<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<p>While the dean was reading to himself this letter, his
countenance frequently changed, and once or twice the tears
streamed from his eyes. When it was finished, he
exclaimed,</p>
<p>“My brother has sent his child to me, and I will be a
parent to him.” He was rushing towards the door, when
Lady Clementina stopped him.</p>
<p>“Is it proper, do you think, Mr. Dean, that all the
servants in the house should be witnesses to your meeting with
your brother and your nephew in the state in which they must be
at present? Send for them into a private
apartment.”</p>
<p>“My brother!” cried the dean; “oh! that it
<i>were</i> my brother! The man is merely a person from the
ship, who has conducted his child hither.”</p>
<p>The bell was rung, money was sent to the man, and orders given
that the boy should be shown up immediately.</p>
<p>While young Henry was walking up the stairs, the dean’s
wife was weighing in her mind in what manner it would most
redound to her honour to receive him; for her vanity taught her
to believe that the whole inquisitive world pried into her
conduct, even upon every family occurrence.</p>
<p>Young William was wondering to himself what kind of an
unpolished monster his beggarly cousin would appear; and was
contemplating how much the poor youth would be surprised, and
awed by his superiority.</p>
<p>The dean felt no other sensation than an impatient desire of
beholding the child.</p>
<p>The door opened—and the son of his brother Henry, of his
benefactor, entered.</p>
<p>The habit he had on when he left his father, having been of
slight texture, was worn out by the length of the voyage, and he
was in the dress of a sailor-boy. Though about the same age
with his cousin, he was something taller: and though a strong
family resemblance appeared between the two youths, he was
handsomer than William; and from a simplicity spread over his
countenance, a quick impatience in his eye—which denoted
anxious curiosity, and childish surprise at every new object
which presented itself—he appeared younger than his
well-informed and well-bred cousin.</p>
<p>He walked into the room, not with a dictated obeisance, but
with a hurrying step, a half pleased, yet a half frightened look,
an instantaneous survey of every person present; not as demanding
“what they thought of him,” but expressing almost as
plainly as in direct words, “what he thought of
them.” For all alarm in respect to his safety and
reception seemed now wholly forgotten, in the curiosity which the
sudden sight of strangers such as he had never seen in his life
before, excited: and as to <i>himself</i>, he did not appear to
know there was such a person existing: his whole faculties were
absorbed in <i>others</i>.</p>
<p>The dean’s reception of him did honour to his
sensibility and his gratitude to his brother. After the
first affectionate gaze, he ran to him, took him in his arms, sat
down, drew him to him, held him between his knees, and repeatedly
exclaimed, “I will repay to you all I owe to your
father.”</p>
<p>The boy, in return, hugged the dean round the neck, kissed
him, and exclaimed,</p>
<p>“Oh! you <i>are</i> my father—you have just such
eyes, and such a forehead—indeed you would be almost the
same as he, if it were not for that great white thing which grows
upon your head!”</p>
<p>Let the reader understand, that the dean, fondly attached to
every ornament of his dignified function, was never seen (unless
caught in bed) without an enormous wig. With this young
Henry was enormously struck; having never seen so unbecoming a
decoration, either in the savage island from whence he came, or
on board the vessel in which he sailed.</p>
<p>“Do you imagine,” cried his uncle, laying his hand
gently on the reverend habiliment, “that this
grows?”</p>
<p>“What is on <i>my</i> head grows,” said young
Henry, “and so does that which is upon my
father’s.”</p>
<p>“But now you are come to Europe, Henry, you will see
many persons with such things as these, which they put on and
take off.”</p>
<p>“Why do you wear such things?”</p>
<p>“As a distinction between us and inferior people: they
are worn to give an importance to the wearer.”</p>
<p>“That’s just as the savages do; they hang brass
nails, wire, buttons, and entrails of beasts all over them, to
give them importance.”</p>
<p>The dean now led his nephew to Lady Clementina, and told him,
“She was his aunt, to whom he must behave with the utmost
respect.”</p>
<p>“I will, I will,” he replied, “for she, I
see, is a person of importance too; she has, very nearly, such a
white thing upon her head as you have!”</p>
<p>His aunt had not yet fixed in what manner it would be
advisable to behave; whether with intimidating grandeur, or with
amiable tenderness. While she was hesitating between both,
she felt a kind of jealous apprehension that her son was not so
engaging either in his person or address as his cousin; and
therefore she said,</p>
<p>“I hope, Dean, the arrival of this child will give you a
still higher sense of the happiness we enjoy in our own.
What an instructive contrast between the manners of the one and
of the other!”</p>
<p>“It is not the child’s fault,” returned the
dean, “that he is not so elegant in his manners as his
cousin. Had William been bred in the same place, he would
have been as unpolished as this boy.”</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, sir,” said young William with
a formal bow and a sarcastic smile, “I assure you several
of my tutors have told me, that I appear to know many things as
it were by instinct.”</p>
<p>Young Henry fixed his eyes upon his cousin, while, with steady
self-complacency, he delivered this speech, and no sooner was it
concluded than Henry cried out in a kind of wonder,</p>
<p>“A little man! as I am alive, a little man! I did
not know there were such little men in this country! I
never saw one in my life before!”</p>
<p>“This is a boy,” said the dean; “a boy not
older than yourself.”</p>
<p>He put their hands together, and William gravely shook hands
with his cousin.</p>
<p>“It <i>is</i> a man,” continued young Henry; then
stroked his cousin’s chin. “No, no, I do not
know whether it is or not.”</p>
<p>“I tell you again,” said the dean, “he is a
boy of your own age; you and he are cousins, for I am his
father.”</p>
<p>“How can that be?” said young Henry.
“He called you <i>Sir</i>.”</p>
<p>“In this country,” said the dean, “polite
children do not call their parents <i>father</i> and
<i>mother</i>.”</p>
<p>“Then don’t they sometimes forget to love them as
such?” asked Henry.</p>
<p>His uncle became now impatient to interrogate him in every
particular concerning his father’s state. Lady
Clementina felt equal impatience to know where the father was,
whether he were coming to live with them, wanted anything of
them, and every circumstance in which her vanity was
interested. Explanations followed all these questions; but
which, exactly agreeing with what the elder Henry’s letter
has related, require no recital here.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />