<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>A FAMILY PARTY.</h3>
<p>"A grandson of Captain Morgan! Well, that
is not much to meet us at our wedding dinner—at
least, if it is not our wedding dinner—Oh, I know
there was our state one, and we met all the old
fogies whom I detest!" cried Mrs. Algernon Merridew,
born Ellen Vernon; "but this is only the
second, and the second is quite as important as the
first. She should have asked the county first, to
introduce us properly—and then the town; but
Aunt Catherine is one of the people who never do
what's expected of them. Besides, I don't want to
meet her relations on the other side. They're nobodies.
She spends quantities of money upon them
which she has no business to do, seeing it's the
Vernons' money and not hers at all, if you come
to that."</p>
<p>"Come, Nell," said her husband with a laugh.
He was a dark young man, as was to be expected—seeing
that she was so fair a young woman—good-looking,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
with whiskers, which were the fashion in
those days, of a bushy blackness, and hair which
suggested pomade. "Come, Nell," he said, "strike
fair. Catherine Vernon does a great deal of good
with her money, and doesn't spare upon the Vernons—all
the town knows that."</p>
<p>"Oh no, she doesn't spare upon the Vernons—all
those useless old creatures that she has up there in
that horrid old-fashioned house! I think if she did
a little more for real relations, and left those old
fogies alone, it would be more like—— Expecting
one to call upon them, and take all sorts of trouble!
And look at poor old Harry kept with his nose at
his desk for ever."</p>
<p>"Poor old Harry is very lucky, I think. Fair
play is a jewel. If she doesn't do all you want,
who do you expect would?"</p>
<p>"You, of course!" cried Ellen, as was natural:
and they were so newly married that he thought it
very pretty; "that is the good of you; and if you
go in for Aunt Catherine too, when you know I
can't endure her——"</p>
<p>"Of course the good of me is to do whatever you
want," he said, with various honeymoon demonstrations;
"but as for going in for Aunt Catherine—you
must know this, Nelly, that I'm very proud of
being connected with Catherine Vernon. I have
heard of her all my life as a sort of goddess, you
know. You must not put me off it all at once—I
couldn't be put off it. There now, there's nothing
to look sulky about."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You are such an old Redborough person," Ellen
said, with a little pout: which was very true. He
was not, indeed, at all a good match for a Vernon;
but his whiskers—things much admired in those days—and
her self-will had worsted all opposition. He
was no more than the son of the perfectly respectable
and very well-to-do solicitor, who was universally
respected in Redborough, and though Algernon had
been in town and sown his wild oats, he had never
entirely got out of his mind the instinctive conviction
that Redborough was the centre of the world;
and to feel himself within the charmed circle in
which Catherine Vernon moved was a promotion
which was intoxicating to the young man. Not
even his devotion to his pretty wife, which was
great, could bring him to disown that allegiance
to Catherine Vernon which every Redborough man
was born with. It was a sort of still more intoxicating
proof of the dignity he had come to, that the
pretty wife herself turned up her little nose at
Catherine. That Mrs. Algernon should be so
familiar with the highest excellence known to
them, as to venture to do this, was to the whole
family of the Merridews an admiration—just as a
family entirely loyal might be flattered by having
a princess among them who should permit herself to
laugh at the majesty of the king; but this did not
shake their own fidelity. And Algernon, though he
ventured with bated breath to say "Aunt Catherine"
when he spoke of her in his own family, had not
got over his veneration for Miss Vernon. He had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
taken her in to dinner on the occasion of the great
banquet, which Ellen described so lightly, with a
sensation bordering upon the hysterical. Rapture,
and pride, and panic were in it. He did not know,
according to the vulgar description, whether he were
on his head or his heels, and his voice made a
buzzing in his own ears as he talked. The second
time was to be in the intimacy of the domestic
circle—if it had been to meet a crossing-sweeper it
would still have been a bewildering gratification;
but all the more, his wife's criticism and her indifference,
and even discontent with the notice which
to him seemed so overpowering an honour, pleased
the young man. She felt herself every bit as good
as Catherine, and yet she was his—Mrs. Algernon
Merridew! The thought was one adapted to make
his head swim with pride and delight.</p>
<p>It was entirely a family party, as Catherine had
said, and a very small one. The Miss Vernon-Ridgways
had been invited, to make the number even,
and their preparations for the unusual honour had
taken up four days at least. When they sailed into
the drawing-room at the Grange, having spent ten
minutes in shaking out the flounces and arranging
the flowers and ribbons with which they were ornamented,
it would be impossible to attempt to describe
the disgust of the bride. She turned her eyes upon
her husband, who for his part was in a state of
beatitude not to be disturbed by trifles, with a look
of indignant rage which he did not understand. "To
think she should ask those old things to meet <i>us!</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
I declare I have a great mind to go right away," she
whispered to Harry, who was more sympathetic.
Harry allowed that it was almost beyond bearing.
"But I wouldn't make a quarrel if I were you," he
said. In the meantime the sisters went up beaming
to their dear Catherine, whom they kissed with
devotion. How well she was looking! how becoming
her dress was! but that lovely lace would be becoming
to any one! they cried. Catherine received all
these compliments with a smile, and she took great
pleasure in Ellen's disgust, and the way in which she
turned her ear instead of her cheek to the salutations
of the cousins, who were rapturous in their admiration
of her in all her bridal finery. The entry of the
stranger, who was unknown to any of them, made a
diversion. Roland Ashton, when he was visible in
the full light of Miss Vernon's drawing-room, turned
out, in appearance at least, a very valuable addition
to the society. Ellen, who was critical, and inclined
by nature to a poor opinion of old Captain Morgan's
grandson, looked at him with astonished, and indeed
reluctant, approval. His whiskers were not so thick
or so black as Algernon's; but he had a fine mass of
dark hair, wavy, and rather longer than is now permitted
by fashion, fine features and dark eyes, with
a paleness which was considered very interesting in
those days. He was much taller and of more imposing
aspect than Edward, whose stature was not
great; he was far more intellectual than Harry;
altogether of the four young men present, his was
no doubt the most noticeable figure. They all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
appraised him mentally as he came in—Catherine
first of all, with a sensation of pride that the one
individual who was her relation, without being the
relation of her family, was a creditable novelty to introduce
among them; the others, with various degrees
of quickened curiosity and grudging. The grudge was
intensified in the persons of the sisters, who could
not endure this interloper. They had felt it their
duty to draw the line at the Morgans long ago, and
it was all they could do to behave with propriety at
Catherine's table when they were seated beside the
descendant of the old people on whom Catherine
spent her money in what they felt to be an entirely
unjustifiable way. They were the only persons present
who kept up their grudge to the end. In
Ellen's case it disappeared with the clear perception
of his good looks. But when Mr. Ashton offered his
arm to Miss Matilda Vernon-Ridgway, the look with
which she received the offered courtesy was enough
to freeze any adventurous young man into stone.
It did not, however. It made him all but laugh as
he glanced at Catherine, who for her part contemplated
her cousins with much gratification. Miss
Matilda placed the end of her finger upon the young
man's arm. She kept at as great a distance as
possible as she crossed the hall by his side. To the
little speech about the weather, which he thought
it his duty to make her, she returned a sort of
inarticulate reply—a monosyllable, but conveying no
meaning. When she was seated at table she flung
herself, so to speak, upon her neighbour at the other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span>
side, who, as it happened, was Harry Vernon, and
who was not prepared for the honour. All this was
to Catherine as good as a play.</p>
<p>"What a climate, and what a poky old place this
Redborough is," said Ellen, preparing to lead the
conversation, as she finished her soup. She spoke
apparently to Edward, but in reality to the company,
which was not too large for general conversation.
"It is dreadful to come back here in the beginning
of winter from Abroad. I declare I quite envy you,
you people who have never been Abroad; you don't
know the difference. Bright sunshine all day long,
and bands playing, and the best of music, and all
your friends to talk to, sitting out under the trees.
Compare that with Redborough, where, beyond a
few tiresome little dinner parties, and perhaps three
dances at Christmas——"</p>
<p>"The White House used to be a great addition to
the cheerfulness of the place," said Edward. "Harry
will have no heart to keep it up by himself now you
have left him."</p>
<p>"Oh, Harry shall marry," said Ellen, "I have
made up my mind to that; and as soon as we have
got quite settled, I mean to set things a-going. I
mean to have a Thursday, Aunt Catherine. We
shall be glad if you'll come. It is to be a <i>Thé
Dansante</i>, which is quite a novelty here. You learn
so much better about all these things Abroad."</p>
<p>"Where is Abroad?" said Roland, in an undertone
which was so confidential and intimate, that
had he been anybody else, Miss Matilda must have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span>
yielded to its seduction. As it was, she only gave
him a look of surprise at his ignorance, and cleared
her throat and shook her bracelets in order to be
able to strike in.</p>
<p>"A <i>Thé Dansante</i> is exactly the kind of entertainment
that suits me," Catherine said.</p>
<p>"Yes, won't it be nice?" said Ellen, unconscious.
"I learnt all the figures of the <i>cotillion</i>, which is the
most amusing thing to end up with, and I made Algy
learn it. As soon as ever our house is ready we shall
start. It will be a new feature in society. As for
Harry, till he's married he'll have to be content with
bachelor's dinners, for I can't always be leaving Algy
to look after him."</p>
<p>Here Harry murmured something, stammering,
and with a blush, to the intent that the bachelor's
dinners would last a long time.</p>
<p>"We don't see you so often at our place as we used
to do, Mr. Harry," said Miss Matilda, sweetly. "It
used to be quite a pleasure to watch for you; and
the summer evenings were so tempting, weren't they?
Oh, fie! it is very naughty to love and to ride away.
We always said that was what was likely to happen,
didn't we?" she said to her sister, on the other side
of the table.</p>
<p>Miss Martha nodded and smiled in return, and
cried—</p>
<p>"Oh, always," in a shriller tone.</p>
<p>"What's that you thought likely to happen?
Then it didn't happen if it was Harry," cried Ellen,
instinctively, ranging herself on her brother's side.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But about this <i>cotillion</i>?" said Edward. "What
is it? I thought it had something to say to a lady's
dress. I am sure it had in the eighteenth century.
We shall have to go to school to learn what your
novelty means."</p>
<p>"She put me to school, I can tell you," cried
Algernon, from the other end of the table. "I had
to work! She is the most dreadful little tyrant,
though she looks so soft."</p>
<p>"Dancing is neglected shamefully nowadays," said
Miss Matilda; "shamefully! We were taught very
differently. Don't you remember, dear, Mousheer
D'Egmont and his little violin, Martha? we were
taught the minuet first on account of our
curtseys——"</p>
<p>"Oh, the funny, old-fashioned thing! You <i>never</i>
curtsey nowadays; even in the Lancers it is only a
bob," said Ellen, "or a bend mostly with your head.
You never see such a thing nowadays."</p>
<p>"My dear! In the presence of your sovereign,"
said Miss Matilda, with dignity, "it <i>always</i> continues
necessary. There is no change in that respect so far
as I am aware, Martha, is there? You were in the
habit of attending Drawing-rooms longer than I."</p>
<p>"Oh, never any change in that!" cried Miss
Martha, rising upon herself, so to speak, and erecting
her head as she looked from one end of the table
to another. It was not often that they had such a
triumph. They had been Presented. They had
made their curtseys to their Sovereign, as Miss
Matilda said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Silence fell upon the table, only broken by the
jingle of Ellen's bracelets, which she pushed up her
arm in her mortification; and there were so many of
them that they made a considerable noise. Even
she was cowed for the moment; and what was worse
was, that her husband being simple-minded, and
getting a little familiar with Catherine, now turned
his looks of awe and veneration upon the Miss
Vernon-Ridgways, who were so well acquainted with
the court and its ways.</p>
<p>And Catherine laughed.</p>
<p>"We are all behind in that respect," she said. "I
am fond of pomp and ceremonial for my part. It
is a pretty thing, but I like it best at a distance.
It is my fault, I have no doubt, that your wife
is ignorant of Drawing-rooms, Mr. Merridew."</p>
<p>"I always said so, Aunt Catherine," cried Ellen,
who was ready to cry, in the midst of her triumph.
"It is horrid for girls to have relations with those
out-of-the-way notions."</p>
<p>Catherine only laughed; it was her habitual
comment. She turned smiling to young Ashton by
her side.</p>
<p>"You ought not to dislike state," he said, in an
undertone; "you who are a kind of queen yourself—or,
shall I say, grand duchess—in your own town?"</p>
<p>"A queen without any subjects," said Catherine,
shaking her head. This time she did not laugh,
and there was even a little glimmer of sadness in
her eyes.</p>
<p>"Not so. I am a stranger, you know. When I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</SPAN></span>
go about the town, I hear of nothing but Catherine
Vernon. They call you so, do you know—<i>tout court</i>,
without miss or madam—that has a great effect upon
one's imagination."</p>
<p>Young Merridew had thrust forward his head, and
was listening, which perhaps was not very good
manners.</p>
<p>"It is quite true," he said eagerly. "Ellen says I
am a very Redborough person. I have been born
and bred here. I can't remember the time when
I didn't look up to—her, as if she was something
above the human——"</p>
<p>"And yet you have married a Vernon!" said
Catherine; but she was pleased. "It is not an uncommon
thing in this world," she said. "People at
a distance think more kindly of one than those who
are near; but this is not talk for a dinner-table.
Not to interfere with Ellen's <i>cotillion</i>" she said, in a
louder tone, "I am thinking of a party for Christmas,
young people. As it is for you, you must lay your
heads together, and decide what it is to be."</p>
<p>Then there arose a flutter of talk, chiefly maintained
by the ladies, but in which young Merridew
was appealed to by his wife; and Harry, stimulated
by the same hand, and Edward, mindful of his duties,
took part.</p>
<p>Catherine and her young relative were left, as it
were, alone, amid the babble of tongues.</p>
<p>"I cannot allow myself to look at it gravely," she
said. "I laugh; it is the best way. They all take
what they can get, but their opinions, if they were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</SPAN></span>
individually weighed, of Catherine Vernon, would
surprise you. They don't think much of me. I dare
say I quite deserve it," she said, after a pause, with
another laugh. "Don't you think that in most cases
enthusiasm is confined to those people who personally
know the least of the object of it? That's an
awkward sentence, but never mind."</p>
<p>"Isn't it the same thing as to say that a great man
is never a hero to his valet, or that a prophet has no
honour in his own country?"</p>
<p>"Not the last, at least," said Catherine; "for being
no prophet, you yourself say I have got some honour
in my country. As for the valet, I don't know," she
continued, "but a maid, though she appraises you at
your true value, and is convinced you are a fool in
many things, still is not without a prejudice in your
favour. She would like, though she maintains her
erect position, to see the rest of the world bow down
before you. That is amusing too."</p>
<p>"You are a philosopher," said the stranger, looking
at her with a tender regard in his eyes, which
made a great impression generally upon younger
women, and moved even Catherine as with a sense
of kindness—of kindness disproportioned to their
actual knowledge of each other, which is a thing
which conciliates everybody, looking as if it implied
a particular attraction.</p>
<p>"Your grandfather thinks me a cynic," she said.
She liked these few words of quiet talk in the midst
of the mingled voices of the others, and was grateful
to the young man who looked so sympathetic. "I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</SPAN></span>
don't know that I am a cynic, but rather than cry, I
prefer to laugh. Is that cynicism?" He gave her
a look which would have no doubt had a great effect
upon the heart of a younger woman, and which
pleased Catherine, old as she was.</p>
<p>"I think it is true philosophy; but some of us
have feelings that will not be laughed at," said
Roland. He was accustomed to make great use of
his fine eyes, and on this occasion he did so with
the greatest effect. There could not have been
more tender sympathy than was in them. Could
he be really so much impressed by her character and
position, and the failure of true gratitude and kindness?
Catherine Vernon would probably have
laughed at any one else of her own age who had
been so easily persuaded; but it is always so much
more easy to believe in the sincerity of affection
which is called forth by one's self! Her eyes softened
as she looked at him.</p>
<p>"I think you and I, Roland, are going to be great
friends," she said, and then turned with a slight
little sigh, so small as to be almost imperceptible,
to the louder voices appealing to her. "You must
settle it among you," she said. "I give Edward
<i>carte blanche</i>. The only thing is that it must take in
everybody, all the Vernonry and our neighbours as
well—a real Christmas party."</p>
<p>"Oh, don't you think, Aunt Catherine, Christmas
is such a bore!" said Ellen, "and family parties! Let
us have strangers. Let us have people we never set
eyes on before. Christmas is so vulgar! Look at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span>
all the newspapers with their little stories; the
snow on the ground and the wanderer coming home,
and so forth. I am so glad we haven't got a
wanderer to come home."</p>
<p>"Christmas brings a great many duties I am
sure," said Miss Matilda. "Have you seen the
charity flannel at Roby's, Catherine? It is so good,
almost good enough to wear one's self; and the
blankets really look like blankets, not horse-cloths.
Do you think that is good or bad? What you give
in charity ought to be different, don't you think?
not to let them suppose they have a right—"</p>
<p>"You forget," said her sister, eager to get in a
word, "that dear Catherine always gives the best."</p>
<p>"Ah! it is well to be Catherine," said Miss
Matilda, "but many people think there should be a
difference. What do you think, Mr. Harry? Catherine
may consider poor people's feelings; but there
are some who think it is wrong to do so—for who is
like Catherine? She is always giving. She is
always so considerate. Whatever she does is sure
to be the best way."</p>
<p>"I am certain," said Algernon Merridew beaming
with honest loyalty from where he sat by Miss
Vernon's side, "that all Redborough is of that
opinion; and Redborough ought to know."</p>
<p>"You mean all but the people to whom I give,"
said Catherine, "there are not so many of them:
but they are the best judges of all, and I don't think
they approve."</p>
<p>"There's nobody so unreasonable as the poor,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span>
said Ellen, "they are never satisfied. You should
just see them turning over the pieces from my
kitchen. Of course all the pieces are quite nice;
everything is, I hope, where I am housekeeper. Oh,
I know I am extravagant, I like the best of everything;
but nothing satisfies the poor. Cold potatoes
now with mayonnaise sauce are what I adore, but
<i>they</i> throw them away."</p>
<p>"Perhaps they don't have the mayonnaise sauce?"
suggested Edward.</p>
<p>"Oh, goodness! I hope not; that would be
simply immoral," cried Miss Matilda. "But, Mr.
Harry, you don't give your opinion, none of the
gentlemen give their opinion. Perhaps that is
because money is what they give, and one shilling
is just like another. You can't have charity shillings.
Oh, but I approve of charity flannel; and
some people always like to make a difference in
what they give to the poor. Poor ladies and gentlemen
soon find that out, I assure you. People give
you useful presents. If they want to invite you,
they invite you when there's nobody there. They
think a family dinner or high tea quite treat
enough for you. And quite right, don't you think,
when one is in the position of a dependent? It
keeps people in their proper places. Dear Catherine
buys the best flannel, better than I can afford,
for her Christmas gifts. She is never like other
people, always more liberal; but I should buy the
whitey-brown, that is, if I could afford any at all
you know."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Don't attack me, Matilda," said Catherine, with
a laugh, "all along the line."</p>
<p>"Oh, attack! <i>you</i>, dear Catherine? not for the
world. We all know what a friend you are. What
should we do without you? Whether we are in
Paris fashions or our old silks, don't we owe it all
to you?"</p>
<p>There was a little pause round the table which
was somewhat awkward; for what could anybody
say? The clever ones were all non-plussed, but
Harry, who was the stolid one, suddenly became
audible with his round rolling bass voice. "Whoever
says that, and whether it was well meant or not, I
say the same. It's all quite true. We owe everything
to Aunt Catherine. I am always ready to say
so, wherever I go."</p>
<p>"Have we come to Christmas toasts already?"
said Edward intervening. "We had better not start
that sort of thing before the time. We all know
what we owe to Aunt Catherine."</p>
<p>"Hush, hush," she cried, waving her hand to him
as she rose. "Now we shall release your noble
intellects from the necessity of coming down to our
level," Catherine said as she followed carefully Miss
Matilda's long train. It was very long, though it
was rather flimsy, and the progress of the ladies was
impeded by it. Ellen swept out lightly in advance
with a perfect command of hers. It was the first
time she had preceded the old cousins in her dignity
as a married woman, and the ring of her bracelets
sounded like a little trumpet-note. As she followed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span>
them out Catherine Vernon returned to her habitual
mood of amused indulgence. She had been almost
sentimental for a moment, she said to herself, beguiled
by that boy's sympathetic eyes, which no doubt
he must make great use of among the young ones.
She laughed at herself not unpleasantly, to think of
the confidences she had almost been beguiled into.
But it pleased her to think that it was her mother's
blood which had exercised this influence upon her.
After all, it might be the Vernons only who were
sordid and ungrateful. The old captain and his wife
had always been exceptions to her sweeping judgment
of human nature. And now it was their
descendant who had touched her heart. Perhaps it
was only the Vernonry after all. But she was fully
restored to her usual kind of amusement as she
watched the progress of her three companions into
a temporary but eager intimacy on the score of
Ellen's Paris fashions which they were eager to examine.
The bride was as eager to exhibit as they
were to see, and was so well pleased with herself
as to be impervious to the little covert blows which
Miss Matilda gave under the shield of her flatteries.
Catherine Vernon established herself in her own
chair, and gathered her costly silken skirts about
her, and took up the newspaper, which people in the
country have to read in the evening instead of the
morning; but she did not read much. She was
diverted by the talk. "Crinoline is certainly going
out," said Ellen. "I heard it from the very best
shops. Look at mine, it is quite small, hardly to be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span>
called crinoline at all. This is the very newest, from
the Grangd Magaseens du Louvre. You see yours
are twice as big," Ellen added, making a little
pirouette to exhibit the diminished proportions of
her hoops. The Miss Vernon-Ridgways looked down
upon their own skirts with unquiet eyes.</p>
<p>"The French are always so exaggerated," said
Miss Matilda. "Ignorant persons have such strange
ideas. They think really nice people in England
take their fashions straight out of Paris, but that is
quite a mistake. It has always to be modified by
English good taste——"</p>
<p>Ellen interrupted with a little shriek. "Oh, good
taste! You should just hear how they speak of that
Abroad. Sometimes I could have cried. They say
no woman knows how to dress herself in England.
And when I come back and see the dreadful things
that are worn here—— This is pretty," Ellen continued,
drawing attention to a portion of her dress.
"The Empress wore one just the same at a ball."</p>
<p>"Dear Ellen," said Miss Matilda, "and you wear
it at a little family party! that shows the difference.
I am sure it was done just to please us, to let us see
what the new fashions are, in your unselfish way,
dear!"</p>
<p>And Catherine laughed behind the newspaper.
The honours of the occasion were to the old sisters
after all.</p>
<p>In the meantime conversation of much more
serious import, though scarcely more elevated, was
going on round the table in the dining-room, where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span>
young Ashton had got the lead, though none of the
others looked upon him with over-favourable eyes.
There was no doubt that he was a very handsome
fellow, and both Harry and Edward had that instinctive
sense that he was a competitor likely to
put them on their mettle, which is supposed to
influence the bosoms of women alone. They thought
(instinctively, and each in their different ways,) that
he must be a coxcomb. They divined that he was
the sort of fellow whom women admired, and scorned
him for it—as women perhaps now and then indulge
in a little sneer at a gentleman's beauty. But by
and by he touched a chord which vibrated more or
less in all their bosoms. He began to talk of the
city, for which country men of business have a
natural reverence. He revealed to them that he
himself was on the Stock Exchange, and incidentally
let fall an anecdote here and there, of the marvellous
incidents, the fairy tales of commerce, that were
taking place in those magic regions every day: of
men who woke in the morning with the most
moderate means at their command, and before night
were millionaires. They gathered close about him
as he added anecdote to anecdote. Edward Vernon
was like tinder, prepared for the fire; for all his
thoughts for some time past had been directed in
that way. And young Merridew was launching forth
upon life, rather more lavishly than was consistent
with his income and prospects. Harry was the least
interested of the three, but even to him the idea of
making a fortune in a few hours and being able to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
retire to the country to give himself up to dogs and
horses, instead of going down to the bank every
morning, was a beatific suggestion. The present
writer does not pretend to be able to inform the
reader exactly how it was, or in favour of which
schemes, that the poet of the Stock Exchange
managed to influence these rustic imaginations, but
he did so. He filled their minds with an impatience
of their own slow business and its mild percentages,
even when he seemed to praise it.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it does feel slow work; I can't say.
I think it is a vast deal more wholesome. It is
very hard to keep your head steady, you know, when
you feel that the chances of an hour or two may
make you the richest man in England."</p>
<p>"Or the poorest perhaps?" said Edward, more
with the idea of subduing himself than checking this
flow of instruction.</p>
<p>"Ye-es," said Ashton, indifferently, "no doubt
that's on the cards: but it ought not to be if your
broker has a head on his shoulders. About the
worst that can happen, if you take proper precautions,
is that you're no worse than you were to
start with, and better luck next time. I don't
approve the 'gain or lose it all' system. But what
will Miss Vernon say if we stay here talking shop
all the evening?" he added.</p>
<p>There was never a more clever conclusion; it was
like the exciting close of an act in the theatre, for
he could not be persuaded to begin again. When
they went reluctantly into the drawing-room, Ellen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>
thought her Algernon had taken too much wine;
and even Edward, who never offended the proprieties
in any way, had a curious light in his eyes, and did
not hear when he was spoken to. But Catherine
Vernon, for her part, did not notice anything except
the filial kindness of young Roland, and the
sympathy and understanding which shone in his
eyes.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span></p>
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