The Bramleighs of Bishop's Folly Part 3
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"Oh, poor George!" cried Nelly; and her cheek flushed, while she tried to seem indifferent. "n.o.body ever called him a genius. When one says he is very good-looking and very good-humored, _tout est dit!_"
"He is very much out of place as a parson."
"Granted. I suspect he thinks so himself."
"Men usually feel that they cannot take orders without some stronger impulse than a mere desire to gain a livelihood."
"I have never talked to him on the matter; but perhaps he had no great choice of a career."
"He might have gone into the army, I suppose? He'd have found scores of creatures there with about his own measure of intelligence."
"I fancied you liked George, Marion," said the other. And there was something half tender, half reproachful, in her tone.
"I liked him so far, that it was a boon to find anything so like a gentleman in this wild savagery; but if you mean that I would have endured him in town, or would have noticed him in society, you are strangely mistaken."
"Poor George!" and there was something comic in her glance as she sighed these words out.
"There; you have won," said Marion, throwing down her mallet. "I must go and hear what Temple is going to do. It would be a great blessing to see a man of the world and a man of mark in this dreary spot, and I hope papa will not lose the present opportunity to secure him."
"Are you alone, Nelly?" said her eldest brother, some time after, as he came up, and found her sitting, lost in thought, under a tree.
"Yes. Marion got tired and went in, and Temple went to ask papa about inviting some high and mighty personage who chances to be in our neighborhood."
"Who is he?"
"Lord Culduff, he called him."
"Oh! a tremendous swell; an amba.s.sador somewhere. What brings him down here?"
"I forget. Yes! it was something about a mine; he has found tin, or copper, or coal, I don't remember which, on some property of his here.
By the way, Augustus, do you really think George L'Estrange a fool?"
"Think him a fool?"
"I mean," said she, blus.h.i.+ng deeply, "Marion holds his intelligence so cheaply that she is quite shocked at his presuming to be in orders."
"Well, I don't think him exactly what Temple calls an _esprit fort_, but he is a very nice fellow, very companionable, and a thorough gentleman in all respects."
"How well you have said it, dear Augustus," said she, with a face beaming with delight. "Where are you off to? Where are you going?"
"I am going to see the yearlings, in the paddock below the river."
"May I go with you, Gussy?" said she, drawing her arm within his. "I do like a brisk walk with you; and you always go like one with a purpose."
CHAPTER V. CONFIDENTIAL TALK.
Temple found his father in his study, deeply engaged with a ma.s.s of papers and letters, and by the worn and fatigued expression of his face showing that he had pa.s.sed a day of hard work.
"I hope I do not disturb you," said Temple, as he leaned on the table at which the other was seated.
"Throw that cigar away, and I'll tell you," said the old man, with a faint smile. "I never can conquer my aversion to tobacco. What do you want to say? Is it anything we cannot talk over at dinner, or after dinner?--for this post leaves at such an inconvenient hour, it gives me scant time to write."
"I beg a thousand pardons, sir; but I have just heard that a very distinguished member of our corps--I mean the diplomatic corps--is down in this neighborhood, and I want your permission to ask him over here."
"Who is he?"
"Lord Culduff."
"What! that old scamp who ran away with Lady Clifford? I thought he could n't come to England?"
"Why, sir, he is one of the first men we have. It was he that negotiated the Erzeroum treaty, and I heard Sir Stamford Bolter say he was the only man in England who understood the Sound dues."
"He ran off with another man's wife, and I don't like that."
"Well, sir, as he didn't marry her afterwards, it was clear it was only a pa.s.sing indiscretion."
"Oh, indeed! that view of it never occurred to me. I suppose, then, it is in this light the corps regards it?"
"I trust so, sir. Where there is no complication there is no loss of character; and as Lord Culduff is received everywhere, and courted in the very best circles, I think it would be somewhat strange if we were to set up to teach the world how it ought to treat him."
"I have no such pretension. I simply claim the right to choose the people I invite to my house."
"He may be my chief to-morrow or next day," said Temple.
"So much the worse for you."
"Certainly not, sir, if we seize the opportunity to show him some attentions. He is a most high-bred gentleman, and from his abilities, his rank, and his connections, sure to be at the head of the line; and I confess I 'd be very much ashamed if he were to hear, as he is sure to hear, that I was in his vicinity without my ever having gone to wait on him."
"Go by all means, then. Wait upon him at once, Temple; but I tell you frankly, I don't fancy presenting such a man to your sisters."
"Why, sir, there is not a more un.o.bjectionable man in all England; his manners are the very type of respectful deference towards ladies. He belongs to that old school which professes to be shocked with modern levity, while his whole conversation is a sort of quiet homage."
"Well, well; how long would he stay,--a week?"
"A couple of days, perhaps, if he came at all. Indeed, I greatly doubt that he would come. They say he is here about some coal-mine they have discovered on his property."
"What! has he found coal?" cried the old man, eagerly.
"So it is said, sir; or, at least, he hopes so."
"It's only lignite. I 'm certain it's only lignite. I have been deceived myself twice or thrice, and I don't believe coal--real coal--exists in this part of Ireland."
"Of that I can tell you nothing; he, however, will only be too glad to talk the matter over with you."
"Yes; it is an interesting topic,--very interesting. Snell says that the great carboniferous strata are all in Ireland, but that they lie deep, and demand vast capital to work them. He predicts a great manufacturing prosperity to the country when Manchester and Birmingham will have sunk into ruins. He opines that this lignite is a mere indication of the immense vein of true carbon beneath. But what should this old debauchee know of a great industrial theme! His whole anxiety will be to turn it to some immediate profit. He 'll be looking for a loan, you 'll see. Mark my words, Temple, he 'll want an advance on his colliery." And he gave one of those rich chuckling laughs which are as peculiar to the moneyed cla.s.ses as ever a simpering smile was to enamelled beauty.
The Bramleighs of Bishop's Folly Part 3
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The Bramleighs of Bishop's Folly Part 3 summary
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