In his service? Certainly not. I lived with him as his friend, and
+became his adopted heir.''
+
+"What office did you fill when you first came to the 'Residence'?"
+
+"I assisted my friend in the duties of his government; I was a good
+Oriental scholar, and could write and speak a dialect he knew nothing
+of. But I submit to the court that this examination, prompted and
+suborned by others, has no other object than to insult me, by leading to
+disclosures of matters essentially private in their nature."
+
+"Let me ask but one question," said the barrister. "What name did you
+bear before you took that of Stapylton?"
+
+"I refuse to submit to this insolence," said Stapylton, rising, angrily.
+"If the laws of the country only can lend themselves to assist the
+persecutions of a rascally Press, the sooner a man of honor seeks
+another land the better. Adjudicate on this case, sirs; I will not stoop
+to bandy words with these men."
+
+"I now, sir," said Hesketh, opening his bag and taking out a roll of
+papers, "am here to demand a committal for forgery against the person
+before you, passing under the name of Horace Stapylton, but whose real
+designation is Samuel Scott Edwardes, son of Samuel Edwardes, a name
+notorious enough once."
+
+I cannot go on, my dear friend; the emotions that overpowered me at the
+time, and compelled me to leave the court, are again threatening me,
+and my brain reels at the recollection of a scene which, even to my
+fast-fading senses, was the most trying of my life.
+
+To General Conyers I must refer you for what ensued after I left. I
+cannot even say who came home with me to the hotel, though I am aware
+I owed that kindness to some one. The face of that unhappy man is yet
+before me, and all the calm in which I have written up to this leaves
+me, as I think over one of the most terrible incidents of my life.
+
+Your brother, shocked of course, bears up bravely, and hopes to write to
+you to-morrow.
+
+One word of good cheer before I close this miserable record. The Indian
+directors have written to offer excellent terms--splendidly liberal
+terms, Conyers calls them, and I agree with him. We have had a very
+busy week of it here, but it will be well requited if all that I now
+anticipate be confirmed to us. Barrington begs you will tell your
+neighbors, the Dills, that Tom--I think that is the name--has just
+arrived at Southampton with General Hunter, and will be here to-morrow
+evening.
+
+I have cut out a short passage from the newspaper to finish my
+narrative. I will send the full report, as published, to-morrow.
+
+Your attached friend,
+
+T. Withering.
+
+"The chief police-office in Marlborough Street was yesterday the scene
+of a very shocking incident. The officer whose conduct at the head of
+his regiment in Manchester has of late called for the almost unanimous
+reprobation of the Press, was, while answering to a charge of aggravated
+assault, directly charged with forgery. Scarcely was the allegation
+made, than he drew a pistol from his pocket, and, placing the muzzle to
+his mouth, pulled the trigger. The direction of the weapon, however, was
+accidentally turned, and the ball, instead of proceeding upwards, passed
+through the lower jaw, fracturing the bone, and created a terrible
+wound. It is supposed that the large vessels are not injured, and that
+he may yet recover. All who witnessed the scene describe it as one of
+intense horror.
+
+"The unhappy man was at once removed to the Middlesex Hospital. He has
+not uttered a word since the event; and when asked if there were any
+relatives or friends whom he wished might be sent for, merely shook his
+head negatively. It is said that when the result of the consultation
+held on him was announced to him as favorable, he seemed rather grieved
+than otherwise at the tidings."
+
+
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO DINAH, HIS SISTER.
+
+My dear Dinah,--How glad am I to tell you that we leave this to-morrow,
+and a large party of us, too, all for "The Home." Put young Conyers in
+my dressing-room, so that the large green bedroom can be free for the
+General, at least for one of the generals--for we have another here,
+Hunter, who will also be our guest. Then there will be Withering. As for
+myself, I can be stowed away anywhere. What happiness would there be to
+us all at such a meeting, if it were not for that poor wretch who lies
+in all his agony a few streets off, and who is never out of my thoughts.
+I went twice to the hospital to see him. The first time I lost courage,
+and came away. The second, I sent up my name, and asked if he would wish
+to see me. The only answer I got was my visiting-card torn in two! How
+hard it is for an injurer to forgive him he has injured! I have arranged
+with the Stapyltons, however, who instigated the charge of forgery,
+not to press it; at least, they are to take bail, and the bail will
+be forfeited, so I understand it; but Withering will explain all more
+clearly.
+
+Our own affairs are all as bright and prosperous as our best wishes
+could desire. The Council have had all the evidence before them, and the
+Moonshee has produced his copy of the Koran, with the torn leaf fitting
+into the jagged margin, and George is vindicated at last in everything.
+His loyalty, his disinterestedness, his honesty, all established. The
+ceremony of his marriage has been fully recognized; and General Conyers
+tells me that the lowest estimate of our claim is a little short of a
+quarter of a million sterling. He counsels me not to be exigent in
+my terms; if he knew me better, perhaps, he would not have deemed the
+advice so necessary.
+
+What will Fifine say to all this wealth? Will she want to go back to
+India, and be a princess, and ride about on an elephant; or will she
+reconcile herself to such humble ways as ours? I am most eager to hear
+how she will take the tidings. Withering says it will not spoil her;
+that knowing nothing of life in its moneyed relations, she runs no
+risk of being carried away by any vulgar notions of her own importance
+through riches.
+
+Conyers has never once hinted at his son's pretensions since Fifine has
+become an heiress; and I fancy--it may be only fancy--is a shade or so
+cool towards me, so that I have not referred to them. But what can I do?
+I cannot offer him my granddaughter, nor--if what you tell me be true,
+that they are always quarrelling--would the proposal be a great kindness
+to either.
+
+Here is Tom Dill, too, and what a change! He is the image of Polly; and
+a fine, well-grown, straight-figured fellow, that looks you manfully in
+the face,--not the slouching, loutish, shamefaced creature you remember
+him. Hunter has had him gazetted to an Ensigncy in the 10th Foot, and
+he will, or I much mistake him, do honest credit to the recommendation.
+Hunter takes him about with him wherever he goes, telling all about
+the shipwreck and Tom's gallantry,--enough to turn the lad's head with
+vanity, but that he is a fine, simple-hearted creature, who thinks very
+little of himself or his achievement. He seems to have no other thought
+than what Polly, his sister, will say and think of him.
+
+He also will be one of our party; that is if I can persuade him to make
+"The Home" his headquarters while our friends are with us. What a strong
+muster we shall be; and how we 'll astonish that old bin of Madeira,
+Dinah! By the way, I have been rather boastful about it to Conyers, and
+let some bottles have the sun on them for a couple of hours every day.
+
+I should like to try my chance once more of seeing that poor fellow
+at the hospital, but Withering will not hear of it; he got positively
+ill-tempered at the bare mention of such a wish. Even Conyers says,
+"Better not," with an air that may mean for the sick man's sake as much
+as my own.
+
+A little more of this life of noise, confusion, and excitement would
+finish me. This city existence, with its incessant events and its never
+ending anxieties, is like walking in a high wind with the chimney-pots
+falling and crashing on every side of one,--while I am pitying the
+fellow whose skull is just cracked, I am forced to remember that my own
+is in danger. And yet there are people who like it; who tell you
+that out of London there is no living; that the country is a grave,
+aggravated by the consciousness that one is dead and buried there!
+
+On Tuesday,--Wednesday, at farthest,--Dinah, look out for us. I do not
+believe there is that prize in the wheel that would tempt me again away
+from home! and till I reach it, believe, my dear Dinah,
+
+Your loving brother,
+
+Peter Barrington.
+
+I have just seen Conyers. He met Sir Harvey Hethrington, the Home
+Secretary, this morning, and they got into a talk over our business,
+and H. said how cruelly I had been treated all this time back, and how
+unfairly poor George's memory was dealt with. "We want," said he, "to
+show your friend our respect and our sympathy, and we have thought of
+submitting his name to the King for a Baronetcy. How do you think Mr.
+Barrington himself would take our project?" "I 'll find out," said
+Conyers, as he told me of the conversation. "If they don't let me
+off, Conyers," said I, "ask them to commute it to Knighthood, for the
+heralds' fees will be smaller; but I'll try, meanwhile, if I can't
+escape either." So that now, Dinah, you may expect me on Saturday. I
+told you what a place this was; you are never sure what may befall you
+from one moment to another!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX. THE END
+
+Fortune had apparently ceased to persecute Peter Barrington.
+
+The Minister did not press honors upon him, and he was free to wait for
+his companions, and in their company he returned to Ireland.
+
+The news of his success--great as it was, magnified still more--had
+preceded him to his own country; and he was met, as all lucky men are
+met, and will be met to the end of time, by those who know the world and
+feelingly estimate that the truly profitable are the fortunate!
+
+Not that he remarked how many had suddenly grown so cordial; what
+troops of passing acquaintances had become in a moment warm friends,
+well-wishing and affectionate. He never so much as suspected that "Luck"
+is a deity worshipped by thousands, who even in the remotest way are not
+to be benefited by it. He had always regarded the world as a far better
+thing than many moralists would allow it to be,--unsteady, wilful,
+capricious, if you like--but a well-intentioned, kindly minded world,
+that would at all times, where passion or prejudice stood aloof,
+infinitely rather do the generous thing than the cruel one.
+
+Little wonder, then, if he journeyed in a sort of ovation! At every
+change of horses in each village they passed, there was sure to be some
+one who wanted to shake his hand. People hobbled out on crutches and
+quitted sick-beds to say how "glad they were;" mere acquaintances most
+of them, who felt a strange mysterious sort of self-consequence in
+fancying themselves for the moment the friends of Peter Barrington, the
+millionnaire! This is all very curious, but it is a fact,--a fact which
+I make no pretence to explain, however.
+
+"And here comes the heartiest well-wisher of them all!" cried
+Barrington, as he saw his sister standing on the roadside, near the
+gate. With thoughtful delicacy, his companions lingered behind, while
+he went to meet and embraced her. "Was I not a true prophet, Dinah dear?
+Did I not often foretell this day to you?" said he, as he drew her arm,
+and led her along, forgetting all about his friends and companions.
+
+"Have they paid the money, Peter?" said she, sharply.
+
+"Of course they have not; such things are not settled like the fare of a
+hackney-coach. But our claim is acknowledged, and, fifty thousand
+times better, George Barrington's name absolved from every shadow of an
+imputation."
+
+"What is the amount they agree to give?"
+
+"Upon my life, I don't know,--that is, I don't recollect, there were
+so many interviews and such discussions; but Withering can tell you
+everything. Withering knows it all. Without _him_ and Conyers I don't
+know how I could have got on. If you had heard how he spoke of George at
+the Council! 'You talk of _my_ services,' said he; 'they are no more
+fit to be compared with those of Colonel Barrington, than are _my_ petty
+grievances with the gross wrongs that lie on _his_ memory.' Withering
+was there; he heard the words, and described the effect of them as
+actually overwhelming."
+
+"And Withering believes the whole thing to be settled?"
+
+"To be sure, he does! Why should he oppose his belief to that of the
+whole world? Why, my dear Dinah, it is not one, nor two, but some
+hundreds of people have come to wish me joy. They had a triumphal arch
+at Naas, with 'Welcome to Barrington' over it. At Carlow, Fishbourne
+came out with the corporation to offer me congratulations."
+
+She gave a hasty, impatient shake of the head, but repressed the sharp
+reply that almost trembled on her lips.
+
+"By George!" cried he, "it does one's heart good to witness such a burst
+of generous sentiment. You 'd have thought some great national benefit
+had befallen, or that some one--his country's idol--had just reaped the
+recompense of his great services. They came flocking out of the towns as
+we whirled past, cheering lustily, and shouting, 'Barrington forever!'"
+
+"I detest a mob!" said she, pursing up her lips.
+
+"These were no mobs, Dinah; these were groups of honest fellows, with
+kind hearts and generous wishes."
+
+Another, but more decisive, toss of the head warned Peter that the
+discussion had gone far enough; indeed she almost said so, by asking
+abruptly, "What is to be done about the boy Conyers? He is madly in love
+with Josephine."
+
+"Marry her, I should say!"
+
+"As a cure for the complaint, I suppose. But what if she will not have
+him? What if she declares that she 'd like to go back to the convent
+again,--that she hates the world, and is sorry she ever came out into
+it,--that she was happier with the sisters--"
+
+"Has she said all this to you, sister?"
+
+"Certainly not, Peter," said Dinah, bridling up. "These were confidences
+imparted to the young man himself. It was he told me of them: he came
+to me last night in a state bordering on distraction. He was hesitating
+whether he would not throw himself into the river or go into a marching
+regiment."
+
+"This is only a laughing matter, then, Dinah?" said Peter, smiling.
+
+"Nothing of the kind, brother! He did not put the alternatives so much
+in juxtaposition as I have; but they lay certainly in that manner on his
+thoughts. But when do your friends arrive? I thought they were to have
+come with you?"
+
+"What a head I have, Dinah! They are all here; two carriages of them. I
+left them on the road when I rushed on to meet you. Oh, here they come!
+here they are!"
+
+"My brother's good fortune, gentlemen, has made him seem to forget what
+adversity never did; but I believe you all know how welcome you are
+here? Your son, General Conyers, thought to meet you earlier, by taking
+boat down to the village, and the girls went with him. Your friend,
+Polly Dill, is one of them, General Hunter."
+
+Having thus, with one sweep of the scythe, cut down a little of all
+around her, she led the way towards the cottage, accepting the arm of
+General Conyers with an antiquated grace that sorely tried Hunter's good
+manners not to smile at.
+
+"I know what you are looking at, what you are thinking of, Barrington,"
+said Withering, as he saw the other stand a moment gazing at the
+landscape on the opposite side of the river.
+
+"I don't think you do, Tom," said he, smiling.
+
+"You were thinking of buying that mountain yonder. You were saying to
+yourself, 'I 'll be the owner of that beech wood before I'm a month
+older!'"
+
+"Upon my life, you 're right! though I have n't the remotest notion of
+how you guessed it. The old fellow that owns it shall name his own terms
+to-morrow morning. Here come the girls, and they 've got Tom Dill with
+them. How the fellow rows! and Fifine is laughing away at Conyers's
+attempt to keep the boat straight. Look at Hunter, too; he 's off to
+meet them. Is he 'going in' for the great heiress prize, eh, Tom?" said
+he, with a knowing smile.
+
+Though Hunter assisted the ladies to land with becoming gallantry, he
+did not offer his arm to Josephine, but dropped behind, where Tom Dill
+brought up the rear with his sister.
+
+"We have no confidences that you may not listen to," said Polly, as she
+saw that he hesitated as to joining them. "Tom, indeed, has been telling
+of yourself, and you may not care to hear your own praises."
+
+"If they come from _you_, I 'm all ears for them."
+
+"Isn't that pretty, Tom? Did you ever hear any one ask more candidly
+for--no, not flattery--what is it to be called?"
+
+Tom, however, could not answer, for he had stopped to shake hands with
+Darby, whose "May I never!" had just arrested him.
+
+"What an honest, fine-hearted fellow it is!" said Hunter, as they moved
+on, leaving Tom behind.
+
+"But if _you_ had n't found it out, who would have known, or who
+acknowledged it? _I_ know--for he has told me--all you have been to
+him."
+
+"Pooh, pooh! nothing; less than nothing. He owes all that he is to
+himself. He is one of those fellows who, once they get into the right
+groove in life, are sure to go ahead. Not even _you_ could make a doctor
+of him. Nature made him a soldier."
+
+Polly blushed slightly at the compliment to those teachings she believed
+a secret, and he went on,--
+
+"What has the world been doing here since I left?"
+
+"Pretty much what it did while you were here. It looked after its
+turnips and asparagus, took care of its young calves, fattened its
+chickens, grumbled at the dear-ness of everything, and wondered when Dr.
+Buck would preach a new sermon."
+
+"No deaths,--no marriages?"
+
+"None. There was only one candidate for both, and he has done
+neither,--Major M'Cormick."
+
+"Confound that old fellow! I had forgotten him. Do you remember the
+last day I saw you here? We were in the garden, talking, as we believed,
+without witnesses. Well, _he_ overheard us. He heard every word we said,
+and a good deal more that we did not say."
+
+"Yes; so he informed me, a few days after."
+
+"You don't mean to say that he had the impertinence--"
+
+"The frankness, General,--the charming candor,--to tell me that I was a
+very clever girl, and not to be discouraged by one failure or two; that
+with time and perseverance--I think he said perseverance--some one was
+sure to take a fancy to me: he might not, perhaps, be handsome, possibly
+not very young; his temper, too, might chance to be more tart than
+was pleasant; in a word, he drew such a picture that I had to stop him
+short, and ask was he making me a proposal? He has never spoken to me
+since!"
+
+"I feel as if I could break his neck," muttered Hunter, below his
+breath; then added, "Do you remember that I asked leave to write to you
+once,--only once?"
+
+"Yes, I remember it."
+
+"And you would not answer me. You shook your head, as though to say the
+permission would be of no service to me; that I might write, but, you
+understand, that it would only be to indulge in a delusion--"
+
+"What an expressive shake of the head that meant all that!"
+
+"Ah! there it is again; never serious, never grave! And now I want
+you to be both. Since I landed in England, I ran down for a day to
+Devonshire. I saw an old aunt of mine, who, besides being very rich,
+has retained no small share of the romance of her life. She always had
+a dash of hero-worship about her, and so I took down Tom with me to show
+her the gallant fellow whose name was in all the newspapers, and of whom
+all the world was talking. She was charmed with him,--with his honest,
+manly simplicity, his utter want of all affectation. She asked me ten
+times a day, 'Can I not be of service to him? Is there no step he wishes
+to purchase? Is there nothing we can do for him?' 'Nothing,'said I; 'he
+is quite equal to his own fortune.' 'He may have brothers,' said she.
+'He has a sister,' said I,--'a sister who has made him all that he is,
+and it was to repay her love and affection that he has shown himself
+to be the gallant fellow we have seen him.' 'Tell her to come and see
+me.--that is,' said she, correcting herself, 'give her a letter I shall
+write, and persuade her, if you can, to oblige me by doing what I ask.'
+Here is the letter; don't say no till you have read it. Nay, don't shake
+your head so deploringly; things may be hard without being impossible.
+At all events, read her note carefully. It's a droll old hand, but clear
+as print."
+
+"I'll read it," said she, looking at the letter; but the sorrowful tone
+revealed how hopelessly she regarded the task.
+
+"Ask Tom about her; and make Tom tell you what she is like. By Jove! he
+has such an admiration for the old damsel, I was half afraid he meant to
+be my uncle."
+
+They reached the cottage laughing pleasantly over this conceit, and
+Polly hurried up to her room to read the letter. To her surprise,
+Josephine was there already, her eyes very red with crying, and her
+cheeks flushed and feverish-looking.
+
+"My dearest Fifine, what is all this for, on the happiest day of your
+life?" said she, drawing her arm around her.
+
+"It's all _your_ fault,--all _your_ doing," said the other, averting her
+head, as she tried to disengage herself from the embrace.
+
+"My fault,--my doing? What do you mean, dearest, what can I have done to
+deserve this?"
+
+"You know very well what you have done. You knew all the time how it
+would turn out."
+
+Polly protested firmly that she could not imagine what was attributed to
+her, and only after a considerable time obtained the explanation of the
+charge. Indeed it was not at first easy to comprehend it, given, as
+it was, in the midst of tears, and broken at every word by sobs. The
+substance was this: that Fifine, in an attempted imitation of Polly's
+manner,--an effort to copy the coquetting which she fancied to be so
+captivating,--had ventured to trifle so far with young Conyers, that,
+after submitting to every alternative of hope and fear for weeks
+long, he at last gave way, and determined to leave the house, quit the
+country, and never meet her more. "It was to be like you I did it,"
+cried she, sobbing bitterly, "and see what it has led me to."
+
+"Well, dearest, be really like me for half an hour; that is, be very
+patient and very quiet. Sit down here, and don't leave this till I come
+back to you."
+
+Polly kissed her hot cheek as she spoke; and the other sat down where
+she was bade, with the half-obedient sulkiness of a naughty child.
+
+"Tell young Mr. Conyers to come and speak to me. I shall be in the
+garden," said she to his servant; and before she had gone many paces he
+was beside her.
+
+"Oh, Polly dearest! have you any hope for me?" cried he, in agony. "If
+you knew the misery I am enduring."
+
+"Come and take a walk with me," said she, passing her arm within his. "I
+think you will like to hear what I have to tell you."
+
+The revelation was not a very long one; and as they passed beneath the
+room where Josephine sat, Polly called out, "Come down here, Fifine, we
+are making a bouquet; try if you can find 'heart's-ease.'"
+
+What a happy party met that day at dinner! All were in their best
+spirits, each contented with the other. "Have you read my aunt's note?"
+whispered Hunter to Polly, as they passed into the drawing-room.
+
+"Yes. I showed it also to Miss Dinah. I asked her advice."
+
+"And what did she say,--what did she advise?"
+
+"She said she 'd think over it and tell me to-morrow."
+
+"To-morrow! Why not now,--why not at once?" cried he, impatiently. "I
+'ll speak to her myself;" and he hurried to the little room where Miss
+Dinah was making tea.
+
+It was not a very long interview; and Hunter returned, fond, radiant,
+and triumphant. "She's the cleverest old woman I ever met in my life,"
+said he; "and the best, besides, after my Aunt Dorothy. She said that
+such an invitation as that was too cordial to be coldly declined; that
+it meant more--far more--than a politeness; that you ought to go, yes,
+by all means; and if there was any difficulty about the journey, or any
+awkwardness in travelling so far, why, there was an easy remedy for it,
+as well as for meeting my aunt a perfect stranger."
+
+"And what was that?"
+
+"To go as her niece, dearest Polly,--to be the wife of a man who loves
+you."
+
+"Is it possible that you have so much to say to each other that you
+won't take tea?" cried Aunt Dinah; while she whispered to Withering, "I
+declare we shall never have a sociable moment till they're all married
+off, and learn to conduct themselves like reasonable creatures."
+
+Is it not the best testimony we can give to happiness, that it is a
+thing to feel and not describe,--to be enjoyed, but not pictured? It is
+like a debt that I owe to my reader, to show him "The Home" as it was
+when blissful hearts were gathered under its roof; and yet, for the life
+of me, I cannot acquit myself of it. To say that there were old people
+with their memories of the past, and young ones with their hopes of the
+future; that there were bygones to sigh over, and vistas to gaze at,
+conveys but little of the kindliness by which heart opened to heart,
+and sorrow grew lighter by mutual endurance, and joys became brighter as
+they were imparted to another.
+
+"So I find," said Barrington, as they sat at breakfast together, "that
+Josephine insists on going back to the convent, and Fred is resolved on
+an exchange into the Infantry, and is off for Canada immediately."
+
+"Not a bit of it!" broke in Hunter, who remarked nothing of the roguish
+drollery of old Peter's eye, nor even suspected that the speech was made
+in mockery. "Master Fred is coming with me into Kilkenny this morning,
+for a visit to the Dean, or whatever he is, who dispenses those social
+handcuffs they call licenses."
+
+"Why, they were quarrelling all the morning," repeated Harrington.
+
+"So we were, sir, and so we mean to do for many a year," said Josephine;
+"and to keep us in countenance, I hear that General Hunter and Polly
+have determined to follow our example."
+
+"What do I hear, Miss Dill?" said Miss Barrington, with an affected
+severity.
+
+"I'm afraid, madam, it is true; there has been what my father calls 'a
+contagious endemic' here lately, and we have both caught it; but ours
+are mild cases, and we hope soon to recover."
+
+"What's this I see here?" cried Fred, who, to conceal his shame, had
+taken up the newspaper. "Listen to this: 'The notorious Stapylton,
+_alias_ Edwardes, whose case up to yesterday was reported all but
+hopeless, made his escape from the hospital, and has not since been
+heard of. It would appear that some of the officials had been bribed to
+assist his evasion, and a strict inquiry will be immediately set on foot
+into the affair.'"
+
+"Do you think he has got over to France?" whispered Peter to Withering.
+
+"Of course he has; the way was all open, and everything ready for him!"
+
+"Then I am thoroughly happy!" cried Barrington, "and there's not even
+the shadow of a cloud over our present sunshine."
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
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+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ Barrington, Vol II. by Charles James Lever
+ </title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Barrington, by Charles James Lever
+
+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: Barrington
+ Volume II (of II)
+
+Author: Charles James Lever
+
+Illustrator: Phiz.
+
+Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34883]
+Last Updated: February 27, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BARRINGTON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p>
+<br /><br />
+</p>
+<h1>
+BARRINGTON
+</h1>
+<h3>
+Volume II.
+</h3>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<h2>
+By Charles James Lever
+</h2>
+<h3>
+With Illustrations By Phiz.
+</h3>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<h3>
+Boston: Little, Brown, And Company.
+</h3>
+<h4>
+1907.
+</h4>
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="100%" alt="Frontispiece " />
+</div>
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img alt="titlepage (27K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" />
+</div>
+<p>
+<br /> <br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<blockquote>
+<p class="toc">
+<big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+</p>
+<p>
+<br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FIFINE AND
+POLLY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AT
+HOME AGAIN <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+SMALL DINNER-PARTY <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+MOVE IN ADVANCE <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+CABINET COUNCIL <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AN
+EXPRESS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CROSS-EXAMININGS
+<br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;GENERAL
+CONYERS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MAJOR
+M'CORMICK'S LETTER <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;INTERCHANGED
+CONFESSIONS <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STAPYLTON'S
+VISIT AT &ldquo;THE HOME&rdquo; <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII.
+</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT <br /><br /> <a
+href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;CROSS-PURPOSES <br /><br />
+<a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;STORMS <br /><br />
+<a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE OLD LEAVEN
+<br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;A HAPPY
+MEETING <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;MEET
+COMPANIONSHIP <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. &nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;AUNT
+DOROTHEA <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;FROM
+GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER
+XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;THE END <br /><br />
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<hr />
+<p>
+<br /> <br />
+</p>
+<h1>
+VOLUME II.
+</h1>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER I. FIFINE AND POLLY
+</h2>
+<p>
+There are a few days in our autumnal season&mdash;very few and rare!&mdash;when
+we draw the curtain against the glare of the sun at breakfast, and yet in
+the evening are glad to gather around the cheerful glow of the fire. These
+are days of varied skies, with fleecy clouds lying low beneath a broad
+expanse of blue, with massive shadows on the mountains, and here and there
+over the landscape tips of sunlight that make the meanest objects
+pictures; and, with all these, a breezy wind that scatters the yellow
+leaves and shakes the tree-tops, while it curls the current of the bright
+river into mimic waves. The sportsman will tell you that on such days the
+birds are somewhat wild, and the angler will vow that no fish will rise to
+the fly, nor is it a scent-lying day for the harriers; and yet, with all
+this, there is a spring and elasticity in the air that impart themselves
+to the temperament, so that the active grow energetic, and even the
+indolent feel no touch of lassitude.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was on the morning of such a day that Barrington, with his sister and
+granddaughter, drew nigh the Home. Conyers had parted with them at Dublin,
+where his regiment was now stationed, but was to follow in a day or two.
+All the descriptions&mdash;descriptions which had taken the shape of
+warnings&mdash;which they had given Josephine of the cottage could not
+prevent her asking at each turn of the road if that large house yonder, if
+that sombre tower over the trees, if that massive gate-lodge were not
+theirs. &ldquo;I know this is it, grandpapa,&rdquo; said she, clapping her hands with
+delight as they came opposite a low wall within which lay the spacious
+lawn of Cobham Park, a portion of the house itself being just visible
+through the trees; &ldquo;don't tell me, aunt,&rdquo; cried she, &ldquo;but let me guess
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is the seat of Sir Charles Cobham, child, one of the richest baronets
+in the kingdom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There it is at last,&mdash;there it is!&rdquo; cried she, straining oat of the
+carriage to see the handsome portico of a very large building, to which a
+straight avenue of oaks led up from the high-road. &ldquo;My heart tells me,
+aunt, that this is ours!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was once on a time, Fifiue,&rdquo; said the old man, with a quivering voice,
+and a glassy film over his eyes; &ldquo;it was once, but it is so no longer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Barrington Hall has long ceased to belong to us,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah; &ldquo;and
+after all the pains I have taken in description, I cannot see how you
+could possibly confound it with our little cottage.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The young girl sat back without a word, and, whether from disappointment
+or the rebuke, looked forth no more.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are drawing very near now, Fifine,&rdquo; said the old man, after a long
+silence, which lasted fully two miles of the way. &ldquo;Where you see the tall
+larches yonder&mdash;not there&mdash;lower down, at the bend of the
+stream; those are the trees. I declare, Dinah, I fancy they have grown
+since we saw them last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no doubt you do, Peter; not that you will find the cottage far
+more commodious and comfortable than you remembered it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, they've repaired that stile, I see,&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;and very well they've
+done it, without cutting away the ivy. Here we are, darling; here we are!&rdquo;
+and he grasped the young girl's hand in one of his, while he drew the
+other across his eyes.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They 're not very attentive, I must say, brother Peter, or they would not
+leave us standing, with our own gate locked against us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see Darby running as fast as he can. Here he comes!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, by the powers, ye're welcome home, your honor's reverence, and the
+mistresses!&rdquo; cried Darby, as he fumbled at the lock, and then failing in
+all his efforts,&mdash;not very wonderful, seeing that he had taken a
+wrong key,&mdash;he seized a huge stone, and, smashing the padlock at a
+blow, threw wide the gate to admit them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are initiated at once into our Irish ways, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss
+Barrington. &ldquo;All that you will see here is in the same style. Let that be
+repaired this evening, sir, and at your own cost,&rdquo; whispered she to Darby,
+into whose hand at the same moment Peter was pressing a crown piece.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'T is the light of my eyes to see your honors home again! 'Tis like rain
+to the new potatoes what I feel in my heart, and looking so fresh and well
+too! And the young lady, she isn't&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+From what dread anticipation Darby's sudden halt saved him the expression
+is not for me to say, but that Peter Barrington guessed it is probable,
+for he lay back in the carriage and shook with laughter.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Drive on, sir,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah to the postilion, &ldquo;and pull up at the
+stone cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You can drive to the door now, ma'am,&rdquo; said Darby, &ldquo;the whole way; Miss
+Polly had the road made while you were away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a clever girl! Who could have thought it?&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I opine that we might have been consulted as to the change. On a matter
+as important as this, Peter, I think our voices might have been asked.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how well she has done it too!&rdquo; muttered he, half aloud; &ldquo;never
+touched one of those copper beeches, and given us a peep of the bright
+river through the meadows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+As the carriage rolled briskly along, Darby, who trotted alongside, kept
+up a current narrative of the changes effected during their absence.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The ould pigeon-house is tuck down, and an iligant new one put up in the
+island; and the calves' paddock is thrown into the flower-garden, and
+there's a beautiful flight of steps down to the river, paved with white
+stones,&mdash;sorrow one is n't white as snow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a mercy we had not a sign over the door, brother Peter,&rdquo; whispered
+Miss Dinah, &ldquo;or this young lady's zeal would have had it emblazoned like a
+shield in heraldry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, how lovely, how beautiful, how exquisite!&rdquo; cried Josephine, as they
+came suddenly round the angle of a copse and directly in front of the
+cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+Nor was the praise exaggerated. It was all that she had said. Over a light
+trellis-work, carried along under the thatch, the roses and jessamine
+blended with the clematis and the passion-flower, forming a deep eave of
+flowers, drooping in heavy festoons across the spaces between the windows,
+and meeting the geraniums which grew below. Through the open sashes the
+rooms might be seen, looking more like beautifnl bowers than the chambers
+of a dwelling-house. And over all, in sombre grandeur, bent the great
+ilex-trees, throwing their grand and tranquil shade over the cottage and
+the little grass-plot and even the river itself, as it swept smoothly by.
+There was in the stillness of that perfumed air, loaded with the
+sweet-brier and the rose, a something of calm and tranquillity; while in
+the isolation of the spot there was a sense of security that seemed to
+fill op the measure of the young girl's hopes, and made her exclaim with
+rapture, &ldquo;Oh, this, indeed, is beautiful!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, my darling Fifine!&rdquo; said the old man, as he pressed her to his
+heart; &ldquo;your home, your own home! I told you, my dear child, it was not a
+great castle, no fine château, like those on the Meuse and the Sambre, but
+a lowly cottage with a thatched roof and a rustic porch.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In all this ardor for decoration and smartness,&rdquo; broke in Miss Dinah, &ldquo;it
+would not surprise me to find that the peacock's tail had been picked out
+in fresh colors and varnished.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faix! your honor is not far wrong,&rdquo; interposed Darby, who had an Irish
+tendency to side with the majority. &ldquo;She made us curry and wash ould
+Sheela, the ass, as if she was a race-horse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope poor Wowsky escaped,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's what he didn't! He has to be scrubbed with soap and water every
+morning, and his hair divided all the way down his back, like a
+Christian's, and his tail looks like a bunch of switch grass.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That 's the reason he has n't come out to meet me; the poor fellow is
+like his betters,&mdash;he's not quite sure that his altered condition
+improves him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have at least one satisfaction, brother Peter,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+sharply; &ldquo;you find Darby just as dirty and uncared for as you left him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By my conscience, there 's another of us is n't much changed since we met
+last,&rdquo; muttered Darby, but in a voice only audible to himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, what a sweet cottage! What a pretty summer-house!&rdquo; cried Josephine,
+as the carriage swept round the copse, and drew short up at the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This summer-house is your home, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington, tartly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Home! home! Do you mean that we live here,&mdash;live here always, aunt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Most distinctly I do,&rdquo; said she, descending and addressing herself to
+other cares. &ldquo;Where's Jane? Take these trunks round by the back door.
+Carry this box to the green-room,&mdash;to Miss Josephine's room,&rdquo; said
+she, with a stronger stress on the words.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, darling, it is a very humble, it is a very lowly,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+&ldquo;but let us see if we cannot make it a very happy home;&rdquo; but as he turned
+to embrace her, she was gone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I told you so, brother Peter,&mdash;I told you so, more than once; but,
+of course, you have your usual answer, 'We must do the best we can!' which
+simply means, doing worse than we need do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington was in no mood for a discussion; he was too happy to be once
+more at home to be ruffled by any provocation his sister could give him.
+Wherever he turned, some old familiar object met his eye and seemed to
+greet him, and he bustled in and out from his little study to the garden,
+and then to the stable, where he patted old Roger; and across to the
+cow-house, where Maggie knew him, and bent her great lazy eyes softly on
+him; and then down to the liver-side, where, in gilt letters, &ldquo;Josephine&rdquo;
+shone on the trim row-boat he had last seen half rotten on the bank; for
+Polly had been there too, and her thoughtful good-nature, forgetting
+nothing which might glad them on their coming.
+</p>
+<p>
+Meanwhile, Josephine had reached her chamber, and, locking the door, sat
+down and leaned her head on the table. Though no tears fell from her eyes,
+her bosom heaved and fell heavily, and more than one deep sigh escaped
+her. Was it disappointment that had so overcome her? Had she fancied
+something grander and more pretentious than this lonely cottage? Was it
+that Aunt Dinah's welcome was wanting in affection? What revulsion could
+it be that so suddenly overwhelmed her? Who can tell these things, who can
+explain how it is that, without any definite picture of an unexpected joy,
+imagination will so work upon us that reality will bring nothing but a
+blank? It is not that the object is less attractive than is hoped for, it
+is simply that a dark shadow has passed over our own hearts; the sense of
+enjoyment has been dulled, and we are sad without a reason. If we
+underrate sorrows of our youth,&mdash;and this is essentially one of them,&mdash;it
+is because our mature age leaves us nothing of that temperament on which
+such afflictions preyed.
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine, without knowing why, without even a reason, wished herself back
+in the convent. There, if there was a life of sombre monotony and
+quietude, there was at least companionship; she had associates of her own
+age. They had pursuits in common, shared the same hopes and wishes and
+fears; but here&mdash;but here&mdash;Just as her thoughts had carried her
+so far, a tap&mdash;a very gentle tap&mdash;came to the door. Josephine
+heard it, but made no answer. It was repeated a little louder, and then a
+low pleasing voice she had never heard before said, &ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Josephine,&mdash;&ldquo;yes&mdash;that is&mdash;who are you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Polly Dill,&rdquo; was the answer; and Josephine arose and unlocked the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Barrington told me I might take this liberty,&rdquo; said Polly, with a
+faint smile. &ldquo;She said, 'Go and make acquaintance for yourself; I never
+play master of the ceremonies.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are Polly,&mdash;the Polly Dill I have heard so much of?&rdquo; said
+Josephine, regarding her steadily and fixedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How stranded your friends must have been for a topic when they talked of
+<i>me!</i>&rdquo; said Polly, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is quite true you have beautiful teeth,&mdash;I never saw such
+beautiful teeth,&rdquo; said Josephine to herself, while she still gazed
+earnestly at her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you,&rdquo; said Polly, &ldquo;are so like what I had pictured you,&mdash;what I
+hoped you would be. I find it hard to believe I see you for the first
+time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, then, <i>you</i> did not think the Rajah's daughter should be a
+Moor?&rdquo; said Josephine, half haughtily. &ldquo;It is very sad to see what
+disappointments I had caused.&rdquo; Neither the saucy toss of the head, nor the
+tone that accompanied these words, were lost upon Polly, who began to feel
+at once that she understood the speaker.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your brother,&rdquo; continued Josephine, &ldquo;is the famous Tom Dill I have
+heard such stories about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Tom! he is anything rather than famous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, he is remarkable; he is odd, original, or whatever you would call
+it. Fred told me he never met any one like him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tom might say as much of Mr. Conyers, for, in truth, no one ever showed
+him such kindness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred told me nothing of that; but perhaps,&rdquo; added she, with a flashing
+eye, &ldquo;you were more in his confidence than I was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I knew very little of Mr. Conyers; I believe I could count on the fingers
+of one hand every time I met him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How strange that you should have made so deep an impression, Miss Dill!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am flattered to hear it, but more surprised than flattered.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I don't wonder at it in the least,&rdquo; said Josephine, boldly. &ldquo;You are
+very handsome, you are very graceful, and then&mdash;&rdquo; She hesitated and
+grew confused, and stammered, and at last said, &ldquo;and then there is that
+about you which seems to say, 'I have only to wish, and I can do it.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no such gift, I assure you,&rdquo; said Polly, with a half-sad smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I know you are very clever; I have heard how accomplished you were,
+how beautifully you rode, how charmingly you sang. I wish he had not told
+me of it all&mdash;for if&mdash;for if&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If what? Say on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you were not so superior to me, I feel that I could love you;&rdquo; and
+then with a bound she threw her arms around Polly's neck, and clasped her
+affectionately to her bosom.
+</p>
+<p>
+Sympathy, like a fashionable physician, is wonderfully successful where
+there is little the matter. In the great ills of life, when the real
+afflictions come down to crush, to wound, or to stun us, we are
+comparatively removed from even the kindest of our comforters. Great
+sorrows are very selfish things. In the lighter maladies, however, in the
+smaller casualties of fortune, sympathy is a great remedy, and we are
+certain to find that, however various our temperaments, it has a sort of
+specific for each. Now Josephine Barrington had not any great cares upon
+her heart; if the balance were to be struck between them, Polly Dill could
+have numbered ten, ay, twenty, for her one, but she thought hers was a
+case for much commiseration, and she liked commiseration, for there are
+moral hypochondrias as well as physical ones. And so she told Polly how
+she had neither father nor mother, nor any other belongings than &ldquo;dear old
+grandpapa and austere Aunt Dinah;&rdquo; that she had been brought up in a
+convent, never knowing one of the pleasures of youth, or her mind being
+permitted to stray beyond the dreary routine of prayer and penance. Of
+music she knew nothing but the solemn chants of the organ, and even
+flowers were to her eyes but the festal decorations of the high altar;
+and, lastly, she vaguely balanced between going back to the dismal
+existence of the cloister, or entering upon the troubled sea of life, so
+full of perils to one unpractised and unskilled as she was. Now Polly was
+a very pretty comforter through these afflictions; her own home
+experiences were not all rose-colored, but the physician who whispers
+honeyed consolations to the patient has often the painful consciousness of
+a deeper malady within than that for which he ministers. Polly knew
+something of a life of struggle and small fortune, with its daily incident
+of debt and dun. She knew what it was to see money mix itself with every
+phase of existence, throwing its damper over joy, arresting the hand of
+benevolence, even denying to the sick-bed the little comforts that help to
+cheat misery. She knew how penury can eat its canker into the heart till
+all things take the color of thrift, and life becomes at last the terrible
+struggle of a swimmer storm-tossed and weary; and yet, with all this
+experience in her heart, she could whisper cheerful counsels to Josephine,
+and tell her that the world had a great many pleasant paths through it,
+though one was occasionally footsore before reaching them; and in this way
+they talked till they grew very fond of each other, and Josephine was
+ready to confess that the sorrow nearest to her heart was parting with
+her. &ldquo;But must you go, dearest Polly,&mdash;must you really go?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must, indeed,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;for if I did not, two little
+sisters of mine would go supperless to bed, not to speak of a small boy
+who is waiting for me with a Latin grammar before him; and the cook must
+get her orders for to-morrow; and papa must have his tea; and this short,
+stumpy little key that you see here unlocks the oat-bin, without which an
+honest old pony would share in the family fast: so that, all things
+considered, my absence would be far from advisable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And when shall we meet again, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not to-morrow, dear; for to-morrow is our fair at Inistioge, and I have
+yarn to buy, and some lambs to sell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And could you sell lambs, Polly?&rdquo; said Josephine, with an expression of
+blank disappointment in her face.
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly smiled, but not without a certain sadness, as she said, &ldquo;There are
+some sentimentalities which, to one in my condition, would just be as
+unsuitable as Brussels lace or diamonds. They are born of luxury and
+indolence, and pertain to those whose existence is assured to them; and my
+own opinion is, they are a poor privilege. At all events,&rdquo; added she,
+rapidly, &ldquo;they are not for me, and I do not wish for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The day after to-morrow, then, you will come here,&mdash;promise me
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be late, then, towards evening, for I have made an engagement to
+put a young horse in harness,&mdash;a three-year-old, and a sprightly one,
+they tell me,&mdash;so that I may look on the morning as filled. I see, my
+dear child, how shocked you are with all these unladylike cares and
+duties; but poor Tom and I used to weld our lives together, and while I
+took my share of boat-building one day, he helped me in the dairy the day
+after; but now that he is gone, our double functions devolve upon me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How happy you must be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I am; at least, I have no time to spare for unhappiness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I could but change with you, Polly!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Change what, my dear child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Condition, fortune, belongings,&mdash;everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take my word for it, you are just as well as you are; but I suppose it's
+very natural for one to fancy he could carry another's burden easier than
+his own, for it was only a few moments back I thought how I should like to
+be you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be me,&mdash;to be me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I was wrong, dearest. It was only a passing, fleeting thought,
+and I now see how absurd I was to wish to be very beautiful, dearly loved,
+and affectionately cared for, with a beautiful home to live in, and every
+hour free to be happy. Oh, what a sigh, dearest, what a sigh! but I assure
+you I have my calamities too; the mice have got at the seeds in my
+onion-bed, and I don't expect to see one come up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+If Josephine's first impulse was to feel angry, her next was to laugh out,
+which she did heartily; and passing her arm fondly round Polly's waist,
+she said, &ldquo;I 'll get used to your raillery, Polly, and not feel sore at
+it; but remember, too, it's a spirit I never knew before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How good and generous, then, to bear it so well!&rdquo; said Polly,
+affectionately; &ldquo;your friend Mr. Conyers did not show the same patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You tried him, then?&rdquo; said Josephine, with a half-eager glance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course; I talked to him as I do to every one. But there goes your
+dinner-bell.&rdquo; Checking herself on a reflection over the pretension of this
+summons of three people to a family meal in a cottage, Polly tied on her
+bonnet and said &ldquo;Good-bye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER II. AT HOME AGAIN
+</h2>
+<p>
+The Barringtons had not been quite a fortnight settled in their home, when
+a note came from Conyers, lamenting, in most feeling terms, that he could
+not pay them his promised visit. If the epistle was not very long, it was
+a grumble from beginning to end. &ldquo;Nobody would know,&rdquo; wrote he, &ldquo;it was
+the same regiment poor Colonel Hunter commanded. Our Major is now in
+command,&mdash;the same Stapylton you have heard me speak of; and if we
+never looked on him too favorably, we now especially detest him. His first
+step was to tell us we were disorderly, ill-dressed, and ill-disciplined;
+but we were even less prepared to hear that we could not ride. The result
+of all this is, we have gone to school again,&mdash;even old captains, who
+have served with distinction in the field, have been consigned to the
+riding-house; and we poor subs are treated as if we were the last refuse
+of all the regiments of the army, sent here to be reformed and corrected.
+We have incessant drills, parades, and inspections, and, worse again, all
+leave is stopped. If I was not in the best of temper with the service
+before, you may judge how I feel towards it now. In fact, if it were not
+that I expect my father back in England by the middle of May, I 'd send in
+my papers and leave at once. How I fall back now in memory to the happy
+days of my ramble with you, and wonder if I shall ever see the like again.
+And how I hate myself for not having felt at the time how immeasurably
+delightful they were! Trust me never to repeat the mistake if I have the
+opportunity given me. I asked this morning for three days&mdash;only three&mdash;to
+run down and see you once more before we leave,&mdash;for we are ordered
+to Honnslow,&mdash;and I was refused. But this was not all: not content
+with rejecting my request, he added what he called an expression of
+astonishment that an officer so deficient in his duties should care to
+absent himself from regimental discipline.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor boy!&mdash;this is, indeed, too bad,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as she had
+read thus far; &ldquo;only think, Peter, how this young fellow, spoiled and
+petted as he was as a child,&mdash;denied nothing, pampered as though he
+were a prince,&mdash;should find himself the mark of so insulting a
+tyranny. Are you listening to me, Peter Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eh,&mdash;what? No, thank you, Dinah; I have made an excellent
+breakfast,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly, and again addressed himself to the
+letter he was reading. &ldquo;That's what I call a Trump, Dinah,&mdash;a regular
+Trump.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is the especial favorite that has called for the very choice eulogy?&rdquo;
+said she, bridling up.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone into the thing, too, with heart and soul,&mdash;a noble fellow!&rdquo;
+continued Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray enlighten us as to the name that calls forth such enthusiasm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stapylton, my dear Dinah,&mdash;Major Stapylton. In all my life I do not
+remember one instance to parallel with this generous and disinterested
+conduct. Listen to what Withering says,&mdash;not a man given to take up
+rash impressions in favor of a stranger. Listen to this: 'Stapylton has
+been very active,&mdash;written to friends, both at Calcutta and Agra, and
+shown, besides, an amount of acuteness in pursuit of what is really
+important, that satisfies me a right good common lawyer has been lost by
+his being a soldier.' And here, again he recurs to him: it is with
+reference to certain documents: 'S. persists in believing that with proper
+diligence these may be recovered; he says that it is a common practice
+with the Moonshees to retain papers, in the hope of their being one day
+deemed of value; and he is fully persuaded that they have not been
+destroyed. There is that about the man's manner of examining a question,&mdash;his
+patience, his instinctive seizure of what is of moment, and his invariable
+rejection of whatever is immaterial; and, lastly, his thorough
+appreciation of the character of that evidence which would have most
+weight with the Indian Board, which dispose me to regard him as an
+invaluable ally to our cause.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do me the favor to regard this picture of your friend now,&rdquo; said Miss
+Barrington, as she handed the letter from Conyers across the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington read it over attentively. &ldquo;And what does this prove, my dear
+sister?&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;This is the sort of stereotyped complaint of every
+young fellow who has been refused a leave. I have no doubt Hunter was too
+easy-tempered to have been strict in discipline, and the chances are these
+young dogs had everything their own way till Stapylton came amongst them.
+I find it hard to believe that any man likes unpopularity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps not, Peter Barrington; but he may like tyranny more than he hates
+unpopularity; and, for my own part, this man is odious to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't say so, Dinah,&mdash;don't say so, I entreat of you, for he will be
+our guest here this very day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Our guest!&mdash;why, is not the regiment under orders to leave?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is; but Withering says it would be a great matter if we could have
+a sort of consultation together before the Major leaves Ireland. There are
+innumerable little details which he sees ought to be discussed between us;
+and so he has persuaded him to give us a day,&mdash;perhaps two days,&mdash;no
+small boon, Dinah, from one so fully occupied as he is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish he would not make the sacrifice, Peter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear sister, are we so befriended by Fortune that we can afford to
+reject the kindness of our fellows?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm no believer in chance friendships, Peter Barrington; neither you nor
+I are such interesting orphans as to inspire sympathy at first sight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine could not help a laugh at Miss Dinah's illustration, and old
+Barriqgton himself heartily joined in the merriment, not sorry the while
+to draw the discussion into a less stern field. &ldquo;Come, come, Dinah,&rdquo; said
+he, gayly, &ldquo;let us put out a few bottles of that old Madeira in the sun;
+and if Darby can find us a salmon-trout, we 'll do our best to entertain
+our visitors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It never occurred to me to doubt the probability of their enjoying
+themselves, Peter; my anxieties were quite on another score.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Fifine,&rdquo; continued Barrington, &ldquo;we shall see if Polly Dill has
+really made you the perfect housekeeper she boasted. The next day or two
+will put your talents to the test.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, if we could only have Polly herself here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What for?&mdash;on what pretext, Miss Barrington?&rdquo; said Dinah, haughtily.
+&ldquo;I have not, so far as I am aware, been accounted very ignorant of
+household cares.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Withering declares that your equal is not in Europe, Dinah.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Withering's suffrage can always be bought by a mock-turtle soup, and
+a glass of Roman punch after it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How he likes it,&mdash;how he relishes it! He says that he comes back to
+the rest of the dinner with the freshness of a man at an assize case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So like him!&rdquo; said Dinah, scornfully; &ldquo;he has never an illustration that
+is not taken from the Four Courts. I remember one day, when asking for the
+bill of fare, he said, 'Will you kindly let me look at the cause list.'
+Prepare yourself, Josephine, for an avalanche of law anecdotes and Old
+Bailey stories, for I assure you you will hear nothing for the next three
+days but drolleries that have been engrossed on parchment and paid stamp
+duty to the Crown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington gave a smile, as though in protest against the speech, and left
+the room. In truth, he was very anxious to be alone, and to think over, at
+his leisure, a short passage in his letter which he had not summoned
+courage to read aloud. It was Withering's opinion that to institute the
+inquiries in India a considerable sum of money would be required, and he
+had left it for Barrington's consideration whether it were wiser to risk
+the great peril of this further involvement, or once more to try what
+chance there might be of a compromise. Who knows what success might have
+attended the suggestion if the old lawyer had but employed any other word!
+Compromise, however, sounded to his ears like an unworthy concession,&mdash;a
+surrender of George's honor. Compromise might mean money for his
+granddaughter, and shame to her father's memory. Not, indeed, that
+Withering was, as a man, one to counsel such a course, but Withering was a
+lawyer, and in the same spirit that he would have taken a verdict for half
+his claim if he saw an adverse feeling in the jury-box, so he would bow to
+circumstances that were stronger than him, and accept the best he could,
+if he might not have all that he ought But could Barrington take this
+view? He thought not. His conviction was that the main question to
+establish was the fair fame and honor of his son; his guide was, how
+George himself would have acted&mdash;would have felt&mdash;in the same
+contingency; and he muttered, &ldquo;He'd have been a hardy fellow who would
+have hinted at compromise to <i>him</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The next point was how the means for the coming campaign were to be
+provided. He had already raised a small sum by way of mortgage on the
+&ldquo;Home,&rdquo; and nothing remained but to see what further advance could be made
+on the same security. When Barrington was a great estated gentleman with a
+vast fortune at his command, it cost him wonderfully little thought to
+contract a loan, or even to sell a farm. A costly election, a few weeks of
+unusual splendor, an unfortunate night at play, had made such sacrifices
+nothing very unusual, and he would give his orders on this score as
+unconcernedly as he would bid his servant replenish his glass at table.
+Indeed, he had no more fear of exhausting his fortune than he felt as to
+out-drinking his cellar. There was enough there, as he often said, for
+those who should come after him. And now, what a change! He stood actually
+appalled at the thought of a mortgage for less than a thousand pounds. But
+so it is; the cockboat may be more to a man than was once the
+three-decker. The cottage was his all now; that lost, and they were
+houseless. Was it not a bold thing to risk everything on one more throw?
+There was the point over which he now pondered as he walked slowly along
+in the little shady alley between the laurel hedges. He had no friend
+nearer his heart than Withering, no one to whom he could unbosom himself
+so frankly and so freely, and yet this was a case on which he could not
+ask his counsel. All his life long he had strenuously avoided suffering a
+question of the kind to intervene between them. Of his means, his
+resources, his straits, or his demands, Withering knew positively nothing.
+It was with Barrington a point of delicacy to maintain this reserve
+towards one who was always his lawyer, and often his guest. The very
+circumstance of his turning innkeeper was regarded by Withering as
+savoring far more of caprice than necessity, and Barrington took care to
+strengthen this impression.
+</p>
+<p>
+If, then, Withering's good sense and worldly knowledge would have been
+invaluable aids to him in this conjunction, he saw he could not have them.
+The same delicacy which debarred him heretofore, would still interpose
+against his appeal to that authority. And then he thought how he had once
+troops of friends to whom he could address himself for counsel. There is
+nothing more true, indeed, than the oft-uttered scoff on the hollowness of
+those friendships which attach to the days of prosperous fortune, and the
+world is very prone to point to the utter loneliness of him who has been
+shipwrecked by Fate; but let us be just in our severity, and let us own
+that a man's belongings, his associates, his&mdash;what common parlance
+calls&mdash;friends, are the mere accidents of his station, and they no
+more accompany him in his fall than do the luxuries he has forfeited. From
+the level from which he has lapsed they have not descended. They are
+there, living to-day as they lived yesterday. If their sympathy is not
+with him, it is because neither are they themselves; they cross each other
+no more. Such friendships are like the contracts made with a crew for a
+particular voyage,&mdash;they end with the cruise. No man ever understood
+this better than Barrington; no man ever bore the world less of ill will
+for its part towards himself. If now and then a sense of sadness would
+cloud him at some mark of passing forgetfulness, he would not own to the
+gloomy feeling; while to any show of recognition, to any sign of a
+grateful remembrance of the past, he would grow boastful to very vanity.
+&ldquo;Look there, Dinah,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;what a noble-hearted fellow that is! I
+scarcely was more than commonly civil to him formerly, and you saw how
+courteous he was in making a place for us, how heartily he hoped I was in
+good health.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll send over to Dill and have a talk with him,&rdquo; was Barrington's last
+resolve, as he turned the subject over and over in his mind. &ldquo;Dill 's a
+shrewd fellow, and I 'm not sure that he has not laid by a little money;
+he might feel no objection to a good investment for it, with such
+security.&rdquo; And he looked around as he spoke on the trees, some of which he
+planted, every one of which he knew, and sighed heavily. &ldquo;He 'll scarce
+love the spot more than I did,&rdquo; muttered he, and walked along with his
+head down. After a while he took out Withering's letter from his pocket
+and re-read it. Somehow, it was hard to say why, it did not read so
+promisingly as at first. The difficulties to be encountered were very
+stubborn ones, so much so that he very palpably hinted how much better
+some amicable settlement would be than an open contest wherein legal
+subtlety and craft should be evoked. There was so much of that matter
+always taken for granted, to be proved, to be demonstrated true on
+evidence, that it actually looked appalling. &ldquo;Of the searches and
+inquiries instituted in India,&rdquo; wrote Withering, &ldquo;I can speak but vaguely;
+but I own the very distance magnifies them immensely to my eyes.&rdquo; &ldquo;Tom is
+growing old, not a doubt of it,&rdquo; muttered Barrington; &ldquo;these were not the
+sort of obstacles that could have terrified him once on a time. He 'd have
+said, 'If there 's evidence, we 'll have it; if there's a document, we 'll
+find it.' It's India, that far-away land, that has frightened him. These
+lawyers, like certain sportsmen, lose their nerve if you take them out of
+their own country. It 's the new style of fences they can't face. Well,
+thanks to him who gave it, I have my stout heart still, and I 'll go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going on&rdquo; was, however, not the easy task it first seemed, nor was the
+pleasantest part of it the necessity of keeping the secret from his
+sister. Miss Dinah had from the first discouraged the whole suit. The
+adversary was too powerful, the odds against them were too great; the
+India Board had only to protract and prolong the case and <i>they</i> must
+be beaten from sheer exhaustion. How, then, should he reconcile her to
+mortgaging the last remnant of all their fortune for &ldquo;one more throw on
+the table&rdquo;? &ldquo;No chance of persuading a woman that this would be wise,&rdquo;
+said he. And he thought, when he had laid the prejudice of sex as the
+ground of error, he had completed his argument.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Going on&rdquo; had its fine generous side about it, also, that cheered and
+elevated him. It was for George he was doing it, and that dear girl, whose
+every trait recalled her father; for let those explain it who can, she,
+who had never seen nor even heard of her father since her infancy,
+inherited all his peculiar ways and habits, and every trick of his manner.
+Let me own that these, even more than any qualities of sterling worth,
+endeared her to her grandfather; and just as he had often declared no rank
+or position that could befall George would have been above his deserts, so
+he averred that if Josephine were to be the greatest heiress in England
+to-morrow, she would be a grace and an ornament to the station. If Aunt
+Dinah would occasionally attempt to curb this spirit, or even limit its
+extravagance, his invariable answer was, &ldquo;It may be all as you say,
+sister, but for the life of me I cannot think my swans to be geese.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+As he thus mused and meditated, he heard the wicket of the garden open and
+shut, and shortly afterwards a half-shambling shuffling step on the
+gravel. Before he had time to speculate on whose it should be, he saw
+Major M'Cormick limping laboriously towards him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How is this, Major?&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;has the change of weather disagreed with
+your rheumatism?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's the wound; it's always worse in the fall of the year,&rdquo; croaked the
+other. &ldquo;I'd have been up to see you before but for the pains, and that old
+fool Dill&mdash;a greater fool myself for trusting him&mdash;made me put
+on a blister down what he calls the course of the nerve, and I never knew
+torture till I tried it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sister Dinah has, I verily believe, the most sovereign remedy for
+these pains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it the green draught? Oh, don't I know it,&rdquo; burst out the Major. &ldquo;You
+might hear my shouts the day I took it down at Inistioge. There was n't a
+bit of skin left on my lips, and when I wiped the perspiration off my head
+my hair came off too. Aquafortis is like egg-flip compared to that blessed
+draught; and I remember well how I crawled to my writing-desk and wrote,
+'Have me opened,' for I knew I was poisoned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did you tell my sister of your sufferings?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure I did, and she only smiled and said that I took it when I was
+fasting, or when I was full, I forget which; and that I ought to have
+taken a brisk walk, and I only able to creep; and only one spoonful at a
+time, and it was the whole bottle I swallowed. In fact, she owned
+afterwards that nothing but the strength of a horse could have saved me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter found it very hard to maintain a decent gravity at the play of the
+Major's features, which during the narrative recalled every dire
+experience of his medicine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, come into the house and we'll give you something better,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I saw your granddaughter at the window as I came by,&mdash;a
+good-looking young woman, and not so dark as I suspected she 'd be.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's not a handsomer girl in Ireland; and as to skin, she 's not as
+brown as her father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It wouldn't be easy to be that; he was about three shades deeper than a
+Portuguese.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;George Barrington was confessedly the finest-looking fellow in the King's
+army, and as English-looking a gentleman as any man in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The tone of this speech was so palpably that of one who would not stand
+the very shadow of a rejoinder, that the Major held his peace, and
+shuffled along without a word. The thought, however, of administering a
+rebuke to any one within the precincts of his home was so repugnant to
+Barrington's nature, that he had scarcely uttered the words than he was
+eager to repair them, and with a most embarrassed humility he stammered
+out something about their recent tour abroad and all the enjoyment it had
+given them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe so,&rdquo; rejoined the other, dryly; &ldquo;but I never saw any pleasure in
+spending money you could keep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Major, that is precisely the very money that does procure
+pleasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wasn't that a post-chaise I saw through the trees? There it is again;
+it's making straight for the 'Home,'&rdquo; said M'Cormick, pointing with his
+stick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Peter; &ldquo;I was expecting a couple of friends to pass a day or
+so with me here. Will you excuse me if I hurry forward to welcome them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't make a stranger of me; I'll saunter along at my leisure,&rdquo; said the
+Major, as Barrington walked briskly on towards the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER III. A SMALL DINNER-PARTY
+</h2>
+<p>
+Withering and Stapylton had arrived fully two hoars earlier than they were
+expected, and Miss Dinah was too deeply engaged in the household cares
+that were to do them honor to receive them. Josephine, too, was not less
+busily occupied, for her conventual education had made her wonderfully
+skilful in all sorts of confectionery, and she was mistress of devices in
+spun sugar and preserved fruits, which rose in Aunt Dinah's eyes to the
+dignity of high art. Barrington, however, was there to meet them, and with
+a cordial welcome which no man could express more gracefully. The luncheon
+hour passed pleasantly over, for all were in good humor and good spirits.
+Withering's holiday always found him ready to enjoy it, and when could old
+Peter feel so happy as when he had a guest beneath his roof who thoroughly
+appreciated the cottage, and entered into the full charm of its lovely
+scenery! Such was Stapylton; he blended a fair liking for the picturesque
+with a natural instinct for comfort and homeliness, and he saw in this
+spot what precisely embraced both elements. It was very beautiful; but,
+better still, it was very lovable. &ldquo;It was so rare&rdquo;&mdash;so, at least, he
+told Barrington&mdash;&ldquo;to find a cottage wherein internal comfort had not
+been sacrificed to some requirement of outward show. There was only one
+way of doing this,&rdquo; said he, as Barrington led him through the little
+flower-garden, giving glimpses of the rooms within as they passed,&mdash;&ldquo;only
+one way, Mr. Barrington; a man must have consummate taste, and strong
+credit at his banker's.&rdquo; Barrington's cheek grew a thought redder, and he
+smiled that faint sad smile which now and then will break from one who
+feels that he could rebut what he has just heard, if it were but right or
+fitting he should do so. Of course, amongst really distressing sensations
+this has no place; but yet there is a peculiar pain in being complimented
+by your friend on the well-to-do condition of your fortune when your
+conscience is full of the long watching hours of the night, or, worse
+still, the first awaking thought of difficulties to which you open your
+eyes of a morning. It is not often, nor are there many to whom you can
+say, &ldquo;I cannot tell the day or the hour when all this shall pass away from
+me; my head is racked with care, and my heart heavy with anxiety.&rdquo; How
+jarring to be told of all the things you ought to do! You who could so
+well afford it! And how trying to have to take shelter from your necessity
+under the shadow of a seeming stinginess, and to bear every reflection on
+your supposed thrift rather than own to your poverty!
+</p>
+<p>
+If Withering had been with them as they strolled, this, perhaps, might
+have been avoided; he had all a lawyer's technical skill to change a
+topic; but Withering had gone to take his accustomed midday nap, the
+greatest of all the luxuries his time of idleness bestowed upon him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, although Stapylton's alludings&mdash;and they were no more&mdash;to
+Barrington's gifts of fortune were such as perfectly consisted with good
+taste and good breeding, Barring-ton felt them all painfully, and probably
+nothing restrained him from an open disclaimer of their fitness save the
+thought that from a host such an avowal would sound ungracefully. &ldquo;It is
+my duty now,&rdquo; reasoned he, &ldquo;to make my guest feel that all the attentions
+he receives exact no sacrifice, and that the pleasure his presence affords
+is unalloyed by a single embarrassment. If he must hear of my
+difficulties, let it be when he is not beneath my roof.&rdquo; And so he let
+Stapylton talk away about the blessings of tranquil affluence, and the
+happiness of him whose only care was to find time for the enjoyments that
+were secured to him. He let him quote Pope and Wharton and Edmund Burke,
+and smiled the blandest concurrence with what was irritating him almost to
+fever.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is Withering's favorite spot,&rdquo; said Peter, as they gained the shade
+of a huge ilex-tree, from which two distinct reaches of the river were
+visible.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it shall be mine, too,&rdquo; said Stapylton, throwing himself down in the
+deep grass; &ldquo;and as I know you have scores of things which claim your
+attention, let me release you, while I add a cigar&mdash;the only possible
+enhancement&mdash;to the delight of this glorious nook.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it shall be as you wish. We dine at six. I 'll go and look after a
+fish for our entertainment;&rdquo; and Barrington turned away into the copse,
+not sorry to release his heart by a heavy sigh, and to feel he was alone
+with his cares.
+</p>
+<p>
+Let us turn for a moment to M'Cormick, who continued to saunter slowly
+about the garden, in the expectation of Barrington's return. Wearied at
+length with waiting, and resolved that his patience should not go entirely
+unrequited, he turned into a little shady walk on which the windows of the
+kitchen opened. Stationing himself there, in a position to see without
+being seen, he took what he called an observation of all within. The sight
+was interesting, even if he did not bring to it the appreciation of a
+painter. There, upon a spacious kitchen table, lay a lordly sirloin,
+richly and variously colored, flanked by a pair of plump guinea-hens and a
+fresh salmon of fully twenty pounds' weight. Luscious fruit and vegetables
+were heaped and mingled in a wild profusion, and the speckled plumage of
+game was half hidden under the massive bunches of great hot-house grapes.
+It is doubtful if Sneyders himself could have looked upon the display with
+a higher sense of enjoyment It is, indeed, a question between the relative
+merits of two senses, and the issue lies between the eye and the palate.
+</p>
+<p>
+Wisely reasoning that such preparations were not made for common guests,
+M'Cormick ran over in his mind all the possible and impossible names he
+could think of, ending at last with the conviction it was some &ldquo;Nob&rdquo; he
+must have met abroad, and whom in a moment of his expansive hospitality he
+had invited to visit him. &ldquo;Isn't it like them!&rdquo; muttered he. &ldquo;It would be
+long before they'd think of such an entertainment to an old neighbor like
+myself; but here they are spending&mdash;who knows how much?&mdash;for
+somebody that to-morrow or next day won't remember their names, or maybe,
+perhaps, laugh when they think of the funny old woman they saw,&mdash;the
+'Fright' with the yellow shawl and the orange bonnet. Oh, the world, the
+world!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It is not for me to speculate on what sort of thing the world had been, if
+the Major himself had been intrusted with the control and fashion of it;
+but I have my doubts that we are just as well off as we are. &ldquo;Well, though
+they haven't the manners to say 'M'Cormick; will you stop and dine?' they
+haven't done with me yet; not a bit!&rdquo; And with this resolve he entered the
+cottage, and found his way to the drawing-room. It was unoccupied; so he
+sat himself down in a comfortable armchair, to await events and their
+issue. There were books and journals and newspapers about; but the Major
+was not a reader, and so he sat musing and meditating, while the time went
+by. Just as the clock struck five, Miss Dinah, whose various cares of
+housewifery had given her a very busy day, was about to have a look at the
+drawing-room before she went to dress, and being fully aware that one of
+her guests was asleep, and the other full stretched beside the river, she
+felt she could go her &ldquo;rounds&rdquo; without fear of being observed. Now,
+whatever had been the peculiar functions she was lately engaged in, they
+had exacted from her certain changes in costume more picturesque than
+flattering. In the first place, the sleeves of her dress were rolled up
+above the elbows, displaying arms more remarkable for bone than beauty. A
+similar curtailment of her petticoats exhibited feet and ankles which&mdash;not
+to be ungallant&mdash;might be called massive rather than elegant; and
+lastly, her two long curls of auburn hair&mdash;curls which, in the
+splendor of her full toilette, were supposed to be no mean aids to her
+captivating powers&mdash;were now tastefully festooned and fastened to the
+back of her head, pretty much as a pair of hawsers are occasionally
+disposed on the bow of a merchantman! Thus costumed, she had advanced into
+the middle of the room before she saw the Major.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pleasure quite unexpected, sir, is this,&rdquo; said she, with a vigorous
+effort to shake out what sailors would call her &ldquo;lower courses.&rdquo; &ldquo;I was
+not aware that you were here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, then, I came in myself, just like old times. I said this morning,
+if it 's fine to-day, I 'll just go over to the 'Fisherman's Home.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The Home,' sir, if you please. We retain so much of the former name.&rdquo;
+But just as she uttered the correction, a chance look at the glass
+conveyed the condition of her head-gear,&mdash;a startling fact which made
+her cheeks perfectly crimson. &ldquo;I lay stress upon the change of name, sir,&rdquo;
+continued she, &ldquo;as intimating that we are no longer innkeepers, and expect
+something, at least, of the deference rendered to those who call their
+house their own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, and why not?&rdquo; croaked out the Major, with a malicious grin.
+&ldquo;And I forgot all about it, little thinking, indeed, to surprise you in
+'dishabille,' as they call it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>You</i> surprise me, sir, every time we meet,&rdquo; said she, with flashing
+eyes. &ldquo;And you make me feel surprised with myself for my endurance!&rdquo; And
+so saying, she retired towards the door, covering her retreat as she went
+by every object of furniture that presented itself, and, like a skilful
+general, defending her rear by every artifice of the ground. Thus did she
+exit, and with a bang of the door&mdash;as eloquent as any speech&mdash;close
+the colloquy.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faix! and the Swiss costume doesn't become you at all!&rdquo; said the Major,
+as he sat back in his chair, and cackled over the scene.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Miss Barrington, boiling with passion, passed her brother's door, she
+stopped to knock.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter!&rdquo; cried she. &ldquo;Peter Barrington, I say!&rdquo; The words were, however,
+not well out, when she heard a step ascending the stair. She could not
+risk another discovery like the last; so, opening the door, she said,
+&ldquo;That hateful M'Cormick is below. Peter, take care that on no account&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was no time to finish, and she had barely an instant to gain her own
+room, when Stapylton reached the corridor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington had, however, heard enough to inform him of his sister's
+high behest. Indeed, he was as quick at interpreting brief messages as
+people have grown in these latter days of telegraphic communication.
+Oracular utterings had been more than once in his life his only
+instructors, and he now knew that he had been peremptorily ordered not to
+ask the Major to dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are, doubtless, people in this world&mdash;I almost fancy I have met
+one or two such myself&mdash;who would not have felt peculiar difficulty
+in obeying this command; who would have gone down to the drawing-room and
+talked coolly to the visitor, discussing commonplaces, easily and
+carelessly, noting the while how at every pause of the conversation each
+was dwelling on the self-same point, and yet, with a quiet abstinence,
+never touching it, till with a sigh, that was half a malediction, the
+uninvited would rise to take leave. Barrington was not of this number. The
+man who sat under his roof was sacred. He could have no faults; and to
+such a pitch had this punctilio carried him, that had an actual enemy
+gained the inside of his threshold, he would have spared nothing to treat
+him with honor and respect.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; muttered he, as he slowly descended the stairs, &ldquo;it will be
+the first time in my life I ever did it, and I don't know how to go about
+it now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+When a frank and generous man is about to do something he is ashamed of,
+how readily will a crafty and less scrupulous observer detect it!
+M'Cormick read Barrington's secret before he was a minute in the room. It
+was in vain Peter affected an off-hand easy manner, incidentally dropping
+a hint that the Attorney-General and another friend had just arrived,&mdash;a
+visit, a mere business visit it was, to be passed with law papers and
+parchments. &ldquo;Poor fun when the partridges were in the stubble, but there
+was no help for it. Who knew, however, if he could not induce them to give
+him an extra day, and if I can, Major, you must promise to come over and
+meet them. You 'll be charmed with Withering, he has such a fund of
+agreeability. One of the old school, but not the less delightful to you
+and me. Come, now, give me your word&mdash;for&mdash;shall we say
+Saturday?&mdash;Yes, Saturday!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 've nothing to say against it,&rdquo; grumbled out M'Cormick, whose assent
+was given, as attorneys say, without prejudice to any other claim.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear from me in the morning, then,&rdquo; said Peter. &ldquo;I 'll send you
+a line to say what success I have had with my friends.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Any time in the day will do,&rdquo; said the Major, unconcernedly; for, in
+truth, the future never had in his estimation the same interest as the
+present. As for the birds in the bush, he simply did not believe in them
+at all.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly. &ldquo;You shall hear from me early, for I
+am anxious you should meet Withering and his companion, too,&mdash;a
+brother-soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who may he be?&rdquo; asked M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's my secret, Major,&mdash;that's my secret,&rdquo; said Peter, with a
+forced laugh, for it now wanted but ten minutes to six; &ldquo;but you shall
+know all on Saturday.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Had he said on the day of judgment, the assurance would have been as
+palatable to M'Cormick. Talking to him of Saturday on a Monday was asking
+him to speculate on the infinite. Meanwhile he sat on, as only they sit
+who understand the deep and high mystery of that process. Oh, if you who
+have your fortunes to make in life, without any assignable mode for so
+doing, without a craft, a calling, or a trade, knew what success there was
+to be achieved merely by sitting&mdash;by simply being &ldquo;there,&rdquo; eternally
+&ldquo;there&rdquo;&mdash;a warning, an example, an illustration, a what you will, of
+boredom or infliction; but still &ldquo;there.&rdquo; The butt of this man, the terror
+of that,&mdash;hated, feared, trembled at,&mdash;but yet recognized as a
+thing that must be, an institution that was, and is, and shall be, when we
+are all dead and buried.
+</p>
+<p>
+Long and dreary may be the days of the sitter, but the hour of his reward
+will come at last. There will come the time when some one&mdash;any one&mdash;will
+be wanted to pair off with some other bore, to listen to his stories and
+make up his whist-table; and then he will be &ldquo;there.&rdquo; I knew a man who,
+merely by sitting on patiently for years, was at last chosen to be sent as
+a Minister and special Envoy to a foreign Court just to get rid of him.
+And for the women sitters,&mdash;the well-dressed and prettily got-up
+simperers, who have sat their husbands into Commissionerships, Colonial
+Secretaryships, and such like,&mdash;are they not written of in the Book
+of Beauty?
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here 's M'Cormick, Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, with a voice shaking with
+agitation and anxiety, &ldquo;whom I want to pledge himself to us for Saturday
+next. Will you add your persuasions to mine, and see what can be done?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think you can depend upon me?&rdquo; cackled out the Major.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am certain of it, sir; I feel your word like your bond on such a
+matter,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah. &ldquo;My grandniece, Miss Josephine Barrington,&rdquo; said
+she, presenting that young lady, who courtesied formally to the
+unprepossessing stranger.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm proud of the honor, ma'am,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, with a deep bow, and
+resumed his seat; to rise again, however, as Withering entered the room
+and was introduced to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is intolerable, Peter,&rdquo; whispered Miss Barrington, while the lawyer
+and the Major were talking together. &ldquo;You are certain you have not asked
+him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;On my honor, Dinah! on my honor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope I am not late?&rdquo; cried Stapylton, entering; then turning hastily to
+Barrington, said, &ldquo;Pray present me to your niece.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is my sister, Major Stapylton; this is my granddaughter;&rdquo; and the
+ladies courtesied, each with a degree of satisfaction which the reader
+shall be left to assign them.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a few words of commonplace civility, uttered, however, with a
+courtesy and tact which won their way for the speaker, Stapylton
+recognized and shook hands with M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know my neighbor, then?&rdquo; said Barrington, in some surprise.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am charmed to say I do; he owes me the <i>denouement</i> of a most
+amusing story, which was suddenly broken off when we last parted, but
+which I shall certainly claim after dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has been kind enough to engage himself to us for Saturday,&rdquo; began
+Dinah. But M'Cormick, who saw the moment critical, stepped in,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear every word of it before you sleep. It's all about
+Walcheren, though they think Waterloo more the fashion now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just as this young lady might fancy Major Stapylton a more interesting
+event than one of us,&rdquo; said Withering, laughing. &ldquo;But what 's become of
+your boasted punctuality, Barrington? A quarter past,&mdash;are you
+waiting for any one?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we, Dinah?&rdquo; asked Barrington, with a look of sheepishness.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I am aware of, Peter. There is no one to <i>come</i>;&rdquo; and she
+laid such an emphasis on the word as made the significance palpable.
+</p>
+<p>
+To Barrington it was painful as well as palpable; so painful, indeed, that
+he hurriedly rang the bell, saying, in a sharp voice, &ldquo;Of course, we are
+all here,&mdash;there are six of us. Dinner, Darby!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The Major had won, but he was too crafty to show any triumph at his
+victory, and he did not dare even to look towards where Miss Barrington
+stood, lest he should chance to catch her eye. Dinner was at length
+announced. Withering gave his arm to Miss Barrington, Stapylton took
+charge of Josephine, and old Peter, pleasantly drawing his arm within
+M'Cormick's, said, &ldquo;I hope you 've got a good appetite, Major, for I have
+a rare fish for you to-day, and your favorite sauce, too,&mdash;smelt, not
+lobster.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Poor Barrington! it was a trying moment for him, that short walk into the
+dinner-room, and he felt very grateful to M'Cormick that he said nothing
+peevish or sarcastic to him on the way. Many a dinner begins in
+awkwardness, but warms as it proceeds into a pleasant geniality. Such was
+the case here. Amongst those, besides, who have not the ties of old
+friendship between them, or have not as yet warmed into that genial
+good-fellowship which is, so to say, its foster-brother, a character of
+the M'Cormick class is not so damaging an element as might be imagined,
+and at times there is a positive advantage in having one of whose merits,
+by a tacit understanding, all are quite agreed. Withering and Stapylton
+both read the man at once, and drew out his salient points&mdash;his
+parsimony, his malice, and his prying curiosity&mdash;in various ways, but
+so neatly and so advisedly as to make him fancy he was the attacking
+party, and very successful, too, in his assaults upon the enemy. Even
+Barrington, in the honest simplicity of his nature, was taken in, and more
+than once thought that the old Major was too severe upon the others, and
+sat in wondering admiration of their self-command and good temper. No
+deception of this sort prevailed with Miss Barrington, who enjoyed to the
+fullest extent the subtle raillery with which they induced him to betray
+every meanness of his nature, and yet never suffered the disclosure to
+soar above the region of the ludicrous.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have been rather hard upon them, Major,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they
+strolled about on the greensward after dinner to enjoy their coffee and a
+cigar. &ldquo;Don't you think you have been a shade too severe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will do them good. They wanted to turn me out like a bagged fox, and
+show the ladies some sport; but I taught them a thing or two.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, M'Cormick, you wrong them there; they had no such intentions,
+believe me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know that <i>you</i> did n't see it,&rdquo; said he, with emphasis, &ldquo;but your
+sister did, and liked it well, besides; ay, and the young one joined in
+the fun. And, after all, I don't see that they got much by the victory,
+for Withering was not pleased at my little hit about the days when he used
+to be a Whig and spout liberal politics; and the other liked just as
+little my remark about the fellows in the Company's service, and how
+nobody knew who they were or where they came from. He was in the Madras
+army himself, but I pretended not to know it; but I found his name written
+on the leaf of an old book he gave me, and the regiment he was in: and did
+you see how he looked when I touched on it? But here he comes now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make your peace with him, M'Cormick, make your peace!&rdquo; said Barrington,
+as he moved away, not sorry, as he went, to mark the easy familiarity with
+which Stapylton drew his arm within the other's, and walked along at his
+side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wasn't that a wonderful dinner we had to-day, from a man that hasn't a
+cross in his pocket?&rdquo; croaked out M'Cormick to Stapylton.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sherry and Madeira after your soup, then Sauterne,&mdash;a thing I don't
+care for any more than the oyster patties it came with; champagne next,
+and in tumblers too! Do you ever see it better done at your mess? Or where
+did you ever taste a finer glass of claret?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was all admirable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was only one thing forgotten,&mdash;not that it signifies to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what might that be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was n't paid for! No, nor will it ever be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You amaze me, Major. My impression was that our friend here was, without
+being rich, in very comfortable circumstances; able to live handsomely,
+while he carried on a somewhat costly suit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That 's the greatest folly of all,&rdquo; broke out M'Cormick; &ldquo;and it's to get
+money for that now that he's going to mortgage this place here,&mdash;ay,
+the very ground under our feet!&rdquo; And this he said with a sort of tremulous
+indignation, as though the atrocity bore especially hard upon <i>them</i>.
+&ldquo;Kinshela, the attorney from Kilkenny, was up with me about it yesterday.
+'It's an elegant investment, Major,' says he, 'and you 're very likely to
+get the place into your hands for all the chance old Peter has of paying
+off the charge. His heart is in that suit, and he 'll not stop as long as
+he has a guinea to go on with it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I said, 'I 'd think of it: I 'd turn it over in my mind;' for there's
+various ways of looking at it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy I apprehend one of them,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a half-jocular
+glance at his companion. &ldquo;You have been reflecting over another
+investment, eh? Am I not right? I remarked you at dinner. I saw how the
+young brunette had struck you, and I said to myself, 'She has made a
+conquest already!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a bit of it; nothing of the kind,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, awkwardly. &ldquo;I 'm
+too 'cute to be caught that way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, but remember it might be a very good catch. I don't speak of the
+suit, because I agree with you, the chances in that direction are very
+small, indeed, and I cannot understand the hopeful feeling with which he
+prosecutes it; but she is a fine, handsome girl, very attractive in
+manner, and equal to any station.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what's the good of all that to me? Wouldn't it be better if she could
+make a pease-pudding, like Polly Dill, or know how to fatten a turkey, or
+salt down a side of bacon?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so; I declare, I don't think so,&rdquo; said Stapylton, as he
+lighted a fresh cigar. &ldquo;These are household cares, and to be bought with
+money, and not expensively, either. What a man like you or I wants is one
+who should give a sort of tone,&mdash;impart a degree of elegance to his
+daily life. We old bachelors grow into self-indulgence, which is only
+another name for barbarism. With a mistaken idea of comfort we neglect
+scores of little observances which constitute the small currency of
+civilization, and without which all intercourse is unpleasing and
+ungraceful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not quite sure that I understand you aright, but there's one thing I
+know, I 'd think twice of it before I 'd ask that young woman to be Mrs.
+M'Cormick. And, besides,&rdquo; added he, with a sly side-look, &ldquo;if it's so good
+a thing, why don't you think of it for yourself?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I need not tell an old soldier like <i>you</i> that full pay and a wife
+are incompatible. Every wise man's experience shows it; and when a fellow
+goes to the bishop for a license, he should send in his papers to the
+Horse Guards. Now, I 'm too poor to give up my career. I have not, like
+you, a charming cottage on a river's bank, and a swelling lawn dotted over
+with my own sheep before my door. I cannot put off the harness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who talks of putting off the harness?&rdquo; cried Withering, gayly, as he
+joined them. &ldquo;Who ever dreamed of doing anything so ill-judging and so
+mistaken? Why, if it were only to hide the spots where the collar has
+galled you, you ought to wear the trappings to the last. No man ever knew
+how to idle, who had n't passed all his life at it! Some go so far as to
+say that for real success a man's father and grandfather should have been
+idlers before him. But have you seen Barrington? He has been looking for
+you all over the grounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Stapylton; &ldquo;my old brother-officer and myself got into pipeclay
+and barrack talk, and strolled away down here unconsciously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, we 'd better not be late for tea,&rdquo; broke in the Major, &ldquo;or we 'll
+hear of it from Miss Dinah!&rdquo; And there was something so comic in the
+seriousness of his tone, that they laughed heartily as they turned towards
+the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER IV. A MOVE IN ADVANCE
+</h2>
+<p>
+How pleasantly did the next day break on the &ldquo;Home&rdquo;! Polly Dill arrived in
+the best of possible spirits. A few lines from Tom had just reached them.
+They were written at sea; but the poor fellow's notions of latitude and
+longitude were so confused that it was not easy to say from whence. They
+were cheery, however, he was in good health, his comrades were
+kind-hearted creatures, and evidently recognized in him one of a station
+above their own. He said that he could have been appointed hospital
+sergeant-if he liked, but that whatever reminded him of his old calling
+was so distasteful that he preferred remaining as he was, the rather as he
+was given to believe he should soon be a corporal.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I mean to stop there, Polly; and now that I have n't got to
+study for it, I feel a courage as to the future I never knew before. Give
+my love to Mr. Conyers, and say that I 'm never tired of thinking over the
+last night I saw him, and of all his good nature to me, and that I hope I
+'ll see his father some day or other to thank him. I suppose father does
+n't miss me? I 'm sure mother does n't; and it 's only yourself, Polly,
+will ever feel a heavy heart for the poor castaway! But cheer up! for as
+sure as my name is Tom, I 'll not bring discredit on you, and you 'll not
+be ashamed to take my arm down the main street when we meet. I must close
+now, for the boat is going.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;P. S. I dreamed last night you rode Sid Davis's brown mare over the
+Millrace at Graigue. Would n't it be strange if it came true? I wish I
+could know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I show this to my friend here, Polly?&rdquo; said Barrington, pointing to
+Withering. &ldquo;It's a letter he 'd like to read; and as she nodded assent, he
+handed it across the breakfast-table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is your brother's regiment, Miss Dill?&rdquo; said Stapylton, who had just
+caught a stray word or two of what passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Forty-ninth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Forty-ninth,&rdquo; said he, repeating the words once or twice. &ldquo;Let me
+see,&mdash;don't I know some Forty-ninth men? To be sure I do. There's Rep
+ton and Hare. Your brother will be delighted with Hare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother is in the ranks, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said she, flushing a deep
+scarlet; and Barrington quickly interposed,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the wild frolic of a young man to escape a profession he had no
+mind for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But in foreign armies every one does it,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, hurriedly.
+&ldquo;No matter what a man's rank may be, he must carry the musket; and I own I
+like the practice,&mdash;if for nothing else for that fine spirit of <i>camaraderie</i>
+which it engenders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Fifine's eyes sparkled with pleasure at what she deemed the well-bred
+readiness of this speech, while Polly became deadly pale, and seemed with
+difficulty to repress the repartee that rose to her mind. Not so Miss
+Dinah, who promptly said, &ldquo;No foreign customs can palliate a breach of our
+habits. We are English, and we don't desire to be Frenchmen or Germans.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Might we not occasionally borrow from our neighbors with advantage?&rdquo;
+asked Stapylton, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I agree with Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering,&mdash;&ldquo;I agree with Miss
+Barrington, whose very prejudices are always right. An army formed by a
+conscription which exempts no man is on a totally different footing from
+one derived from voluntary enlistment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A practice that some say should be reserved for marriage,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, whose happy tact it was to relieve a discussion by a ready
+joke.
+</p>
+<p>
+They arose from table soon after,&mdash;Polly to accompany Miss Barrington
+over the garden and the shrubberies, and show all that had been done in
+their absence, and all that she yet intended to do, if approved of;
+Withering adjourned to Barrington's study to pore over parchments; and
+Stapylton, after vainly seeking to find Josephine in the drawing-room, the
+flower-garden, or the lawn, betook himself with a book, the first he could
+find on the table, to the river's side, and lay down, less to read than to
+meditate and reflect.
+</p>
+<p>
+A breezy morning of a fine day in early autumn, with slow sailing clouds
+above and a flickering sunlight on the grass below, besides a rippling
+river, whose banks are glowing with blue and purple heath-bells,&mdash;all
+these and a Waverley novel were not enough to distract Stapylton from the
+cares that pressed upon his mind; for so it is, look where we may on those
+whom Fortune would seem to have made her especial favorites, and we shall
+find some unsatisfied ambition, some craving wish doomed to
+disappointment, some hope deferred till the heart that held it has ceased
+to care for its accomplishment. To the world's eyes, here was a man
+eminently fortunate: already high up in the service, with health, vigor,
+and good looks, a reputation established for personal gallantry in the
+field, and an amount of capacity that had already won for him more than
+one distinction, and yet all these, great and solid advantages as they
+are, were not sufficient to give the ease of mind we call happiness.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had debts, some of them heavy debts, but these sat lightly on him. He
+was one of those men creditors never crush, some secret consciousness
+seeming to whisper that, however ill the world may go with them for a
+while, in the long run they must triumph; and thus Mr. Hirman Davis, to
+whom he owed thousands, would have cashed him another bill to-morrow, all
+on the faith of that future which Stapylton talked about with the careless
+confidence of a mind assured.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had enemies, too,&mdash;powerful and determined enemies,&mdash;who
+opposed his advancement for many a year, and were still adverse to him;
+but, like the creditors, they felt he was not a man to be crushed, and so
+he and his ill-wishers smiled blandly when they met, exchanged the most
+cordial greetings, and even imparted little confidences of their several
+fortunes with all that well-bred duplicity which so simulates friendship.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had been crossed,&mdash;no, not in love, but in his ambition to marry
+one greatly above him in station; but her subsequent marriage had been so
+unfortunate that he felt in part recompensed for the slight she passed
+upon him; so that, taking it all and all, fate had never been cruel to him
+without a compensation.
+</p>
+<p>
+There are men who feel their whole existence to be a hand-to-hand struggle
+with the world, who regard the world as an adversary to be worsted, and
+all whose efforts are devoted to reach that point upon which they can turn
+round and say, &ldquo;You see that I have won the game. I was unknown, and I am
+famous; I was poor, and I am rich; I was passed over and ignored, and now
+the very highest are proud to recognize me!&rdquo; Stapylton was one of these.
+All the egotism of his nature took this form, and it was far more in a
+spirit against his fellows than in any indulgence of himself he fought and
+struggled with Fortune. Intrusted by Withering with much of the secret
+history of Barring-ton's claim against the India Company, he had learned
+considerably more through inquiries instituted by himself, and at length
+arrived at the conclusion that if old Barring-ton could be persuaded to
+limit his demands within moderate bounds, and not insist upon the details
+of that personal reparation which he assumed so essential to his son's
+honor, a very ample recompense would not be refused him. It was to induce
+Barrington to take this course Stapylton had consented to come down with
+Withering,&mdash;so, at least, he said, and so Withering believed. Old
+lawyer that he was, with a hundred instincts of distrust about him, he had
+conceived a real liking for Stapylton, and a great confidence in his
+judgment. &ldquo;We shall have to divide our labors here, Major,&rdquo; said he, as
+they travelled along together; &ldquo;I will leave the ladies to your care.
+Barrington shall be mine.&rdquo; A very brief acquaintance with Miss Dinah
+satisfied Stapylton that she was one to require nice treatment, and what
+he called &ldquo;a very light hand.&rdquo; The two or three little baits he had thrown
+out took nothing; the stray bits of sentimentality, or chance scraps of
+high-toned principle he had addressed to her, had failed. It was only when
+he had with some sharpness hit off some small meanness in M'Cormick's
+nature that she had even vouchsafed him so much as a half-smile of
+approval, and he saw that even then she watched him closely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he, half aloud to himself, &ldquo;that old woman is not one easily to
+be dealt with; and the younger one, too, would have a will of her own if
+she had but the way to use it. If Polly had been in her place,&mdash;the
+clever, quickwitted Polly,&mdash;she would have gone with me in my plans,
+associated herself in all my projects, and assured their success. Oh for a
+good colleague just to keep the boat's head straight when one is weary of
+rowing!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would I do?&rdquo; said a low voice near. And, on looking up, he saw Josephine
+standing over him, with an arch smile on her face as though she had
+surprised him in a confession.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long have you been there?&rdquo; asked he, hurriedly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A few seconds.''
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what have you heard me say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you wanted a colleague, or a companion of some sort; and as I was
+the only useless person here, I offered myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In good faith?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In good faith!&mdash;why not? I am more likely to gain by the association
+than you are; at least, if you can only be as pleasant of a morning as you
+were yesterday at dinner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll try,&rdquo; said he, springing to his feet; &ldquo;and as a success in these
+efforts is mainly owing to the amount of zeal that animates them, I am
+hopeful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Which means a flattery at the outset,&rdquo; said she, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only as much as your friend Mr. Withering would throw out to dispose the
+court in his favor; and now, which way shall we walk? Are you to be the
+guide, or I?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You, by all means, since you know nothing of the locality.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Agreed. Well, here is my plan. We cross the river in this boat, and take
+that path yonder that leads up by the waterfall. I know, from the dark
+shadow of the mountain, that there is a deep glen, very wild, very
+romantic, and very solemn, through which I mean to conduct you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All this means a very long excursion, does it not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have just told me that you were free from all engagement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; but not from all control. I must ask Aunt Dinah's leave before I set
+out on this notable expedition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do nothing of the kind. It would be to make a caprice seem a plan. Let us
+go where you will,&mdash;here, along the river's side; anywhere, so that
+we may affect to think that we are free agents, and not merely good
+children sent out for a walk.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a rebel against authority you are for one so despotic yourself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I despotic! Who ever called me so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your officers say as much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know from what quarter that came,&rdquo; said he; and his bronzed face grew a
+shade deeper. &ldquo;That dilettante soldier, young Conyers, has given me this
+character; but I 'd rather talk of you than myself. Tell me all about your
+life. Is it as delightful as everything around would bespeak it? Are these
+trees and flowers, this sunny bank, this perfumed sward, true emblems of
+the existence they embellish, or is Paradise only a cheat?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so. I think Paradise is very like what it looks, not but I
+own that the garden is pleasanter with guests in it than when only Adam
+and Eve were there. Mr. Withering is charming, and you can be very
+agreeable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would I knew how to be so,&rdquo; said he, seriously, &ldquo;just at this moment;
+for I am going away from Ireland, and I am very desirous of leaving a good
+impression behind me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What could it signify to you how you were thought of in this lonely
+spot?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More than you suspect,&mdash;more than you would, perhaps, credit,&rdquo; said
+he, feelingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+There was a little pause, during which they walked along side by side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What are you thinking of?&rdquo; said she, at last
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was thinking of a strange thing,&mdash;it was this: About a week ago
+there was no effort I was not making to obtain the command of my regiment.
+I wanted to be Lieutenant-Colonel; and so bent was I on gaining my object,
+that if giving away three or four years of that life that I may hope for
+would have done it, I 'd have closed the bargain; and now the ambition is
+gone, and I am speculating whether I 'll not take the cottage of your
+friend Major M'Cormick,&mdash;he offered it to me last night,&mdash;and
+become your neighbor. What say <i>you</i> to the project?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;For us the exchange will be all a gain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want your opinion,&mdash;your own,&rdquo; said he, with a voice reduced to a
+mere whisper.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd like it of all things; although, if I were your sister or your
+daughter, I'd not counsel it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why not, if you were my sister?&rdquo; said he, with a certain constraint
+in his manner.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd say it was inglorious to change from the noble activity of a
+soldier's life to come and dream away existence here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what if I have done enough for this same thing men call fame? I have
+had my share of campaigning, and as the world looks there is wondrous
+little prospect of any renewal of it. These peace achievements suit your
+friend Conyers better than me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you are not just to him. If I read him aright, he is burning for
+an occasion to distinguish himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+A cold shrug of the shoulders was his only acknowledgment of this speech,
+and again a silence fell between them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I would rather talk of <i>you</i>, if you would let me,&rdquo; said he, with
+much significance of voice and manner. &ldquo;Say would you like to have me for
+your neighbor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be a pleasant exchange for Major M'Cormick,&rdquo; said she, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want you to be serious now. What I am asking you interests me too
+deeply to jest over.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;First of all, is the project a serious one?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Next, why ask advice from one as inexperienced as I am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because it is not counsel I ask,&mdash;it is something more. Don't look
+surprised, and, above all, don't look angry, but listen to me. What I have
+said now, and what more I would say, might more properly have been uttered
+when we had known each other longer; but there are emergencies in life
+which give no time for slow approaches, and there are men, too, that they
+suit not. Imagine such now before you,&mdash;I mean, both the moment and
+the man. Imagine one who has gone through a great deal in life, seen,
+heard, and felt much, and yet never till now, never till this very
+morning, understood what it was to know one whose least word or passing
+look was more to him than ambition, higher than all the rewards of glory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We never met till yesterday,&rdquo; said she, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True; and if we part to-morrow, it will be forever. I feel too
+painfully,&rdquo; added he, with more eagerness, &ldquo;how I compromise all that I
+value by an avowal abrupt and rash as this is; but I have had no choice. I
+have been offered the command of a native force in India, and must give my
+answer at once. With hope&mdash;the very faintest, so that it be hope&mdash;I
+will refuse. Remember I want no pledge, no promise; all I entreat is that
+you will regard me as one who seeks to win your favor. Let time do the
+rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not think I ought to do this&mdash;I do not know if you should ask
+it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I speak to your grandfather&mdash;may I tell him what I have told you&mdash;may
+I say, 'It is with Josephine's permission&mdash;'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am called Miss Barrington, sir, by all but those of my own family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forgive me, I entreat you,&rdquo; said he, with a deep humility in his tone. &ldquo;I
+had never so far forgotten myself if calm reason had not deserted me. I
+will not transgress again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the shortest way back to the cottage,&rdquo; said she, turning into a
+narrow path in the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It does not lead to my hope,&rdquo; said he, despondingly; and no more was
+uttered between them for some paces.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not walk so very fast, Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said he, in a tone which
+trembled slightly. &ldquo;In the few minutes&mdash;the seconds you could accord
+me&mdash;I might build the whole fortune of my life. I have already
+endangered my hopes by rashness; let me own that it is the fault I have
+struggled against in vain. This scar&rdquo;&mdash;and he showed the deep mark of
+a sabre-wound on the temple&mdash;&ldquo;was the price of one of my offendings;
+but it was light in suffering to what I am now enduring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can we not talk of what will exact no such sacrifice?&rdquo; said she, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not now, not now!&rdquo; said he, with emotion; &ldquo;if you pass that porch without
+giving me an answer, life has no longer a tie for me. You know that I ask
+for no pledge, no promise, merely time,&mdash;no more than time,&mdash;a
+few more of those moments of which you now would seem eager to deny me.
+Linger an instant here, I beseech you, and remember that what to <i>you</i>
+may be a caprice may to <i>me</i> be a destiny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not hear more of this,&rdquo; said she, half angrily. &ldquo;If it were not
+for my own foolish trustfulness, you never would have dared to address
+such words to one whom you met yesterday for the first time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is true your generous frankness, the nature they told me you
+inherited, gives me boldness, but it might teach you to have some pity for
+a disposition akin to it. One word,&mdash;only one word more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one, sir! The lesson my frankness has taught me is, never to incur
+this peril again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you part from me in anger?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not with <i>you</i>; but I will not answer for myself if you press me
+further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even this much is better than despair,&rdquo; said he, mournfully; and she
+passed into the cottage, while he stood in the porch and bowed
+respectfully as she went by. &ldquo;Better than I looked for, better than I
+could have hoped,&rdquo; muttered he to himself, as he strolled away and
+disappeared in the wood.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER V. A CABINET COUNCIL
+</h2>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you think of it, Dinah?&rdquo; said Barrington, as they sat in conclave
+the next morning in her own sitting-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+She laid down a letter she had just finished reading on the table,
+carefully folding it, like one trying to gain time before she spoke: &ldquo;He's
+a clever man, and writes well, Peter; there can be no second opinion upon
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But his proposal, Dinah,&mdash;his proposal?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pleases me less the more I think of it. There is great disparity of age,&mdash;a
+wide discrepancy in character. A certain gravity of demeanor would not be
+undesirable, perhaps, in a husband for Josephine, who has her moments of
+capricious fancy; but if I mistake not, this man's nature is stern and
+unbending.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There will be time enough to consider all that, Dinah. It is, in fact, to
+weigh well the chances of his fitness to secure her happiness that he
+pleads; he asks permission to make himself known to her, rather than to
+make his court.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I used to fancy that they meant the same thing,&mdash;I know that they
+did in my day, Peter,&rdquo; said she, bridling; &ldquo;but come to the plain question
+before us. So far as I understand him, his position is this: 'If I satisfy
+you that my rank and fortune are satisfactory to you, have I your
+permission to come back here as your granddaughter's suitor?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not precisely, Dinah,&mdash;not exactly this. Here are his words: 'I am
+well aware that I am much older than Miss Barrington, and it is simply to
+ascertain from herself if, in that disparity of years, there exists that
+disparity of tastes and temper which would indispose her to regard me as
+one to whom she would intrust her happiness. I hope to do this without any
+offence to her delicacy, though not without peril to my own self-love.
+Have I your leave for this experiment?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who is he? Who are his friends, connections, belongings? What is his
+station independently of his military rank, and what are his means? Can
+you answer these questions?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one of them. I never found myself till to-day in a position to
+inquire after them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us begin, then, by that investigation, Peter. There is no such test
+of a man as to make him talk of himself. With you alone the matter,
+perhaps, would not present much difficulty to him, but I intend that Mr.
+Withering's name and my own shall be on the committee; and, take <i>my</i>
+word for it, we shall sift the evidence carefully.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bear in mind, sister Dinah, that this gentleman is, first of all, our
+guest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The first of all that I mean to bear in mind is, that he desires to be
+your grandson.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&mdash;of course. I would only observe on the reserve that
+should be maintained towards one who honors us with his presence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter Barrington, the Arabs, from whom you seem to borrow your notions on
+hospitality, seldom scruple about cutting a guest's head off when he
+passes the threshold; therefore I would advise you to adopt habits that
+may be more suited to the land we live in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All I know is,&rdquo; said Barrington, rising and pacing the room, &ldquo;that I
+could no more put a gentleman under my roof to the question as to his
+father and mother and his fortune, than I could rifle his writing-desk and
+read his letters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother Peter, the weakness of your disposition has cost you one of the
+finest estates in your country, and if it could be restored to you
+to-morrow, the same imbecility would forfeit it again. I will, however,
+take the matter into my own hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With Withering, I suppose, to assist you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly not. I am perfectly competent to make any inquiry I deem
+requisite without a legal adviser. Perhaps, were I to be so accompanied,
+Major Stapylton would suppose that he, too, should appear with his
+lawyer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington smiled faintly at the dry jest, but said nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; resumed she, &ldquo;that you are very much afraid about my want of tact
+and delicacy in this investigation. It is a somewhat common belief amongst
+men that in all matters of business women err on the score of hardness and
+persistence. I have listened to some edifying homilies from your friend
+Withering on female incredulity and so forth,&mdash;reproaches which will
+cease to apply when men shall condescend to treat us as creatures
+accessible to reason, and not as mere dupes. See who is knocking at the
+door, Peter,&rdquo; added she, sharply. &ldquo;I declare it recalls the old days of
+our innkeeping, and Darby asking for the bill of the lame gentleman in No.
+4.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, they were pleasant days, too,&rdquo; said Barrington, but in a
+tone so low as to be unheard by his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo; said Withering, as he opened the door a few inches, and
+peeped inside. &ldquo;I want to show you a note I have just had from Kinshela,
+in Kilkenny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, yes; come in,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington. &ldquo;I only wish you had arrived a
+little earlier. What is your note about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's very short and very purpose-like. The first of it is all about
+Brazier's costs, which it seems the taxing-officer thinks fair and
+reasonable,&mdash;all excepting that charge for the additional affidavits.
+But here is what I want to show you. 'Major M'Cormick, of M'Cormick's
+Grove, has just been here; and although I am not entitled to say as much
+officially on his part, I entertain no doubt whatever but that he is ready
+to advance the money we require. I spoke of fifteen hundred, but said
+twelve might possibly be taken, and twelve would be, I imagine, his limit,
+since he held to this amount in all our conversation afterwards. He
+appears to be a man of strange and eccentric habits, and these will
+probably be deemed a sufficient excuse for the singular turn our interview
+took towards its conclusion. I was speaking of Mr. Barrington's wish for
+the insertion in the deed of a definite period for redemption, and he
+stopped me hastily with, &ldquo;What if we could strike out another arrangement?
+What if he was to make a settlement of the place on his granddaughter? I
+am not too old to marry, and I 'd give him the money at five per cent.&rdquo; I
+have been careful to give you the very expressions he employed, and of
+which I made a note when he left the office; for although fully aware how
+improper it would be in me to submit this proposal to Mr. Barrington, I
+have felt it my duty to put you in possession of all that has passed
+between us.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How can you laugh, Peter Barrington?&mdash;how is it possible you can
+laugh at such an insult,&mdash;such an outrage as this? Go on, sir,&rdquo; said
+she, turning to Withering; &ldquo;let us hear it to the end, for nothing worse
+can remain behind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no more; at least, there is not anything worth hearing. Kinshela
+winds up with many apologies, and hopes that I will only use his
+communication for my own guidance, and not permit it in any case to
+prejudice him in your estimation.&rdquo; As he spoke, he crumpled up the note in
+his hand in some confusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who thinks of Mr. Kinshela, or wants to think of him, in the matter?&rdquo;
+said she, angrily. &ldquo;I wish, however, I were a man for a couple of hours,
+to show Major M'Cormick the estimate I take of the honor he intends us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;After all, Dinah, it is not that he holds us more cheaply, but rates
+himself higher.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; broke in Withering; &ldquo;and I know, for my own part, I have never
+been able to shake off the flattery of being chosen by the most nefarious
+rascal to defend him on his trial. Every man is a great creature in his
+own eyes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, sir, be proud of your client,&rdquo; said she, trembling with anger.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&mdash;he 's no client of mine, nor is this a case I would plead
+for him. I read you Kinshela's note because I thought you were building
+too confidently on M'Cormick's readiness to advance this money.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I understood what that readiness meant, though my brother did not.
+M'Cormick looked forward to the day&mdash;and not a very distant day did
+he deem it&mdash;when he should step into possession of this place, and
+settle down here as its owner.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington's face grew pale, and a glassy film spread over his eyes, as
+his sister's words sunk into his heart. &ldquo;I declare, Dinah,&rdquo; said he,
+falteringly, &ldquo;that never did strike me before.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'It never rains but it pours,' says the Irish adage,&rdquo; resumed she. &ldquo;My
+brother and I were just discussing another proposal of the same kind when
+you knocked. Read that letter. It is from a more adroit courtier than the
+other, and, at least, he does n't preface his intentions with a bargain.&rdquo;
+And she handed Stapylton's letter to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said the lawyer, &ldquo;this is another guess sort of man, and a very
+different sort of proposal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspected that he was a favorite of yours,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+significantly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I own to it. He is one of those men who have a great attraction for
+me,&mdash;men who come out of the conflict of life and its interests
+without any exaggerated notions of human perfectibility or the opposite,
+who recognize plenty of good and no small share of bad in the world, but,
+on the whole, are satisfied that, saving ill health, very few of our
+calamities are not of our own providing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All of which is perfectly compatible with an odious egotism, sir,&rdquo; said
+she, warmly; &ldquo;but I feel proud to say such characters find few admirers
+amongst women.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;From which I opine that he is not fortunate enough to number Miss Dinah
+Barrington amongst his supporters?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are right there, sir. The prejudice I had against him before we met
+has been strengthened since I have seen him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is candid of you, however, to call it a prejudice,&rdquo; said he, with a
+smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be it so, Mr. Withering; but prejudice is only another word for an
+instinct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm afraid if we get into ethics we 'll forget all about the proposal,&rdquo;
+said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a sarcasm!&rdquo; cried Withering, &ldquo;that if we talk of morals we shall
+ignore matrimony.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I like the man, and I like his letter,&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I distrust both one and the other,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I almost fancy I could hold a brief on either side,&rdquo; interposed
+Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course you could, sir; and if the choice were open to you, it would be
+the defence of the guilty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering, calmly, &ldquo;when a great legal
+authority once said that he only needed three lines of any man's writing
+'to hang him,' it ought to make us very lenient in our construction of a
+letter. Now, so far as I can see in this one before us, he neither asks
+nor protests too much. He begs simply for time, he entreats leave to draw
+a bill on your affections, and he promises to meet it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir, he wishes to draw at sight, though he has never shown us the
+letter of credit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I vow to Heaven it is hopeless to expect anything practical when you two
+stand up together for a sparring-match,&rdquo; cried Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be practical, then, brother Peter, and ask this gentleman to give you a
+quarter of an hour in your study. Find out who he is; I don't expect you
+to learn what he is, but what he has. With his fortune we shall get the
+clew to himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; chimed in Withering, &ldquo;all that is very businesslike and
+reasonable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it pledges us to nothing,&rdquo; added she. &ldquo;We take soundings, but we
+don't promise to anchor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you go off again with your figures of speech, Dinah, there is an end
+of me, for I have one of those unhappy memories that retain the
+illustration and forget what it typified. Besides this, here is a man who,
+out of pure good nature and respect for poor George's memory, has been
+doing us most important services, written letters innumerable, and taken
+the most active measures for our benefit. What sort of a figure shall I
+present if I bring him to book about his rental and the state of his bank
+account?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With the exercise of a little tact, Barrington,&mdash;a little management&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask a man with a club-foot to walk gingerly! I have no more notion of
+getting at anything by address than I have of tying the femoral artery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The more blunt the better, Peter Barrington. You may tumble into the
+truth, though you'd never pick your way into it. Meanwhile, leave me to
+deal with Major M'Cor-mick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You'll do it courteously, Dinah; you'll bear in mind that he is a
+neighbor of some twenty years' standing?&rdquo; said Barrington, in a voice of
+anxiety.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll do it in a manner that shall satisfy <i>my</i> conscience and <i>his</i>
+presumption.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She seated herself at the table as she said this, and dashed off a few
+hasty lines. Indeed, so hurried was the action, that it looked far more
+like one of those instances of correspondence we see on the stage than an
+event of real life.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will that do?&rdquo; said she, showing the lines to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+The old lawyer read them over to himself, a faint twitching of the mouth
+being the only sign his face presented of any emotion. &ldquo;I should say
+admirably,&mdash;nothing better.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I see it, Dinah?&rdquo; asked Peter.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear it, brother,&rdquo; said she, taking the paper and reading,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Miss Barrington informs Mr. Kinshela that if he does not at once retract
+his epistle of this morning's date, she will place it in the hands of her
+legal adviser, and proceed against it as a threatening letter.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, sister, you will not send this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As sure as my name is Dinah Barrington.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VI. AN EXPRESS
+</h2>
+<p>
+In the times before telegraphs,&mdash;and it is of such I am writing,&mdash;a
+hurried express was a far more stirring event than in these our days of
+incessant oracles. While, therefore, Barrington and his sister and
+Withering sat in deep consultation on Josephine's fate and future, a hasty
+summons arrived from Dublin, requiring the instantaneous departure of
+Stapylton, whose regiment was urgently needed in the north of England, at
+that time agitated by those disturbances called the Bread Riots. They were
+very formidable troubles, and when we look back upon them now, with the
+light which the great events of later years on the Continent afford us,
+seem more terrible still. It was the fashion, however, then, to treat them
+lightly, and talk of them contemptuously; and as Stapylton was eating a
+hasty luncheon before departure, he sneered at the rabble, and scoffed at
+the insolent pretension of their demands. Neither Barrington nor Withering
+sympathized with the spirit of the revolt, and yet each felt shocked at
+the tone of haughty contempt Stapylton assumed towards the people. &ldquo;You'll
+see,&rdquo; cried he, rising, &ldquo;how a couple of brisk charges from our fellows
+will do more to bring these rascals to reason than all the fine pledges of
+your Parliament folk; and I promise you, for my own part, if I chance upon
+one of their leaders, I mean to lay my mark on him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear, sir, it is your instinctive dislike to the plebeian that moves
+you here,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah. &ldquo;You will not entertain the question whether
+these people may not have some wrongs to complain of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps so, madam,&rdquo; said he; and his swarthy face grew darker as he
+spoke. &ldquo;I suppose this is the case where the blood of a gentleman boils
+indignantly at the challenge of the <i>canaille</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not have a French word applied to our own people, sir,&rdquo; said she,
+angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well said,&rdquo; chimed in Withering. &ldquo;It is wonderful how a phrase can seem
+to carry an argument along with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And old Peter smiled, and nodded his concurrence with this speech.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a sad minority do I stand in!&rdquo; said Stapylton, with an effort to
+smile very far from successful. &ldquo;Will not Miss Josephine Barrington have
+generosity enough to aid the weaker side?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if it be the worst cause,&rdquo; interposed Dinah. &ldquo;My niece needs not to
+be told she must be just before she is generous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then it is to your own generosity I will appeal,&rdquo; said Stapylton, turning
+to her; &ldquo;and I will ask you to ascribe some, at least, of my bitterness to
+the sorrow I feel at being thus summoned away. Believe me it is no light
+matter to leave this place and its company.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But only for a season, and a very brief season too, I trust,&rdquo; said
+Barrington. &ldquo;You are going away in our debt, remember.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a loser's privilege, all the world over, to withdraw when he has
+lost enough,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a sad smile towards Miss Dinah; and
+though the speech was made in the hope it might elicit a contradiction,
+none came, and a very awkward silence ensued.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will reach Dublin to-night, I suppose?&rdquo; said Withering, to relieve
+the painful pause in the conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be late,&mdash;after midnight, perhaps.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And embark the next morning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Two of our squadrons have sailed already; the others will, of course,
+follow to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And young Conyers,&rdquo; broke in Miss Dinah,&mdash;&ldquo;he will, I suppose,
+accompany this&mdash;what shall I call it?&mdash;this raid?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, madam. Am I to convey to him your compliments upon the first
+opportunity to flesh his maiden sword?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are to do nothing of the kind, sir; but tell him from me not to
+forget that the angry passions of a starving multitude are not to be
+confounded with the vindictive hate of our natural enemies.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Natural enemies, my dear Miss Barrington! I hope you cannot mean that
+there exists anything so monstrous in humanity as a natural enemy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do, sir; and I mean all those whose jealousy of us ripens into hatred,
+and who would spill their heart's blood to see us humbled. When there
+exists a people like this, and who at every fresh outbreak of a war with
+us have carried into the new contest all the bitter animosities of long
+past struggles as debts to be liquidated, I call these natural enemies;
+and, if you prefer a shorter word for it, I call them Frenchmen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dinah, Dinah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Peter, Peter! don't interrupt me. Major Stapylton has thought to tax me
+with a blunder, but I accept it as a boast!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Madam, I am proud to be vanquished by you,&rdquo; said Stapylton, bowing low.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I trust, sir,&rdquo; said she, continuing her speech, and as if heedless of
+his interruption, &ldquo;that no similarity of name will make you behave at
+Peterloo&mdash;if that be the name&mdash;as though you were at Waterloo.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life!&rdquo; cried he, with a saucy laugh, &ldquo;I don't know how I am to
+win your good opinion, except it be by tearing off my epaulettes, and
+putting myself at the head of the mob.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know very little of my sister, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, &ldquo;or
+you would scarcely have selected that mode of cultivating her favor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is a popular belief that ladies always side with the winning
+cause,&rdquo; said Stapylton, affecting a light and easy manner; &ldquo;so I must do
+my best to be successful. May I hope I carry your <i>good</i> wishes away
+with me?&rdquo; said he, in a lower tone to Josephine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope that nobody will hurt you, and you hurt nobody,&rdquo; said she,
+laughingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this, I take it, is about as much sympathy as ever attends a man on
+such a campaign. Mr. Barrington, will you grant me two minutes of
+conversation in your own room?&rdquo; And, with a bow of acquiescence,
+Barrington led the way to his study.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I ought to have anticipated your request, Major Stapyl-ton,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, when they found themselves alone. &ldquo;I owe you a reply to your
+letter, but the simple fact is, I do not know what answer to give it; for
+while most sensible of the honor you intend us, I feel still there is much
+to be explained on both sides. We know scarcely anything of each other,
+and though I am conscious of the generosity which prompts a man with <i>your</i>
+prospects and in <i>your</i> position to ally himself with persons in <i>ours</i>,
+yet I owe it to myself to say, it hangs upon a contingency to restore us
+to wealth and station. Even a portion of what I claim from the East India
+Company would make my granddaughter one of the richest heiresses in
+England.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton gave a cold, a very cold smile, in reply to this speech. It
+might mean that he was incredulous or indifferent, or it might imply that
+the issue was one which need not have been introduced into the case at
+all. Whatever its signification, Barrington felt hurt by it, and hastily
+said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I have any need to trouble you with these details: it is rather
+my province to ask for information regarding <i>your</i> circumstances
+than to enter upon a discussion of <i>ours</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am quite ready to give you the very fullest and clearest,&mdash;I mean
+to yourself personally, or to your sister; for, except where the lawyer
+intervenes of necessity and <i>de droit</i>, I own that I resent his
+presence as an insult. I suppose few of us are devoid of certain family
+circumstances which it would be more agreeable to deal with in confidence;
+and though, perhaps, I am as fortunate as most men in this respect, there
+are one or two small matters on which I would ask your attention. These,
+however, are neither important nor pressing. My first care is to know,&mdash;and
+I hope I am not peremptory in asking it,&mdash;have I your consent to the
+proposition contained in my letter; am I at liberty to address Miss
+Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington flushed deeply and fidgeted; he arose and sat down again,&mdash;all
+his excitement only aggravated by the well-bred composure of the other,
+who seemed utterly unconscious of the uneasiness he was causing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you think, Major, that this is a case for a little time to reflect,&mdash;that
+in a matter so momentous as this, a few days at least are requisite for
+consideration? We ought to ascertain something at least of my
+granddaughter's own sentiments,&mdash;I mean, of course, in a general way.
+It might be, too, that a day or two might give us some better insight into
+her future prospects.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pardon my interrupting you; but, on the last point, I am perfectly
+indifferent. Miss Barrington with half a province for her dower, would be
+no more in my eyes than Miss Barrington as she sat at breakfast this
+morning. Nor is there anything of high-flown sentiment in this
+declaration, as my means are sufficiently ample for all that I want or
+care.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, at least, is one difficulty disposed of. You are an eldest son?&rdquo;
+said he; and he blushed at his own boldness in making the inquiry.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am an only son.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Easier again,&rdquo; said Barrington, trying to laugh off the awkward moment.
+&ldquo;No cutting down one's old timber to pay off the provisions for younger
+brothers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In my case there is no need of this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your father. Is he still living, Major Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father has been dead some years.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington fidgeted again, fumbled with his watch-chain and his eye-glass,
+and would have given more than he could afford for any casualty that
+should cut short the interview. He wanted to say, &ldquo;What is the amount of
+your fortune? What is it? Where is it? Are you Wiltshire or Staffordshire?
+Who are your uncles and aunts, and your good friends that you pray for,
+and where do you pray for them?&rdquo; A thousand questions of this sort arose
+in his mind, one only more prying and impertinent than another. He knew he
+ought to ask them; he knew Dinah would have asked them. Ay, and would have
+the answers to them as plain and palpable as the replies to a life
+assurance circular; but he could n't do it. No; not if his life depended
+on it.
+</p>
+<p>
+He had already gone further in his transgression of good manners than it
+ever occurred to him before to do, and he felt something between a holy
+inquisitor and a spy of the police.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton looked at his watch, and gave a slight start.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Later than you thought, eh?&rdquo; cried Peter, overjoyed at the diversion.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton smiled a cold assent, and put up his watch without a word. He
+saw all the confusion and embarrassment of the other, and made no effort
+to relieve him. At last, but not until after a considerable pause, he
+said,&mdash;&ldquo;I believe, Mr. Barrington,&mdash;I hope, at least,&mdash;I
+have satisfactorily answered the questions which, with every right on your
+part, you have deemed proper to put to me. I cannot but feel how painful
+the task has been to you, and I regret it the more, since probably it has
+set a limit to inquiries which you are perfectly justified in making, but
+which closer relations between us may make a matter far less formidable
+one of these days.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, yes,&mdash;just so; of course,&rdquo; said Barrington, hurriedly assenting
+to he knew not what.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I trust I take my leave of you with the understanding that when we
+meet again, it shall be as in the commencement of these pleasanter
+relations. I own to you I am the more eager on this point, that I perceive
+your sister, Miss Barrington, scarcely regards me very favorably, and I
+stand the more in need of your alliance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think it possible, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, boldly,
+&ldquo;that my sister and I could have two opinions upon anything or anybody.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I only ask that she may partake of yours on this occasion,&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, bowing. &ldquo;But I must start; as it is, I shall be very late in
+Dublin. Will you present my most respectful adieux to the ladies, and say
+also a goodbye for me to Mr. Withering?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You'll come in for a moment to the drawing-room, won't you?&rdquo; cried
+Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not. I opine it would be better not. There would be a certain
+awkwardness about it,&mdash;that is, until you have informed Miss Dinah
+Barrington of the extent to which you have accorded me your confidence,
+and how completely I have opened every detail of my circumstances. I
+believe it would be in better taste not to present myself. Tell Withering
+that if he writes, Manchester will find me. I don't suspect he need give
+himself any more trouble about establishing the proofs of marriage. They
+will scarcely contest that point. The great question will and must be, to
+ascertain if the Company will cease to oppose the claim on being fully
+convinced that the letter to the Meer Busherat was a forgery, and that no
+menace ever came from Colonel Barrington's hand as to the consequences of
+opposing his rule. Get them to admit this,&mdash;let the issue rest upon
+this,&mdash;and it will narrow the whole suit within manageable limits.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you not say this much to him before you go? It would come with so
+much more force and clearness from yourself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done so till I was wearied. Like a true lawyer, he insists upon
+proving each step as he goes, and will not condescend to a hypothetical
+conclusion, though I have told him over and over again we want a
+settlement, not a victory. Good-bye, good-bye! If I once launch out into
+the cause, I cannot tear myself away again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has your guest gone, Peter?&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as her brother re-entered
+the drawing-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; it was a hurried departure, and he had no great heart for it,
+either. By the way, Withering, while it is fresh in my head, let me tell
+you the message he has sent you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was there none for <i>me</i>, Peter?&rdquo; said she, scofflngly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but there was, Dinah! He left with me I know not how many polite and
+charming things to say for him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And am I alone forgotten in this wide dispensation of favors?&rdquo; asked
+Josephine, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course not, dear,&rdquo; chimed in Miss Dinah. &ldquo;Your grandpapa has been
+charged with them all. You could not expect a gentleman so naturally timid
+and bashful as our late guest to utter them by his own lips.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Withering, laughing, &ldquo;that you have not forgiven the haughty
+aristocrat for his insolent estimate of the people!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He an aristocrat! Such bitter words as his never fell from any man who
+had a grandfather!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wrong for once, Dinah,&rdquo; broke in Barrington. &ldquo;I can answer for it that
+you are unjust to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall see,&rdquo; said she. &ldquo;Come, Josephine, I have a whole morning's work
+before me in the flower-garden, and I want your help. Don't forget, Peter,
+that Major M'Cormick's butler, or boatman, or bailiff, whichever he be,
+has been up here with a present of seakale this morning. Give him
+something as you pass the kitchen; and you, Mr. Withering, whose trade it
+is to read and unravel mysteries, explain if you can the meaning of this
+unwonted generosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose we can all guess it,&rdquo; said he, laughing. &ldquo;It's a custom that
+begins in the East and goes round the whole world till it reaches the vast
+prairie in the Far West.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what can that custom be, Aunt Dinah?&rdquo; asked Josephine, innocently.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's an ancient rite Mr. Withering speaks, of, child, pertaining to the
+days when men offered sacrifices. Come along; I 'm going!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VII. CROSS-EXAMININGS.
+</h2>
+<p>
+While Barrington and his lawyer sat in conclave over the details of the
+great suit, Stapylton hurried along his road with all the speed he could
+summon. The way, which for some miles led along the river-side, brought
+into view M'Cormick's cottage, and the Major himself, as he stood
+listlessly at his door.'
+</p>
+<p>
+Halting his carriage for a moment, Stapylton jumped out and drew nigh the
+little quickset hedge which flanked the road.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What can I do for you in the neighborhood of Manchester, Major? We are
+just ordered off there to ride down the Radicals.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish it was nearer home you were going to do it,&rdquo; said he, crankily.
+&ldquo;Look here,&rdquo;&mdash;and he pointed to some fresh-turned earth,&mdash;&ldquo;they
+were stealing my turnips last night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would appear that these fellows in the North are growing dangerous,&rdquo;
+said Stapylton.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'T is little matter to us,&rdquo; said M'Cormick, sulkily. &ldquo;I'd care more about
+a blight in the potatoes than for all the politics in Europe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A genuine philosopher! How snug you are here, to be sure! A man in a
+pleasant nook like this can well afford to smile at the busy ambitions of
+the outer world. I take it you are about the very happiest fellow I know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Maybe I am, maybe I'm not,&rdquo; said he, peevishly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This spot only wants what I hinted to you t'other evening, to be
+perfection.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay!&rdquo; said the other, dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you agree with me heartily, if you had the candor to say it. Come,
+out with it, man, at once. I saw your gardener this morning with a great
+basketful of greenery, and a large bouquet on the top of it,&mdash;are not
+these significant signs of a projected campaign? You are wrong, Major,
+upon my life you are wrong, not to be frank with me. I could, by a strange
+hazard, as the newspapers say, 'tell you something to your advantage.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About what?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About the very matter you were thinking of as I drove up. Come, I will be
+more generous than you deserve.&rdquo; And, laying his arm on M'Cormick's
+shoulder, he halt whispered in his ear; &ldquo;It is a good thing,&mdash;a
+deuced good thing! and I promise you, if I were a marrying man, you 'd
+have a competitor. I won't say she 'll have one of the great fortunes
+people rave about, but it will be considerable,&mdash;very considerable.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How do you know, or what do you know?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll tell you in three words. How I know is, because I have been the
+channel for certain inquiries they made in India. What I know is, the
+Directors are sick of the case, they are sorely ashamed of it, and not a
+little uneasy lest it should come before the public, perhaps before the
+Parliament. Old Barrington has made all negotiation difficult by the
+extravagant pretensions he puts forward about his son's honor, and so
+forth. If, however, the girl were married, her husband would be the person
+to treat with, and I am assured with him they would deal handsomely, even
+generously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why would n't all this make a marrying man of you, though you were
+n't before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's a slight canonical objection, if you must know,&rdquo; said Stapylton,
+with a smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I perceive,&mdash;a wife already! In India, perhaps?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no time just now for a long story, M'Cormick,&rdquo; said he,
+familiarly, &ldquo;nor am I quite certain I 'd tell it if I had. However, you
+know enough for all practical purposes, and I repeat to you this is a
+stake I can't enter for,&mdash;you understand me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's another thing, now,&rdquo; said M'Cormick; &ldquo;and as we are talking so
+freely together, there's no harm in mentioning it. It 's only the other
+day, as I may call it, that we met for the first time?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very true: when I was down here at Cobham.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And never heard of each other before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not to my knowledge, certainly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That being the case, I 'm curious to hear how you took this wonderful
+interest in me. It wasn't anything in my appearance, I 'm sure, nor my
+manner; and as to what you 'd hear about me among those blackguards down
+here, there's nothing too bad to say of me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll be as frank as yourself,&rdquo; said Stapylton, boldly; &ldquo;you ask for
+candor, and you shall have it. I had n't talked ten minutes with you till
+I saw that you were a thorough man of the world; the true old soldier, who
+had seen enough of life to know that whatever one gets for nothing in this
+world is just worth nothing, and so I said to myself, 'If it ever occurs
+to me to chance upon a good opportunity of which I cannot from
+circumstances avail myself, there's my man. I'll go to him and say,
+&ldquo;M'Cormick, that's open to you, there's a safe thing!&rdquo; And when in return
+he 'd say, &ldquo;Stapylton, what can I do for you?&rdquo; my answer would be, &ldquo;Wait
+till you are satisfied that I have done you a good turn; be perfectly
+assured that I have really served you.&rdquo; And then, if I wanted a loan of a
+thousand or fifteen hundred to lodge for the Lieutenant-Colonelcy, I 'd
+not be ashamed to say, &ldquo;M'Cormick, let me have so much.&rdquo;'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's <i>it</i>, is it?&rdquo; said M'Cormick, with a leer of intense cunning.
+&ldquo;Not a bad bargain for <i>you</i>, anyhow. It is not every day that a man
+can sell what is n't his own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might say, it's not every day that a man regards a possible loan as a
+gift, but I 'm quite ready to reassure all your fears on that score; I'll
+even pledge myself never to borrow a shilling from you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, I don't mean that; you took me up so quick,&rdquo; said the old fellow,
+reddening with a sense of shame he had not felt for many a year. &ldquo;I may be
+as stingy as they call me, but for all that I 'd stand to a man who stands
+to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Between gentlemen and men of the world these things are better left to a
+sense of an honorable understanding than made matters of compact. There is
+no need of another word on the matter. I shall be curious, however, to
+know how your project speeds. Write to me,&mdash;you have plenty of time,&mdash;and
+write often. I 'm not unlikely to learn something about the Indian claim,
+and if I do, you shall hear of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not over good at pen and ink work; indeed, I haven't much practice,
+but I'll do my best.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do, by all means. Tell me how you get on with Aunt Dinah, who, I suspect,
+has no strong affection for either of us. Don't be precipitate; hazard
+nothing by a rash step; secure your way by intimacy, mere intimacy: avoid
+particular attentions strictly; be always there, and on some pretext or
+other&mdash;But why do I say all this to an old soldier, who has made such
+sieges scores of times?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I think I see my way clear enough,&rdquo; said the old fellow, with a
+grin. &ldquo;I wish I was as sure I knew why you take such an interest in me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe I have told you already; I hope there is nothing so strange in
+the assurance as to require corroboration. Come, I must say good-bye; I
+meant to have said five words to you, and I have stayed here
+five-and-twenty minutes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would n't you take something?&mdash;could n't I offer you anything?&rdquo; said
+M'Cormick, hesitatingly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, thanks. I lunched before I started; and although old Dinah made
+several assaults upon me while I ate, I managed to secure two cutlets and
+part of a grouse-pie, and a rare glass of Madeira to wash them down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That old woman is dreadful, and I'll take her down a peg yet, as sure as
+my name is Dan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, don't, Major; don't do anything of the kind. The people who tame
+tigers are sure to get scratched at last, and nobody thanks them for their
+pains. Regard her as the sailors do a fire-ship; give her a wide berth,
+and steer away from her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but she sometimes gives chase.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strike your flag, then, if it must be; for, trust me, you 'll not conquer
+<i>her</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We 'll see, we 'll see,&rdquo; muttered the old fellow, as he waved his adieux,
+and then turned back into the house again.
+</p>
+<p>
+As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering a
+malediction on the &ldquo;dear friend&rdquo; he had just parted with. When the <i>bourgeois
+gentilhomme</i> objected to his adversary pushing him <i>en tierce</i>
+while he attacked him <i>en quarte</i>, he was expressing a great social
+want, applicable to those people who in conversation will persist in
+saying many things which ought not to be uttered, and expressing doubts
+and distrusts which, however it be reasonable to feel, are an outrage to
+avow.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The old fox,&rdquo; said Stapylton, aloud, &ldquo;taunted me with selling what did
+not belong to me; but he never suspects that I have bought something
+without paying for it, and that something himself! Yes, the mock siege he
+will lay to the fortress will occupy the garrison till it suits me to open
+the real attack, and I will make use of him, besides, to learn whatever
+goes on in my absence. How the old fellow swallowed the bait! What
+self-esteem there must be in such a rugged nature, to make him imagine he
+could be successful in a cause like this! He is, after all, a clumsy agent
+to trust one's interest to. If the choice had been given me, I'd far
+rather have had a woman to watch over them. Polly Dill, for instance, the
+very girl to understand such a mission well. How adroitly would she have
+played the game, and how clearly would her letters have shown me the exact
+state of events!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Such were the texts of his musings as he drove along, and deep as were his
+thoughts, they never withdrew him, when the emergency called, from
+attention to every detail of the journey, and he scrutinized the
+post-horses as they were led out, and apportioned the rewards to the
+postilions as though no heavier care lay on his heart than the road and
+its belongings. While he rolled thus smoothly along, Peter Barrington had
+been summoned to his sister's presence, to narrate in full all that he had
+asked, and all that he had learned of Stapylton and his fortunes.
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Dinah was seated in a deep armchair, behind a formidable
+embroidery-frame,&mdash;a thing so complex and mysterious in form as to
+suggest an implement of torture. At a short distance off sat Withering,
+with pen, ink, and paper before him, as if to set down any details of
+unusual importance; and into this imposing presence poor Barrington
+entered with a woful sense of misgiving and humiliation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have got a quiet moment at last, Peter,&rdquo; said Miss Barrington. &ldquo;I have
+sent the girls over to Brown's Barn for the tulip-roots, and I have told
+Darby that if any visitors came they were to be informed we were
+particularly occupied by business, and could see no one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just so,&rdquo; added Withering; &ldquo;it is a case before the Judge in Chamber.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what have we got to hear?&rdquo; asked Barrington, with an air of
+innocence.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have got to hear your report, brother Peter; the narrative of your
+late conversation with Major Stapylton; given, as nearly as your memory
+will serve, in the exact words and in the precise order everything
+occurred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;October the twenty-third,&rdquo; said Withering, writing as he spoke; &ldquo;minute
+of interview between P. B. and Major S. Taken on the same morning it
+occurred, with remarks and observations explanatory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Begin,&rdquo; said Dinah, imperiously, while she worked away without lifting
+her head. &ldquo;And avoid, so far as possible, anything beyond the precise
+expression employed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don't suppose I took notes in shorthand of what we said to each
+other, do you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I certainly suppose you can have retained in your memory a conversation
+that took place two hours ago,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can relate it circumstantially and clearly,&rdquo; added Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I 'm very sorry to disappoint you, but I can do nothing of the
+kind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean to say that you had no interview with Major Stapylton,
+Peter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or that you have forgotten all about it?&rdquo; said Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or is it that you have taken a pledge of secrecy, brother Peter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, no! It is simply this, that though I retain a pretty fair general
+impression of what I said myself, and what he said afterwards, I could no
+more pretend to recount it accurately than I could say off by heart a
+scene in 'Romeo and Juliet.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why don't you take the 'Comedy of Errors' for your illustration, Peter
+Barrington? I ask you, Mr. Withering, have you in all your experience met
+anything like this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would go hard with a man in the witness-box to make such a
+declaration, I must say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What would a jury think of, what would a judge say to him?&rdquo; said she,
+using the most formidable of all penalties to her brother's imagination.
+&ldquo;Wouldn't the court tell him that he would be compelled to speak out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They'd have it out on the cross-examination, at all events, if not on the
+direct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the name of confusion, what do you want with me?&rdquo; exclaimed Peter, in
+despair.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We want everything,&mdash;everything that you heard about this man. Who
+he is, what he is; what by the father's side, what by the mother's; what
+are his means, and where; who knows him, who are his associates. Bear in
+mind that to us, here, he has dropped out of the clouds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And gone back there too,&rdquo; added Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish to Heaven he had taken me with him!&rdquo; sighed Peter, drearily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think in this case, Miss Barrington,&rdquo; said Withering, with a
+well-affected gravity, &ldquo;we had better withdraw a juror, and accept a
+nonsuit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have done with it altogether,&rdquo; said she, gathering up her worsted and
+her needles, and preparing to leave the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, entreatingly, &ldquo;imagine a man as wanting
+in tact as I am,&mdash;and as timid, too, about giving casual offence,&mdash;conducting
+such an inquiry as you committed to my hands. Fancy how, at every attempt
+to obtain information, his own boldness, I might call it rudeness, stared
+him in the face, till at last, rather than push his investigations, he
+grew puzzled how to apologize for his prying curiosity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother, brother, this is too bad! It had been better to have thought
+more of your granddaughter's fate and less of your own feelings.&rdquo; And with
+this she flounced out of the room, upsetting a spider-table, and a case of
+stuffed birds that stood on it, as she passed.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/410.jpg" width="100%" alt="410 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't doubt but she 's right, Tom,&rdquo; said Peter, when the door closed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did he not tell you who he was, and what his fortune? Did you really
+learn nothing from him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He told me everything; and if I had not been so cruelly badgered, I could
+have repeated every word of it; but you never made a hound true to the
+scent by flogging him, Tom,&mdash;is n't that a fact, eh?&rdquo; And consoled by
+an illustration that seemed so pat to his case, he took his hat and
+strolled out into the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER VIII. GENERAL CONYERS
+</h2>
+<p>
+In a snug little room of the Old Ship Hotel, at Dover, a large, heavy man,
+with snow-white hair, and moustaches,&mdash;the latter less common in
+those days than the present,&mdash;sat at table with a younger one, so
+like him that no doubt could have existed as to their being father and
+son. They had dined, and were sitting over their wine, talking
+occasionally, but oftener looking fondly and affectionately at each other;
+and once, by an instinct of sudden love, grasping each other's hand, and
+sitting thus several minutes without a word on either side.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You did not expect me before to-morrow, Fred,&rdquo; said the old man, at last.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, father,&rdquo; replied young Conyers. &ldquo;I saw by the newspapers that you
+were to dine at the Tuileries on Tuesday, and I thought you would not quit
+Paris the same evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; I started the moment I took off my uniform. I wanted to be with you,
+my boy; and the royal politeness that detained me was anything but a
+favor. How you have grown, Fred,&mdash;almost my own height, I believe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The more like you the better,&rdquo; said the youth, as his eyes ran over, and
+the old man turned away to hide his emotion.
+</p>
+<p>
+After a moment he said: &ldquo;How strange you should not have got my letters,
+Fred; but, after all, it is just as well as it is. I wrote in a very angry
+spirit, and was less just than a little cool reflection might have made
+me. They made no charges against me, though I thought they had. There were
+grumblings and discontents, and such-like. They called me a Rajah, and
+raked up all the old stories they used to circulate once on a time about a
+far better fellow&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mean Colonel Barrington, don't you?&rdquo; said Fred.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where or how did you hear of that name?&rdquo; said the old man, almost
+sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;An accident made me the guest of his family, at a little cottage they
+live in on an hish river. I passed weeks there, and, through the favor of
+the name I bore, I received more kindness than I ever before met in life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And they knew you to be a Conyers, and to be my son?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was Colonel Barrington's aunt was my hostess, and she it was who, on
+hearing my name, admitted me at once to all the privileges of old
+friendship. She told me of the close companionship which once subsisted
+between you and her nephew, and gave me rolls of his letters to read
+wherein every line spoke of you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Mr. Barrington, the father of George, how did he receive you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;At first with such coolness that I could n't bring myself to recross his
+threshold. He had been away from home when I arrived, and the day of his
+return I was unexpectedly presented to him by his sister, who evidently
+was as unprepared as myself for the reception I met with.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was that reception,&mdash;how was it? Tell me all as it
+happened.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the affair of a moment. Miss Barrington introduced me, saying,
+'This is the son of poor George's dearest friend,&mdash;this is a
+Conyers;' and the old man faltered, and seemed like to faint, and after a
+moment stammered out something about an honor he had never counted upon,&mdash;a
+visit he scarcely could have hoped for; and, indeed, so overcome was he
+that he staggered into the house only to take to his bed, where he lay
+seriously ill for several days after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor fellow! It was hard to forgive,&mdash;very hard.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, but he has forgiven it&mdash;whatever it was&mdash;heartily, and
+wholly forgiven it. We met afterwards by a chance in Germany, and while I
+was hesitating how to avoid a repetition of the painful scene which marked
+our first meeting, he came manfully towards me with his hand out, and
+said, 'I have a forgiveness to beg of you; and if you only know how I long
+to obtain it, you would scarce say me no.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The worthy father of poor George! I think I hear him speak the very words
+himself. Go on, Fred,&mdash;go on, and tell me further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is no more to tell, sir, unless I speak of all the affectionate
+kindness he has shown,&mdash;the trustfulness and honor with which he has
+treated me. I have been in his house like his own son.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! if you had known that son! If you had seen what a type of a soldier
+he was! The most intrepid, the boldest fellow that ever breathed; but with
+a heart of childlike simplicity and gentleness. I could tell you traits of
+him, of his forbearance, his forgiveness, his generous devotion to
+friendship, that would seem to bespeak a nature that had no room for other
+than soft and tender emotion; and yet, if ever there was a lion's heart
+within a man's bosom it was his.&rdquo; For a moment or two the old man seemed
+overcome by his recollections, and then, as if by an effort, rallying
+himself, he went on: &ldquo;You have often heard the adage, Fred, that enjoins
+watching one's pennies and leaving the pounds to take care of themselves;
+and yet, trust me, the maxim is truer as applied to our morals than our
+money. It is by the smaller, finer, and least important traits of a man
+that his fate in life is fashioned. The caprices we take no pains to curb,
+the tempers we leave unchecked, the petty indulgences we extend to our
+vanity and self-love,&mdash;these are the great sands that wreck us far
+oftener than the more stern and formidable features of our character. I
+ought to know this truth; I myself lost the best and truest and the
+noblest friend that ever man had, just from the exercise of a spirit of
+bantering and ridicule which amused those about me, and gave me that
+pre-eminence which a sarcastic and witty spirit is sure to assert. You
+know already how George Barrington and I lived together like brothers. I
+do not believe two men ever existed more thoroughly and sincerely attached
+to each other. All the contrarieties of our dispositions served but to
+heighten the interest that linked us together. As for myself, I was never
+wearied in exploring the strange recesses of that great nature that seemed
+to unite all that could be daring and dashing in man with the tenderness
+of a woman. I believe I knew him far better than he knew himself. But to
+come to what I wanted to tell you, and which is an agony to me to dwell
+on. Though for a long while our close friendship was known in the
+regiment, and spoken of as a thing incapable of change, a sort of rumor&mdash;no,
+not even a rumor, but an impression&mdash;seemed to gain, that the ties
+between us were looser on my side than his; that George looked up to <i>me</i>,
+and that I, with the pride of a certain superiority, rather lorded it over
+<i>him</i>. This feeling became painfully strengthened when it got about
+that Barrington had lent me the greater part of the purchase-money for my
+troop,&mdash;a promotion, by the way, which barred his own advancement,&mdash;and
+it was whispered, so at least I heard, that Barrington was a mere child in
+my hands, whom I rebuked or rewarded at pleasure. If I could have traced
+these rumors to any direct source, I could have known how to deal with
+them. As it was, they were vague, shadowy, and unreal; and their very
+unsubstantiality maddened me the more. To have told George of them would
+have been rasher still. The thought of a wrong done to <i>me</i> would
+have driven him beyond all reason, and he would infallibly have
+compromised himself beyond recall. It was the very first time in my life I
+had a secret from him, and it eat into my heart like a virulent disease.
+The consciousness that I was watched, the feeling that eyes were upon me
+marking all I did, and tongues were commenting on all I said, exasperated
+me, and at one moment I would parade my friendship for Barrington in a
+sort of spirit of defiance, and at another, as though to give the lie to
+my slanderers, treat him with indifference and carelessness, as it were,
+to show that I was not bound to him by the weight of a direct obligation,
+and that our relations involved nothing of dependence. It was when, by
+some cruel mischance, I had been pursuing this spirit to its extreme, that
+the conversation one night at mess turned upon sport and tiger-hunting.
+Many stories were told, of course, and we had the usual narratives of
+hairbreadth escapes and perils of the most appalling kind; till, at
+length, some one&mdash;I forget exactly who it was&mdash;narrated a
+single-handed encounter with a jaguar, which in horror exceeded anything
+we had heard before. The details were alone not so terrible, but the
+circumstances so marvellous, that one and all who listened cried out, 'Who
+did it?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The man who told me the tale,' replied the narrator, 'and who will
+probably be back to relate it here to you in a few days,&mdash;Colonel
+Barrington.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have told you the devilish spirit which had me in possession. I have
+already said that I was in one of those moods of insolent mockery in which
+nothing was sacred to me. No sooner, then, did I hear Barrington's name
+than I burst into a hearty laugh, and said, 'Oh! if it was one of George
+Barrington's tigers, you ought to have mentioned that fact at the outset.
+You have been exciting our feelings unfairly.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I assume that his statement was true,' said the other, gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Doubtless; just as battle-pieces are true, that is, pic-torially true.
+The tiger did nothing that a tiger ought not to do, nor did George
+transgress any of those &ldquo;unities&rdquo; which such combats require. At the same
+time, Barring-ton's stories have always a something about them that stamps
+the authorship, and you recognize this trait just as you do a white horse
+in a picture by Wouvermans.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In this strain I went on, heated by my own warmed imagination, and the
+approving laughter of those around me. I recounted more than one feat of
+Barrington's,&mdash;things which I knew he had done, some of them almost
+incredible in boldness. These I told with many a humorous addition and
+many an absurd commentary, convulsing the listeners with laughter, and
+rendering my friend ridiculous.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He came back from the hills within the week, and before he was two hours
+in his quarters he had heard the whole story. We were at luncheon in the
+mess-room when he entered, flushed and excited, but far more moved by
+emotion than resentment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Ormsby,' said he, 'you may laugh at me to your heart's content and I'll
+never grumble at it; but there are some young officers here who, not
+knowing the ties that attach us, may fancy that these quizzings pass the
+limits of mere drollery, and even jeopardize something of my truthfulness.
+<i>You</i>, I know, never meant this any more than I have felt it, but
+others might, and might, besides, on leaving this and sitting at other
+tables, repeat what they had heard here. Tell them that you spoke of me as
+you have a free right to do, in jest, and that your ridicule was the
+good-humored banter of a friend,&mdash;of a friend who never did, never
+could, impugn my honor.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;His eyes were swimming over, and his lips trembling, as he uttered the
+last words. I see him now, as he stood there, his very cheek shaking in
+agitation. That brave, bold fellow, who would have marched up to a battery
+without quailing, shook like a sickly girl.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Am I to say that you never draw the long-bow, George?' asked I, half
+insolently.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'You are to say, sir, that I never told a lie,' cried he, dark with
+passion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Oh, this discussion will be better carried on elsewhere,' said I, as I
+arose and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As I was in the wrong, totally in the wrong, I was passionate and
+headstrong. I sat down and wrote a most insolent letter to Barrington. I
+turned all the self-hate that was consuming <i>me</i> against my friend,
+and said I know not what of outrage and insult. I did worse; I took a copy
+of my letter, and declared that I would read it to the officers in the
+mess-room. He sent a friend to me to beg I would not take this course of
+open insult. My answer was, 'Colonel Barrington knows his remedy.' When I
+sent this message, I prepared for what I felt certain would follow. I knew
+Barrington so well that I thought even the delay of an hour, then two
+hours, strange. At length evening drew nigh, and, though I sat waiting in
+my quarters, no one came from him,&mdash;not a letter nor a line apprised
+me what course he meant to take.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not caring to meet the mess at such a moment, I ordered my horses and
+drove up to a small station about twenty miles off, leaving word where I
+was to be found. I passed three days there in a state of fevered
+expectancy. Barrington made no sign, and, at length, racked and distressed
+by the conflict with myself,&mdash;now summoning up an insolent spirit of
+defiance to the whole world, now humbling myself in a consciousness of the
+evil line I had adopted,&mdash;I returned one night to my quarters. The
+first news that greeted me was that Barrington had left us. He had
+accepted the offer of a Native command which had been made to him some
+months before, and of which we had often canvassed together all the
+advantages and disadvantages. I heard that he had written two letters to
+me before he started, and torn them up after they were sealed. I never
+heard from him, never saw him more, till I saw his dead body carried into
+camp the morning he fell.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must get to the end of this quickly, Fred, and I will tell you all at
+once, for it is a theme I will never go back on. I came to England with
+despatches about two years after Barrington's death. It was a hurried
+visit, for I was ordered to hold myself in readiness to return almost as
+soon as I arrived. I was greatly occupied, going about from place to
+place, and person to person, so many great people desired to have a verbal
+account of what was doing in India, and to hear confidentially what I
+thought of matters there. In the midst of the mass of letters which the
+post brought me every morning, and through which, without the aid of an
+officer on the staff, I could never have got through, there came one whose
+singular address struck me. It was to 'Captain Ormsby Conyers, 22d Light
+Dragoons,' a rank I had held fourteen years before that time in that same
+regiment. I opined at once that my correspondent must have been one who
+had known me at that time and not followed me in the interval. I was
+right. It was from old Mr. Barrington,&mdash;George Barrington's father.
+What version of my quarrel with his son could have reached him, I cannot
+even guess, nor by what light he read my conduct in the affair; but such a
+letter I never read in my life. It was a challenge to meet him anywhere,
+and with any weapon, but couched in language so insulting as to impugn my
+courage, and hint that I would probably shelter myself behind the pretext
+of his advanced age. 'But remember,' said he, 'if God has permitted me to
+be an old man, it is <i>you</i> who have made me a childless one!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a few seconds he paused, overcome by emotion, and then went on: &ldquo;I sat
+down and wrote him a letter of contrition, almost abject in its terms. I
+entreated him to believe that for every wrong I had done his noble-hearted
+son, my own conscience had repaid me in misery ten times told; that if he
+deemed my self-condemnation insufficient, it was open to him to add to it
+whatever he wished of obloquy or shame; that if he proclaimed me a coward
+before the world, and degraded me in the eyes of men, I would not offer
+one word in my defence. I cannot repeat all that I said in my deep
+humiliation. His answer came at last, one single line, re-enclosing my own
+letter to me: 'Lest I should be tempted to make use of this letter, I send
+it back to you; there is no need of more between us.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With this our intercourse ceased. When a correspondence was published in
+the 'Barrington Inquiry,' as it was called, I half hoped he would have
+noticed some letters of mine about George; but he never did, and in his
+silence I thought I read his continued unforgiveness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope, father, that you never believed the charges that were made
+against Captain Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not one of them; disloyalty was no more his than cowardice. I never knew
+the Englishman with such a pride of country as he had, nor could you have
+held out a greater bribe to him, for any achievement of peril, than to
+say, 'What a gain it would be for England!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How was it that such a man should have had a host of enemies?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing so natural. Barrington was the most diffident of men; his
+bashfulness amounted to actual pain. With strangers, this made him cold to
+very sternness, or, as is often seen in the effort to conquer a natural
+defect, gave him a manner of over-easy confidence that looked like
+impertinence. And thus the man who would not have wounded the self-love of
+the meanest beggar, got the reputation of being haughty, insolent, and
+oppressive. Besides this, when he was in the right, and felt himself so,
+he took no pains to convince others of the fact. His maxim was,&mdash;have
+I not heard it from his lips scores of times,&mdash;'The end will show.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet the end will not show, father; his fame has not been vindicated,
+nor his character cleared.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In some measure the fault of those who took up his cause. They seemed
+less to insist on reparation than punishment. They did not say, 'Do
+justice to this man's memory;' but, 'Come forward and own you wronged him,
+and broke his heart.' Now, the accusation brought against George
+Barrington of assuming sovereign power was not settled by his death; his
+relatives forgot this, or merged it in their own charge against the
+Company. They mismanaged everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it too late to put them on the right track, father; or could you do
+it?&rdquo; asked the youth, eagerly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not too late, boy! There is time for it yet. There is, however, one
+condition necessary, and I do not see how that is to be secured.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I should see Mr. Barrington and confer with him alone; he must admit me
+to his confidence, and I own to you, I scarcely deem that possible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I try&mdash;may I attempt this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not like to refuse you, Fred: but if I say Yes, it will be to
+include you in my own defeated hopes. For many a year Mr. Barrington has
+refused to give one sign of his forgiveness; for in his treatment of you I
+only recognize the honorable feeling of exempting the son from the penalty
+due to the father. But perhaps defeat is better than self-reproach, and as
+I have a strong conviction I could serve him, I am ready to risk a
+failure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may make the attempt, then?&rdquo; said Fred, eagerly. &ldquo;I will write to Miss
+Barrington to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now of yourself. What of your career? How do you like soldiering,
+boy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Less than ever, sir; it is only within the last week or two that we have
+seen anything beyond barrack or parade duty. Now, however, we have been
+called to repress what are called risings in the northern shires; and our
+task has been to ride at large unarmed mobs and charge down masses, whose
+grape-shot are brickbats. Not a very glorious campaign!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The old man smiled, but said nothing for a moment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Your colonel is on leave, is he not?&rdquo; asked he.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. We are commanded by that Major Stapylton I told you of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A smart officer, but no friend of yours, Fred,&rdquo; said the General,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir; certainly no friend of mine,&rdquo; said the young man, resolutely.
+&ldquo;To refuse me a week's leave to go and meet my father, whom I have not
+seen for years, and, when pressed, to accord me four days, is to disgust
+me with himself and the service together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, as you cannot be my guest, Fred, I will be yours. I 'll go back
+with you to headquarters. Stapylton is a name I used to be familiar with
+long ago. It may turn out that I know his family; but let us talk of
+Barrington. I have been thinking it would be better not to link any
+question of his own interests with my desire to meet him, but simply to
+say I 'm in England, and wish to know if he would receive me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It shall be as you wish, sir. I will write to his sister by this post.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And after one day in town, Fred, I am ready to accompany you anywhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER IX. MAJOR M'CORMICK'S LETTER
+</h2>
+<p>
+As it was not often that Major M'Cormick performed the part of a
+letter-writer, perhaps my reader will pardon me if I place him before him
+on one of these rare occasions. If success would always respond to labor,
+his would have been a real triumph; for the effort cost him many days, two
+sleepless nights, a headache, and half a quire of paper.
+</p>
+<p>
+Had not Stapylton retained him by an admirably selected hamper of good
+things from a celebrated Italian warehouse in the Strand, I am afraid that
+M'Cormick's zeal might have cooled down to the zero of forgetfulness; but
+the reindeer hams and the Yarmouth bloaters, the potted shrimps and the
+preserved guavas, were an appeal that addressed themselves to that organ
+which with him paid the double debt of digestion and emotion. He felt that
+such a correspondent was worth a sacrifice, and he made it That my reader
+may appreciate the cost of the achievement, I would have him imagine how a
+mason about to build a wall should be obliged to examine each stone before
+he laid it, test its constituent qualities, its shape and its size,&mdash;for
+it was thus that almost every word occasioned the Major a reference to the
+dictionary, spelling not having been cultivated in his youth, nor much
+practised in his riper years. Graces of style, however, troubled him
+little; and, to recur to my figure of the stone-mason, if he was
+embarrassed in his search for the materials, he cared wonderfully little
+for the architecture. His letter ran thus, and the reader will perceive
+that it must have been written some weeks after the events recorded in the
+last chapter:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mac's Nest, October, Thursday.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear S.,&mdash;A touch of my old Walcheren complaint has laid me up since
+Tuesday, and if the shakes make me illegible now, that's the reason why.
+Besides this the weather is dreadful; cold east winds and rains, sometimes
+sleet, every day; and the turf so wet, it 's only smoke, not fire. I
+believe it is the worst climate in Europe, and it gets wetter every year.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The hamper came to hand, but though it was marked 'Carriage paid, this
+side up,' they upset it and broke two bottles, and charged seven and
+fourpence-halfpenny for the bringing it, which is, I think, enormous; at
+least, Tim Hacket got over a thrashing-machine from Scotland last spring
+for twelve and four, and there 's no comparison between the two. Thanks to
+you, however, all the same; but if you can get any of this charge reduced,
+so much the better, not to speak of the bottles,&mdash;both mixed pickles&mdash;which
+they ought to make good.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad to see you are touching up the Radicals in the North; powder
+and ball will do more to bring them to reason than spouting in Parliament.
+The papers say there was nine killed and twenty-three wounded; and one
+fellow, the 'Stockport Bee,' says, that 'if the Butcher that led the
+dragoons is n't turned out of the service with disgrace no gentleman will
+degrade himself by entering the army.' Isn't the Butcher yourself? Miss
+Barrington, always your friend, says it is; and that if the account of
+another paper, called the 'Ægis,' be true, you 'll have to go to a
+court-martial. I stood stoutly to you through it all, and declared that
+when the niggers was up at Jamaica, we had n't time to take the names of
+the prisoners, and we always cut one of their ears off to know them again.
+Old Peter laughed till the tears ran down his face, but Dinah said, 'If I
+did not suppose, sir, that you were inventing a very graceless joke, I'd
+insist on your leaving this room and this house on the instant.' It was
+ten o'clock at night, and raining hard; so you may guess I gave in. Bad as
+she is, the young one is her equal, and I gave up all thoughts of what you
+call 'prosecuting my suit' in that quarter. She isn't even commonly civil
+to me, and when I ask her for, maybe, the mustard at dinner, she turns
+away her head, and says, 'Darby, give Major M'Cormick the salt.' That's
+French politeness, perhaps; but I'll pay them all off yet, for they can't
+get sixpence on the mortgage, and I 'm only drinking out that bin of old
+Madeira before I tell them that I won't advance the money. Why should I?
+The women treat me worse than a dog, and old B. is neither more nor less
+than a fool. Dill, the doctor, however he got it, says it's all up about
+the suit with the India Company; that there's no proof of the Colonel's
+marriage at all, that the charges against him were never cleared up, and
+that nothing can come out of it but more disgrace and more exposure.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish you 'd send me the correct account of what took place between you
+and one of your subalterns, for old Dinah keeps harping on it in a sort of
+mysterious and mischievous way of her own, that provokes me. Was it that
+he refused to obey orders, or that <i>you</i>, as <i>she</i> says, used
+such language towards him that he wrote to report you? Give it to me in
+black and white, and maybe I won't try her temper with it. At all events,
+make out some sort of a case, for the old woman is now intolerable. She
+said yesterday, 'Major Stapylton, to whom I write by this post, will see
+that his visit here must be preceded by an explanation.' There's her words
+for you, and I hope you like them!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think you are right to be in no hurry about purchasing, for many say
+the whole system will be changed soon, and the money would be clean thrown
+away. Besides this, I have been looking over my bauk-book, and I find I
+could n't help you just now. Two bad harvests, and the smut in the wheat
+last year, are running me mighty close. I won't finish this till
+to-morrow, for I 'm going to dine at 'The Home' to-day. It is the
+granddaughter's birthday, and there was a regular shindy about who was
+going to be asked. Old Peter was for a grand celebration, and inviting the
+Admiral, and the Gores, and God knows who besides; and Dinah was for what
+she called a family party, consisting, I suppose, of herself and Darby. I
+'ll be able, before I close this, to tell you how it was ended; for I only
+know now that Dill and his daughter are to be there.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wednesday.&mdash;I sit down with a murdering headache to finish this
+letter. Maybe it was the pickled lobster, or the ice punch, or the other
+drink they called champagne-cup that did it. But I never passed such a
+night since I was in the trenches, and I am shaking still, so that I can
+scarce hold the pen. It was a grand dinner, to be sure, for ruined people
+to give. Venison from Carrick Woods, and game of every kind, with all
+kinds of wine; and my Lord Car-rickmore talking to Miss Dinah, and the
+Admiral following up with the niece, and Tom Brabazon, and Dean of
+Deanspark, and the devil knows who besides, bringing up the rear, with
+Dill and your obedient servant. Every dish that came in, and every bottle
+that was uncorked, I said to myself, 'There goes another strap on the
+property;' and I felt as if we were eating the trees and the timber and
+the meadows all the time at table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It 's little of the same sympathy troubled the others. My Lord was as
+jolly as if he was dining with the King; and old Cobham called for more of
+the Madeira, as if it was an inn; and Peter himself&mdash;the heartless
+old fool&mdash;when he got up to thank the company for drinking his
+granddaughter's health, said, 'May I trust that even at my advanced age
+this may not be the last time I may have to speak my gratitude to you all
+for the generous warmth with which you have pledged this toast; but even
+should it be so, I shall carry away with me from this evening's happiness
+a glow of pleasure that will animate me to the last. It was only this
+morning I learned what I know you will all hear with satisfaction, that
+there is every probability of a speedy arrangement of my long-pending suit
+with the Company, and that my child here will soon have her own again.'
+Grand applause and huzzas, with a noise that drowned 'Bother!' from
+myself, and in the middle of the row up jumps the Admiral, and cries out,
+'Three cheers more for the Rajah's daughter!' I thought the old roof would
+come down; and the blackguards in the kitchen took up the cry and shouted
+like mad, and then we yelled again, and this went on for maybe five
+minutes. 'What does it all mean,' says I, 'but a cheer for the Court of
+Bankruptcy, and Hip, hip, hurray! for the Marshalsea Prison!' After that,
+he had half an hour or more of flatteries and compliments. My Lord was so
+happy, and Peter Barrington so proud, and the Admiral so delighted, and
+the rest of us so much honored, that I could n't stand it any longer, but
+stole away, and got into the garden, to taste a little fresh air and
+quietness. I had n't gone ten paces, when I came plump upon Miss Dinah,
+taking her coffee under a tree. 'You are a deserter, I fear, sir,' said
+she, in her own snappish way; so I thought I 'd pay her off, and I said,
+'To tell you the truth, Miss Barrington, at our time of life these sort of
+things are more full of sadness than pleasure. We know how hollow they
+are, and how little heart there is in the cheers of the people that are so
+jolly over your wine, but would n't stop to talk to you when you came down
+to water!'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The worse we think of the world, Major M'Cormick,' says she, 'the more
+risk we run of making ourselves mean enough to suit it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I don't suspect, ma'am,' says I, 'that when people have known it so long
+as you and I, that they are greatly in love with it.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'They may, however, be mannerly in their dealings with it, sir,' said
+she, fiercely; and so we drew the game, and settled the men for another
+battle.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Is there anything new, ma'am?' says I, after a while.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I believe not, sir. The bread riots still continue in the North, where
+what would seem the needless severity of some of the military commanders
+has only exasperated the people. You have heard, I suppose, of Major
+Stapylton's business?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Not a word, ma'am,' says I; 'for I never see a paper.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'I know very little of the matter myself,' says she. 'It was, it would
+appear, at some night assemblage at a place called Lund's Common. A young
+officer sent forward by Major Stapylton to disperse the people, was so
+struck by the destitution and misery he witnessed, and the respectful
+attitude they exhibited, that he hesitated about employing force, and
+restricted himself to counsels of quietness and submission. He did more,&mdash;not
+perhaps very prudently, as some would say,&mdash;he actually emptied his
+pockets of all the money he had, giving even his watch to aid the starving
+horde before him. What precise version of his conduct reached his
+superior, I cannot say; but certainly Major Stapylton commented on it in
+terms of the harshest severity, and he even hinted at a reason for the
+forbearance too offensive for any soldier to endure.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She did not seem exactly to know what followed after this, but some sort
+of inquiry appeared to take place, and witnesses were examined as to what
+really occurred at Lund's Common; and amongst others, a Lascar, who was
+one of the factory hands,&mdash;having come to England a great many years
+before with an officer from India. This fellow's evidence was greatly in
+favor of young Conyers, and was subjected to a very severe
+cross-examination from yourself, in the middle of which he said something
+in Hindostanee that nobody in the court understood but you; and after this
+he was soon dismissed and the case closed for that day.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'What do you think, Major M'Cormick,' said she, 'but when the court of
+inquiry opened the next morning, Lal-Adeen, the Lascar, was not to be
+found high or low. The court have suspended their sittings to search for
+him; but only one opinion prevails,&mdash;that Major Stapylton knows more
+of this man's escape than he is likely to tell.' I have taken great pains
+to give you her own very words in all this business, and I wrote them down
+the moment I got home, for I thought to myself you 'd maybe write about
+the matter to old Peter, and you ought to be prepared for the way they
+look at it; the more because Miss Dinah has a liking for young Conyers,&mdash;what
+she calls a motherly affection; but I don't believe in the motherly part
+of it! But of course you care very little what the people here say about
+you at all. At least, I know it would n't trouble <i>me</i> much, if I was
+in your place. At all events, whatever you do, do with a high hand, and
+the Horse Guards is sure to stand to you. Moderation may be an elegant
+thing in civil life, but I never knew it succeed in the army. There's the
+rain coming on again, and I just sent out six cars to the bog for turf; so
+I must conclude, and remain, yours sincerely,
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Daniel T. M'Cormick.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm thinking of foreclosing the small mortgage I hold on 'The Home,' but
+as they pay the interest regularly, five per cent, I would n't do it if I
+knew things were going on reasonably well with them; send me a line about
+what is doing regarding the 'claim,' and it will guide me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+While Major M'Cormick awaited the answer to his postscript, which to him&mdash;as
+to a lady&mdash;was the important part of his letter, a short note arrived
+at 'The Home' from Mr. Withering, enclosing a letter he had just received
+from Major Stapylton. Withering's communication was in answer to one from
+Barrington, and ran thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear B.,&mdash;All things considered, I believe you are right in not
+receiving General Conyers at this moment. It would probably, as you
+suspect, enable calumnious people to say that you could make your
+resentments play second when they came in the way of your interests. If
+matters go on well, as I have every hope they will, you can make the <i>amende</i>
+to him more satisfactorily and more gracefully hereafter. Buxton has at
+length consented to bring the case before the House; of course it will not
+go to a division, nor, if it did, could it be carried; but the discussion
+will excite interest, the Press will take it up, and after a few regretful
+and half-civil expressions from the Ministry, the India Board will see the
+necessity of an arrangement.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is somewhat unfortunate and <i>mal à propos</i> that Stapylton should
+at this moment have got into an angry collision with young Conyers. I have
+not followed the case closely, but, as usual in such things, they seem
+each of them in the wrong,&mdash;the young sub wanting to make his
+generous sympathy supply the place of military obedience, and the old
+officer enforcing discipline at the cost of very harsh language. I learn
+this morning that Conyers has sold out, intending to demand a personal
+satisfaction. You will see by S.'s letter that he scarcely alludes to this
+part of the transaction at all. S. feels very painfully the attacks of the
+Press, and sees, perhaps, more forcibly than I should in his place, the
+necessity of an exchange. Read attentively the portion I have underlined.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It is to this alone I have to direct my readers' attention, the first two
+sides of the letter being entirely filled with details about the &ldquo;claim&rdquo;:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The newspapers have kept me before you for some days back, much more, I
+doubt not, to their readers' amusement than to my own gratification. I
+could, if I pleased, have told these slanderers that I did not charge a
+crowd of women and children,&mdash;that I did not cut down an elderly man
+at his own door-sill,&mdash;that I did not use language &ldquo;offensive and
+unbecoming&rdquo; to one of my officers, for his having remonstrated in the name
+of humanity against the cruelty of my orders. In a word, I might have
+shown the contemptible scribblers that I knew how to temper duty with
+discretion, as I shall know how, when the occasion offers, to make the
+punishment of a calumniator a terror to his colleagues. However, there is
+a very absurd story going about of a fellow whose insolence I certainly <i>did</i>
+reply to with the flat of my sabre, and whom I should be but too happy to
+punish legally, if he could be apprehended. That he made his escape after
+being captured, and that I connived at or assisted in it,&mdash;I forget
+which,&mdash;you have probably heard. In fact, there is nothing too
+incredible to say of me for the moment; and what is worse, I begin to
+suspect that the Home Secretary, having rather burned his fingers in the
+business, will not be very sorry to make an Admiral Byng of a Major of
+Hussars. For each and all these reasons I mean to exchange, and, if
+possible, into a regiment in India. This will, of course, take some time;
+meanwhile, I have asked for and obtained some months' leave. You will be
+surprised at my troubling you with so much of purely personal matters, but
+they are the necessary preface to what I now come. You are aware of the
+letter I wrote some time back to Mr. Barrington, and the request it
+preferred. If the reply I received was not discouraging, neither was it
+conclusive. The ordinary commonplaces as to the shortness of our
+acquaintance, the want of sufficient knowledge of each other's tastes,
+characters, &amp;c, were duly dwelt upon; but I could not at the end say,
+was I an accepted or a rejected suitor. Now that the critical moment of my
+life draws nigh,&mdash;for such I feel the present emergency,&mdash;an act
+of confidence in me would have more than double value. Can you tell me
+that this is the sentiment felt towards me, or am I to learn that the
+yells of a rabble have drowned the voices of my friends? In plain words,
+will Miss Josephine Barrington accept my offer? Will she intrust her
+happiness to my keeping, and change the darkest shadow that ever lowered
+over my life into a gleam of unspeakable brightness? You have given me too
+many proofs of a friendly disposition towards me, not to make me feel that
+you are the best fitted to bring this negotiation to a good issue. If I do
+not mistake you much, you look with favor on my suit and wish it success.
+I am ashamed to say how deeply my hopes have jeopardized my future
+happiness, but I tell you frankly life has no such prize to my ambition,
+nor, in fact, any such alternative of despair before me.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, my dear Barrington,&rdquo; continued Withering's letter, &ldquo;there is a great
+deal in this that I like, and something with which I am not so much
+pleased. If, however, I am not the Major's advocate to the extent he asks,
+or expects me, it is because I feel that to be unjustly dealt with is a
+stronger claim on <i>your</i> heart than that of any other man I ever met
+with, and the real danger here would be that you should suffer that
+feeling to predominate over all others. Consult your granddaughter's
+interests, if you can, independently of this; reflect well if the plan be
+one likely to promise her happiness. Take your sensible, clear-headed
+sister into your counsels; but, above all, ascertain Josephine's own
+sentiments, and do nothing in direct opposition to them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, Dinah,&rdquo; said Barrington, placing the letter in her hands, &ldquo;this is
+as much to your address as to mine. Read it over carefully, and you'll
+find me in the garden when you have done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington laid down her great roll of worsted work, and began her
+task without a word. She had not proceeded very far, however, when
+Josephine entered in search of a book. &ldquo;I beg pardon, aunt, if I derange
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We say disturb, or inconvenience, in English, Miss Barrington. What is it
+you are looking for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The 'Legend of Montrose,' aunt. I am so much amused by that Major
+Dalgetty that I can think of nothing but him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; muttered the old lady. &ldquo;It was of a character not altogether
+dissimilar I was thinking myself at that moment. Sit down here, child, and
+let me talk to you. This letter that I hold here, Josephine, concerns
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Me, aunt&mdash;concerns <i>me?</i> And who on earth could have written a
+letter in which I am interested?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall hear it.&rdquo; She coughed only once or twice, and then went on:
+&ldquo;It's a proposal of marriage,&mdash;no less. That gallant soldier who left
+us so lately has fallen in love with you,&mdash;so he says, and of course
+he knows best. He seems fully aware that, being older than you, and graver
+in temperament, his offer must come heralded with certain expressions
+almost apologetic; but he deals with the matter skillfully, and tells us
+that being well off as regards fortune, of good blood, and with fair
+prospects before him, he does not wish to regard his suit as hopeless.
+Your grandfather was minded to learn how you might feel disposed to accept
+his addresses by observing your demeanor, by watching what emotion mention
+of him might occasion, by seeing how far you felt interested in his good
+or ill repute. I did not agree with him. I am never for the long road when
+there is a short one, and therefore I mean to let you hear his letter.
+This is what he writes.&rdquo; While Miss Dinah read the extract which the
+reader has just seen, she never noticed, or, if noticed, never attended
+to, the agitation in her niece's manner, or seemed to remark that from a
+deep-crimson at first her cheeks grew pale as death, and her
+lips-tremulous. &ldquo;There, child,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, as she finished&mdash;&ldquo;there
+are his own words; very ardent words, but withal respectful. What do you
+think of them,&mdash;of them and of him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Josephine hung down her head, and with her hands firmly clasped together,
+she sat for a few moments so motionless that she seemed scarcely to
+breathe.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Would you like to think over this before you speak of it, Josephine?
+Would you like to take this letter to your room and ponder over it alone?&rdquo;
+No answer came but a low, half-subdued sigh.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you do not wish to make a confidante of me, Josephine, I am sorry for
+it, but not offended.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, aunt, it is not that,&rdquo; burst she in; &ldquo;it is to <i>you</i> and you
+alone, I wish to speak, and I will be as candid as yourself. I am not
+surprised at the contents of this letter. I mean, I was in a measure
+prepared for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is to say, child, that he paid you certain attentions?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She nodded assent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And how did you receive them? Did you let him understand that you were
+not indifferent to him,&mdash;that his addresses were agreeable to you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Another, but shorter, nod replied to this question.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must confess,&rdquo; said the old lady, bridling up, &ldquo;all this amazes me
+greatly. Why, child, it is but the other day you met each other for the
+first time. How, when, and where you found time for such relations as you
+speak of, I cannot imagine. Do you mean to tell me, Josephine, that you
+ever talked alone together?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Constantly, aunt!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Constantly!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, aunt. We talked a great deal together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But how, child,&mdash;where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here, aunt, as we used to stroll together every morning through the wood
+or in the garden; then as we went on the river or to the waterfall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can comprehend nothing of all this, Josephine. I know you mean to deal
+openly with me; so say at once, how did this intimacy begin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can scarcely say how, aunt, because I believe we drifted into it. We
+used to talk a great deal of ourselves, and at length we grew to talk of
+each other,&mdash;of our likings and dislikings, our tastes and our
+tempers. And these did not always agree!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, aunt,&rdquo; said she, with a heavy sigh. &ldquo;We quarrelled very often; and
+once,&mdash;I shall not easily forget it,&mdash;once seriously.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was it about?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was about India, aunt; and he was in the wrong, and had to own it
+afterwards and ask pardon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He must know much more of that country than you, child. How came it that
+you presumed to set up your opinion against his?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The presumption was his,&rdquo; said she, haughtily. &ldquo;He spoke of <i>his</i>
+father's position as something the same as <i>my</i> father's. He talked
+of him as a Rajah!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not know that he spoke of his father,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah,
+thoughtfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, he spoke much of him. He told me, amongst other things, how he had
+been a dear friend of papa's; that as young men they lived together like
+brothers, and never were separate till the fortune of life divided them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is all this I am listening to? Of whom are you telling me,
+Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of Fred, Aunt Dinah; of Fred, of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you mean young Conyers, child?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. How could I mean any other?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ta, ta, ta!&rdquo; said the old lady, drumming with her heel on the floor and
+her fingers on the table. &ldquo;It has all turned out as I said it would!
+Peter, Peter, will you never be taught wisdom? Listen to me, child!&rdquo; said
+she, turning almost sternly towards Josephine. &ldquo;We have been at
+cross-purposes with each other all this time. This letter which I have
+just read for you&mdash;&rdquo; She stopped suddenly as she reached thus far,
+and after a second's pause, said, &ldquo;Wait for me here; I will be back
+presently. I have a word to say to your grandfather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Leaving poor Josephine in a state of trepidation and bewilderment,&mdash;ashamed
+at the confession she had just made, and trembling with a vague sense of
+some danger that impended over her,&mdash;Miss Dinah hurried away to the
+garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here's a new sort of worm got into the celery, Dinah,&rdquo; said he, as she
+came up, &ldquo;and a most destructive fellow he is. He looks like a mere
+ruffling of the leaf, and you 'd never suspect him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is your peculiarity never to suspect anything, brother Peter, even
+after you have had warning of peril. Do you remember my telling you, when
+we were up the Rhine, what would come of that intimacy between Conyers and
+Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think I do,&rdquo; said he, making what seemed an effort of memory.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can you recall the indolent slipshod answer you made me about it? But
+of course you cannot. It was an old-maid's apprehensions, and you forgot
+the whole thing. Well, Peter, I was right and you were wrong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not the first time that the double event has come off so!&rdquo; said he,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are too fond of that cloak of humility, Peter Barrington. The plea of
+Guilty never saved any one from transportation!&rdquo; Waiting a moment to
+recover her breath after this burst of passion, she went on: &ldquo;After I had
+read that letter you gave me, I spoke to Josephine; I told her in a few
+words how it referred to her, and frankly asked her what she thought of
+it. She was very candid and very open, and, I must say, also very
+collected and composed. Young ladies of the present day possess that
+inestimable advantage over their predecessors. Their emotions do not
+overpower them.&rdquo; This was the second time of &ldquo;blowing off the steam,&rdquo; and
+she had to wait a moment to rally. &ldquo;She told me, frankly, that she was not
+unprepared for such an offer; that tender passages had already been
+exchanged between them. The usual tomfoolery, I conclude,&mdash;that
+supreme effort of selfishness people call love,&mdash;in a word, Peter,
+she was in no wise disinclined to the proposal; the only misfortune was,
+she believed it came from young Conyers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington would have laughed, and laughed heartily, if he dared. As it
+was, the effort to restrain himself sent the blood to his head, and made
+his eyes run over.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may well blush, Peter Barrington,&rdquo; said she, shaking her finger at
+him. &ldquo;It's all your own doing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And when you undeceived her, Dinah, what did she say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not done so yet; but my impression is that so susceptible a young
+lady should find no great difficulty in transferring her affections. For
+the present I mean to limit myself to declaring that this offer is not
+from Conyers; if she has curiosity to know the writer, she shall learn it.
+I always had my doubts about these convents Bread and water diet makes
+more epicures than abstinents!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER X. INTERCHANGED CONFESSIONS
+</h2>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington, with Josephine at one side and Polly Dill on the other,
+sat at work in her little room that opened on the garden. Each was engaged
+in some peculiar task, and each seemed bent upon her labor in that
+preoccupied way which would imply that the cares of needlework make no
+mean call upon human faculties. A close observer would, however, have
+remarked that though Miss Barrington stitched vigorously away at the
+background for a fierce tiger with measly spots over him, Polly seemed
+oftener to contemplate than continue her handiwork; while Josephine's
+looks strayed constantly from the delicate tracery she was following, to
+the garden, where the roses blended with the jasmine, and the drooping
+honeysuckles hung listlessly over the boughs of the apple-tree.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If your work wearies you, Fifine,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, &ldquo;you had better read
+for us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh no, not at all, aunt; I like it immensely. I was only wondering why
+one should devise such impossible foliage, when we have the real thing
+before us, in all its grace and beauty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; said the old lady; &ldquo;the sight of a real tiger would not put me
+out of countenance with my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It certainly ought not, ma'am,&rdquo; said Polly; while she added, in a faint
+whisper, &ldquo;for there is assuredly no rivalry in the case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps Miss Dill is not too absorbed in her study of nature, as applied
+to needlework, to read out the newspaper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do it with pleasure, ma'am. Where shall I begin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Deaths and marriages first, of course, child. Then fashion and varieties;
+take the accidents afterwards, and close with anything remarkable in
+politics, or any disastrous occurrence in high life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly obeyed to the letter; once only straying into an animated account of
+a run with the Springfield fox-hounds, where three riders out of a large
+field came in at the death; when Miss Dinah stopped her abruptly, saying,
+&ldquo;I don't care for the obituary of a fox, young lady. Go on with something
+else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you have the recent tragedy at Ring's End, ma'am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know it by heart Is there nothing new in the fashions,&mdash;how are
+bonnets worn? What's the latest sleeve? What's the color in vogue?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A delicate blue, ma'am; a little off the sky, and on the hyacinth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very becoming to fair people,&rdquo; said Miss Dinah, with a shake of her blond
+ringlets.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'The Prince's Hussars!' Would you like to hear about <i>them</i>, ma'am?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By all means.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's a very short paragraph. 'The internal troubles of this unhappy
+regiment would seem to be never ending. We last week informed our readers
+that a young subaltern of the corps, the son of one of our most
+distinguished generals, had thrown up his commission and repaired to the
+Continent, to enable him to demand a personal satisfaction from his
+commanding officer, and we now learn that the Major in question is
+precluded from accepting the gage of battle by something stronger than
+military etiquette.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Read it again, child; that vile newspaper slang always puzzles me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly recited the passage in a clear and distinct voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you understand by it, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I take it to mean nothing, madam. One of those stirring pieces of
+intelligence which excites curiosity, and are no more expected to be
+explained than a bad riddle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It cannot surely be that he shelters himself under his position towards
+us? That I conclude is hardly possible!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Miss Barrington said this as a reflection, she addressed herself
+almost directly to Josephine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As far as I am concerned, aunt,&rdquo; answered Josephine, promptly, &ldquo;the Major
+may fight the monster of the Drachenfels to-morrow, if he wishes it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, here is another mystery apparently on the same subject. 'The Lascar,
+Lal-Adeen, whom our readers will remember as having figured in a
+police-court a few days back, and was remanded till the condition of his
+wound&mdash;a severe sabre-cut on the scalp&mdash;should permit his
+further examination, and on the same night made his escape from the
+hospital, has once again, and very unexpectedly, turned up at
+Boulogne-sur-Mer. His arrival in this country&mdash;some say voluntarily,
+others under a warrant issued for his apprehension&mdash;will probably
+take place to-day or to-morrow, and, if report speak truly, be followed by
+some of the most singular confessions which the public has heard for a
+long time back.' 'The Post' contradicts the statement, and declares 'no
+such person has ever been examined before the magistrate, if he even have
+any existence at all.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what interest has all this for us?&rdquo; asked Miss Dinah, sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not forget, ma'am, that this is the same man Major Stapylton was
+said to have wounded; and whose escape scandal hinted he had connived at,
+and who now 'does not exist.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I declare Miss Dill, I remember no such thing; but it appears to me that
+Major Stapylton occupies a very considerable space in your own thoughts.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy Polly likes him, aunt,&rdquo; said Josephine, with a slight smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I will own he interests me; there is about him a mysterious
+something that says, 'I have more in my head and on my heart than you
+think of, and more, perhaps, than you could carry if the burden were
+yours.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A galley-slave might say the same, Miss Dill.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt of it, ma'am; and if there be men who mix in the great world,
+and dine at grand houses, with something of the galley-slave on their
+conscience, they assuredly impress us with an amount of fear that is half
+a homage. One dreads them as he does a tiger, but the terror is mingled
+with admiration.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is nonsense, young lady, and baneful nonsense, too, begotten of
+French novels and a sickly sentimentality. I hope Fifine despises it as
+heartily as I do.&rdquo; The passionate wrath which she displayed extended to
+the materials of her work-basket, and while rolls of worsted were upset
+here, needles were thrown there; and at last, pushing her embroidery-frame
+rudely away, she arose and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dearest Polly, how could you be so indiscreet! You know, far better than
+I do, how little patience she has with a paradox.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sweet Fifine,&rdquo; said the other, in a low whisper, &ldquo;I was dying to get
+rid of her, and I knew there was only one way of effecting it. You may
+remark that whenever she gets into a rage, she rushes out into the
+flower-garden, and walks round and round till she's ready to drop. There
+she is already; you may gauge her anger by the number of her revolutions
+in a minute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why did you wish her away, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll tell you why; that is, there is a charming French word for what I
+mean, the verb 'agacer,' all untranslatable as it is. Now there are
+moments when a person working in the same room&mdash;reading, writing,
+looking out of the window&mdash;becomes an insupportable infliction. You
+reason, and say, 'How absurd, how childish, how ungenerous,' and so forth.
+It won't do; for as you look round he is there still, and by his mere
+presence keeps up the ferment in your thoughts. You fancy, at last, that
+he stands between you and your inner self, a witness that won't let your
+own conscience whisper to you, and you come in the end to hate him. Your
+dear aunt was on the high-road to this goal, when I bethought me of my
+expedient! And now we are all alone, dearest, make me a confession.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You do not like Major Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you do like somebody else?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; said she, slowly, and dividing the syllables as she spoke them.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That being the case, and seeing, as you do, that your aunt is entirely of
+your own mind, at least as to the man you do not care for, why don't you
+declare as much frankly to your grandfather, and break off the negotiation
+at once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just because that dear old grandpapa asked me not to be precipitate, not
+to be rash. He did not tell me that I must love Major Stapylton, or must
+marry him; but he said, 'If you only knew, Fifine, what a change in our
+fortune would come of a change in <i>your</i> feelings; if you could but
+imagine, child, how the whole journey of life might be rendered easier,
+all because you took the right-hand road instead of the left; if you could
+guess these things, and what might follow them&mdash;'&rdquo; She stopped.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. I have said all that he said; he kissed my cheek as he got thus far,
+and hurried away from the room.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you, like a sweet, obedient child, hastened away to yours; wrote a
+farewell, a heart-broken farewell, to Fred Conyers; and solemnly swore to
+your own conscience you 'd marry a man you disliked. These are the sort of
+sacrifices the world has a high admiration for; but do you know, Fifine,
+the world limps a little in its morality sometimes, and is not one-half
+the fine creature it thinks itself. For instance, in the midst of all its
+enthusiasm for you, it has forgotten that in accepting for your husband a
+man you do not love, you are doing a dishonesty; and that, besides this,
+you really love another. It is what the French call the aggravating
+circumstance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean to do nothing of the kind!&rdquo; broke in Fifine, boldly. &ldquo;Your lecture
+does not address itself to <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do not be angry, Fifine,&rdquo; said the other, calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is rather too hard to be rebuked for the faults one might have, but
+has not committed. It's like saying how wet you 'd have been had you
+fallen into that pool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it also means, don't fall into the pool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know, Polly,&rdquo; said Josephine, archly, &ldquo;I have a sort of suspicion
+that you don't dislike this Major yourself! Am I right?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not say you were altogether wrong; that is, he interests me, or,
+rather, he puzzles me, and it piques my ingenuity to read him, just as it
+would to make out a cipher to which I had only one-half the key.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Such a feeling as that would never inspire a tender interest, at least,
+with <i>me</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor did I say it was, Fifine. I have read in some book of my father's how
+certain physicians inoculated themselves with plague, the better to note
+the phenomena, and trace the course; and I own I can understand their
+zeal, and I 'd risk something to decipher this man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This may be very nice in medicine, Polly, but very bad in morals! At all
+events, don't catch the plague for the sake of saving <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! I assure you any step I take shall be done in the interests of
+science solely; not but that I have a small debt to acquit towards the
+gallant Major.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have! What can it possibly be?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it was this wise,&rdquo; said she, with a half-sigh. &ldquo;We met at a
+country-house here, and he paid me certain attentions, made me compliments
+on my riding, which I knew to be good, and my singing, which was just
+tolerable; said the usual things which mean nothing, and a few of those
+more serious ones which are supposed to be more significant; and then he
+asked my father's leave to come and visit him, and actually fixed a day
+and an hour. And we, poor people, all delighted with the flattery of such
+high notice, and thinking of the effect upon our neighbors so splendid a
+visitor would produce, made the most magnificent preparations to receive
+him,&mdash;papa in a black satin waistcoat, mamma in her lilac ribbons. I
+myself,&mdash;having put the roof on a pigeon-pie, and given the last
+finishing touch to a pagoda of ruby jelly,&mdash;I, in a charming figured
+muslin and a blush rose in my hair, awaited the hour of attack! And, after
+all, he never came. No, Fifine, never came! He forgot us, or he changed
+his mind, or something else turned up that he liked better; or&mdash;which
+is just as likely as any of the three&mdash;he thought it would be a
+charming piece of impertinence to pass off on such small folk, who
+presumed to fancy themselves company for him. At all events, Fifine, we
+saw him no more. He went his way somewhere, and we were left lamenting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you really liked him, Polly?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, of the two, I disliked him; but I wished very much that he might like
+<i>me!</i> I saw him very overbearing and very insolent to those who were
+certainly his equals, assuming a most offensive superiority everywhere and
+to any one, and I thought what an awful humiliation it would be if so
+great a personage were to be snubbed by the doctor's daughter. I wanted to
+give a lesson which could only be severe if it came from one humble as
+myself; but he defeated me, Fifine, and I am still his debtor! If I did
+not like him before, you may believe that I hate him now; and I came off
+here this morning, in hot haste, for no other purpose than to set you
+against him, and induce you to regard him as I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There was little need,&rdquo; said Fifine, calmly; &ldquo;but here comes my aunt back
+again. Make your submission quickly, Polly, or it will be too late to
+expect mercy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll do better,&rdquo; said Polly, rising. &ldquo;I 'll let my trial go on in my
+absence;&rdquo; and with this she stepped out of the window as Miss Barrington
+entered by the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XI. STAPYLTON'S VISIT AT &ldquo;THE HOME&rdquo;
+</h2>
+<p>
+So secretly had Barrington managed, that he negotiated the loan of five
+hundred pounds on a mortgage of the cottage without ever letting his
+sister hear of it; and when she heard on a particular day that her brother
+expected Mr. Kinshela, the attorney, from Kilkenny, on business, she made
+the occasion the pretext of a visit to Dr. Dill, taking Josephine with
+her, to pass the day there.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington was therefore free to receive his lawyer at his ease, and
+confer with him alone. Not that he cared much for his company; he felt
+towards the attorney pretty much as an ardent soldier feels to a
+non-combatant, the commissary, or the paymaster. Had he been a barrister,
+indeed, old Peter would have welcomed him with the zest of true
+companionship; he would have ransacked his memory for anecdotes, and
+prepared for the meeting as for an encounter of sharp wits. Now it is no
+part of my task to present Mr. Kinshela more than passingly to my reader,
+and I will merely say that he was a shrewd, commonplace man, whose
+practice rarely introduced him to the higher classes of his county, and
+who recognized Barrington, even in his decline, as a person of some
+consideration.
+</p>
+<p>
+They had dined well, and sat over their wine in the little dining-room
+over the river, a favorite spot of Barrington's when he wished to be
+confidential, for it was apart from the rest of the cottage, and removed
+from all intrusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, you won't tell me, Kinshela, who lent us this money?&rdquo; said the old
+man, as he passed the decanter across the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not that I won't, sir, but I can't. It was in answer to an
+advertisement I inserted in the 'Times,' that I got an application from
+Granger and Wood to supply particulars; and I must say there was no
+unnecessary security on their part. It was as speedily settled a
+transaction as I ever conducted, and I believe in my heart we might have
+had a thousand pounds on it just as easily as five hundred.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As well as it is, Kinshela. When the day of repayment comes round, I'll
+perhaps find it heavy enough;&rdquo; and he sighed deeply as he spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who knows, sir? There never was a time that capital expended on land was
+more remunerative than the present.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Now, Mr. Kinshela well knew that the destination of the money they spoke
+of was not in this direction, and that it had as little to say to subsoil
+drainage or top dressing as to the conversion of the heathen; but he was
+angling for a confidence, and he did not see how to attain it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington smiled before he answered,&mdash;one of those sad, melancholy
+smiles which reveal a sorrow a man is not able to suppress,&mdash;and then
+he said, &ldquo;I 'm afraid, Kinshela, I 'll not test the problem this time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will be better employed, perhaps, sir. You mean, probably, to take
+your granddaughter up to the drawing-room at the Castle?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never so much as thought of it, Joe Kinshela; the fact is, that money
+is going where I have sent many a hundred before it,&mdash;in law! I have
+had a long, wearisome, costly suit, that has well-nigh beggared me; and of
+that sum you raised for me I don't expect to have a shilling by this day
+week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I heard something about that, sir,&rdquo; said the other, cautiously.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was it you heard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, of course, worth repeating; nothing from any one that knew the
+matter himself; just the gossip that goes about, and no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, let us hear the gossip that goes about, and I'll promise to tell
+you if it's true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, indeed,&rdquo; said Kinshela, drawing a long breath, &ldquo;they say that your
+claim is against the India Board.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barring ton nodded.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that it is a matter little short of a million is in dispute.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+He nodded again twice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And they say, too,&mdash;of course, on very insufficient knowledge,&mdash;that
+if you would have abated your demands once on a time, you might readily
+have got a hundred thousand pounds, or even more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's not impossible,&rdquo; muttered Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that, now&mdash;&rdquo; he stammered for an instant, and then stopped.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But now? Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure, sir, they can know nothing about it; it's just idle talk, and no
+more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on, and tell me what they say <i>now</i>,&rdquo; said Barrington, with a
+strong force on the last word.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They say you 'll be beaten, sir,&rdquo; said he, with an effort.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And do they say why, Kinshela?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, sir; they say you won't take advice; and no matter what Mr.
+Withering counsels, or is settled in consultation, you go your own way and
+won't mind them; and that you have been heard to declare you 'll have all,
+or nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They give me more credit than I deserve, Kinshela. It is, perhaps, what I
+ought to have said, for I have often <i>thought it</i>. But in return for
+all the kind interest my neighbors take about me, let them know that
+matters look better for us than they once did. Perhaps,&rdquo; added he, with a
+laugh,&mdash;&ldquo;perhaps I have overcome my obstinacy, or perhaps my
+opponents have yielded to it. At all events, Joe, I believe I see land at
+last, and it was a long 'lookout' and many a fog-bank I mistook for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what makes you think now you'll win?&rdquo; said the other, growing bolder
+by the confidence reposed in him.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington half started at the presumption of the question; but he
+suddenly remembered how it was he himself who had invited the discussion,
+so he said calmly,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My hope is not without a foundation. I expect by the mail to-night a
+friend who may be able to tell me that I have won, or as good as won.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Kinshela was dying to ask who the friend was, but even his curiosity had
+its prudential limits; so he merely took out his watch, and, looking at
+it, remarked that the mail would pass in about twenty minutes or so.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the way, I must n't forget to send a servant to wait on the roadside;&rdquo;
+and he rang the bell and said, &ldquo;Let Darby go up to the road and take Major
+Stapylton's luggage when he arrives.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that the Major Stapylton is going to be broke for the doings at
+Manchester, sir?&rdquo; asked Kinshela.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is the same Major Stapylton that a rascally press is now libelling and
+calumniating,&rdquo; said Barrington, hotly. &ldquo;As to being broke, I don't believe
+that we have come yet to that pass in England that the discipline of our
+army is administered by every scribbler in a newspaper.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I humbly crave your pardon, sir, if I have said the slightest thing to
+offend; but I only meant to ask, was he the officer they were making such
+a fuss about?&rdquo; &ldquo;He is an officer of the highest distinction, and a
+wellborn gentleman to boot,&mdash;two admirable reasons for the assaults
+of a contemptible party. Look you, Kinshela; you and I are neither of us
+very young or inexperienced men, but I would ask you, have we learned any
+wiser lesson from our intercourse with life than to withhold our judgment
+on the case of one who rejects the sentence of a mob, and appeals to the
+verdict of his equals?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if he cut the people down in cold blood,&mdash;if it be true that he
+laid open that poor black fellow's cheek from the temple to the chin&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If he did no such thing,&rdquo; broke in Barrington; &ldquo;that is to say, if there
+is no evidence whatever that he did so, what will your legal mind say
+then, Joe Kinshela?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just this, sir. I'd say&mdash;what all the newspapers are saying&mdash;that
+he got the man out of the way,&mdash;bribed and sent him off.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not hint that he murdered him, and buried him within the precincts of
+the jail? I declare I wonder at your moderation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am sure, sir, that if I suspected he was an old friend of yours&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing of the kind,&mdash;a friend of very short standing; but what has
+that to say to it? Is he less entitled to fair play whether he knew me or
+not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All I know of the case is from the newspapers; and as I scarcely see one
+word in his favor, I take it there is not much to be said in his defence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if my ears don't deceive me, that was the guard's horn I heard
+then. The man himself will be here in five minutes or so. You shall
+conduct the prosecution, Kinshela, and I 'll be judge between you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Heaven forbid, sir; on no account whatever!&rdquo; said Kinshela, trembling all
+over. &ldquo;I'm sure, Mr. Barrington, you couldn't think of repeating what I
+said to you in confidence&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no, Kinshela. You shall do it yourself; and it's only fair to tell
+you that he is a right clever fellow, and fully equal to the task of
+defending himself.&rdquo; Peter arose as he spoke, and walked out upon the lawn,
+affectedly to meet his coming guest, but in reality to cover a laugh that
+was half smothering him, so comical was the misery expressed in the
+attorney's face, and so ludicrous was his look of terror.
+</p>
+<p>
+Of course I need not say that it never occurred to Barrington to realize
+his threat, which he merely uttered in the spirit of that quizzing habit
+that was familiar to him. &ldquo;Yes, Kinshela,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;here he comes. I
+recognize his voice already;&rdquo; and Barrington now walked forward to welcome
+his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not till after some minutes of conversation, and when the light
+fell strongly on Stapylton's features, that Barrington saw how changed a
+few weeks of care had made him. He looked at the least ten years older
+than before. His eyes had lost their bold and daring expression, too, and
+were deep sunk, and almost furtive in their glance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are tired, I fear,&rdquo; said Barrington, as the other moved his hand
+across his forehead, and, with a slight sigh, sank down upon a sofa.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Less tired than worried,&mdash;harassed,&rdquo; said he, faintly. &ldquo;Just as at a
+gaming-table a man may lose more in half an hour's high play than years of
+hard labor could acquire, there are times of life when we dissipate more
+strength and vigor than we ever regain. I have had rough usage since I saw
+you last,&rdquo; said he, with a very sickly smile. &ldquo;How are the ladies,&mdash;well,
+I hope?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perfectly well. They have gone to pass the day with a neighbor, and will
+be home presently. By the way, I left a friend here a few moments ago.
+What can have become of him?&rdquo; and he rang the bell hastily. &ldquo;Where's Mr.
+Kinshela, Darby?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Gone to bed, sir. He said he 'd a murthering headache, and hoped your
+honor would excuse him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Barrington laughed heartily at this message, Stapylton never asked
+the reason, but sat immersed in thought and unmindful of all around him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect you ought to follow his good example, Major,&rdquo; said Peter.
+&ldquo;A mug of mulled claret for a nightcap, and a good sleep, will set you all
+right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It will take more than that to do it,&rdquo; said the Major, sadly. Then
+suddenly rising, and pacing the room with quick, impatient steps, he said,
+&ldquo;What could have induced you to let them bring your claim before the
+House? They are going to do so, ain't they?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. Tom Withering says that nothing will be so effectual, and I thought
+you agreed with him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never. Nothing of the kind. I said, threaten it; insist that if they
+continue the opposition, that you will,&mdash;that you must do so; but I
+never was the fool to imagine that it could really be a wise step. What 's
+the fate of all such motions? I ask you. There's a speech&mdash;sometimes
+an able one&mdash;setting forth a long catalogue of unmerited injuries and
+long suffering. There's a claim made out that none can find a flaw in, and
+a story that, if Parliament was given to softness, might move men almost
+to tears, and at the end of it up rises a Minister to say how deeply he
+sympathizes with the calamity of the case, but that this house is, after
+all, not the fitting locality for a discussion which is essentially a
+question of law, and that, even if it were, and if all the allegations
+were established,&mdash;a point to which he by no means gave adhesion,&mdash;there
+was really no available fund at the disposal of the Crown to make
+reparation for such losses. Have you not seen this, or something like
+this, scores of times? Can you tell me of one that succeeded?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A case of such wrong as this cannot go without reparation,&rdquo; said Peter,
+with emotion. &ldquo;The whole country will demand it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The country will do no such thing. If it were a question of penalty or
+punishment,&mdash;yes! the country would demand it. Fine, imprison,
+transport, hang him! are easy words to utter, and cheap ones; but pay him,
+reinstate him, reward him! have a very different sound and significance.
+They figure in the budget, and are formidable on the hustings. Depend on
+it, Mr. Barrington, the step will be a false one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It has been my fate never to have got the same advice for two weeks
+together since the day I entered on this weary suit,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+with a peevishness not natural to him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may as well tell you the whole truth at once,&rdquo; said Stapylton. &ldquo;The
+Board have gone back of all their good intentions towards us; some recent
+arrivals from India, it is said, have kindled again the old fire of
+opposition, and we are to be met by a resistance bold and uncompromising.
+They are prepared to deny everything we assert; in fact, they have
+resolved to sweep all the pieces off the board and begin the whole game
+again, and all because you have taken this unfortunate course of appeal to
+Parliament.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you told Withering this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; I have talked the matter over for nearly four hours with him. Like a
+lawyer, he was most eager to know from what source came the new evidence
+so damaging to us. I could only guess at this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your guess was&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I scarcely like to own to you that I take a less favorable view of
+mankind than you do, who know it better; but in this case my suspicion
+attaches to a man who was once your son's dearest friend, but grew to be
+afterwards his deadliest enemy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not have this said, Major Stapylton. I know whom you mean, and I
+don't believe a word of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton simply shrugged his shoulders, and continued to pace the room
+without speaking, while Barrington went on muttering, half aloud: &ldquo;No, no,
+impossible; quite impossible. These things are not in nature. I don't
+credit them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You like to think very well of the world, sir!&rdquo; said the Major, with a
+faint scorn, so faint as scarcely to color his words.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think very badly of it, and you 'll soon come down to the level you
+assign it,&rdquo; said Peter, boldly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm afraid I 'm not in the humor just now to give it my best suffrages.
+You 've seen, I doubt not, something of the treatment I have met with from
+the Press for the last few weeks; not very generous usage,&mdash;not very
+just. Well! what will you say when I tell you that I have been refused an
+inquiry into my conduct at Manchester; that the Government is of opinion
+that such an investigation might at the moment be prejudicial to the
+public peace, without any counterbalancing advantage on the score of a
+personal vindication; that they do not deem the time favorable for the
+calm and unbiassed judgment of the country; in one short word, sir, they
+'d rather ruin a Major of Hussars than risk a Cabinet. I am to exchange
+into any corps or any service I can; and they are to tide over these
+troubles on the assumption of having degraded me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope you wrong them,&mdash;I do hope you wrong them!&rdquo; cried Barrington,
+passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall see if I do,&rdquo; said he, taking several letters from his pocket,
+and searching for one in particular. &ldquo;Yes, here it is. This is from
+Aldridge, the private secretary of the Commander-in-chief. It is very
+brief, and strictly secret:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Dear S.,&mdash;The &ldquo;Chief&rdquo; does not like your scrape at all. You did
+rather too much, or too little,&mdash;a fatal mistake dealing with a mob.
+You must consent&mdash;there's no help for it&mdash;to be badly used, and
+an injured man. If you don't like the half-pay list,&mdash;which would, in
+my mind, be the best step,&mdash;there 's the Seventeenth ordered to
+Baroda, and Maidstone refuses to go. This, or the Second West India, are
+the only things open. Above all, don't show fight; don't rally a party
+round you, for there is not a man in England whose influence is
+sufficiently great to stand between you and the public. A conple of years'
+patience and a hot climate will set all right, and reinstate you
+everywhere. Come over here at once and I 'll do my best for you.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Yours ever,
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'St. George Aldridge.'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is a friend's letter,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with a sneer; &ldquo;and he has no
+better counsel to give me than to plead guilty, and ask for a mitigated
+punishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Harrington was silenced; he would not by any expression of indignation add
+to the great anger of the other, and he said nothing. At last he said, &ldquo;I
+wish from my heart&mdash;I wish I could be of any service to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are the only man living who can,&rdquo; was the prompt answer.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so&mdash;in what way? Let me hear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;When I addressed a certain letter to you some time back, I was in a
+position both of fortune and prospect to take at least something from the
+presumption of my offer. Now, though my fortune remains, my future is more
+than clouded, and if I ask you to look favorably on my cause now, it is to
+your generosity I must appeal; I am, in fact, asking you to stand by a
+fallen man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+This speech, uttered in a voice slightly shaken by agitation, went to
+Barrington's heart. There was not a sentiment in his nature so certain to
+respond to a call upon it as this one of sympathy with the beaten man; the
+weaker side was always certain of his adherence. With a nice tact
+Stapylton said no more, but, pushing open the window, walked out upon the
+smooth sward, on which a faint moonlight flickered. He had shot his bolt,
+and saw it as it quivered in his victim's flesh. Barrington was after him
+in an instant, and, drawing an arm within his he said in a low voice, &ldquo;You
+may count upon me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton wrung his hand warmly, without speaking. After walking for a few
+moments, side by side, he said: &ldquo;I must be frank with you, Mr. Barrington.
+I have little time and no taste for circumlocution; I cannot conceal from
+myself that I am no favorite with your sister. I was not as eager as I
+ought to have been to cultivate her good opinion; I was a little piqued at
+what I thought mere injustices on her part,&mdash;small ones, to be sure,
+but they wounded me, and with a temper that always revolted against a
+wrong, I resented them, and I fear me, in doing so, I jeopardized her
+esteem. If she is as generous as her brother, she will not remember these
+to me in my day of defeat. Women, however, have their own ideas of mercy,
+as they have of everything, and she may not choose to regard me as you
+have done.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect you are wrong about this,&rdquo; said Harrington, breaking in.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I wish I may be; at all events, I must put the feeling to the test
+at once, for I have formed my plan, and mean to begin it immediately.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very few words will tell it. I intend to go on half-pay, or sell out if
+that be refused me; set out for India by the next mail, and, with what
+energy remains to me, vindicate your son's claim. I have qualifications
+that will make me better than a better man. I am well versed in
+Hindostanee, and a fair Persian scholar; I have a wide acquaintance with
+natives of every rank, and I know how and where to look for information.
+It is not my disposition to feel over-sanguine, but I would stake all I
+possess on my success, for I see exactly the flaws in the chain, and I
+know where to go to repair them. You have witnessed with what ardor I
+adopted the suit before; but you cannot estimate the zeal with which I
+throw myself into it now&mdash;<i>now</i> that, like George Barring-ton
+himself, I am a man wronged, outraged, and insulted.&rdquo; For a few seconds be
+seemed overcome by passion and unable to continue; then he went on: &ldquo;If
+your granddaughter will accept me, it is my intention to settle on her all
+I possess. Our marriage can be private, and she shall be free to accompany
+me or to remain here, as she likes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But how can all this be done so hurriedly? You talk of starting at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must, if I would save your son's cause. The India Board are sending out
+their emissaries to Calcutta, and I must anticipate them&mdash;if I cannot
+do more, by gaining them over to us on the voyage out. It is a case for
+energy and activity, and I want to employ both.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The time is very short for all this,&rdquo; said Barrington, again.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it is, sir, and so are the few seconds which may rescue a man from
+drowning! It is in the crisis of my fate that I ask you to stand by me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But have you any reason to believe that my granddaughter will hear you
+favorably? You are almost strangers to each other?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If she will not give me the legal right to make her my heir, I mean to
+usurp the privilege. I have already been with a lawyer for that purpose.
+My dear sir,&rdquo; added he, passionately, &ldquo;I want to break with the past
+forever! When the world sets up its howl against a man, the odds are too
+great! To stand and defy it he must succumb or retreat. Now, I mean to
+retire, but with the honors of war, mark you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My sister will never consent to it,&rdquo; muttered Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you? Have I the assurance of <i>your</i> support?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I can scarcely venture to say 'yes,' and yet I can't bear to say 'no' to
+you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is less than I looked for from you,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mournfully.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know Dinah so well. I know how hopeless it would be to ask her
+concurrence to this plan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She may not take the generous view of it; but there is a worldly one
+worth considering,&rdquo; said Stapylton, bitterly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, sir, if you count on <i>that</i>, I would not give a copper
+half-penny for your chance of success!&rdquo; cried Barrington, passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have quite misconceived me; you have wronged me altogether,&rdquo; broke in
+Stapylton, in a tone of apology; for he saw the mistake he had made, and
+hastened to repair it. &ldquo;My meaning was this&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So much the better. I'm glad I misunderstood you. But here come the
+ladies. Let us go and meet them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One word,&mdash;only one word. Will you befriend me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will do all that I can,&mdash;that is, all that I ought,&rdquo; said
+Barrington, as he led him away, and re-entered the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not meet them to-night,&rdquo; said Stapylton, hurriedly. &ldquo;I am nervous
+and agitated. I will say good-night now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+This was the second time within a few days that Stapylton had shown an
+unwillingness to confront Miss Barrington, and Peter thought over it long
+and anxiously. &ldquo;What can he mean by it?&rdquo; said he, to himself. &ldquo;Why should
+he be so frank and outspoken with me, and so reserved with her? What can
+Dinah know of him? What can she suspect, that is not known to me? It is
+true they never did like each other,&mdash;never 'hit it off' together;
+but that is scarcely <i>his</i> fault. My excellent sister throws away
+little love on strangers, and opens every fresh acquaintance with a very
+fortifying prejudice against the newly presented. However it happens,&rdquo;
+muttered he, with a sigh, &ldquo;<i>she</i> is not often wrong, and <i>I</i> am
+very seldom right;&rdquo; and, with this reflection, he turned once again to
+resume his walk in the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XII. A DOCTOR AND HIS PATIENT
+</h2>
+<p>
+Stapylton did not make his appearance at breakfast; he sent down a message
+that he had passed a feverish night, and begged that Dr. Dill might be
+sent for. Though Barrington made two attempts to see his guest, the
+quietness of the room on each occasion implied that he was asleep, and,
+fearing to disturb him, he went downstairs again on tiptoe.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is what the persecution has done, Dinah,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;They have
+brought that stout-hearted fellow so low that he may be the victim of a
+fever to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nonsense, Peter. Men of courage don't fall sick because the newspapers
+calumniate them. They have other things on their minds than such puny
+attacks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So he may, likely enough, too. He is bent heart and soul on what I told
+you last night, and I 'm not surprised if he never closed his eyes
+thinking of it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Neither did I!&rdquo; said she, curtly, and left the room.
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctor was not long in arriving, and, after a word or two with
+Barrington, hastened to the patient's room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are we alone?&rdquo; asked Stapylton, cutting short the bland speech with which
+Dill was making his approaches. &ldquo;Draw that curtain a bit, and take a good
+look at me. Are my eyes bloodshot? Are the pupils dilated? I had a bad
+sunstroke once; see if there be any signs of congestion about me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I see none. A little flushed; your pulse, too, is accelerated, and
+the heart's action is labored&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind the heart; if the head be well, it will take care of it. Reach
+me that pocket-book; I want to acquit one debt to you before I incur
+another. No humbug between us;&rdquo; and he pressed some notes into the other's
+palm as he spoke. &ldquo;Let us understand each other fully, and at once. I 'm
+not very ill; but I want <i>you</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am at your orders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faithfully,&mdash;loyally?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Faithfully,&mdash;loyally!&rdquo; repeated the other after him.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/454.jpg" width="100%" alt="454 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You've read the papers lately,&mdash;you've seen these attacks on me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, what do they say and think here&mdash;I mean in this house&mdash;about
+them? How do they discuss them? Remember, I want candor and frankness; no
+humbug. I'll not stand humbug.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The women are against you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both of them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How comes that?&mdash;on what grounds?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The papers accused you of cruelty; they affirmed that there was no cause
+for the measures of severity you adopted; and they argued&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't bore me with all that balderdash. I asked you how was it that these
+women assumed I was in the wrong?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I was about to tell you, if you had not interrupted me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is, they believed what they read in the newspapers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, of course, swallowed that fine story about the Hindoo fellow that I
+first cut down, and afterwards bribed to make his escape from the
+hospital?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect they half believed it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Or rather, believed half of it, the cutting down part! Can you tell me
+physiologically,&mdash;for I think it comes into that category,&mdash;why
+it is that women not otherwise ill-natured, in nine cases out of ten take
+the worst alternative as the credible one? But never mind that. They
+condemn me. Is n't it so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; and while old Barrington insists&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who cares what he insists? Such advocacy as his only provokes attack, and
+invites persecution. I 'd rather have no such allies!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe you are right.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want fellows like yourself, doctor,&mdash;sly, cautious, subtle
+fellows,&mdash;accustomed to stealing strong medicines into the system in
+small doses; putting the patient, as you call it in your slang, 'under the
+influence' of this, that, and t'other,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Dill smiled blandly at the compliment to his art, and Stapylton went on:&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not that I have time just now for this sort of chronic treatment. I need
+a heroic remedy, doctor. I 'm in love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Dill, with an accent nicely balanced between interest and
+incredulity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, and I want to marry!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Miss Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The granddaughter. There is no need, I hope, to make the distinction, for
+I don't wish to be thought insane. Now you have the case. What 's your
+prescription?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Propose for her!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I have, but they hesitate. The old man is not unfavorable; he is,
+perhaps, more: he is, in a measure, friendly; but what avails such
+advocacy? I want another guess sort of aid,&mdash;a clever man; or, what
+is better still, a clever woman, to befriend me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+He waited some seconds for a reply, but Dill did not speak; so he went on:
+&ldquo;A clever woman, to take a woman's view of the case, balancing this
+against that, never ignoring an obstacle, but inquiring what there may be
+to compensate for it Do you know such a one, doctor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps I may; but I have my doubts about securing her services.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even with a retainer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even with a retainer. You see, Major,&rdquo;&mdash;here Dill dropped his voice
+to a most confidential whisper,&mdash;&ldquo;my daughter Polly,&mdash;for I know
+we both have her in mind,&mdash;Polly is a strange sort of girl, and very
+hard to understand; for while, if the case were her own, she 'd no more
+think of romance than she would of giving ten guineas for a dress, if she
+was advising another whose position and prospects were higher than hers,
+it's the romantic part of it she'd lay all the stress on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;From which I gather that my suit will not stand this test!&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, with a peculiar smile. &ldquo;Eh, is n't that your meaning?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are certainly some years older than the lady,&rdquo; said Dill, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not old enough to be, as the world would surely say, 'her father,' but
+fully old enough to give license for sarcasm.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, as she will be a great fortune&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a sixpence,&mdash;she'll not have sixpence, doctor. That bubble has
+burst at last, and can never be blown again. The whole claim has been
+rejected, refused, thrown out, and there 's an end of it. It amuses the
+old man to sit on the wreck and fancy he can repair the shattered timbers
+and make them seaworthy; and, for the time he is likely to last, it is
+only kindness to leave him to his delusion; but he is ruined,&mdash;ruined
+beyond recall, and as I have told you, the girl will have nothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do they know this,&mdash;has Barrington heard it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I broke it to him last night, but I don't think he fully realized
+the tidings; he has certain reserves&mdash;certain little conceits of his
+own&mdash;which are to supply him with a sort of hope; but let us talk of
+something more practical. How can we secure Miss Dill's services?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A few days ago, the easiest way would have been to offer to befriend her
+brother, but this morning brings us news that this is not needed,&mdash;he
+is coming home.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a great event in its way; at least, it may be for Tom. It seems
+there was a collision at sea, somewhere near the Cape, between the ship
+'St. Helen's,' that carried out General Hunter and his staff, and the
+'Regulus,' with the Forty-ninth on board. It was at night, and a terrible
+sea on at the time. In the shock the 'St. Helen's' took fire; and as the
+two ships were inextricably locked together, the danger was common to
+each. While the boats were being lowered and manned,&mdash;for it was soon
+seen the vessel could not be saved,&mdash;a cry was raised that the fire
+was gaining on the fore-hold, and would soon reach the magazine. The woful
+news spread at once, and many jumped overboard in their terror. Just then
+Tom heard that there was a means of drowning the powder by opening a
+certain sluice, and, without waiting for more, he clambered across into
+the sinking vessel, made his way through smoke and fire, gained the spot,
+and succeeded, just as the very ladder itself had caught the flames. How
+he got back he cannot tell, for the vessel foundered in a few minutes, and
+he was so burned&mdash;face, cheek, and one shoulder&mdash;that he was
+unconscious of everything; and even when the account came, was still in
+bed, and not able to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He was a wild sort of lad, was he not,&mdash;a scamp, in short?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, not exactly that; idle&mdash;careless&mdash;kept bad company at
+times.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;These are the fellows who do this kind of thing once in their lives,&mdash;mark
+you, never twice. They never have more than one shot in their locker, but
+it will suffice in this case.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the worthy doctor was very far from enthusiastic about his son's
+gallantry, there was a degree of coolness in the Major's estimate of it
+that almost shocked him; and he sat staring steadily at the stern bronzed
+face, and the hard lineaments of the man, and wondering of what strange
+stuff such natures were fashioned.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's quite clear, then, that for Master Tom we can do nothing half so
+good as chance has done for him,&rdquo; said Stapylton, after a short interval.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Chance and himself too,&rdquo; added the doctor.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton made no answer, but, covering his eyes with his hand, lay deep
+in thought.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you only had the Attorney-General, Mr. Withering, on your side,&rdquo; said
+Dill. &ldquo;There is no man has the same influence over this family.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not what <i>you</i> call influence I want, my good sir. It is a far
+more subtle and more delicate agent. I require the sort of aid, in fact,
+which your daughter could supply, if she would. An appointment awaits me
+in India, but I must occupy it at once. I have no time for a long
+courtship. I 'm just as hurried as that boy of yours was when he swamped
+the powder-magazine. It's a skirmish where I can't wait for the heavy
+artillery, but must do my best with the light field-guns,&mdash;do you
+understand me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Dill nodded, and Stapylton resumed: &ldquo;The thing can be done just by the
+very road that you have pronounced impossible,&mdash;that is, by the
+romantic side of it,&mdash;making it a case of violent love at first
+sight, the passion of a man past the heyday of youth, but yet young enough
+to feel a most ardent affection. I am, besides,&rdquo; said he, laughing with a
+strange blending of levity and sarcasm, &ldquo;a sort of Brummagem hero; have
+been wounded, led assaults, and that kind of thing, to a degree that
+puffery can take the benefit of. And, last of all, doctor, I am rich
+enough to satisfy greater ambitions than ought to live under such a roof
+as this. Do you see the part your daughter can take in this drama?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And could you induce her to accept it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not very certain,&mdash;I'd be slow to pledge myself to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mockingly; &ldquo;the passing glimpses we bachelors
+obtain of the working of that vaunted institution, The Family, fail to
+impress us with all its imputed excellence; you are, it seems to me, just
+as powerless within your own doors as I am regarding what goes on in a
+neighbor's house. I take it, however, that it can't be helped. Children,
+like colonies, are only governable when helpless.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect you are wrong, sir; at least, I fancy I have as much of the
+sort of influence you speak of as others; but still, I think, here, in
+this particular case, you would yourself be your best ambassador, if you
+were strong enough to come down with me in the boat to-day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I am!&rdquo; cried Stapylton, starting up to a sitting posture; &ldquo;and
+what then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You would be better in my house than this,&rdquo; said Dill, mysteriously.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Speak out, and speak clearly, doctor; I have very little the matter with
+me, and am in no want of change of air. What I need is the assistance of
+one dexterous enough to advocate my plans with persons and in places to
+which I have no access. Your daughter is just such a one,&mdash;will she
+do it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We can ask her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, how will you explain my absence to these people here? What will you
+say for my not appearing at breakfast, and yet being able to take an
+airing with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will put it on hygienic grounds,&rdquo; said Dill, smiling acutely. &ldquo;My
+profession has a number of sanctuaries the profane vulgar can never enter.
+I 'll just step down now and ask Barrington to lend me his boat, and I 'll
+throw out a dark hint that I 'd like to manage a consultation on your case
+without alarming you, for which purpose I 'd ask Dr. Tobin to be at my
+house, when we arrive there, by mere accident, so that a conference would
+follow as a matter of course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very wily,&mdash;very subtle all this, doctor. Do you know, I 'm half
+frightened at the thought of trusting myself to such a master of intrigue
+and mystification.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have no fears; I reserve all my craft for my clients.&rdquo; And with this he
+left the room, but only for a few minutes; for he met Barrington on the
+stairs, and speedily obtained permission to take his boat to Inistioge,
+having first pledged himself to come back with Stapylton to dinner.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We shall see, we shall see,&rdquo; muttered Stapylton to himself. &ldquo;Your
+daughter must decide where I am to dine today.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+By the way&mdash;that is, as they glided along the bright river&mdash;Dill
+tried to prepare Stapylton for the task before him, by sundry hints as to
+Polly's temper and disposition, with warnings against this, and cautions
+about that. &ldquo;Above all,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;don't try to overreach her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perfect frankness&mdash;candor itself&mdash;is my device. Won't that do?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must first see will she believe it,&rdquo; said the doctor, slyly; and for
+the remainder of the way there was a silence between them.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIII. CROSS-PURPOSES
+</h2>
+<h3>
+&ldquo;Where 's Miss Polly?&rdquo; said Dill, hastily, as he passed his threshold.
+</h3>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She's making the confusion of roses in the kitchen, sir,&rdquo; said the maid,
+whose chemistry had been a neglected study.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell her that I have come back, and that there is a gentleman along with
+me,&rdquo; said he, imperiously, as he led the way into his study. &ldquo;I have
+brought you into this den of mine, Major, because I would just say one
+word more by way of caution before you see Polly. You may imagine, from
+the small range of her intercourse with the world, and her village life,
+that her acuteness will not go very far; don't be too sure of that,&mdash;don't
+reckon too much on her want of experience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose I have encountered as sharp wits as hers before this time o'
+day,&rdquo; replied he, half peevishly; and then, with an air of better temper,
+added, &ldquo;I have no secrets to hide, no mystery to cloak. If I want her
+alliance, she shall herself dictate the terms that shall requite it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The doctor shook his head dubiously, but was silent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect, my good doctor,&rdquo; said Stapylton, laughing, &ldquo;that your
+charming daughter is a little, a very little, of a domestic despot; you
+are all afraid of her; never very sure of what she will say or do or think
+on any given circumstances, and nervously alive to the risk of her
+displeasure.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is something in what you say,&rdquo; remarked Dill, with a sigh; &ldquo;but it
+was always my mistake to bring up my children with too much liberty of
+action. From the time they were so high&rdquo;&mdash;and he held his hand out
+about a yard above the floor&mdash;&ldquo;they were their own masters.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Just as the words had fallen from him, a little chubby, shock-headed
+fellow, about five years old, burst into the room, which he believed
+unoccupied, and then, suddenly seeing his papa, set up a howl of terror
+that made the house ring.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is it, Jimmy,&mdash;what is it, my poor man?&rdquo; said Polly, rushing
+with tucked-up sleeves to the spot; and, catching him up in her arms, she
+kissed him affectionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you take him away?&mdash;will you take him out of that?&rdquo; hissed out
+Dill between his teeth. &ldquo;Don't you see Major Stapylton here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Major Stapylton will excuse a toilette that was never intended for
+his presence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will certainly say there could not be a more becoming one, nor a more
+charming tableau to display it in!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, Jimmy,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;you must have some bread and jam for
+getting me such a nice compliment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And she bore away the still sobbing urchin, who, burying his head in her
+bosom, could never summon courage to meet his father's eye.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a spacious garden you appear to have here!&rdquo; said Stapylton, who saw
+all the importance of a diversion to the conversation.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a very much neglected one,&rdquo; said Dill, pathetically. &ldquo;My poor dear
+boy Tom used to take care of it when he was here; he had a perfect passion
+for flowers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Whether that Tom was associated in the Major's mind with some other very
+different tastes or not, Stapylton smiled slightly, and after a moment
+said, &ldquo;If you permit me, I 'll take a stroll through your garden, and
+think over what we have been talking of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Make yourself at home in every respect,&rdquo; said Dill. &ldquo;I have a few
+professional calls to make in the village, but we 'll meet at luncheon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's in the garden, Polly,&rdquo; said Dill, as he passed his daughter on the
+stairs; &ldquo;he came over here this morning to have a talk with you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, sir!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; he has got it into his head that you can be of service to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not impossible, sir; I think I might.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm glad to bear it, Polly; I'm delighted to see you take a good sensible
+view of things. I need not tell you he's a knowing one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, sir. But, as I have heard you card-players say, 'he shows his hand.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So he does, Polly; but I have known fellows do that just to mislead the
+adversary.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sorry adversaries that could be taken in so easily.&rdquo; And with a saucy
+toss of her head she passed on, scarcely noticing the warning gesture of
+her father's finger as she went.
+</p>
+<p>
+When she had found her work-basket and supplied herself with the means of
+occupying her fingers for an hour or so, she repaired to the garden and
+took her seat under a large elm, around whose massive trunk a mossy bench
+ran, divided by rustic-work into a series of separate places.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a churlish idea it was to erect these barricades, Miss Dill!&rdquo; said
+Stapylton as he seated himself at her side; &ldquo;how unpicturesque and how
+prudish!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was a simple notion of my brother Tom's,&rdquo; said she, smiling, &ldquo;who
+thought people would not be less agreeable by being reminded that they had
+a place of their own, and ought not to invade that of their neighbor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an unsocial thought!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Poor Tom! A strange reproach to make against <i>you</i>,&rdquo; said she,
+laughing out.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By the way, has n't he turned out a hero,&mdash;saved a ship and all she
+carried from the flames,&mdash;and all at the hazard of his own life?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He has done a very gallant thing; and, what's more, I 'll venture to say
+there is not a man who saw it thinks so little of it as himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suppose that every brave man has more or less of that feeling.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm glad to learn this fact from such good authority,&rdquo; said she, with a
+slight bend of the head.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A prettily turned compliment, Miss Dill. Are you habitually given to
+flattery?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No? I rather think not. I believe the world is pleased to call me more
+candid than courteous.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you let me take you at the world's estimate,&mdash;that is, will you
+do me the inestimable favor to bestow a little of this same candor upon <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Willingly. What is to be the subject of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The subject is a very humble one,&mdash;myself!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How can I possibly adjudicate on such a theme?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Better than you think for, perhaps!&rdquo; And for a moment he appeared awkward
+and ill at ease. &ldquo;Miss Dill,&rdquo; said he, after a pause, &ldquo;fortune has been
+using me roughly of late; and, like all men who deem themselves hardly
+treated, I fly at once to any quarter where I fancy I have found a more
+kindly disposition towards me. Am I indulging a self-delusion in believing
+that such sentiments are yours?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly Dill, with her own keen tact, had guessed what was the real object
+of Stapylton's visit. She had even read in her father's manner how he
+himself was a shareholder in the scheme, and she had made up her mind for
+a great frankness on each side; but now, seeing the diplomatic
+mys-teriousness with which the Major opened his attack, that love of
+mischievous drollery which entered into her nature suggested a very
+different line. She determined, in fact, to seem to accept the Major's
+speech as the preliminary to an offer of his hand. She therefore merely
+turned her head slightly, and in a low voice said, &ldquo;Continue!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have not deceived myself, then,&rdquo; said he, with more warmth of manner.
+&ldquo;I have secured one kind heart in my interest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must own,&rdquo; said she, with a half-coquettish look of pique, &ldquo;that you
+scarcely deserve it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How,&mdash;in what way?&rdquo; asked he, in astonishment.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a very short memory you are blessed with! Must I, then, remind you
+of a certain evening at Cobham? Must I recall what I thought at the time
+very particular, as they certainly were very pleasant, attentions on your
+part? Must I, also, bring to mind a certain promised visit from you, the
+day and hour all named by yourself,&mdash;a visit which never came off?
+And after all this, Major, are you not really a bold man to come down and
+take up your negotiation where you dropped it? Is there not in this a
+strong conviction of the greatness of Major Stapylton and the littleness
+of the doctor's daughter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton was struck dumb. When a general sees that what he meant as a
+feint has been converted into a real attack, the situation is often
+imminent; but what comparison in difficulty is there between that mistake
+and that of him who assails what he never desired to conquer? How he
+inwardly cursed the stupidity with which he had opened his negotiation!
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I perceive,&rdquo; said she, triumphing over his confusion, &ldquo;that your calmer
+judgment does not reassure you. You feel that there is a certain levity in
+this conduct not quite excusable! Own it frankly, and at once!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will own, if you like, that I was never in a situation of greater
+embarrassment!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I tell you why?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You couldn't; it would be totally impossible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will try, however, if you permit me. You do! Then here goes. You no
+more intended anything to come of your little flirtation at Cobham than
+you now do of a more serious blunder. You never came here this morning to
+make your court to <i>me</i>, You are much pained at the awkwardness of a
+situation so naturally wounding to me, and for the life of you, you cannot
+imagine what escape there is out of such a difficulty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are wonderfully clever, Miss Dill,&rdquo; said he; and there was an honest
+admiration in his look that gave the words a full significance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;but I am wonderfully good-natured. I forgive you what is
+the hardest thing in the world to forgive!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! if you would but be my friend,&rdquo; cried he, warmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a want of tact there was in that speech, Major Stapylton!&rdquo; said she,
+with a laugh; &ldquo;but perhaps you wanted to reverse the line of our dear
+little poet, who tells of some one 'that came but for Friendship, and took
+away Love'!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How cruel you are in all this mockery of me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Does not the charge of cruelty come rather ill from <i>you?&mdash;you</i>,
+who can afford to sport with the affections of poor village maidens. From
+the time of that 'Major bold of Halifax' the song tells of, I never heard
+your equal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could you prevail upon yourself to be serious for a few minutes?&rdquo; said
+he, gravely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not,&mdash;at least not just now; but why should I make the
+attempt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because I would wish your aid in a serious contingency,&mdash;a matter in
+which I am deeply interested, and which involves probably my future
+happiness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, Major! is it possible that you are going to trifle with my feelings
+once more?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear Miss Dill, must I plead once more for a little mercy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, don't do any such thing; it would seem ungenerous to refuse, and yet
+I could not accord it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fairly beaten,&rdquo; said he, with a sigh; &ldquo;there is no help for it. You are
+the victor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How did you leave our friends at 'The Home'?&rdquo; said she, with an easy
+indifference in her tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All well, perfectly well; that is to say, I believe so, for I only saw my
+host himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a pleasant house; how well they understand receiving their friends!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is so peaceful and so quiet!&rdquo; said he, with an effort to seem at ease.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And the garden is charming!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And all this is perfectly intolerable,&rdquo; said he, rising, and speaking in
+a voice thick with suppressed anger. &ldquo;I never came here to play a part in
+a vaudeville! Your father led me to believe, Miss Dill, that you might not
+be indisposed to lend me your favoring aid in a suit which I am interested
+in. He told me I should at least find you frank and outspoken; that if you
+felt inclined to assist me, you'd never enhance the service by a seeming
+doubt or hesitation&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if I should not feel so inclined, what did he then give you to
+expect?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you'd say so!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I do, then, clearly and distinctly tell you, if my counsels offer a
+bar to your wishes, they are all enlisted against you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is the acme of candor. You can only equal it by saying how I could
+have incurred your disfavor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There is nothing of disfavor in the matter. I think you charming. You are
+a hero,&mdash;very clever, very fascinating, very accomplished; but I
+believe it would be a great mistake for Fifine to marry you. Your tempers
+have that sort of resemblance that leave no reliefs in their mutual play.
+You are each of you hot and hasty, and a little imperious; and if she were
+not very much in love, and consequently disposed to think a great deal of
+you and very little of herself, these traits that I speak of would work
+ill. But if every one of them were otherwise, there would still be one
+obstacle worse than all!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And that is&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you not guess what I mean, Major Stapylton? You do not, surely, want
+confidences from me that are more than candor!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do I understand you aright?&rdquo; said he, growing red and pale by turns, as
+passion worked within him; &ldquo;do I apprehend you correctly? These people
+here are credulous enough to be influenced by the shadowy slanders of the
+newspapers, and they listen to the half-muttered accusations of a hireling
+press?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They do say very awkward things in the daily press, certainly,&rdquo; said she,
+dryly; &ldquo;and your friends marvel at the silence with which you treat them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I <i>have</i> divined your meaning,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;It is by these
+cowardly assailants I am supposed to be vanquished. I suspect, however,
+that Colonel Barrington himself was, once on a time, indulged with the
+same sort of flattery. They said that he had usurped a sovereignty,
+falsified documents, purloined jewels of immense value. I don't know what
+they did not charge him with. And what do they say of me? That I exhibited
+great severity&mdash;cruelty, if you will&mdash;towards a mob in a state
+of rebellion; that I reprimanded a very silly subaltern for a misplaced
+act of humanity. That I have been cashiered, too, they assert, in face of
+the 'Gazette,' which announces my appointment to an unattached majority.
+In a word, the enormity of the falsehood has never stayed their hand, and
+they write of me whatever their unthinking malevolence can suggest to
+them. You have, perhaps, seen some of these paragraphs?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like every one else, I have read them occasionally; not very attentively,
+indeed. But, in truth, I'm not a reader of newspapers. Here, for instance,
+is this morning's as it came from Dublin, still unopened;&rdquo; and she handed
+it as she spoke.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us see if I be still honored with their notice,&rdquo; said he, unfolding
+the paper, and running his eyes hastily over it. &ldquo;Debate on the Sugar Bill&mdash;Prison
+Reforms&mdash;China&mdash;Reinforcements for Canada&mdash;Mail Service to
+the Colonies&mdash;Bankruptcy Court. Oh, here we have it&mdash;here it
+is!&rdquo; and he crushed the paper while he folded down one part of it. &ldquo;Shall
+I read it for you? The heading is very tempting: 'Late Military Scandal.&mdash;A
+very curious report is now going through our West-end Clubs, and
+especially such as are the resort of military officers. It is to the
+purport that a certain Field-officer of Cavalry&mdash;whose conduct has
+been the subject of severe strictures from the Press&mdash;will speedily
+be called to answer for a much graver offence than the transgression of
+regimental discipline. The story which has reached us is a very strange
+one, and we should call it incredible, if we were not informed, on
+author-ity, that one of our most distinguished Indian generals has
+declared himself fully satisfied of its truth in every particular.' Can
+you fancy anything worse than that, Miss Dill? An unknown somebody is
+alleged to be convinced of an unknown something that attaches to me; for,
+of course, I am designated as the 'Field-officer of Cavalry,' and the
+public is graciously pleased to hold me in abhorrence till I have found
+out my calumniator and refuted him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It seems very hard. Who do you suspect is the Indian General alluded to?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell me, first of all,&mdash;does he exist?&rdquo; &ldquo;And this, too, you will not
+reply to, nor notice?&rdquo; &ldquo;Not, certainly, through such a channel as it
+reaches me. If the slanderer will stand forth and avow himself, I may know
+how to deal with him. But what has led us into this digression? I am sure
+it is as little to your taste as to mine. I have failed in my mission, and
+if I were able to justify every act of my life, what would it avail me?
+You have pronounced against me; at least, you will not take my brief.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What if I were retained by the other side?&rdquo; said she, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never suspected that there was another side,&rdquo; said he, with an air of
+extreme indifference. &ldquo;Who is my formidable rival?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I might have told you if I saw you were really anxious on the subject.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be but hypocrisy in me to pretend it. If, for example, Major
+McCormick&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, that is too bad!&rdquo; cried Polly, interrupting. &ldquo;This would mean an
+impertinence to Miss Barrington.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How pleasant we must have been! Almost five o'clock, and I scarcely
+thought it could be three!&rdquo; said he, with an affected languor.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Time's foot is not heard when he treads upon flowers,'&rdquo; said she,
+smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where shall I find your father, Miss Dill? I want to tell him what a
+charming creature his daughter is, and how wretched I feel at not being
+able to win her favor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pray don't; or he might fall into my own mistake, and imagine that you
+wanted a lease of it for life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Still cruel, still inexorable!&rdquo; said he, with a mockery of affliction in
+his tone. &ldquo;Will you say all the proper things&mdash;the regrets, and such
+like&mdash;I feel at not meeting him again; and if he has asked me to
+dinner&mdash;which I really forget&mdash;will you make the fitting
+apology?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is it, in the present case?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'm not exactly sure whether I am engaged to dine elsewhere, or too ill
+to dine at all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not say it is the despair at being rejected renders you unequal to
+the effort? I mean, of course, by myself, Major Stapylton.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no objection; say so, if you like,&rdquo; said he, with an insulting
+indifference. &ldquo;Good-day, Miss Dill. This is the way to the road, I
+believe;&rdquo; and, with a low bow, very deferential but very distant, he
+turned away to leave the garden. He had not, however, gone many paces,
+when he stopped and seemed to ponder. He looked up at the sky, singularly
+clear and cloudless as it was, without a breath of wind in the air; he
+gazed around him on every side, as if in search of an object he wanted;
+and then, taking out his purse, he drew forth a shilling and examined it.
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; muttered he, &ldquo;Chance has been my only counsellor for many a year,
+and the only one that never takes a bribe! And yet, is it not taking to
+the raft before the ship has foundered? True; but shall I be sure of the
+raft if I wait for the shipwreck? She is intensely crafty. She has that
+sort of head that loves a hard knot to unravel! Here goes! Let Destiny
+take all the consequences!&rdquo; and as he flung up the piece of money in the
+air, he cried, &ldquo;Head!&rdquo; It was some minutes ere he could discover where it
+had fallen, amongst the close leaves of a border of strawberries. He bent
+down to look, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Head! she has won!&rdquo; Just as he arose from
+his stooping attitude he perceived that Polly was engaged in the adjoining
+walk, making a bouquet of roses. He sprang across the space, and stood
+beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thought you had been a mile off by this time, at least,&rdquo; said she,
+calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I meant, and so I intended; but just as I parted from you, a thought
+struck me&mdash;one of those thoughts which come from no process of
+reasoning or reflection, but seem impelled by a force out of our own
+natures&mdash;that I would come back and tell you something that was
+passing in my mind. Can you guess it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; except it be that you are sorry for having trifled so unfeelingly
+with my hopes, and have come back to make the best reparation in your
+power, asking me to forgive and accept you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have guessed aright; it was for that I returned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a clever guess I made! Confess I am very ready-witted!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are; and it is to engage those ready wits in my behalf that I am now
+before you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'At my feet,' sir, is the appropriate expression. I wonder how a
+gentleman so suited to be the hero of a story could forget the language of
+the novel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want you to be serious,&rdquo; said he, almost sternly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why should that provoke seriousness from <i>me</i> which only costs
+<i>you</i> levity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Levity!&mdash;where is the levity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it not this instant that you flung a shilling in the air, and cried
+out, as you looked on it, 'She has won'? Is it not that you asked Chance
+to decide for you what most men are led to by their affections, or at
+least their interests; and if so, is levity not the name for this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True in part, but not in whole; for I felt it was <i>I</i> who had won
+when 'head' came uppermost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet you have lost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How so! You refuse me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I forgive your astonishment. It is really strange, but I do refuse you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why? Are you piqued with me for anything that occurred this morning?
+Have I offended you by anything that dropped from me in that conversation?
+Tell me frankly, that I may, if in my power, rectify it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; I rather felt flattered at the notion of being consulted. I thought
+it a great tribute to my clear-headedness and my tact.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then tell me what it was.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You really wish it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Insist upon it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I insist upon it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it was this. Seeing that you were intrusting your future fortune to
+chance, I thought that I would do the same, and so I tossed up whether,
+opportunity serving, I should accept you or a certain other, and the other
+won!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I ask for the name of my fortunate rival?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think it is very fair, perhaps not altogether delicate of you;
+and the more since he has not proposed, nor possibly ever may. But no
+matter, you shall hear his name. It was Major McCormick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;McCormick! You mean this for an insult to me, Miss Dill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/472.jpg" width="100%" alt="472 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it certainly is open to that objection,&rdquo; said she, with a very
+slight closure of her eyes, and a look of steady, resolute defiance.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And in this way,&rdquo; continued he, &ldquo;to throw ridicule over the offer I have
+made you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Scarcely that; the proposition was in itself too ridiculous to require
+any such aid from me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a moment Stapylton lost his self-possession, and he turned on her with
+a look of savage malignity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;An insult, and an intentional insult!&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a bold thing to avow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think so, Major Stapylton. We have been playing a very rough game
+with each other, and it is not very wonderful if each of us should have to
+complain of hard treatment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could not so very clever a person as Miss Dill perceive that I was only
+jesting?&rdquo; said he, with a cutting insolence in his tone.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I assure you that I did not,&rdquo; said she, calmly; &ldquo;had I known or even
+suspected it was a jest, I never should have been angry. That the
+distinguished Major Stapylton should mock and quiz&mdash;or whatever be
+the name for it&mdash;the doctor's daughter, however questionable the good
+taste, was, after all, only a passing slight. The thought of asking her to
+marry him was different,&mdash;that was an outrage!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You shall pay for this one day, perhaps,&rdquo; said he, biting his lip.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said she, laughing; &ldquo;this is not a debt of honor;
+you can afford to ignore it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you again, you shall pay for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Till then, sir!&rdquo; said she, with a courtesy; and without giving him time
+for another word, she turned and re-entered the house.
+</p>
+<p>
+Scarcely had Stapylton gained the road when he was joined by McCormick.
+&ldquo;Faith, you didn't get the best of that brush, anyhow,&rdquo; said he, with a
+grin.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean, sir?&rdquo; replied Stapylton, savagely.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean that I heard every word that passed between you, and I would n't
+have been standing in your shoes for a fifty-pound note.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How is your rheumatism this morning?&rdquo; asked Stapylton, blandly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pretty much as it always is,&rdquo; croaked out the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be thankful to it, then; for if you were not a cripple, I 'd throw you
+into that river as sure as I stand here to say it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Major McCormick did not wait for a less merciful moment, but hobbled away
+from the spot with all the speed he could muster.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIV. STORMS
+</h2>
+<p>
+When Stapylton stepped out of his boat and landed at &ldquo;The Home,&rdquo; the first
+person he saw was certainly the last in his wishes. It was Miss Dinah who
+stood at the jetty, as though awaiting him. Scarcely deigning to notice,
+beyond a faint smile of acquiescence, the somewhat bungling explanation he
+gave of his absence, she asked if he had met her brother.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I left the village a couple of hours ago; rather
+loitering, as I came along, to enjoy the river scenery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He took the road, and in this way missed you,&rdquo; said she, dryly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How unfortunate!&mdash;for me, I mean, of course. I own to you, Miss
+Barrington, wide as the difference between our ages, I never yet met any
+one so thoroughly companionable to me as your brother. To meet a man so
+consummately acquainted with the world, and yet not soured by his
+knowledge; to see the ripe wisdom of age blended with the generous warmth
+of youth; to find one whose experiences only make him more patient, more
+forgiving, more trustful&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too trustful, Major Stapylton, far too trustful.&rdquo; And her bold gray eyes
+were turned upon him as she spoke, with a significance that could not be
+mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a noble feeling, madam,&rdquo; said he, haughtily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a great misfortune to its possessor, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can we deem that misfortune, Miss Barrington, which enlarges the charity
+of our natures, and teaches us to be slow to think ill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Not paying the slightest attention to his question, she said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother went in search of you, sir, to place in your hands some very
+urgent letters from the Horse Guards, and which a special messenger
+brought here this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Truly kind of him. They relate, I have no doubt, to my Indian
+appointment. They told me I should have news by to-day or to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He received a letter also for himself, sir, which he desired to show
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;About his lawsuit, of course? It is alike a pleasure and a duty to me to
+serve him in that affair.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It more nearly concerns yourself, sir,&rdquo; said she, in the same cold, stern
+tone; &ldquo;though it has certainly its bearing on the case you speak of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More nearly concerns myself!&rdquo; said he, repeating her words slowly. &ldquo;I am
+about the worst guesser of a riddle in the world, Miss Barrington. Would
+you kindly relieve my curiosity? Is this letter a continuation of those
+cowardly attacks which, in the want of a worthier theme, the Press have
+amused themselves by making upon me? Is it possible that some enemy has
+had the malice to attack me through my friends?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The writer of the letter in question is a sufficient guarantee for its
+honor, Mr. Withering.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Withering!&rdquo; repeated he, with a start, and then, as suddenly assuming
+an easy smile, added: &ldquo;I am perfectly tranquil to find myself in such
+hands as Mr. Withering's. And what, pray, does <i>he</i> say of me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will you excuse me, Major Stapylton, if I do not enter upon a subject on
+which I am not merely very imperfectly informed, but on which so humble a
+judgment as mine would be valueless? My brother showed me the letter very
+hurriedly; I had but time to see to what it referred, and to be aware that
+it was his duty to let you see it at once,&mdash;if possible, indeed,
+before you were again under his roof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a grave significance your words have, Miss Barrington!&rdquo; said he,
+with a cold smile. &ldquo;They actually set me to think over all my faults and
+failings, and wonder for which of them I am now arraigned.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We do not profess to judge you, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+By this time they had sauntered up to the little garden in front of the
+cottage, within the paling of which Josephine was busily engaged in
+training a japonica. She arose as she heard the voices, and in her
+accustomed tone wished Stapylton good-evening. &ldquo;<i>She</i>, at least, has
+heard nothing of all this,&rdquo; muttered he to himself, as he saluted her. He
+then opened the little wicket; and Miss Barrington passed in,
+acknowledging his attention by a short nod, as she walked hastily forward
+and entered the cottage. Instead of following her, Stapylton closed the
+wicket again, remaining on the outside, and leaning his arm on the upper
+rail.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why do you perform sentry? Are you not free to enter the fortress?&rdquo; said
+Fifine.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I half suspect not,&rdquo; said he, in a low tone, and to hear which she was
+obliged to draw nigher to where he stood.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean? I don't understand you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No great wonder, for I don't understand myself. Your aunt has, however,
+in her own most mysterious way, given me to believe that somebody has
+written something about me to somebody else, and until I clear up what in
+all probability I shall never hear, that I had better keep to what the
+Scotch call the 'back o' the gate.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is quite unintelligible.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope it is, for it is almost unendurable. I am sorely afraid,&rdquo; added
+he, after a minute, &ldquo;that I am not so patient as I ought to be under Miss
+Barrington's strictures. I am so much more in the habit of command than of
+obedience, that I may forget myself now and then. To <i>you</i>, however,
+I am ready to submit all my past life and conduct. By you I am willing to
+be judged. If these cruel calumnies which are going the round of the
+papers on me have lowered me in your estimation, my case is a lost one;
+but if, as I love to think, your woman's heart resents an injustice,&mdash;if,
+taking counsel of your courage and your generosity, you feel it is not the
+time to withdraw esteem when the dark hour of adversity looms over a man,&mdash;then,
+I care no more for these slanders than for the veriest trifles which cross
+one's every-day life. In one word,&mdash;your verdict is life or death to
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In that case,&rdquo; said she, with an effort to dispel the seriousness of his
+manner, &ldquo;I must have time to consider my sentence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But that is exactly what you cannot have, Josephine,&rdquo; said he; and there
+was a certain earnestness in his voice and look, which made her hear him
+call her by her name without any sense of being off ended. &ldquo;First relieve
+the suffering; there will be ample leisure to question the sufferer
+afterwards. The Good Samaritan wasted few words, and asked for no time.
+The noblest services are those of which the cost is never calculated. Your
+own heart can tell you: can you befriend me, and will you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I do not know what it is you ask of me,&rdquo; said she, with a frank boldness
+which actually disconcerted him. &ldquo;Tell me distinctly, what is it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will tell you,&rdquo; said he, taking her hand, but so gently, so
+respectfully withal, that she did not at first withdraw it,&mdash;&ldquo;I will
+tell you. It is that you will share that fate on which fortune is now
+frowning; that you will add your own high-couraged heart to that of one
+who never knew a fear till now; that you will accept my lot in this the
+day of my reverse, and enable me to turn upon my pursuers and scatter
+them. To-morrow or next day will be too late. It is now, at this hour,
+that friends hold back, that one more than friend is needed. Can you be
+that, Josephine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; said she, firmly. &ldquo;If I read your meaning aright, I cannot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You cannot love me, Josephine,&rdquo; said he, in a voice of intense emotion;
+and though he waited some time for her to speak, she was silent. &ldquo;It is
+true, then,&rdquo; said he, passionately, &ldquo;the slanderers have done their work!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know nothing of these calumnies. When my grandfather told me that they
+accused you falsely, and condemned you unfairly, I believed him. I am as
+ready as ever to say so. I do not understand your cause; but I believe you
+to be a true and gallant gentleman!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But yet, not one to love!&rdquo; whispered he, faintly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Again she was silent, and for some time he did not speak.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A true and gallant gentleman!&rdquo; said he, slowly repeating her own words;
+&ldquo;and if so, is it an unsafe keeping to which to intrust your happiness? It
+is no graceful task to have oneself for a theme; but I cannot help it. I
+have no witnesses to call to character; a few brief lines in an army list,
+and some scars&mdash;old reminders of French sabres&mdash;are poor
+certificates, and yet I have no others.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was something which touched her in the sadness of his tone as he
+said these words, and if she knew how, she would have spoken to him in
+kindliness. He mistook the struggle for a change of purpose, and with
+greater eagerness continued: &ldquo;After all I am scarcely more alone in the
+world than you are! The dear friends who now surround you cannot be long
+spared, and what isolation will be your fate then! Think of this, and
+think, too, how, in assuring your own future, you rescue mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Very differently from his former speech did the present affect her; and
+her cheeks glowed and her eyes flashed as she said, &ldquo;I have never
+intrusted my fate to your keeping, sir; and you may spare yourself all
+anxiety about it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You mistake me. You wrong me, Josephine&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You wrong yourself when you call me by my Christian name; and you arm me
+with distrust of one who would presume upon an interest he has not
+created.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You refuse me, then?&rdquo; said he, slowly and calmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Once, and forever!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It may be that you are mistaken, Miss Barrington. It may be that this
+other affection, which you prefer to mine, is but the sickly sentiment of
+a foolish boy, whose life up to this has not given one single guarantee,
+nor shown one single trait of those which make 'true and gallant
+gentlemen.' But you have made your choice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said she, with a low but firm voice.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You acknowledge, then, that I was right,&rdquo; cried he, suddenly; &ldquo;there is a
+prior attachment? Your heart is not your own to give?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And by what right do you presume to question me? Who are you, that dares
+to do this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who am I?&rdquo; cried he, and for once his voice rose to the discordant ring
+of passion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, that was my question,&rdquo; repeated she, firmly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So, then, you have had your lesson, young lady,&rdquo; said he; and the words
+came from him with a hissing sound, that indicated intense anger. &ldquo;Who am
+I? You want my birth, my parentage, my bringing up! Had you no friend who
+could have asked this in your stead? Or were all those around you so
+bereft of courage that they deputed to a young girl what should have been
+the office of a man?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the savage earnestness of his manner startled, it did not affright
+her; and it was with a cold quietness she said, &ldquo;If you had known my
+father, Major Stapylton, I suspect you would not have accused his daughter
+of cowardice!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was he so very terrible?&rdquo; said he, with a smile that was half a sneer.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He would have been, to a man like you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To a man like me,&mdash;a man like me! Do you know, young lady, that
+either your words are very idle words or very offensive ones?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet I have no wish to recall them, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be better you could find some one to sustain them.
+Unfortunately, however, you cannot ask that gallant gentleman we were just
+talking of; for it is only the other day, and after passing over to Calais
+to meet me, his friends pretend that there is some obstacle to our
+meeting. I owe my tailor or my bootmaker something; or I have not paid my
+subscription to a club; or I have left an unsettled bill ar Baden. I
+really forget the precise pretext; but it was one which to them seemed
+quite sufficient to balk me of a redress, and at the same time to shelter
+their friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will not believe one word of it, sir!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, we have at least arrived at a perfect frankness in our intercourse.
+May I ask you, young lady, which of your relatives has suggested your
+present course! Is it to your aunt or to your grandfather I must go for an
+explanation?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I suspect it is to me, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he came from
+behind Josephine. &ldquo;It is to me you must address yourself. Fifine, my dear,
+your aunt is looking for you; go and tell her, too, that I am quite ready
+for tea, and you will find me here when it is ready. Major Stapylton and I
+will take a stroll along the river-side.&rdquo; Now this last was less an
+invitation than a sort of significant hint to Stapylton that his host had
+no intention to ask him to cross his threshold, at least for the present;
+and, indeed, as Barrington passed out and closed the wicket after him, he
+seemed as though closing the entrance forever.
+</p>
+<p>
+With a manner far more assured thau his wont, Barrington said: &ldquo;I have
+been in pursuit of you, Major Stapylton, since four o'clock. I missed you
+by having taken the road instead of the river; and am much grieved that
+the communication I have to make you should not take place anywhere rather
+than near my roof or within my own gates.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am to suppose from your words, sir, that what you are about to say can
+scarcely be said to a friend; and if so, cannot you hit upon a more
+convenient mode of making your communication?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think not. I believe that I shall be dealing more fairly with you by
+saying what I have to say in person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Stapylton, calmly, as the other paused.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are aware,&rdquo; continued Barrington, &ldquo;that the chief obstacle to a
+settlement of the claims I have long preferred against the India Company
+has been a certain document which they possess, declaring that a large
+portion of the territory held by the Rajah of Luckerabad was not amenable
+to the laws that regulate succession, being what is called 'Lurkar-teea,'&mdash;conquered
+country,&mdash;over which, under no circumstances, could the Rajah
+exercise prospective rights. To this deed, for their better protection,
+the Company obtained the signature and seal of the Rajah himself, by means
+which, of course, we could never discover; but they held it, and always
+declared that no portion of my son's claim could extend to these lands.
+Now, as they denied that he could succeed to what are called the 'Turban
+lands,' meaning the right of sovereignty&mdash;being a British subject&mdash;on
+the one hand, and rejected his claim to these conquered countries on the
+other,&mdash;they excluded him altogether.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; said Stapylton, mildly, &ldquo;I'm shocked to interrupt you, but
+I am forced to ask, what is the intimate bearing of all this upon me, or
+on your position towards me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have a little patience, sir, and suffer me to proceed. If it should turn
+out that this document&mdash;I mean that which bears the signature and
+seal of the Rajah&mdash;should be a forgery; if, I say, it could be shown
+that what the India Board have long relied on to sustain their case and
+corroborate their own view could be proved false, a great point would be
+gained towards the establishment of our claim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Doubtless,&rdquo; said Stapylton, with the half-peevish indifference of one
+listening against his will.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, there is a good prospect of this,&rdquo; said Barring-ton, boldly. &ldquo;Nay,
+more, it is a certainty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Barrington,&rdquo; said Stapylton, drawing himself haughtily up, &ldquo;a few
+hours ago this history would have had a very great interest for me. My
+hopes pointed to a very close relationship with your family; the last hour
+has sufficed to dispel those hopes. Your granddaughter has rejected me so
+decidedly that I cannot presume to suppose a change in her opinion
+possible. Let me not then, obtain any share in your confidence to which I
+have no right whatever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What I am about to say will have more interest for you, sir,&rdquo; continued
+Barrington. &ldquo;I am about to mention a name that you will recognize,&mdash;the
+Moonshee, Ali Gohur.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton started, and dropped the cigar he was smoking. To take out
+another and light it, however, sufficed to employ him, as he murmured
+between his teeth, &ldquo;Go on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This man says&mdash;&rdquo; continued Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Said, perhaps, if you like,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, &ldquo;for he died some months
+ago.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; he is alive at this hour. He was on board the Indiaman that was run
+down by the transport. He was saved and carried on board the 'Regulus' by
+the intrepidity of young Dill. He is now recovering rapidly from the
+injuries he received, and at the date of the letter which I hold here, was
+able to be in daily communication with Colonel Hunter, who is the writer
+of this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I wish the gallant Colonel honester company. Are you aware, Mr.
+Barrington, that you are speaking of one of the greatest rascals of a
+country not famed for its integrity?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He lays no claim to such for the past; but he would seem desirous to make
+some reparation for a long course of iniquity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Charmed for his sake, and that of his well-wishers, if he have any. But,
+once again, sir, and at all the risk of appearing very impatient, what
+concern has all this for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A great deal, sir. The Moonshee declares that he has been for years back
+in close correspondence with a man we long since believed dead, and that
+this man was known to have communicated constantly with the law advisers
+of the India Board in a manner adverse to us, he being none other than the
+son of the notorious Sam Edwardes, whom he always addressed under cover to
+Captain Horace Stapylton, Prince's Hussars.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is&mdash;strange enough, when one thinks of the quarter it comes
+from&mdash;perfectly true. I came to know Edwardes when on my voyage home,
+invalided. He took immense trouble about me, nursed and tended me, and, in
+return, asked as a favor to have some letters he was expecting addressed
+to my care. I neither knew who he was, nor cared. He got his letters, and
+I suppose read them; but of their contents, I, it is needless to say, know
+nothing. I am speaking of a dozen years ago, or, at least, eight or ten,
+for since that time I have never heard of either Edwardes or his friend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He tells a different story. He asserts that to his letters, forwarded to
+the same address up to the period of last March, he regularly received
+replies; but at last finding that the writer was disposed to get rid of
+him, he obtained means to circulate a report of his death, and sailed for
+Europe to prefer his claims, whatever they be, in person.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if every word of this were true, Mr. Barrington, which I don't
+suspect it is, how, in the name of common sense, does it concern me? I
+don't suppose I ever took my own letters at a post-office twice in my
+life. My servant, who has lived with me fourteen years, may, for aught I
+know, have been bribed to abstract these letters on their arrival; they
+would be easily recognized by the very superscription. This is one way the
+thing might have been done. There may have been fifty more, for aught I
+know or care.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don't deny that you knew Edwardes, and had a close intimacy with
+him?&mdash;a circumstance which you never revealed to Withering or
+myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not at all improbable I may have known half a dozen of that name.
+It is by no means an uncommon one, not to say that I have a singularly
+infelicitous memory for people's names. But for the last time, sir, I must
+protest against this conversation going any further. You have taken upon
+you, I would hope without intending it, the tone of a French <i>Juge
+d'Instruction</i> in the interrogation of a prisoner. You have questioned
+and cross-questioned me, asking how I can account for this, or explain
+that. Now, I am ready to concede a great deal to your position as my host,
+and to your years, but really I must entreat of you not to push my
+deference for these beyond the limits of the respect I owe myself. You
+very properly warned me at the opening of this conversation that it ought
+not to have the sanction of your roof-tree. I have only to beg that if it
+is to go any further, that it be conducted in such a shape as is usual
+between gentlemen who have an explanation to ask, or a satisfaction to
+demand.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+There was consummate craft in giving the discussion this turn. Stapylton
+well knew the nature of the man he was addressing, and that after the
+passing allusion to his character as a host, he only needed to hint at the
+possibility of a meeting to recall him to a degree of respect only short
+of deference for his opponent.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I defer to you at once, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said the old man, with a bland
+courtesy, as he uncovered and bowed. &ldquo;There was a time when I should
+scarcely have required the admonition you have given me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am glad to perceive that you understand me so readily,&rdquo; said Stapylton,
+who could scarcely repress the joy he felt at the success of his
+diversion; &ldquo;and that nothing may mar our future understanding, this is my
+address in London, where I shall wait your orders for a week.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the stroke was shrewdly intended, and meant to throw upon
+Barrington all the onus of the provocation, the Major little suspected
+that it was the one solitary subject of which his opponent was a master.
+On the &ldquo;duello&rdquo; Barrington was an authority beyond appeal, and no
+subtlety, however well contrived, could embarrass or involve him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no satisfaction to claim at your hands, Major Stapylton,&rdquo; said he,
+calmly. &ldquo;My friend, Mr. Withering, when he sent me these letters, knew you
+were my guest, and he said, 'Read them to Major Stapylton. Let him know
+what is said of him, and who says it.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, perhaps, you ought to add, sir, who gives it the sanction of his
+belief,&rdquo; broke in Stapylton, angrily. &ldquo;You never took the trouble to
+recite these charges till they obtained your credence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have said nothing to disprove them,&rdquo; said the old man, quickly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is enough,&mdash;quite enough, sir; we understand each other
+perfectly. You allege certain things against me as injuries done you, and
+you wait for <i>me</i> to resent the imputation. I 'll not balk you, be
+assured of it. The address I have given you in London will enable you to
+communicate with me when you arrive there; for I presume this matter had
+better be settled in France or Holland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think so,&rdquo; said Barrington, with the air of a man thoroughly at his
+ease.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I need not say, Mr. Barrington, the regret it gives me that it was not
+one of my detractors himself, and not their dupe, that should occupy this
+place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The dupe, sir, is very much at your service.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Till we meet again,&rdquo; said Stapylton, raising his hat as he turned away.
+In his haste and the confusion of the moment, he took the path that led
+towards the cottage; nor did he discover his mistake till he heard
+Barrington's voice calling out to Darby,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Get the boat ready to take Major Stapylton to Inistioge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You forget none of the precepts of hospitality,&rdquo; said Stapylton, wheeling
+hastily around, and directing his steps towards the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington looked after him as he went, and probably in his long and
+varied life, crossed with many a care and many troubles, he had never felt
+the pain of such severe self-reproach as in that moment. To see his guest,
+the man who had sat at his board and eaten his salt, going out into the
+dreary night without one hospitable effort to detain him, without a pledge
+to his health, without a warm shake of his hand, or one hearty wish for
+his return.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dear, dear!&rdquo; muttered he, to himself, &ldquo;what is the world come to! I
+thought I had no more experiences to learn of suffering; but here is a new
+one. Who would have thought to see the day that Peter Barrington would
+treat his guest this fashion?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you coming in to tea, grandpapa?&rdquo; cried Josephine, from the garden.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here I am, my dear!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And your guest, Peter, what has become of him?&rdquo; said Dinah.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He had some very urgent business at Kilkenny; something that could not
+admit of delay, I opine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you have not let him go without his letters, surely. Here are all
+these formidable-looking despatches, on his Majesty's service, on the
+chimney-piece.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How forgetful of me!&rdquo; cried he, as, snatching them up, he hastened down
+to the river-side. The boat, however, had just gone; and although he
+shouted and called at the top of his voice, no answer came, and he turned
+back at last, vexed and disappointed.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall have to start for Dublin to-morrow, Dinah,&rdquo; said he, as he walked
+thoughtfully up and down the room. &ldquo;I must have Withering's advice on
+these letters. There are very pressing matters to be thought of here, and
+I can take Major Stapylton's despatches with me. I am certain to hear of
+him somewhere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Miss Barrington turned her eyes full upon him, and watched him narrowly.
+She was a keen detector of motives, and she scanned her brother's face
+with no common keenness, and yet she could see nothing beyond the
+preoccupation she had often seen. There was no impatience, no anxiety. A
+shade more thoughtful, perhaps, and even that passed off, as he sat down
+to his tea, and asked Fifine what commissions she had for the capital.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You will leave by the evening mail, I suppose?&rdquo; said Miss Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Dinah, night travelling wearies me. I will take the coach as it
+passes the gate to-morrow at five; this will bring me in time to catch
+Withering at his late dinner, and a pleasanter way to finish a day's
+travel no man need ask for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Nothing could be more easily spoken than these words, and Miss Dinah felt
+reassured by them, and left the room to give some orders about his
+journey.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifine, darling,&rdquo; said Barrington, after a pause, &ldquo;do you like your life
+here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course I do, grandpapa. How could I wish for one more happy?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But it is somewhat dull for one so young,&mdash;somewhat solitary for a
+fair, bright creature, who might reasonably enough care for pleasure and
+the world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To me it is a round of gayety, grandpapa; so that I almost felt inclined
+yesterday to wish for some quiet davs with aunt and yourself,&mdash;some
+of those dreamy days like what we had in Germany.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fear me much, darling, that I contribute but little to the pleasure. My
+head is so full of one care or another, I am but sorry company, Fifine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you only knew how dull we are without you! How heavily the day drags
+on even with the occupations you take no share in; how we miss your steps
+on the stairs and your voice in the garden, and that merry laugh that sets
+ourselves a-laughing just by its own ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you would miss me, then?&rdquo; said he, as he pushed the hair from her
+temples, and stared steadfastly at her face,&mdash;&ldquo;you would miss me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would only be half life without you,&rdquo; cried she, passionately.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So much the worse,&mdash;so much the worse!&rdquo; muttered he; and he turned
+away, and drew his hand across his eyes. &ldquo;This life of ours, Fifine, is a
+huge battle-field; and though the comrades fall fast around him, the brave
+soldier will fight on to the last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don't want a dress-coat, brother Peter, to dine with Withering, so I
+have just put up what will serve you for three days, or four, at
+furthest,&rdquo; said Dinah, entering. &ldquo;What will be the extent of your stay?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me have a black coat, Dinah; there 's no saying what great man may
+not ask for my company; and it might be a week before I get back again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's no necessity it should be anything of the kind, Peter; and with
+your habits an hotel life is scarcely an economy. Come, Fifine, get to
+bed, child. You'll have to be up at daybreak. Your grandpapa won't think
+his coffee drinkable, if it is not made by your hands.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And with this remark, beautifully balanced between a reproof and a
+flattery, she proceeded to blow out the candles, which was her accustomed
+mode of sending her company to their rooms.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XV. THE OLD LEAVEN
+</h2>
+<p>
+Withering arrived at his own door just as Barrington drove up to it. &ldquo;I
+knew my letter would bring you up to town, Barrington,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and I
+was so sure of it that I ordered a saddle of mutton for your dinner, and
+refused an invitation to the Chancellor's.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And quite right too. Iam far better company, Tom. Are we to be all
+alone?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All alone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was exactly what I wanted. Now, as I need a long evening with you,
+the sooner they serve the soup the better; and be sure you give your
+orders that nobody be admitted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+If Mr. Withering's venerable butler, an official long versed in the
+mysteries of his office, were to have been questioned on the subject, it
+is not improbable he would have declared that he never assisted at a
+pleasanter tête-â tête than that day's dinner. They enjoyed their good
+dinner and their good wine like men who bring to the enjoyment a ripe
+experience of such pleasures, and they talked with the rare zest of good
+talkers and old friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We are in favor with Nicholas,&rdquo; said Withering, as the butler withdrew,
+and left them alone, &ldquo;or he would never have given us that bottle of port.
+Do you mark, Barrington, it's the green seal that John Bushe begged so
+hard for one night, and all unsuccessfully.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is rare stuff!&rdquo; said Barrington, looking at it between him and the
+light.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it was that story of yours of the Kerry election that won it. The old
+fellow had to rush out of the room to have his laugh out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know, Tom,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he sipped his wine, &ldquo;I believe, in
+another generation, nobody will laugh at all. Since you and I were boys,
+the world has taken a very serious turn. Not that it is much wiser, or
+better, or more moral, or more cultivated, but it is graver. The old
+jollity would be now set down simply for vulgarity, and with many people a
+joke is only short of an insult.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I tell you why, Peter? We got our reputation for wit, just as we
+made our name for manufacture, and there sprung up a mass of impostors in
+consequence,&mdash;fellows who made poor jokes and rotten calicoes, that
+so disgusted the world that people have gone to France for their fun, and
+to Germany for their furniture. That is, to my taking, the reason of all
+this social reaction.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps you are right, Tom. Old Joe Millers are not unlike cloth made out
+of devil's dust. One can't expect much wear out of either.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We must secure another bottle from that bin before Nicholas changes his
+mind,&rdquo; said Withering, rising to ring the bell.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Tom, not for me. I want all the calm and all the judgment I can
+muster, and don't ask me to take more wine. I have much to say to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course you have. I knew well that packet of letters would bring you up
+to town; but you have had scarcely time to read them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very hurriedly, I confess. They reached me yesterday afternoon; and when
+I had run my eyes hastily over them, I said, 'Stapylton must see this at
+once.' The man was my guest,&mdash;he was under my roof,&mdash;there could
+not be a question about how to deal with him. He was out, however, when
+the packet reached my hands; and while the pony was being harnessed, I
+took another look over that letter from Colonel Hunter. It shocked me,
+Tom, I confess; because there flashed upon me quite suddenly the
+recollection of the promptitude with which the India Board at home here
+were provided with an answer to each demand we made. It was not merely
+that when we advanced a step they met us; but we could scarcely meditate a
+move that they were not in activity to repel it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I saw that, too, and was struck by it,&rdquo; said Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;True enough, Tom. I remember a remark of yours one day. 'These people,'
+said you, 'have our range so accurately, one would suspect they had
+stepped the ground.'&rdquo; The lawyer smiled at the compliment to his
+acuteness, and the other went on: &ldquo;As I read further, I thought Stapylton
+had been betrayed,&mdash;his correspondent in India had shown his letters.
+'Our enemies,' said I, 'have seen our despatches, and are playing with our
+cards on the table.' No thought of distrust,&mdash;not a suspicion against
+his loyalty had ever crossed me till I met him. I came unexpectedly upon
+him, however, before the door, and there was a ring and resonance in his
+voice as I came up that startled me! Passion forgets to shut the door
+sometimes, and one can see in an angry mind what you never suspected in
+the calm one. I took him up at once, without suffering him to recover his
+composure, and read him a part of Hunter's letter. He was ready enough
+with his reply; he knew the Moonshee by reputation as a man of the worst
+character, but had suffered him to address certain letters under cover to
+him, as a convenience to the person they were meant for, and who was no
+other than the son of the notorious Sam Edwardes. 'Whom you have known all
+this while,' said I, 'without ever acknowledging to us?'
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'Whom I did know some years back,' replied he, 'but never thought of
+connecting with the name of Colonel Barrington's enemy.' All this was
+possible enough, Tom; besides, his manner was frank and open in the
+extreme. It was only at last, as I dwelt, what he deemed too
+pertinaciously, on this point, that he suddenly lost control of himself,
+and said, 'I will have no more of this'&mdash;or, 'This must go no
+further'&mdash;or some words to that effect.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha! the probe had touched the sore spot, eh?&rdquo; cried Withering. &ldquo;Go on!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;'And if you desire further explanations from me, you must ask for them at
+the price men pay for inflicting unmerited insult.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cleverly turned, cleverly done,&rdquo; said Withering; &ldquo;but you were not to be
+deceived and drawn off by that feint, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Feint or not, it succeeded, Tom. He made me feel that I had injured him;
+and as he would not accept of my excuses,&mdash;as, in fact, he did not
+give me time to make them&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He got you into a quarrel, is n't that the truth?&rdquo; asked Withering,
+hotly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come, Tom, be reasonable; he had perfect right on his side. There
+was what he felt as a very grave imputation upon him; that is, I had made
+a charge, and his explanation had not satisfied me,&mdash;or, at all
+events, I had not said I was satisfied,&mdash;and we each of us, I take
+it, were somewhat warmer than we need have been.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you are going to meet him,&mdash;going to fight a duel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if I am, it will not be the first time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And can you tell for what? Will you be able to make any man of common
+intelligence understand for what you are going out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope so. I have the man in my eye. No, no, don't make a wry face, Tom.
+It's another old friend I was thinking of to help me through this affair,
+and I sincerely trust he will not be so hard to instruct as you imagine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How old are you, Barrington?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dinah says eighty-one; but I suspect she cheats me. I think I am
+eighty-three.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And is it at eighty-three that men fight duels?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;' Not if they can help it, Tom, certainly. I have never been out since I
+shot Tom Connelly in the knee, which was a matter of forty years ago, and
+I had good hopes it was to be my last exploit of this kind. But what is to
+be done if a man tells you that your age is your protection; that if it
+had not been for your white hairs and your shaking ankles, that he 'd have
+resented your conduct or your words to him? Faith, I think it puts a
+fellow on his mettle to show that his heart is all right, though his hand
+may tremble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll not take any share in such a folly. I tell you, Barrington, the
+world for whom you are doing this will be the very first to scout its
+absurdity. Just remember for a moment we are not living in the old days
+before the Union, and we have not the right, if we had the power, to throw
+our age back into the barbarism it has escaped from.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Barbarism! The days of poor Yelverton, and Ponsonby, and Harry Grattan,
+and Parsons, and Ned Lysaght, barbarism! Ah! my dear Tom, I wish we had a
+few of such barbarians here now, and I 'd ask for another bottle or two of
+that port.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll not give it a milder word; and what's more, I'll not suffer you to
+tarnish a time-honored name by a folly which even a boy would be blamed
+for. My dear old friend, just grant me a little patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is cool, certainly,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing. &ldquo;You have said all
+manner of outrageous things to me for half an hour unopposed, and now you
+cry have patience.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me your honor now that this shall not go further.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I cannot, Tom,&mdash;I assure you, I cannot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean by 'you cannot'?&rdquo; cried Withering, angrily.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I mean just what I said. If you had accepted a man's brief, Tom
+Withering, there is a professional etiquette which would prevent your
+giving it up and abandoning him; and so there are situations between men
+of the world which claim exactly as rigid an observance. I told Stapylton
+I would be at his orders, and I mean to keep my word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if you had no right to pledge it; not if I can prove to you that this
+quarrel was a mere got-up altercation to turn you from an inquiry which
+this man dare not face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is too subtle for me, Withering,&mdash;far too subtle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No such thing, Barrington; but I will make it plainer. How if the man you
+are going to meet had no right to the name he bears?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do I care for his name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't you care for the falsehood by which he has assumed one that is not
+his own?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I may be sorry that he is not more clean-handed; but I tell you again,
+Tom, they never indulged such punctilios in our young days, and I 'm too
+old to go to school again!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I declare, Barrington, you provoke me,&rdquo; said the lawyer, rising, and
+pacing the room with hasty strides. &ldquo;After years and years of weary toil,
+almost disheartened by defeat and failure, we at last see the outline of
+land; a few more days&mdash;or it may be hours&mdash;of perseverance may
+accomplish our task. Since I arose this morning I have learned more of our
+case, seen my way more clearly through matters which have long puzzled me,
+than the cost of years has taught me. I have passed four hours with one
+who would give his life to serve you, but whose name I was not at liberty
+to divulge, save in the last necessity, and the reasons for which reserve
+I heartily concur in; and now, by a rash and foolish altercation, you
+would jeopardy everything. Do you wonder if I lose temper?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have got me into such a state of bewilderment, Tom, that I don't know
+what I am asked to agree to. But who is your friend,&mdash;is n't it a
+woman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is not a woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'd have bet five pounds it was! When as sharp a fellow as you takes the
+wrong line of country, it's generally a woman is leading the way over the
+fences.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This time your clever theory is at fault.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, who is it? Out with him, Tom. I have not so many stanch friends in
+the world that I can afford to ignore them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will tell you his name on one condition.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I agree. What is the condition?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is this: that when you hear it you will dismiss from your mind&mdash;though
+it be only for a brief space&mdash;all the prejudices that years may have
+heaped against him, and suffer me to show you that <i>you</i>, with all
+your belief in your own fairness, are not just; and with a firm conviction
+in your own generosity, might be more generous. There 's my condition!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, it must be owned I am going to pay pretty smartly for my
+information,&rdquo; said Barrington, laughing. &ldquo;And if you are about to preach
+to me, it will not be a 'charity' sermon; but, as I said before, I agree
+to everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Withering stopped his walk and resumed it again. It was evident he had not
+satisfied himself how he should proceed, and he looked agitated and
+undecided. &ldquo;Barrington,&rdquo; said he, at last, &ldquo;you have had about as many
+reverses in life as most men, and must have met with fully your share of
+ingratitude and its treatment. Do you feel, now, in looking back, that
+there are certain fellows you cannot forgive?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One or two, perhaps, push me harder than the rest; but if I have no gout
+flying about me, I don't think I bear them any malice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, you have no gouty symptoms now, I take it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never felt better for the last twenty years.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is as it should be; for I want to talk to you of a man who, in all
+our friendship, you have never mentioned to me, but whose name I know will
+open an old wound,&mdash;Ormsby Conyers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington laid down the glass he was lifting to his lips, and covered his
+face with both his hands, nor for some moments did he speak a word.
+&ldquo;Withering,&rdquo; said he, and his voice trembled as he spoke, &ldquo;even your
+friendship has scarcely the right to go this far. The injury the man you
+speak of did me meets me every morning as I open my eyes, and my first
+prayer each day is that I may forgive him, for every now and then, as my
+lone lot in life comes strongly before me, I have need to pray for this;
+but I have succeeded at last,&mdash;I have forgiven him from my heart;
+but, dear friend, let us not talk of what tears open wounds that bleed
+afresh at a touch. I beseech you, let all that be a bygone.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is more than I can do, Barrington; for it is not to me you must
+acknowledge you have forgiven this man,&mdash;you must tell it to
+himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is not needed, Tom. Thousands of long miles separate us, and will in
+all likelihood separate us to the last. What does he want with my
+forgiveness, which is less a question between him and me than between me
+and my own heart?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And yet it is what he most desires on earth; he told me so within an
+hour!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Told you so,&mdash;and within an hour?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, Barrington, he is here. Not in the house,&rdquo; added he, hastily, for
+the suddenness of the announcement had startled the old man, and agitated
+him greatly. &ldquo;Be calm, my dear friend,&rdquo; said Withering, laying a hand on
+the other's shoulder. &ldquo;He who is now come to claim your forgiveness has
+never injured you to the extent you believe. He asks it as the last
+tribute to one he loved only less than you loved him. He has told me
+everything; never sparing himself, nor seeking by any subtlety to excuse a
+particle of his conduct. Let me tell you that story as I heard it. It will
+be some solace to you to know that your noble-hearted son inspired a
+friendship which, after the long lapse of years, extracts such an
+atonement as one act of disloyalty to it could demand. This was Ormsby
+Conyers's one and only treason to the love that bound them. Listen to it!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington tried to speak, but could not; so he nodded an assent, and
+Withering continued. His story was that which the reader has already heard
+from the lips of Conyers himself, and the old lawyer told it well. If he
+did not attempt to extenuate the offence and wrong of Conyers, he showed
+the power and strength of an affection which could make one of the
+haughtiest of men come forward to accuse himself, and at every cost of
+humiliation vindicate the noble nature of his friend.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why not have avowed all this before?&mdash;why not have spared
+himself years of self-accusing, and me years of aggravated misery?&rdquo; cried
+Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He did make the attempt. He came to England about eighteen years ago, and
+his first care was to write to you. He asked to be allowed to see you, and
+sent you at the same time an admission that he had injured you, and was
+come to seek your forgiveness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That's true, Tom; all strictly true. I remember all about it. His letter
+was such a one as an enemy might have used to crush him. My own temper at
+the time was not to be trusted too far; sorrow was making me cruel, and
+might make me vindictive; so I sent it back to him, and hinted it was
+safer in <i>his</i> hands than <i>mine</i>.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he has never forgotten your generosity. He said, 'It was what well
+became the father of George Barrington. '&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If he is here in this city, now, let me see him. Remember, Withering,
+when a man comes to my age his time is short. Cannot we go to him at
+once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not feeling certain of your coming up to town to-day, I had arranged with
+Conyers to start for 'The Home' tomorrow; we were to await the post hour,
+and, if no letter came from you, to leave at ten o'clock. I was to take
+him up at Elvidge's Hotel. What say you if I drive him down to Reynolds's?
+You stop there, I know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With all my heart, Tom. I am fully as impatient as he can be to sign and
+seal our reconciliation. Indeed, I feel myself already less sinned against
+than sinning; and an act of forgiveness is only an exchange of prisoners
+between us. If you knew how young I feel again at all this, Withering,&rdquo;
+said he, grasping his friend's hand. &ldquo;What a happiness to know that poor
+George's memory is so revered that one who has failed towards him in
+fidelity should come to expiate the wrong thus openly! My fine
+noble-hearted boy deserved this tribute! And he told you how they loved
+each other; in what a brotherhood they lived; and what a glorious fellow
+George was? Did he tell you of his gentleness?&mdash;womanly softness it
+was, Tom. A careless observer might have said there was no stuff in him to
+make a soldier, and yet where was there his equal? You heard what he did
+at Naghapoor and Meerutan, where he held a mountain-pass with three
+squadrons against a whole army corps, and never owned to being wounded
+till he fell fainting from his horse on the retreat. Oh, let me not speak
+of these things, or my heart will burst I must leave you, old friend; this
+agitation will unfit me for much that is before me; let me go, I beseech
+you, and when you see me to-morrow, you 'll find I am all myself again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was in silence they grasped each other's hand, and parted.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVI. A HAPPY MEETING
+</h2>
+<p>
+Barrington scarcely closed his eyes that night after he had parted with
+Withering, so full was he of thinking over all he had heard. &ldquo;It was,&rdquo; as
+he repeated to himself over and over again, &ldquo;'such glorious news' to hear
+that it was no long-laid plot, no dark treachery, had brought poor George
+to his grave, and that the trusted friend had not turned out a secret
+enemy. How prone we are,&rdquo; thought he, &ldquo;to suffer our suspicions to grow
+into convictions, just by the mere force of time. Conyers was neither
+better nor worse than scores of young fellows entering on life,
+undisciplined in self-restraint, and untutored by converse with the world;
+and in his sorrow and repentance he is far and away above most men. It was
+fine of him to come thus, and become his own accuser, rather than suffer a
+shade of reproach to rest upon the fame of his friend. And this reparation
+he would have made years ago, but for my impatience. It was I that would
+not listen,&mdash;would not admit it.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I believe in my heart, then, this confession has a higher value for me
+than would the gain of our great suit. It is such a testimony to my brave
+boy as but one man living could offer. It is a declaration to the world
+that says, 'Here am I, high in station, covered with dignities and rich in
+rewards; yet there was a man whose fate has never interested you, over
+whose fall you never sorrowed; hundreds of times my superior.' What a
+reward is this for all my life of toil and struggle,&mdash;what a glorious
+victory, when the battle looked so doubtful! People will see at last it is
+not an old man's phantasy; it is not the headlong affection of a father
+for his son has made me pursue this reparation for him here. There is a
+witness 'come to judgment,' who will tell them what George Barrington was;
+how noble as a man, how glorious as a soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+While the old man revelled in the happiness of these thoughts, so absorbed
+was he by them that he utterly forgot the immediate object which had
+occasioned his journey,&mdash;forgot Stapylton and the meeting, and all
+that had led to it. Thus passed the hours of the night; and as the day
+broke, he arose, impatient to actual feverishness for the coming
+interview. He tried by some occupation to fill up the time. He sat down to
+write to his sister an account of all Withering had told him, leaving the
+rest to be added after the meeting; but he found, as he read it over, that
+after the mention of George's name, nothing dropped from his pen but
+praises of him. It was all about his generosity, his open-heartedness, and
+his bravery. &ldquo;This would seem downright extravagant,&rdquo; said he, as he
+crushed the paper in his hand, &ldquo;till she hears it from the lips of Conyers
+himself.&rdquo; He began another letter, but somehow again he glided into the
+self-same channel.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This will never do,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;there's nothing for it but a brisk walk.&rdquo;
+So saying he sallied out into the deserted streets, for few were about at
+that early hour. Barrington turned his steps towards the country, and soon
+gained one of those shady alleys which lead towards Finglas. It was a
+neighborhood he had once known well, and a favorite resort of those
+pleasant fellows who thought they compensated for a hard night at Daly's
+by sipping syllabub of a morning on a dewy meadow. He once had rented a
+little cottage there; a fancy of poor George's it was, that there were
+some trout in the stream beside it; and Barrington strolled along till he
+came to a little mound, from which he could see the place, sadly changed
+and dilapidated since he knew it. Instead of the rustic bridge that
+crossed the river, a single plank now spanned the stream, and in the
+disorder and neglect of all around, it was easy to see it had fallen to
+the lot of a peasant to live in it. As Barrington was about to turn away,
+he saw an old man&mdash;unmistakably a gentleman&mdash;ascending the hill,
+with a short telescope in his hand. As the path was a narrow one, he
+waited, therefore, for the other's arrival, before he began to descend
+himself. With a politeness which in his younger days Irish gentlemen
+derived from intercourse with France, Barring-ton touched his hat as he
+passed the stranger, and the other, as if encouraged by the show of
+courtesy, smiled as he returned the salute, and said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Might I take the liberty to ask you if you are acquainted with this
+locality?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Few know it better, or, at least, knew it once,&rdquo; said Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the classic ground of Ireland in days past,&rdquo; said the stranger. &ldquo;I
+have heard that Swift lived here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; but you cannot see his house from this. It was nearer to Santry,
+where you see that wood yonder. There was, however, a celebrity once
+inhabited that small cottage before us. It was the home of Parnell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that Parnell's cottage?&rdquo; asked the stranger, with eagerness; &ldquo;that
+ruined spot, yonder?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. It was there he wrote some of his best poems. I knew the room well
+he lived in.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;How I would like to see it!&rdquo; cried the other.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are an admirer of Parnell, then?&rdquo; said Barrington, with a smile of
+courteous meaning.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will own to you, sir, it was less of Parnell I was thinking than of a
+dear friend who once talked to me of that cottage. He had lived there, and
+cherished the memory of that life when far away from it; and so well had
+he described every walk and path around it, each winding of the river, and
+every shady nook, that I had hoped to recognize it without a guide.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, it is sadly changed of late. Your friend had not probably seen it for
+some years?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me see. It was in a memorable year he told me he lived there,&mdash;when
+some great demonstration was made by the Irish volunteers, with the Bishop
+of Down at their head. The Bishop dined there on that day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The Earl of Bristol dined that day with me, there,&rdquo; said Barrington,
+pointing to the cottage.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;May I ask with whom I have the honor to speak, sir?&rdquo; said the stranger,
+bowing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Was it George Barrington told you this?&rdquo; said the old man, trembling with
+eagerness: &ldquo;was it he who lived here? I may ask, sir, for I am his
+father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am Ormsby Conyers,&rdquo; said the other; and his face became pale, and
+his knees trembled as he said it.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give me your hand, Conyers,&rdquo; cried Barrington,&mdash;&ldquo;the hand that my
+dear boy has so often pressed in friendship. I know all that you were to
+each other, all that you would be to his memory.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you forgive me?&rdquo; said Conyers.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have, for many a year. I forgave you when I thought you had been his
+enemy. I now know you had only been your own to sacrifice such love, such
+affection as he bore you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I never loved him more than I have hated myself for my conduct towards
+him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let us talk of George,&mdash;he loved us both,&rdquo; said Barrington, who
+still held Conyers by the hand. &ldquo;It is a theme none but yourself can rival
+me in interest for.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not easy for Conyers to attain that calm which could enable him to
+answer the other's questions; but by degrees he grew to talk freely,
+assisted a good deal by the likeness of the old man to his son,&mdash;a
+resemblance in manner even as much as look,&mdash;and thus, before they
+reached town again, they had become like familiar friends.
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington could never hear enough of George; even of the incidents he had
+heard of by letter, he liked to listen to the details again, and to mark
+how all the traits of that dear boy had been appreciated by others.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I must keep you my prisoner,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they gained the door of
+his hotel. &ldquo;The thirst I have is not easily slaked; remember that for more
+than thirty years I have had none to talk to me of my boy! I know all
+about your appointment with Withering; he was to have brought you here
+this morning to see me, and my old friend will rejoice when he comes and
+finds us here together.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He was certain you would come up to town,&rdquo; said Conyers, &ldquo;when you got
+his letters. You would see at once that there were matters which should be
+promptly dealt with; and he said, 'Barrington will be my guest at dinner
+to-morrow.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Eh?&mdash;how?&mdash;what was it all about? George has driven all else
+out of my head, and I declare to you that I have not the very vaguest
+recollection of what Wither-ing's letters contained. Wait a moment; a
+light is breaking on me. I do remember something of it all now. To be
+sure! What a head I have! It was all about Stapylton. By the way, General,
+how you would have laughed had you heard the dressing Withering gave me
+last night, when I told him I was going to give Stapylton a meeting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A hostile meeting?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if you like to give it that new-fangled name, General, which I
+assure you was not in vogue when I was a young man. Withering rated me
+soundly for the notion, reminded me of my white hairs and such other
+disqualifications, and asked me indignantly, 'What the world would say
+when they came to hear of it?' 'What would the world say if they heard I
+declined it, Tom?' was my answer. Would they not exclaim, 'Here is one of
+that fire-eating school who are always rebuking us for our laxity in
+matters of honor; look at him and say, are these the principles of his
+sect?'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Conyers shook his head dissentingly, and smiled.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; said Barrington, replying to the other's look, &ldquo;you are just of
+my own mind! A man who believes you to have injured him claims reparation
+as a matter of right. I could not say to Stapylton, 'I will not meet
+you!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I <i>did</i> say so, and that within a fortnight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You said so, and under what provocation?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He grossly insulted my son, who was his subaltern; he outraged him by
+offensive language, and he dared even to impugn his personal courage. It
+was in one of those late riots where the military were called out; and my
+boy, intrusted with the duty of dispersing an assemblage, stopped to
+remonstrate where he might have charged, and actually relieved the misery
+he had his orders to have trampled under the feet of his squadron. Major
+Stapylton could have reprimanded, he might have court-martialled him; he
+had no right to attempt to dishonor him. My son left the service,&mdash;I
+made him leave on the spot,&mdash;and we went over to France to meet this
+man. I sent for Proctor to be my boy's friend, and my letter found him at
+Sir Gilbert Stapylton's, at Hollowcliffe. To explain his hurried
+departure, Proctor told what called him away. 'And will you suffer your
+friend to meet that adventurer,' said Sir Gilbert, 'who stole my nephew's
+name if he did not steal more?' To be brief, he told that this fellow had
+lived with Colonel Howard Stapylton, British Resident at Ghurtnapore, as a
+sort of humble private secretary. 'In the cholera that swept the district
+Howard died, and although his will, deposited at Calcutta, contained
+several legacies, the effects to redeem them were not to be discovered.
+Meanwhile this young fellow assumed the name of Stapylton, gave himself
+out for his heir, and even threatened to litigate some landed property in
+England with Howard's brother. An intimation that if he dared to put his
+menace in action a full inquiry into his conduct should be made, stopped
+him, and we heard no more of him,&mdash;at least, for a great many years.
+When an old Madras friend of Howard's who came down to spend his
+Christmas, said, &ldquo;Who do you think I saw in town last week, but that young
+scamp Howard used to call his Kitmagar, and who goes by the name of
+Stapylton?&rdquo; we were so indignant at first that we resolved on all manner
+of exposures; but learning that he had the reputation of a good officer,
+and had actually distinguished himself at Waterloo, we relented. Since
+that, other things have come to our knowledge to make us repent our
+lenity. In fact, he is an adventurer in its very worst sense, and has
+traded upon a certain amount of personal courage to cover a character of
+downright ignominy.' Proctor, on hearing all this, recalled me to England;
+and declared that he had traced enough to this man's charge to show he was
+one whom no gentleman could meet. It would appear that some recent
+discoveries had been made about him at the Horse Guards also; for when
+Proctor asked for a certain piece of information from one of his friends
+in office there, he heard, for answer, 'We hope to know that, and more, in
+a day or two.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know that I 'm sorry for it,&mdash;heartily sorry?&rdquo; said
+Barrington. &ldquo;The fellow had that stamp of manliness about him that would
+seem the pledge of a bold, straightforward nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have a high value for courage, but it won't do everything.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More 's the pity, for it renders all that it aids of tenfold more worth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And on the back of all this discovery comes Hunter's letter, which
+Withering has sent you, to show that this Stapylton has for years back
+been supplying the Indian Directors with materials to oppose your claims.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing ever puzzled us so much as the way every weak point of our case
+was at once seized upon, and every doubt we ourselves entertained
+exaggerated into an impassable barrier. Withering long suspected that some
+secret enemy was at work within our own lines, and repeatedly said that we
+were sold. The difficulty is, why this man should once have been our
+enemy, and now should strive so eagerly to be not alone our friend, but
+one of us. You have heard he proposed for my granddaughter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred suspected his intentions in that quarter, but we were not certain of
+them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And it is time I should ask after your noble-hearted boy. How is he, and
+where?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He is here, at my hotel, impatiently waiting your permission to go down
+to 'The Home.' He has a question to ask there, whose answer will be his
+destiny.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has Josephine turned another head then?&rdquo; said Barring-ton, laughing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She has won a very honest heart; as true and as honorable a nature as
+ever lived,&rdquo; said Conyers, with emotion. &ldquo;Your granddaughter does not
+know, nor needs ever to know, the wrong I have done her father; and if you
+have forgiven me, you will not remember it against my boy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But what do you yourself say to all this? You have never seen the girl?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred has.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know nothing about her tastes, her temper, her bringing up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fred does.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nor are you aware that the claim we have so long relied on is almost
+certain to be disallowed. I have scarcely a hope now remaining with regard
+to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have more than I need; and if Fred will let me have a bungalow in his
+garden, I'll make it all over to him tomorrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is then with your entire consent he would make this offer?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With my whole heart in it! I shall never feel I have repaired the injury
+I have done George Barrington till I have called his daughter my own.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Old Barrington arose, and walked up and down with slow and measured steps.
+At last he halted directly in front of General Conyers, and said,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you will do me one kindness, I will agree to everything. What am I
+saying? I agree already; and I would not make a bargain of my consent; but
+you will not refuse me a favor?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask me anything, and I promise it on the faith of a gentleman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is this, then; that you will stand by me in this affair of
+Stapylton's. I have gone too far for subtleties or niceties. It is no
+question of who was his father, or what was his own bringing up. I have
+told him I should be at his orders, and don't let me break my word.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If you choose me for your friend, Barrington, you must not dictate how I
+am to act for you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That is quite true; you are perfectly correct there,&rdquo; said the other, in
+some confusion.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;On that condition, then, that I am free to do for you what I would agree
+to in my own case, I accept the charge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there is to be no humbug of consideration for my age and my white
+hairs; none of that nonsense about a fellow with one leg in the grave.
+Mark you, Conyers, I will stand none of these; I have never taken a writ
+of ease not to serve on a jury, nor will I hear of one that exempts me
+from the rights of a gentleman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have got your full powers to treat, and you must trust me. Where are we
+to find Stapylton's friend?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He gave me an address which I never looked at. Here it is!&rdquo; and he drew a
+card from his pocket.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Captain Duff Brown, late Fifth Fusiliers, Holt's Hotel, Charing Cross.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you know him?&rdquo; asked Barrington, as the other stood silently
+re-reading the address.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, thoroughly,&rdquo; said he, with a dry significance. &ldquo;The man who selects
+Duff Brown to act for him in an affair of honor must be in a sore strait.
+It is a sorry indorsement to character. He had to leave the service from
+the imputation of foul play in a duel himself; and I took an active part
+against him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Will this make your position unpleasant to you,&mdash;would you rather
+not act for me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite the reverse. It is more than ever necessary you should have some
+one who not only knows the men he is to deal with, but is known himself to
+them. It is a preliminary will save a world of trouble.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;When can we set out?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-night by the eight-o'clock packet, we can sail for Liverpool; but let
+us first of all despatch Fred to 'The Home.' The poor boy will be half
+dead with anxiety till he knows I have your permission.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll accredit him with a letter to my sister; not that he needs it, for
+he is one of her prime favorites. And now for another point. Withering
+must be made believe that we are all off together for the country this
+evening. He is so opposed to this affair with Stapylton, that he is in a
+mood to do anything to prevent it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well thought of; and here comes the man himself in search of us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have been half over the town after you this morning, General,&rdquo; said
+Withering, as he entered; &ldquo;and your son, too, could make nothing of your
+absence. He is in the carriage at the door now, not knowing whether he
+ought to come up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll soon reassure him on that score,&rdquo; said Barrington, as he left the
+room, and hastened downstairs with the step of one that defied the march
+of time.
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVII. MEET COMPANIONSHIP
+</h2>
+<p>
+In a very modest chamber of a house in one of the streets which lead from
+the Strand to the Thames, two persons sat at supper. It is no time for
+lengthened introductions, and I must present Captain Duff Brown very
+hurriedly to my reader, as he confronted his friend Stapylton at table.
+The Captain was a jovial-looking, full-whiskered, somewhat corpulent man,
+with a ready reply, a ready laugh, and a hand readier than either, whether
+the weapon wielded was a billiard-cue or a pistol.
+</p>
+<p>
+The board before them was covered with oysters and oyster-shells, porter
+in its pewter, a square-shaped decanter of gin, and a bundle of cigars.
+The cloth was dirty, the knives unclean, and the candles ill-matched and
+of tallow; but the guests did not seem to have bestowed much attention to
+these demerits, but ate and drank like men who enjoyed their fare.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The best country in Europe,&mdash;the best in the world,&mdash;I call
+England for a fellow who knows life,&rdquo; cried the Captain. &ldquo;There is nothing
+you cannot do; nothing you cannot have in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;With eight thousand a year, perhaps,&rdquo; said Stapylton, sarcastically.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No need of anything like it. Does any man want a better supper than we
+have had to-night? What better could he have? And the whole cost not over
+five, or at most six shillings for the pair of us.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You may talk till you are hoarse, Duff, but I'll not stay in it When once
+I have settled these two or three matters I have told you of, I'll start
+for&mdash;I don't much care whither. I'll go to Persia, or perhaps to the
+Yankees.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I</i> always keep America for the finish!&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;It is to
+the rest of the world what the copper hell is to Crockford's,&mdash;the
+last refuge when one walks in broken boots and in low company. But tell
+me, what have you done to-day; where did you go after we parted?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I went to the Horse Guards, and saw Blanchard,&mdash;pompous old humbug
+that he is. I told him that I had made up my mind to sell out; that I
+intended to take service in a foreign army,&mdash;he hates foreigners,&mdash;and
+begged he would expedite my affairs with his Royal Highness, as my
+arrangements could not admit of delay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he told you that there was an official routine, out of which no
+officer need presume to expect his business could travel?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He told me no such thing. He flatly said, 'Your case is already before
+the Commander-in-Chief, Major Stapylton, and you may rely on it there will
+be no needless delay in dealing with it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That was a threat, I take it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course it was a threat; and I only said, 'It will be the first
+instance of the kind, then, in the department,' and left him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where to, after that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I next went to Gregory's, the magistrate of police. I wanted to see the
+informations the black fellow swore to; and as I knew a son of Gregory's
+in the Carbiniers, I thought I could manage it; but bad luck would have it
+that the old fellow should have in his hands some unsettled bills with my
+indorsements on them,&mdash;fact; Gregory and I used to do a little that
+way once,&mdash;and he almost got a fit when he heard my name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tried back after that, eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Went on to Renshaw's and won fifty pounds at hazard, took Blake's odds on
+Diadem, and booked myself for a berth in the Boulogne steamer, which
+leaves at two this morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You secured a passport for me, did n't you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No. You'll have to come as my servant. The Embassy fellows were all
+strangers to me, and said they would not give a separate passport without
+seeing the bearer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right. I don't dislike the second cabin, nor the ladies'-maids. What
+about the pistols?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+<!-- IMG --></a>
+</p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+<img src="images/508.jpg" width="100%" alt="508 " />
+</div>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are yonder under the great-coat. Renshaw lent them. They are not
+very good, he says, and one of them hangs a little in the fire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;They 'll be better than the old Irishman's, that's certain. You may swear
+that his tools were in use early in the last century.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And himself, too; that's the worst of it all. I wish it was not a fellow
+that might be my grandfather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't know. I rather suspect, if I was given to compunctions, I'd have
+less of them for shaking down the rotten ripe fruit than the blossom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And he 's a fine old fellow, too,&rdquo; said Stapylton, half sadly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why didn't you tell him to drop in this evening and have a little <i>écarté?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+For a while Stapylton leaned his head on his hand moodily, and said
+nothing.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cheer up, man! Taste that Hollands. I never mixed better,&rdquo; said Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I begin to regret now, Duff, that I did n't take your advice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And run away with her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, it would have been the right course, after all!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I knew it. I always said it. I told you over and over again what would
+happen if you went to work in orderly fashion. They 'd at once say, 'Who
+are your people,&mdash;where are they,&mdash;what have they?' Now, let a
+man be as inventive as Daniel Defoe himself, there will always slip out
+some flaw or other about a name, or a date,&mdash;dates are the very
+devil! But when you have once carried her off, what can they do but
+compromise?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She would never have consented.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'd not have asked her. I 'd have given her the benefit of the customs
+of the land she lived in, and made it a regular abduction. Paddy somebody
+and Terence something else are always ready to risk their necks for a pint
+of whiskey and a breach of the laws.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think I could have brought myself to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I</i> could, I promise you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And there 's an end of a man after such a thing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, if he fails. If he's overtaken and thrashed, I grant you he not only
+loses the game, but gets the cards in his face, besides. But why fail?
+Nobody fails when he wants to win,&mdash;when he determines to win. When I
+shot De Courcy at Asterabad&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't bring up that affair, at least, as one of precedent, Duff. I
+neither desire to be tried for a capital felony, nor to have committed
+one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Capital fiddlesticks! As if men did not fight duels every day of the
+week; the difference between guilt and innocence being that one fellow's
+hand shook, and the other's was steady. De Courcy would have 'dropped' me,
+if I'd have Jet him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And so <i>you</i> would have carried her off, Master Duff?&rdquo; said
+Stapylton, slowly.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; if she had the pot of money you speak of, and no Lord Chancellor for
+a guardian. I 'd have made the thing sure at once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The money she will and must have; so much is certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I 'd have made the remainder just as certain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a vulgar crime, Duff; it would be very hard to stoop to it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fifty things are harder,&mdash;no cash, no credit are harder. The Fleet
+is harder. But what is that noise? Don't you hear a knock at the door?
+Yes, there's some one without who hasn't much patience.&rdquo; So saying, he
+arose and walked to the door. As he opened it, he started back a little
+with surprise, for it was a police constable stood before him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not you, Captain, not <i>you</i>, sir! it's another gentleman I want. I
+see him at the table there,&mdash;Major Stapylton.&rdquo; By this time the man
+had entered the room and stood in front of the fire. &ldquo;I have a warrant
+against you, Major,&rdquo; said he, quietly. &ldquo;Informations have been sworn
+before Mr. Colt that you intend to fight a duel, and you must appear at
+the office to-morrow, to enter into your bond, and to give securities to
+keep the peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who swore the informations?&rdquo; cried Brown.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What have we to do with that?&rdquo; said Stapylton, impatiently. &ldquo;Isn't the
+world full of meddling old women? Who wants to know the names?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll lay the odds it was old Conyers; the greatest humbug in that land
+of humbugs,&mdash;Bengal. It was he that insisted on my leaving the Fifth.
+Come, Sergeant, out with it. This was General Conyers's doing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm sorry to be obliged to declare you in custody, Major,&rdquo; said the
+policeman; &ldquo;but if you like to come over to Mr. Colt's private residence,
+I 'm sure he 'd settle the matter this evening.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He'll do no such thing, by George!&rdquo; cried Brown. &ldquo;The sneaking dogs who
+have taken this shabby course shall be exposed in open court. We 'll have
+the names in full, and in every newspaper in England. Don't compromise the
+case, Stapylton; make them eat the mess they have cooked, to the last
+mouthful. We 'll show the world what the fighting Irishman and his gallant
+friend are made of. Major Stapylton is your prisoner, Sergeant?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The man smiled slightly at the passionate energy of the speaker, and
+turned to Stapylton. &ldquo;There 's no objection to your going to your
+lodgings, Major. You 'll be at the chief office by ten to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton nodded assent, and the other retired and closed the door.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you say now?&rdquo; cried Brown, triumphantly. &ldquo;Did n't I tell you
+this? Did n't I say that when old Con-yers heard my name, he 'd say, 'Oh,
+there 'll be no squaring this business'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's just as likely that he said, 'I 'll not confer with that man; he had
+to leave the service.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;More fool you, then, not to have had a more respectable friend. Had you
+there, Stapylton,&mdash;eh?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I acknowledge that. All I can say in extenuation is, that I hoped old
+Barrington, living so long out of the world, would have selected another
+old mummy like himself, who had never heard of Captain Duff Brown, nor his
+famous trial at Calcutta.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's not a man in the kingdom has not heard of me. I 'm as well known
+as the first Duke in the land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't boast of it, Duff; even notoriety is not always a cheap luxury.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who knows but you may divide it with me to-morrow or next day?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you mean, sir?&mdash;what do you mean?&rdquo; cried Stapylton, slapping
+the table with his clenched hand.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only what I said,&mdash;that Major Stapylton may furnish the town with a
+nine-days wonder, <i>vice</i> Captain Duff Brown, forgotten.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Evidently ashamed of his wrath, Stapylton tried to laugh off the occasion
+of it, and said, &ldquo;I suppose neither of us would take the matter much to
+heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll not go to the office with you to-morrow, Stapylton,&rdquo; added he,
+after a pause; &ldquo;that old Sepoy General would certainly seize the
+opportunity to open some old scores that I'd as soon leave undisturbed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;All right, I think you are prudent there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I 'll be of use in another way. I 'll lay in wait for that fellow who
+reports for the 'Chronicle,' the only paper that cares for these things,
+and I 'll have him deep in the discussion of some devilled kidneys when
+your case is called on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I fancy it does not matter what publicity it obtains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, I don't know that. Old Braddell, our major, used to say, 'Reputation,
+after forty, is like an old wall. If you begin to break a hole in it, you
+never know how much will come away.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tell you again, Duff, I'm past scandalizing; but have your way, if you
+will 'muzzle the ox,' and let us get away from this as soon as may be. I
+want a little rest after this excitement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I 'm pretty much in the same boot myself, though I don't exactly
+know where to go. France is dangerous. In Prussia there are two sentences
+recorded against me. I 'm condemned to eight years' hard labor in
+Wurtemberg, and pronounced dead in Austria for my share in that Venetian
+disturbance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don't tell me of these rascalities. Bad enough when a man is driven to
+them, but downright infamy to be proud of.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have you never thought of going into the Church? I 've a notion you 'd be
+a stunning preacher.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give up this bantering, Duff, and tell me how I shall get hold of young
+Conyers. I 'd rather put a ball in that fellow than be a
+Lieutenant-General. He has ever been my rock ahead. That silly coxcomb has
+done more to mar my destiny than scores of real enemies. To shoot him
+would be to throw a shell in the very midst of them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'd rather loot him, if I had the choice; the old General has lots of
+money. Stapylton, scuttle the ship, if you like, but first let <i>me</i>
+land the cargo. Of all the vengeances a man can wreak on another the
+weakest is to kill him. For my part, I 'd cherish the fellow that injured
+me. I 'd set myself to study his tastes and learn his ambitions. I 'd
+watch over him and follow him, being, as it were, his dearest of all
+friends,&mdash;read backwards!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is tiresome scoundrelism. I'll to bed,&rdquo; said Stapylton, taking a
+candle from the table.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, if you must shoot this fellow, wait till he's married; wait for the
+honeymoon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;There's some sense in that. I 'll go and sleep over it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XVIII. AUNT DOROTHEA.
+</h2>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You must come down with me for one day, Tom, to see an old aunt of mine
+at Bournemouth,&rdquo; said Hunter to young Dill. &ldquo;I never omitted going to see
+her the first thing whenever I landed in England, and she 'll not forgive
+me if I were to do so now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why should I go, sir? My presence would only trouble the comfort of a
+family meeting.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quite the reverse. She 'll be delighted to see you. It will be such a
+triumph to her, amongst all her neighbors, to have had a visit from the
+hero of the day,&mdash;the fellow that all the print-shops are full of.
+Why, man, you are worth five hundred pounds to me. I 'm not sure I might
+not say double as much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In that case, sir, I 'm perfectly at your orders.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+And down they went, and arrived late on the day after this conversation at
+an old-fashioned manor-house, where Miss Dorothy Hunter had passed some
+sixty-odd years of her life. Though to Tom she seemed to bear a great
+resemblance to old Miss Barrington, there was really little likeness
+between them, beyond an inordinate pride of birth, and an intense
+estimation for the claims of family. Miss Hunter's essential
+characteristic was a passion for celebrities; a taste somewhat difficult
+to cultivate in a very remote and little visited locality. The result was
+that she consoled herself by portraits, or private letters, or autographs
+of her heroes, who ranged over every imaginable career in life, and of
+whom, by mere dint of iteration, she had grown to believe herself the
+intimate friend or correspondent.
+</p>
+<p>
+No sooner had she learned that her nephew was to be accompanied by the
+gallant young soldier whose name was in every newspaper than she made what
+she deemed the most suitable preparations for his reception. Her bedroom
+was hung round with portraits of naval heroes, or pictures of sea-fights.
+Grim old admirals, telescope in hand, or with streaming hair, shouting out
+orders to board the enemy, were on every side; while, in the place of
+honor, over the fireplace, hung a vacant frame, destined one day to
+contain the hero of the hour, Tom Dill himself.
+</p>
+<p>
+Never was a poor fellow in this world less suited to adulation of this
+sort. He was either overwhelmed with the flattery, or oppressed by a
+terror of what some sensible spectator&mdash;if such there were&mdash;would
+think of the absurd position in which he was forced to stand. And when he
+found himself obliged to inscribe his name in a long column of illustrious
+autographs, the sight of his own scarce legible characters filled up the
+measure of his shame.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He writes like the great Turenne,&rdquo; said Miss Dorothy; &ldquo;he always wrote
+from above downwards, so that no other name than his own could figure on
+the page.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I got many a thrashing for it at school, ma'am,&rdquo; said Tom, apologizing,
+&ldquo;and so I gave up writing altogether.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, yes! the men of action soon learn to despise the pen; they prefer to
+make history rather than record it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not easy for Hunter to steer his bashful friend through all the
+shoals and quicksands of such flattery; but, on the plea of his broken
+health and strength, he hurried him early to his bed, and returned to the
+fireside, where his aunt awaited him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He's charming, if he were only not so diffident. Why will he not be more
+confiding, more at his ease with me,&mdash;like Mungo Park, or Sir Sidney
+Smith?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;After a while, so he will, aunt. You 'll see what a change there will be
+in him at our next visit All these flatteries he meets with are too much
+for him; but when we come down again, you 'll see him without these
+distracting influences. Then bear in mind his anxieties,&mdash;he has not
+yet seen his family; he is eager to be at home again. I carried him off
+here positively in spite of himself, and on the strict pledge of only for
+one day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;One day! And do you mean that you are to go tomorrow?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No help for it, aunt. Tom is to be at Windsor on Saturday. But for that,
+he would already have been on his way to Ireland.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then there's no time to be lost. What can we do for him? He'snot rich?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hasn't a shilling; but would reject the very shadow of such assistance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not if a step were purchased for him; without his knowledge, I mean.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It would be impossible that he should not know it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely there is some way of doing it A handsome sum to commemorate
+his achievement might be subscribed. I would begin it with a thousand
+pounds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;He'd not accept it. I know him thoroughly. There's only one road to him
+through which he would not deem a favor a burden.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what of that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;A kindness to his sister. I wish you saw her, aunt!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is she like him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like him? Yes; but very much better-looking. She's singularly handsome,
+and such a girl! so straightforward and so downright It is a positive
+luxury to meet her after all the tiresome conventionalities of the
+every-day young lady.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I ask her here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, if you would, aunt!&mdash;if you only would!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;That you may fall in love with her, I suppose?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, aunt, that is done already.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I think, sir, I might have been apprised of this attachment!&rdquo; said she,
+bridling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I didn't know it myself, aunt, till I was close to the Cape. I thought it
+a mere fancy as we dropped down Channel; grew more thoughtful over it in
+the Bay of Biscay; began to believe it as we discovered St. Helena; and
+came back to England resolved to tell you the whole truth, and ask you, at
+least, to see her and know her.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I will, then. I 'll write and invite her here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You 're the best and kindest aunt in Christendom!&rdquo; said he, rushing over
+and kissing her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm not going to let you read it, sir,&rdquo; said she, with a smile. &ldquo;If she
+show it to you, she may. Otherwise it is a matter between ourselves.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be it entirely as you wish, aunt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And if all this goes hopefully on,&rdquo; said she, after a pause, &ldquo;is Aunt
+Dorothea to be utterly forgotten? No more visits here,&mdash;no happy
+summer evenings,&mdash;no more merry Christmases?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nay, aunt, I mean to be your neighbor. That cottage you have often
+offered me, near the rocks, I 'll not refuse it again,&mdash;that is, if
+you tempt me once more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is yours, and the farm along with it. Go to bed now, and leave me to
+write my note, which will require-some thought and reflection.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know you 'll do it well. I know none who could equal you in such a
+task.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll try and acquit myself with credit,&rdquo; said she, as she sat down to
+the writing-desk.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what is all this about,&mdash;a letter from Miss Dorothea to Polly,&rdquo;
+said Tom, as they drove along the road back to town. &ldquo;Surely they never
+met?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never; but my aunt intends that they shall. She writes to ask your sister
+to come on a visit here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But why not have told her the thing was impossible? You know us. You have
+seen the humble way we live,&mdash;how many a care it costs to keep up
+that little show of respectability that gets us sufferance in the world,
+and how one little attempt beyond this is quite out of our reach. Why not
+have told her frankly, sir, 'These people are not in our station'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Just because I acknowledge no such distinction as you want to draw, my
+good fellow. If my aunt has asked your sister to come three hundred miles
+to see her, she has thought over her request with more foresight than you
+or I could have given it, take my word for it. When she means kindly, she
+plans thoughtfully. And now I will tell you what I never meant to have
+spoken of, that it was only last night she asked me how could she be of
+use to you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To <i>me!</i>&rdquo; said he, blushing, &ldquo;and why to <i>me?</i>&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can you never be brought to see that you are a hero, Tom,&mdash;that all
+the world is talking of you just now, and people feel a pride in being
+even passingly mixed up with your name?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If they only knew how much I have to be ashamed of before I can begin to
+feel vain, they 'd not be so ready with their praise or their flattery.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I 'll talk over all that with your sister Polly,&rdquo; said Hunter, gayly; for
+he saw the serious spirit that was gaining over the poor fellow.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do so, sir; and you'll soon see, if there's anything good or hopeful
+about me, where it comes from and who gave it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XIX. FROM GENERAL CONYERS TO HIS SON
+</h2>
+<h3>
+Beddwys, N. Wales.
+</h3>
+<p>
+My dear Fred,&mdash;How happy I am that you are enjoying yourself; short
+of being with you, nothing could have given me greater pleasure than your
+letter. I like your portrait of the old lady, whose eccentricities are
+never inconsistent with some charming traits of disposition, and a nature
+eminently high-minded and honorable; but why not more about Josephine? She
+is surely oftener in your thoughts than your one brief paragraph would
+bespeak, and has her due share in making the cottage the delightful home
+you describe it to be. I entreat you to be more open and more explicit on
+this theme, for it may yet be many days before I can explore the matter
+for myself; since, instead of the brief absence I calculated on, we may,
+for aught I know, be detained here for some weeks.
+</p>
+<p>
+It is clear to me, from your last, a note of mine from Liverpool to you
+must have miscarried. You ask me where you are to address me next, and
+what is the nature of the business which has called me away so suddenly? I
+gave you in that letter all the information that I was myself possessed
+of, and which, in three words, amounted to this: Old Barrington, having
+involved himself in a serious personal quarrel with Stapylton, felt, or
+believed, that he ought to give him a meeting. Seeing how useless all
+attempt at dissuasion proved, and greatly fearing what hands he might fall
+into, I agreed to be his friend on the occasion; trusting, besides, that
+by a little exercise of tact and temper, extreme measures might be
+avoided, and the affair arranged. You may well believe, without my
+insisting further upon it, that I felt very painfully how we should both
+figure before the world,&mdash;a man of eighty-three or four, accompanied
+to the ground by another of sixty-odd! I know well how, in the changed
+temper of the age, such acts are criticised, and acquiesce, besides, in
+the wiser spirit that now prevails. However, as I said before, if
+Barrington must go on, it were better he should do so under the guidance
+of a sincere friend than of one casually elevated to act as such, in a
+moment of emergency.
+</p>
+<p>
+We left Dublin, by the mail-packet, on Wednesday; and after a rough
+passage of twenty-three hours, reached Liverpool too late to catch the
+evening coach. Thus detained, we only arrived here on Sunday night late.
+At my club I found a note from Stapylton, stating that he had daily called
+there to learn if we had come, but the boisterous state of the weather
+sufficiently explained our delay, and giving an address where he might be
+found, as well as that of &ldquo;his friend.&rdquo; Now, it so chanced that this
+friend was a very notorious person well known to me in India, where he had
+been tried for an unfair duel, and narrowly escaped&mdash;I should say
+unjustly escaped&mdash;being hanged. Though I had fully made up my mind
+not to be placed in any relations with such a man, I thought it would be
+as well that Barrington should know the character of his antagonist's
+friend from other sources, and so I invited an old Bengal companion of
+mine to dine with us the day after we arrived. Stamer was a judge of the
+criminal court, and tried Duff Brown, the man I speak of. As we sat over
+our wine together, we got upon this case, and Stamer declared that it was
+the only criminal cause in his whole life wherein he regretted the escape
+of the guilty party. &ldquo;The fellow,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;defended himself in a three
+hours' speech, ably and powerfully; but enunciated at times&mdash;as it
+were unconsciously&mdash;sentiments so abominable and so atrocious as to
+destroy the sympathy a part of his discourse excited. But somehow boldness
+has its fascination, and he was acquitted.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Barrington's old-fashioned notions were not, however, to be shocked even
+by this narrative, and he whispered to me, &ldquo;Unpleasant for <i>you</i>,
+Conyers. Wish it might have been otherwise, but it can't be helped.&rdquo; We
+next turned to discuss Duff Brown's friend, and Stamer exclaimed, &ldquo;Why,
+that's the man they have been making all this fuss about in India. He was,
+or he said he was, the adopted son of Howard Stapylton; but the family
+never believed the adoption, nor consented to receive him, and at this
+moment a Moonshee, who acted as Persian secretary to old Stapylton, has
+turned up with some curious disclosures, which, if true, would show that
+this young fellow held a very humble position in Stapylton's household,
+and never was in his confidence. This Moonshee was at Malta a few weeks
+ago, and may be, for aught I know, in England now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+I asked and obtained Barrington's permission to tell how we were ourselves
+involved with this Major Stapylton, and he quickly declared that, while
+the man stood thus accused, there could be no thought of according him a
+satisfaction. The opinion was not the less stringent that Stamer was
+himself an Irishman and of a fighting family.
+</p>
+<p>
+I am not very sure that we made Barrington a convert to our opinions, but
+we at least, as we separated for the night, left him doubtful and
+hesitating. I had not been in bed above an hour, when Mr. Withering awoke
+me. He had followed us from Dublin as soon as he learned our departure,
+and, going straight to a magistrate, swore informations against both
+Barrington and Stapylton. &ldquo;My old friend will never forgive me, I know,&rdquo;
+said he; &ldquo;but if I had not done this, I should never have forgiven
+myself.&rdquo; It was arranged between us that I was to mention the fact of such
+informations having been sworn, without stating by whom, to Barrington,
+and then persuade him to get privately away from town before a warrant
+could be served. I leave you to imagine that my task was not without its
+difficulties, but, before the day broke, I succeeded in inducing him to
+leave, and travelling by post without halt, we arrived at this quiet spot
+yesterday evening. Barrington, with all his good temper, is marvellously
+put out and irritable, saying, &ldquo;This is not the way such things were done
+once;&rdquo; and peevishly muttered, &ldquo;I wonder what poor Harry Beamish or Guy
+Hutchinson would say to it all?&rdquo; One thing is quite clear, we had got into
+a wasps' nest; Stapylton and his friend were both fellows that no
+honorable man would like to deal with, and we must wait with a little
+patience to find some safe road out of this troublesome affair.
+</p>
+<p>
+A letter came to B. from the India House the evening before we left town,
+but he handed it to me before he finished reading it, merely remarking,
+&ldquo;The old story, 'Yours of the ninth or nineteenth has duly been received,'
+&amp;c.&rdquo; But I found that it contained a distinct admission that his claim
+was not ill-founded, and that some arrangement ought to be come to.
+</p>
+<p>
+I now close my very lengthy epistle, promising, however, that as soon as I
+hear from town, either from Withering or Stamer, you shall have my news.
+We are, of course, close prisoners here for the present, for though the
+warrant would not extend to Ireland, Barrington's apprehensions of being
+&ldquo;served&rdquo; with such a writ at all would induce him to hide for six months
+to come.
+</p>
+<p>
+I scarcely ask you to write to me here, not knowing our probable stay; but
+to-morrow may, perhaps, tell us something on this head. Till when, believe
+me,
+</p>
+<p>
+Yours affectionately,
+</p>
+<p>
+Ormsby Conters.
+</p>
+<p>
+My most cordial greeting to Miss Barrington, and my love to her niece.
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO HIS SISTER MISS DINAH BARRINGTON.
+</p>
+<p>
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Dinah,&mdash;I hardly know how to tell you what has happened, or
+what is happening around me. I came over here to meet Major Stapylton, but
+find that there is no such person,&mdash;the man who calls himself so
+being a mere adventurer, who had taken the name, and, I believe, no small
+share of the goods, of its owner, got into the Bengal army, thence into
+our own service, and though not undistinguished for gallantry, seems to
+have led a life of ceaseless roguery and intrigue. He knew all about poor
+George's business, and was in correspondence with those we believe to be
+our friends in India, but who now turn out to be our inveterate enemies.
+This we have got at by the confession of one of those Oriental fellows
+they call Moonshees, who has revealed all their intercourse for years
+back, and even shown a document setting forth the number of rupees he was
+to receive when Stapylton had been married to Josephine. The Moonshee is
+very ill, and his examination can only be conducted at intervals; but he
+insists on a point of much importance to us, which is, that Stapylton
+induced him to tear out of the Rajah's Koran the page on which the
+adoption of George was written, and signed by the Meer himself. He
+received a large sum for this service, which, however, he evaded by a
+fraud, sending over to England not the real document itself, but a copy
+made by himself, and admirably counterfeited. It was the possession of
+this by Stapylton which enabled him to exercise a great control over our
+suit,&mdash;now averring that it was lost; now, under pledge of secrecy,
+submitting it to the inspection of some of the Indian authorities.
+Stapylton, in a word, saw himself in a position to establish our claim,
+whenever the time came that by making Josephine his wife, he could secure
+the fortune. This is all that we know up to this, but it is a great deal,
+and shows in what a maze of duplicity and treachery we have been involved
+for more than twenty years. The chief point, however, is that the real
+deed, written in the Meer's Koran, and torn out of it by the Moonshee, in
+his first impulse to forward it to Stapylton, is now extant, and the Koran
+itself is there to show the jagged margin of the torn-out leaf, and the
+corresponding page on the opposite side of the volume. Stapylton refuses
+to utter one word since the accusation against him has been made; and as
+the charges stand to falsifying documents, abstraction of funds, and other
+derelictions in India, he is now under a heavy bail to appear when called
+on.
+</p>
+<p>
+The whole business has made me so nervous and excitable that I cannot
+close my eyes at night, and I feel feverish and restless all day. It is
+very shocking to think of a man one has never injured, never heard of,
+animated with a spirit so inimical as to pass years of life in working ill
+to us. He would appear to have devoted himself to the task of blackening
+poor George's character and defaming him. It would seem that Mr. Howard
+Stapylton was one of those who took an active part against George. Whether
+this young fellow caught the contagion of this antipathy, or helped to
+feed it, I cannot tell; but it is certain that all the stories of cruelty
+and oppression the India Board used to trump up to us came from this one
+source; and at the end of all he seeks to be one of a family he has
+striven for years to ruin and to crush! I am lost in my efforts to
+understand this, though Stamer and Withering assure me they can read the
+man like print. Indeed, they see inferences and motives in fifty things
+which convey nothing to me; and whenever I feel myself stopped by some
+impassable barrier, to <i>them</i> it is only a bridge that conducts to a
+fresh discovery.
+</p>
+<p>
+The Stapyltons are all in arms now that another sportsman has winged the
+bird for them; and each day increases the number of accusations against
+this unfortunate fellow. It is true, dear Dinah, that our own prospects
+brighten through all this. I am constantly receiving civil messages and
+hopeful assurances; and even some of the directors have called to express
+sympathy and good wishes. But how chilled is the happiness that comes
+dashed with the misfortune of another! What a terrible deal it detracts
+from our joy to know that every throb of pleasure to ourselves has cost a
+pang of misery elsewhere! I wish this fellow could have gone his way,
+never minding us; or, if that could n't be, that he 'd have grown tired of
+persecuting those who had never harmed him, and given us up!
+</p>
+<p>
+They are now assailing him on all sides. One has found that he forged a
+will; another that he falsified a signature; and a miserable creature&mdash;a
+native Indian, who happened to be in that Manchester riot the other day&mdash;has
+now been ferreted out to swear that Stapylton followed him through a
+suburb, down a lane, and into a brick-field, where he cut him down and
+left him for dead. There seems a great deal of venom and acrimony in all
+this; and though the man is unquestionably not my friend, and I see that
+this persecution continues, I find it very hard not to stand by him.
+</p>
+<p>
+As for Withering, it has made the veteran ten years younger. He is up
+every morning at five, and I hear that he never goes to his room till long
+past midnight. These are the pastimes that to such men replace the sports
+of the field and the accidents of the chase. They have their vacillations
+of hope and fear, their moments of depression and of triumph in them; and
+they run a fellow-creature to earth with all the zest of a hard rider
+after a fox.
+</p>
+<p>
+Tell my darling Fifine that I am longing to be at home again,&mdash;longing
+for the quiet roof, and the roses at the window, and the murmur of the
+river, and her own sweet voice better than them all. And what a deal of
+happiness is in our power if we would only consent to enjoy it, without
+running after some imaginary good, some fancied blessing, which is to
+crown our wishes! If I could but only have guessed at the life of anxiety,
+doubt, and vacillation the pursuit of this claim would have cost me,&mdash;the
+twenty years of fever,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+I give you my word, Dinah, I 'd rather have earned my daily bread with a
+spade, or, when too old for that, taken to fishing for a livelihood.
+</p>
+<p>
+But why do I complain of anything at this moment? When have I been so
+truly happy for many a long year? Conyers never leaves me,&mdash;he talks
+of George from morning to night. And I now see that with all my affection
+for that dear boy, I only half knew his noble nature, his fine and
+generous character. If you only heard of the benevolent things he has
+done; the poor fellows he has sent home to their families at his own cost;
+the sums he has transmitted to wives and widows of soldiers in England;
+the children whose care and support he has provided for! These were the
+real drains on that fortune that the world thought wasted and squandered
+in extravagance. And do you know, Dinah, there is a vein of intense
+egotism in my heart that I never so much as suspected! I found it out by
+chance,&mdash;it was in marking how far less I was touched by the highest
+and best traits of my poor boy than by the signs of love to myself! and
+when Conyers said, &ldquo;He was always talking about you; he never did anything
+important without the question, 'How would &ldquo;Dad&rdquo; like this, I wonder?
+would &ldquo;Dad&rdquo; say &ldquo;God speed&rdquo; in this case?' And his first glass of wine
+every day was to the health of that dear old father over the seas.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+To you who loved him only a little less than myself, I have no shame in
+the confession of this weakness. I suppose Conyers, however, has hit upon
+it, for he harps on this theme continually, and, in sheer pride of heart,
+I feel ten years younger for it.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here comes Withering to say, &ldquo;Some more wonderful news;&rdquo; but I have begged
+him to keep it till I have sealed this letter, which if it grows any
+longer, I 'll never have courage to send to you. A dozen kisses to Fifine
+I can, however, transmit without any increase to the postage. Give my love
+to young Conyers; tell him I am charmed with his father,&mdash;I never met
+any one so companionable to me, and I only long for the day when the same
+roof shall cover all of us.
+</p>
+<p>
+Yours, my dearest sister, ever affectionately,
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM T. WITHERING, ESQ., TO MISS DINAH BARRINGTON, &ldquo;THE HOME.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Long's Hotel, Bond Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Miss Barrington,&mdash;If your brother has deputed me to write to
+you, it is not that he is ill, but simply that the excitement caused by
+some late events here has so completely mastered him that he can neither
+sit quiet a moment, nor address him steadily to any task. Nor am I
+surprised it should be so. Old, weather-beaten sailor on the ocean of life
+as I am, I feel an amount of feverishness and anxiety I am half ashamed
+of. Truth is, my dear Miss Dinah, we lawyers get so much habituated to
+certain routine rogueries that we are almost shocked when we hear of a
+wickedness not designated by a statute. But I must not occupy your time
+with such speculations, the more since I have only a brief space to give
+to that report of proceedings to which I want your attention. And, first
+of all, I will entreat you to forgive me for all want of sequence or
+connection in what I may say, since events have grown so jumbled together
+in my mind, that it is perfectly impossible for me to be certain whether
+what I relate should come before or after some other recorded fact In a
+word, I mean to give you an outline of our discoveries, without showing
+the track of our voyage on the map, or even saying how we came by our
+knowledge.
+</p>
+<p>
+You are aware, Barrington tells me, how Stapylton came by the name he
+bears. Aware that he was for some of his earlier years domesticated with
+old Howard Stapylton at Ghurtnapore, in some capacity between confidential
+valet and secretary,&mdash;a position that was at once one of
+subordination and trust,&mdash;it would now appear that a Moonshee, who
+had long served Colonel Barrington as Persian correspondent, came into
+Howard Stapylton's service in the same capacity: how introduced, or by
+whom, we know not. With this Moonshee, the young fellow I speak of became
+an intimate and close friend, and it is supposed obtained from him all
+that knowledge of your nephew's affairs which enabled him to see to what
+his claim pretended, and what were its prospects of success. It is now
+clear enough that he only regarded this knowledge at first as a means of
+obtaining favor from the Indian Government. It was, in fact, by ceding to
+them in detail certain documents, that he got his first commission in the
+Madras Fusiliers, and afterwards his promotion in the same regiment; and
+when, grown more ambitious, he determined to enter the King's service, the
+money for purchase came from the same source. Being, however, a fellow of
+extravagant habits, his demands grew at last to be deemed excessive and
+importunate; and though his debts had been paid three several times, he
+was again found involving himself as before, and again requiring
+assistance. This application was, however, resisted; and it was apparently
+on the strength of that refusal that he suddenly changed his tactics,
+turned his attention towards us, and bethought him that by forwarding your
+grandniece's claim,&mdash;if he could but win her affections in the mean
+while,&mdash;he would secure as a wife one of the richest heiresses in
+Europe. An examination of dates proves this, by showing that his last
+application to the Indian Board was only a few weeks before he exchanged
+into the regiment of Hussars he lately served with, and just then ordered
+to occupy Kilkenny. In one word, when it was no longer profitable to
+oppose Josephine's claim, he determined to support it and make it his own.
+The &ldquo;Company,&rdquo; however, fully assured that by the papers in their
+possession they could prove their own cause against Colonel Barrington,
+resisted all his menaces,&mdash;when, what does he do? It was what only a
+very daring and reckless fellow would ever have thought of,&mdash;one of
+those insolent feats of boldness that succeed by the very shock they
+create. He goes to the Secret Committee at the India House and says: &ldquo;Of
+the eighteen documents I have given you, seven are false. I will not tell
+you which they are, but if you do not speedily compromise this claim and
+make a satisfactory settlement on Colonel Barrington's daughter, I'll
+denounce you, at all the peril it may be to myself.&rdquo; At first they agree,
+then they hesitate, then they treat again, and so does the affair proceed,
+till suddenly&mdash;no one can guess why&mdash;they assume a tone of open
+defiance, and flatly declare they will hold no further intercourse with
+him, and even threaten with exposure any demand on his part.
+</p>
+<p>
+This rejection of him came at a critical moment. It was just when the
+press had begun to comment on the cruelty of his conduct at Peterloo, and
+when a sort of cry was got up through the country to have him dismissed
+from the service. We all saw, but never suspected, why he was so terribly
+cut up at this time. It was hard to believe that he could have taken mere
+newspaper censure so much to heart. We never guessed the real cause, never
+saw that he was driven to his last expedient, and obliged to prejudice all
+his hope of success by precipitancy. If he could not make Josephine his
+wife at once, on the very moment, all was lost. He made a bold effort at
+this. Who knows if he might not have succeeded but for you, as Josephine
+was very young, my old friend himself utterly unfit to cope with anything
+but open hostility? I say again, I 'd not have answered for the result if
+you had not been in command of the fortress. At all events, he failed; and
+in the failure lost his temper so far as to force a quarrel upon your
+brother. He failed, however; and no sooner was he down, than the world was
+atop of him: creditors, Jews, bill-discounters, and, last of all, the
+Stapyltons, who, so long as he bore their family name thousands of miles
+off, or associated it with deeds of gallantry, said nothing; now, that
+they saw it held up to attack and insult, came forward to declare that he
+never belonged to them, and at length appealed formally to the Horse
+Guards, to learn under what designation he had entered the service, and at
+what period taken the name he went by.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton's application for leave to sell out had just been sent in; and
+once more the newspapers set up the cry that this man should not be
+permitted to carry away to Aix and Baden the proceeds of a sale which
+belonged to his &ldquo;creditors.&rdquo; You know the world, and I need not tell you
+all the pleasant things it told this fellow, for men are pretty nigh as
+pitiless as crows to their wounded. I thought the complication had reached
+its limit, when I learned yesterday evening that Stapylton had been
+summoned before a police magistrate for a case of assault committed by him
+when in command of his regiment at Manchester. The case had evidently been
+got up by a political party, who, seeing the casual unpopularity of the
+man, determined to profit by it. The celebrated radical barrister,
+Hesketh, was engaged for the plaintiff.
+</p>
+<p>
+When I arrived at the court, it was so full that it was with difficulty I
+got a passage to a seat behind the bench. There were crowds of
+fashionables present, the well-known men about town, and the idlers of the
+clubs, and a large sprinkling of military men, for the news of the case
+had got wind already.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton, dressed in black, and looking pale and worn, but still
+dignified and like a gentleman, had not a single friend with him. I own to
+you, I felt ashamed to be there, and was right glad when he did not
+recognize me.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though the case opened by a declaration that this was no common assault
+case, wherein in a moment of passion a man had been betrayed into an
+excess, I knew the cant of my craft too well to lay any stress on such
+assertion, and received it as the ordinary exordium. As I listened,
+however, I was struck by hearing that the injured man was asserted to be
+one well known to Stapylton, with whom he had been for years in intimacy,
+and that the assault was in reality a deliberate attempt to kill, and not,
+as had been represented, a mere passing act of savage severity committed
+in hot blood. &ldquo;My client,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;will be brought before you; he is a
+Hindoo, but so long a resident of this country that he speaks our language
+fluently. You shall hear his story yourselves, and yourselves decide on
+its truthfulness. His wounds are, however, of so serious a nature that it
+will be advisable his statement should be a brief one.&rdquo; As he said this, a
+dark-complexioned fellow, with a look half-frightened, half defiant, was
+carried forwards in a chair, and deposited, as he sat, on the table. He
+gave his name as Lai Adeen, his age as forty-eight, his birthplace
+Majamarha, near Agra. He came to this country twelve years ago, as servant
+to an officer who had died on the passage, and after many hardships in his
+endeavor to earn a livelihood, obtained employment at Manchester in the
+mill of Brandling and Bennett, where he was employed to sweep the
+corridors and the stairs; his wages were nine shillings a week. All this,
+and much more of the same kind, he told simply and collectedly. I tried to
+see Stapylton while this was going on, but a pillar of the gallery,
+against which he leaned, concealed him from my view.
+</p>
+<p>
+I omit a great deal, not without its interest, but reserving it for
+another time, and come to his account of the night on which he was
+wounded. He said that as the cavalry marched on that morning into
+Manchester, he was struck by seeing at the head of the regiment one he had
+never set his eyes on for years, but whose features he knew too well to be
+deceived in.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I tried to get near him, that he might recognize me,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but the
+crowd kept me back, and I could not. I thought, indeed, at one moment he
+had seen me, and knew me; but as he turned his head away, I supposed I was
+mistaken.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was on the following evening, when the riot broke out in Mill Street,
+that I saw him next. I was standing at the door of a chemist's shop when
+the cavalry rode by at a walk. There was a small body of them in front, at
+about forty or fifty paces, and who, finding a sort of barricade across
+the street, returned to the main body, where they seemed to be reporting
+this. A cry arose that the troops had been blocked up at the rear, and at
+the same instant a shower of stones came from the side-streets and the
+house-tops. Thinking to do him a service, I made my way towards him I
+knew, in order to tell him by what way he could make his escape; and
+jostled and pushed, and half ridden down, I laid my hand on his horse's
+shoulder to keep myself from falling. 'Stand back, you scoundrel!' said
+he, striking me with the hilt of his sword in the face. 'Don't you know
+me, master?' cried I, in terror. He bent down in his saddle till his face
+was almost close to mine, and then, reining his horse back to give him
+room for a blow, he aimed a desperate cut at me. I saw it coming, and
+threw myself down; but I rose the next instant and ran. The street was
+already so clear by this time, I got into Cleever's Alley, down Grange
+Street, up the lane that leads to the brick-fields, and at last into the
+fields themselves. I was just thinking I was safe, when I saw a horseman
+behind me. He saw me, and dashed at me. I fell upon my knees to ask mercy,
+and he gave me this;&rdquo; and he pointed to the bandages which covered his
+forehead, stained as they were with clotted blood. &ldquo;I fell on my face, and
+he tried to make his horse trample on me; but the beast would not, and he
+only touched me with his hoof as he sprang across me. He at last
+dismounted to see, perhaps, if I were dead; but a shout from some of the
+rioters warned him to mount again; and he rode away, and I lay there till
+morning. It is not true that I was in prison and escaped,&mdash;that I was
+taken to the hospital, and ran away from it. I was sheltered in one of the
+clay-huts of the brickmakers for several weeks, afraid to come abroad, for
+I knew that the Sahib was a great man and could take my life. It was only
+by the persuasions of others that I left my hiding-place and have come
+here to tell my story.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+On being questioned why this officer could possibly desire to injure him,
+what grudge one in such a station could bear him, he owned he could not
+say; they had never been enemies, and, indeed, it was in the hope of a
+friendly recognition and assistance that he approached him in Mill Street.
+</p>
+<p>
+Stapylton's defence was very brief, given in an off-hand, frank manner,
+which disposed many in his favor. He believed the fellow meant to attack
+him; he certainly caught hold of his bridle. It was not his intention to
+give him more than a passing blow; but the utterance of a Hindoo curse&mdash;an
+expression of gross outrage in the East&mdash;recalled prejudices long
+dormant, and he gave the rascal chase, and cut him over the head,&mdash;not
+a severe cut, and totally unaccompanied by the other details narrated.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As for our former acquaintance I deny it altogether. I have seen
+thousands of his countrymen, and may have seen him; but, I repeat, I never
+knew him, nor can he presume to say he knew me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The Hindoo smiled a faint, sickly smile, made a gesture of deep humility,
+and asked if he might put a few questions to the &ldquo;Sahib.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Were you in Naghapoor in the year of the floods?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Stapylton, firmly, but evidently with an effort to appear
+calm.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the service of the great Sahib, Howard Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;In his service? Certainly not. I lived with him as his friend, and became
+his adopted heir.''
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What office did you fill when you first came to the 'Residence'?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I assisted my friend in the duties of his government; I was a good
+Oriental scholar, and could write and speak a dialect he knew nothing of.
+But I submit to the court that this examination, prompted and suborned by
+others, has no other object than to insult me, by leading to disclosures
+of matters essentially private in their nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me ask but one question,&rdquo; said the barrister. &ldquo;What name did you bear
+before you took that of Stapylton?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I refuse to submit to this insolence,&rdquo; said Stapylton, rising, angrily.
+&ldquo;If the laws of the country only can lend themselves to assist the
+persecutions of a rascally Press, the sooner a man of honor seeks another
+land the better. Adjudicate on this case, sirs; I will not stoop to bandy
+words with these men.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I now, sir,&rdquo; said Hesketh, opening his bag and taking out a roll of
+papers, &ldquo;am here to demand a committal for forgery against the person
+before you, passing under the name of Horace Stapylton, but whose real
+designation is Samuel Scott Edwardes, son of Samuel Edwardes, a name
+notorious enough once.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+I cannot go on, my dear friend; the emotions that overpowered me at the
+time, and compelled me to leave the court, are again threatening me, and
+my brain reels at the recollection of a scene which, even to my
+fast-fading senses, was the most trying of my life.
+</p>
+<p>
+To General Conyers I must refer you for what ensued after I left. I cannot
+even say who came home with me to the hotel, though I am aware I owed that
+kindness to some one. The face of that unhappy man is yet before me, and
+all the calm in which I have written up to this leaves me, as I think over
+one of the most terrible incidents of my life.
+</p>
+<p>
+Your brother, shocked of course, bears up bravely, and hopes to write to
+you to-morrow.
+</p>
+<p>
+One word of good cheer before I close this miserable record. The Indian
+directors have written to offer excellent terms&mdash;splendidly liberal
+terms, Conyers calls them, and I agree with him. We have had a very busy
+week of it here, but it will be well requited if all that I now anticipate
+be confirmed to us. Barrington begs you will tell your neighbors, the
+Dills, that Tom&mdash;I think that is the name&mdash;has just arrived at
+Southampton with General Hunter, and will be here to-morrow evening.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have cut out a short passage from the newspaper to finish my narrative.
+I will send the full report, as published, to-morrow.
+</p>
+<p>
+Your attached friend,
+</p>
+<p>
+T. Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The chief police-office in Marlborough Street was yesterday the scene of
+a very shocking incident. The officer whose conduct at the head of his
+regiment in Manchester has of late called for the almost unanimous
+reprobation of the Press, was, while answering to a charge of aggravated
+assault, directly charged with forgery. Scarcely was the allegation made,
+than he drew a pistol from his pocket, and, placing the muzzle to his
+mouth, pulled the trigger. The direction of the weapon, however, was
+accidentally turned, and the ball, instead of proceeding upwards, passed
+through the lower jaw, fracturing the bone, and created a terrible wound.
+It is supposed that the large vessels are not injured, and that he may yet
+recover. All who witnessed the scene describe it as one of intense horror.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The unhappy man was at once removed to the Middlesex Hospital. He has not
+uttered a word since the event; and when asked if there were any relatives
+or friends whom he wished might be sent for, merely shook his head
+negatively. It is said that when the result of the consultation held on
+him was announced to him as favorable, he seemed rather grieved than
+otherwise at the tidings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+FROM PETER BARRINGTON TO DINAH, HIS SISTER.
+</p>
+<p>
+My dear Dinah,&mdash;How glad am I to tell you that we leave this
+to-morrow, and a large party of us, too, all for &ldquo;The Home.&rdquo; Put young
+Conyers in my dressing-room, so that the large green bedroom can be free
+for the General, at least for one of the generals&mdash;for we have
+another here, Hunter, who will also be our guest. Then there will be
+Withering. As for myself, I can be stowed away anywhere. What happiness
+would there be to us all at such a meeting, if it were not for that poor
+wretch who lies in all his agony a few streets off, and who is never out
+of my thoughts. I went twice to the hospital to see him. The first time I
+lost courage, and came away. The second, I sent up my name, and asked if
+he would wish to see me. The only answer I got was my visiting-card torn
+in two! How hard it is for an injurer to forgive him he has injured! I
+have arranged with the Stapyltons, however, who instigated the charge of
+forgery, not to press it; at least, they are to take bail, and the bail
+will be forfeited, so I understand it; but Withering will explain all more
+clearly.
+</p>
+<p>
+Our own affairs are all as bright and prosperous as our best wishes could
+desire. The Council have had all the evidence before them, and the
+Moonshee has produced his copy of the Koran, with the torn leaf fitting
+into the jagged margin, and George is vindicated at last in everything.
+His loyalty, his disinterestedness, his honesty, all established. The
+ceremony of his marriage has been fully recognized; and General Conyers
+tells me that the lowest estimate of our claim is a little short of a
+quarter of a million sterling. He counsels me not to be exigent in my
+terms; if he knew me better, perhaps, he would not have deemed the advice
+so necessary.
+</p>
+<p>
+What will Fifine say to all this wealth? Will she want to go back to
+India, and be a princess, and ride about on an elephant; or will she
+reconcile herself to such humble ways as ours? I am most eager to hear how
+she will take the tidings. Withering says it will not spoil her; that
+knowing nothing of life in its moneyed relations, she runs no risk of
+being carried away by any vulgar notions of her own importance through
+riches.
+</p>
+<p>
+Conyers has never once hinted at his son's pretensions since Fifine has
+become an heiress; and I fancy&mdash;it may be only fancy&mdash;is a shade
+or so cool towards me, so that I have not referred to them. But what can I
+do? I cannot offer him my granddaughter, nor&mdash;if what you tell me be
+true, that they are always quarrelling&mdash;would the proposal be a great
+kindness to either.
+</p>
+<p>
+Here is Tom Dill, too, and what a change! He is the image of Polly; and a
+fine, well-grown, straight-figured fellow, that looks you manfully in the
+face,&mdash;not the slouching, loutish, shamefaced creature you remember
+him. Hunter has had him gazetted to an Ensigncy in the 10th Foot, and he
+will, or I much mistake him, do honest credit to the recommendation.
+Hunter takes him about with him wherever he goes, telling all about the
+shipwreck and Tom's gallantry,&mdash;enough to turn the lad's head with
+vanity, but that he is a fine, simple-hearted creature, who thinks very
+little of himself or his achievement. He seems to have no other thought
+than what Polly, his sister, will say and think of him.
+</p>
+<p>
+He also will be one of our party; that is if I can persuade him to make
+&ldquo;The Home&rdquo; his headquarters while our friends are with us. What a strong
+muster we shall be; and how we 'll astonish that old bin of Madeira,
+Dinah! By the way, I have been rather boastful about it to Conyers, and
+let some bottles have the sun on them for a couple of hours every day.
+</p>
+<p>
+I should like to try my chance once more of seeing that poor fellow at the
+hospital, but Withering will not hear of it; he got positively
+ill-tempered at the bare mention of such a wish. Even Conyers says,
+&ldquo;Better not,&rdquo; with an air that may mean for the sick man's sake as much as
+my own.
+</p>
+<p>
+A little more of this life of noise, confusion, and excitement would
+finish me. This city existence, with its incessant events and its never
+ending anxieties, is like walking in a high wind with the chimney-pots
+falling and crashing on every side of one,&mdash;while I am pitying the
+fellow whose skull is just cracked, I am forced to remember that my own is
+in danger. And yet there are people who like it; who tell you that out of
+London there is no living; that the country is a grave, aggravated by the
+consciousness that one is dead and buried there!
+</p>
+<p>
+On Tuesday,&mdash;Wednesday, at farthest,&mdash;Dinah, look out for us. I
+do not believe there is that prize in the wheel that would tempt me again
+away from home! and till I reach it, believe, my dear Dinah,
+</p>
+<p>
+Your loving brother,
+</p>
+<p>
+Peter Barrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+I have just seen Conyers. He met Sir Harvey Hethrington, the Home
+Secretary, this morning, and they got into a talk over our business, and
+H. said how cruelly I had been treated all this time back, and how
+unfairly poor George's memory was dealt with. &ldquo;We want,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;to show
+your friend our respect and our sympathy, and we have thought of
+submitting his name to the King for a Baronetcy. How do you think Mr.
+Barrington himself would take our project?&rdquo; &ldquo;I 'll find out,&rdquo; said
+Conyers, as he told me of the conversation. &ldquo;If they don't let me off,
+Conyers,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;ask them to commute it to Knighthood, for the heralds'
+fees will be smaller; but I'll try, meanwhile, if I can't escape either.&rdquo;
+So that now, Dinah, you may expect me on Saturday. I told you what a place
+this was; you are never sure what may befall you from one moment to
+another!
+</p>
+<p>
+<a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<div style="height: 4em;">
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+</div>
+<h2>
+CHAPTER XX. THE END
+</h2>
+<h3>
+Fortune had apparently ceased to persecute Peter Barrington.
+</h3>
+<p>
+The Minister did not press honors upon him, and he was free to wait for
+his companions, and in their company he returned to Ireland.
+</p>
+<p>
+The news of his success&mdash;great as it was, magnified still more&mdash;had
+preceded him to his own country; and he was met, as all lucky men are met,
+and will be met to the end of time, by those who know the world and
+feelingly estimate that the truly profitable are the fortunate!
+</p>
+<p>
+Not that he remarked how many had suddenly grown so cordial; what troops
+of passing acquaintances had become in a moment warm friends, well-wishing
+and affectionate. He never so much as suspected that &ldquo;Luck&rdquo; is a deity
+worshipped by thousands, who even in the remotest way are not to be
+benefited by it. He had always regarded the world as a far better thing
+than many moralists would allow it to be,&mdash;unsteady, wilful,
+capricious, if you like&mdash;but a well-intentioned, kindly minded world,
+that would at all times, where passion or prejudice stood aloof,
+infinitely rather do the generous thing than the cruel one.
+</p>
+<p>
+Little wonder, then, if he journeyed in a sort of ovation! At every change
+of horses in each village they passed, there was sure to be some one who
+wanted to shake his hand. People hobbled out on crutches and quitted
+sick-beds to say how &ldquo;glad they were;&rdquo; mere acquaintances most of them,
+who felt a strange mysterious sort of self-consequence in fancying
+themselves for the moment the friends of Peter Barrington, the
+millionnaire! This is all very curious, but it is a fact,&mdash;a fact
+which I make no pretence to explain, however.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And here comes the heartiest well-wisher of them all!&rdquo; cried Barrington,
+as he saw his sister standing on the roadside, near the gate. With
+thoughtful delicacy, his companions lingered behind, while he went to meet
+and embraced her. &ldquo;Was I not a true prophet, Dinah dear? Did I not often
+foretell this day to you?&rdquo; said he, as he drew her arm, and led her along,
+forgetting all about his friends and companions.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have they paid the money, Peter?&rdquo; said she, sharply.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course they have not; such things are not settled like the fare of a
+hackney-coach. But our claim is acknowledged, and, fifty thousand times
+better, George Barrington's name absolved from every shadow of an
+imputation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the amount they agree to give?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, I don't know,&mdash;that is, I don't recollect, there were
+so many interviews and such discussions; but Withering can tell you
+everything. Withering knows it all. Without <i>him</i> and Conyers I don't
+know how I could have got on. If you had heard how he spoke of George at
+the Council! 'You talk of <i>my</i> services,' said he; 'they are no more
+fit to be compared with those of Colonel Barrington, than are <i>my</i>
+petty grievances with the gross wrongs that lie on <i>his</i> memory.'
+Withering was there; he heard the words, and described the effect of them
+as actually overwhelming.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And Withering believes the whole thing to be settled?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To be sure, he does! Why should he oppose his belief to that of the whole
+world? Why, my dear Dinah, it is not one, nor two, but some hundreds of
+people have come to wish me joy. They had a triumphal arch at Naas, with
+'Welcome to Barrington' over it. At Carlow, Fishbourne came out with the
+corporation to offer me congratulations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+She gave a hasty, impatient shake of the head, but repressed the sharp
+reply that almost trembled on her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;By George!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;it does one's heart good to witness such a burst
+of generous sentiment. You 'd have thought some great national benefit had
+befallen, or that some one&mdash;his country's idol&mdash;had just reaped
+the recompense of his great services. They came flocking out of the towns
+as we whirled past, cheering lustily, and shouting, 'Barrington forever!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I detest a mob!&rdquo; said she, pursing up her lips.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;These were no mobs, Dinah; these were groups of honest fellows, with kind
+hearts and generous wishes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Another, but more decisive, toss of the head warned Peter that the
+discussion had gone far enough; indeed she almost said so, by asking
+abruptly, &ldquo;What is to be done about the boy Conyers? He is madly in love
+with Josephine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Marry her, I should say!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;As a cure for the complaint, I suppose. But what if she will not have
+him? What if she declares that she 'd like to go back to the convent
+again,&mdash;that she hates the world, and is sorry she ever came out into
+it,&mdash;that she was happier with the sisters&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Has she said all this to you, sister?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly not, Peter,&rdquo; said Dinah, bridling up. &ldquo;These were confidences
+imparted to the young man himself. It was he told me of them: he came to
+me last night in a state bordering on distraction. He was hesitating
+whether he would not throw himself into the river or go into a marching
+regiment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;This is only a laughing matter, then, Dinah?&rdquo; said Peter, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing of the kind, brother! He did not put the alternatives so much in
+juxtaposition as I have; but they lay certainly in that manner on his
+thoughts. But when do your friends arrive? I thought they were to have
+come with you?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What a head I have, Dinah! They are all here; two carriages of them. I
+left them on the road when I rushed on to meet you. Oh, here they come!
+here they are!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother's good fortune, gentlemen, has made him seem to forget what
+adversity never did; but I believe you all know how welcome you are here?
+Your son, General Conyers, thought to meet you earlier, by taking boat
+down to the village, and the girls went with him. Your friend, Polly Dill,
+is one of them, General Hunter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Having thus, with one sweep of the scythe, cut down a little of all around
+her, she led the way towards the cottage, accepting the arm of General
+Conyers with an antiquated grace that sorely tried Hunter's good manners
+not to smile at.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know what you are looking at, what you are thinking of, Barrington,&rdquo;
+said Withering, as he saw the other stand a moment gazing at the landscape
+on the opposite side of the river.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don't think you do, Tom,&rdquo; said he, smiling.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You were thinking of buying that mountain yonder. You were saying to
+yourself, 'I 'll be the owner of that beech wood before I'm a month
+older!'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my life, you 're right! though I have n't the remotest notion of how
+you guessed it. The old fellow that owns it shall name his own terms
+to-morrow morning. Here come the girls, and they 've got Tom Dill with
+them. How the fellow rows! and Fifine is laughing away at Conyers's
+attempt to keep the boat straight. Look at Hunter, too; he 's off to meet
+them. Is he 'going in' for the great heiress prize, eh, Tom?&rdquo; said he,
+with a knowing smile.
+</p>
+<p>
+Though Hunter assisted the ladies to land with becoming gallantry, he did
+not offer his arm to Josephine, but dropped behind, where Tom Dill brought
+up the rear with his sister.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;We have no confidences that you may not listen to,&rdquo; said Polly, as she
+saw that he hesitated as to joining them. &ldquo;Tom, indeed, has been telling
+of yourself, and you may not care to hear your own praises.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;If they come from <i>you</i>, I 'm all ears for them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Isn't that pretty, Tom? Did you ever hear any one ask more candidly for&mdash;no,
+not flattery&mdash;what is it to be called?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Tom, however, could not answer, for he had stopped to shake hands with
+Darby, whose &ldquo;May I never!&rdquo; had just arrested him.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an honest, fine-hearted fellow it is!&rdquo; said Hunter, as they moved
+on, leaving Tom behind.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;But if <i>you</i> had n't found it out, who would have known, or who
+acknowledged it? <i>I</i> know&mdash;for he has told me&mdash;all you have
+been to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pooh, pooh! nothing; less than nothing. He owes all that he is to
+himself. He is one of those fellows who, once they get into the right
+groove in life, are sure to go ahead. Not even <i>you</i> could make a
+doctor of him. Nature made him a soldier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly blushed slightly at the compliment to those teachings she believed a
+secret, and he went on,&mdash;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What has the world been doing here since I left?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pretty much what it did while you were here. It looked after its turnips
+and asparagus, took care of its young calves, fattened its chickens,
+grumbled at the dear-ness of everything, and wondered when Dr. Buck would
+preach a new sermon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;No deaths,&mdash;no marriages?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;None. There was only one candidate for both, and he has done neither,&mdash;Major
+M'Cormick.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Confound that old fellow! I had forgotten him. Do you remember the last
+day I saw you here? We were in the garden, talking, as we believed,
+without witnesses. Well, <i>he</i> overheard us. He heard every word we
+said, and a good deal more that we did not say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes; so he informed me, a few days after.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You don't mean to say that he had the impertinence&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;The frankness, General,&mdash;the charming candor,&mdash;to tell me that
+I was a very clever girl, and not to be discouraged by one failure or two;
+that with time and perseverance&mdash;I think he said perseverance&mdash;some
+one was sure to take a fancy to me: he might not, perhaps, be handsome,
+possibly not very young; his temper, too, might chance to be more tart
+than was pleasant; in a word, he drew such a picture that I had to stop
+him short, and ask was he making me a proposal? He has never spoken to me
+since!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I feel as if I could break his neck,&rdquo; muttered Hunter, below his breath;
+then added, &ldquo;Do you remember that I asked leave to write to you once,&mdash;only
+once?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I remember it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And you would not answer me. You shook your head, as though to say the
+permission would be of no service to me; that I might write, but, you
+understand, that it would only be to indulge in a delusion&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What an expressive shake of the head that meant all that!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! there it is again; never serious, never grave! And now I want you to
+be both. Since I landed in England, I ran down for a day to Devonshire. I
+saw an old aunt of mine, who, besides being very rich, has retained no
+small share of the romance of her life. She always had a dash of
+hero-worship about her, and so I took down Tom with me to show her the
+gallant fellow whose name was in all the newspapers, and of whom all the
+world was talking. She was charmed with him,&mdash;with his honest, manly
+simplicity, his utter want of all affectation. She asked me ten times a
+day, 'Can I not be of service to him? Is there no step he wishes to
+purchase? Is there nothing we can do for him?' 'Nothing,' said I; 'he is
+quite equal to his own fortune.' 'He may have brothers,' said she. 'He has
+a sister,' said I,&mdash;'a sister who has made him all that he is, and it
+was to repay her love and affection that he has shown himself to be the
+gallant fellow we have seen him.' 'Tell her to come and see me.&mdash;that
+is,' said she, correcting herself, 'give her a letter I shall write, and
+persuade her, if you can, to oblige me by doing what I ask.' Here is the
+letter; don't say no till you have read it. Nay, don't shake your head so
+deploringly; things may be hard without being impossible. At all events,
+read her note carefully. It's a droll old hand, but clear as print.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'll read it,&rdquo; said she, looking at the letter; but the sorrowful tone
+revealed how hopelessly she regarded the task.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask Tom about her; and make Tom tell you what she is like. By Jove! he
+has such an admiration for the old damsel, I was half afraid he meant to
+be my uncle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+They reached the cottage laughing pleasantly over this conceit, and Polly
+hurried up to her room to read the letter. To her surprise, Josephine was
+there already, her eyes very red with crying, and her cheeks flushed and
+feverish-looking.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My dearest Fifine, what is all this for, on the happiest day of your
+life?&rdquo; said she, drawing her arm around her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;It's all <i>your</i> fault,&mdash;all <i>your</i> doing,&rdquo; said the other,
+averting her head, as she tried to disengage herself from the embrace.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;My fault,&mdash;my doing? What do you mean, dearest, what can I have done
+to deserve this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;You know very well what you have done. You knew all the time how it would
+turn out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly protested firmly that she could not imagine what was attributed to
+her, and only after a considerable time obtained the explanation of the
+charge. Indeed it was not at first easy to comprehend it, given, as it
+was, in the midst of tears, and broken at every word by sobs. The
+substance was this: that Fifine, in an attempted imitation of Polly's
+manner,&mdash;an effort to copy the coquetting which she fancied to be so
+captivating,&mdash;had ventured to trifle so far with young Conyers, that,
+after submitting to every alternative of hope and fear for weeks long, he
+at last gave way, and determined to leave the house, quit the country, and
+never meet her more. &ldquo;It was to be like you I did it,&rdquo; cried she, sobbing
+bitterly, &ldquo;and see what it has led me to.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, dearest, be really like me for half an hour; that is, be very
+patient and very quiet. Sit down here, and don't leave this till I come
+back to you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Polly kissed her hot cheek as she spoke; and the other sat down where she
+was bade, with the half-obedient sulkiness of a naughty child.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tell young Mr. Conyers to come and speak to me. I shall be in the
+garden,&rdquo; said she to his servant; and before she had gone many paces he
+was beside her.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Polly dearest! have you any hope for me?&rdquo; cried he, in agony. &ldquo;If you
+knew the misery I am enduring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come and take a walk with me,&rdquo; said she, passing her arm within his. &ldquo;I
+think you will like to hear what I have to tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+The revelation was not a very long one; and as they passed beneath the
+room where Josephine sat, Polly called out, &ldquo;Come down here, Fifine, we
+are making a bouquet; try if you can find 'heart's-ease.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+What a happy party met that day at dinner! All were in their best spirits,
+each contented with the other. &ldquo;Have you read my aunt's note?&rdquo; whispered
+Hunter to Polly, as they passed into the drawing-room.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes. I showed it also to Miss Dinah. I asked her advice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what did she say,&mdash;what did she advise?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;She said she 'd think over it and tell me to-morrow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To-morrow! Why not now,&mdash;why not at once?&rdquo; cried he, impatiently. &ldquo;I
+'ll speak to her myself;&rdquo; and he hurried to the little room where Miss
+Dinah was making tea.
+</p>
+<p>
+It was not a very long interview; and Hunter returned, fond, radiant, and
+triumphant. &ldquo;She's the cleverest old woman I ever met in my life,&rdquo; said
+he; &ldquo;and the best, besides, after my Aunt Dorothy. She said that such an
+invitation as that was too cordial to be coldly declined; that it meant
+more&mdash;far more&mdash;than a politeness; that you ought to go, yes, by
+all means; and if there was any difficulty about the journey, or any
+awkwardness in travelling so far, why, there was an easy remedy for it, as
+well as for meeting my aunt a perfect stranger.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what was that?&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;To go as her niece, dearest Polly,&mdash;to be the wife of a man who
+loves you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is it possible that you have so much to say to each other that you won't
+take tea?&rdquo; cried Aunt Dinah; while she whispered to Withering, &ldquo;I declare
+we shall never have a sociable moment till they're all married off, and
+learn to conduct themselves like reasonable creatures.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+Is it not the best testimony we can give to happiness, that it is a thing
+to feel and not describe,&mdash;to be enjoyed, but not pictured? It is
+like a debt that I owe to my reader, to show him &ldquo;The Home&rdquo; as it was when
+blissful hearts were gathered under its roof; and yet, for the life of me,
+I cannot acquit myself of it. To say that there were old people with their
+memories of the past, and young ones with their hopes of the future; that
+there were bygones to sigh over, and vistas to gaze at, conveys but little
+of the kindliness by which heart opened to heart, and sorrow grew lighter
+by mutual endurance, and joys became brighter as they were imparted to
+another.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So I find,&rdquo; said Barrington, as they sat at breakfast together, &ldquo;that
+Josephine insists on going back to the convent, and Fred is resolved on an
+exchange into the Infantry, and is off for Canada immediately.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a bit of it!&rdquo; broke in Hunter, who remarked nothing of the roguish
+drollery of old Peter's eye, nor even suspected that the speech was made
+in mockery. &ldquo;Master Fred is coming with me into Kilkenny this morning, for
+a visit to the Dean, or whatever he is, who dispenses those social
+handcuffs they call licenses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, they were quarrelling all the morning,&rdquo; repeated Harrington.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;So we were, sir, and so we mean to do for many a year,&rdquo; said Josephine;
+&ldquo;and to keep us in countenance, I hear that General Hunter and Polly have
+determined to follow our example.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do I hear, Miss Dill?&rdquo; said Miss Barrington, with an affected
+severity.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;I'm afraid, madam, it is true; there has been what my father calls 'a
+contagious endemic' here lately, and we have both caught it; but ours are
+mild cases, and we hope soon to recover.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;What's this I see here?&rdquo; cried Fred, who, to conceal his shame, had taken
+up the newspaper. &ldquo;Listen to this: 'The notorious Stapylton, <i>alias</i>
+Edwardes, whose case up to yesterday was reported all but hopeless, made
+his escape from the hospital, and has not since been heard of. It would
+appear that some of the officials had been bribed to assist his evasion,
+and a strict inquiry will be immediately set on foot into the affair.'&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Do you think he has got over to France?&rdquo; whispered Peter to Withering.
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course he has; the way was all open, and everything ready for him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then I am thoroughly happy!&rdquo; cried Barrington, &ldquo;and there's not even the
+shadow of a cloud over our present sunshine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+<p>
+THE END. <br /><br />
+</p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
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