The King's Highway eBook

George Payne Rainsford James
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 646 pages of information about The King's Highway.

The King's Highway eBook

George Payne Rainsford James
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 646 pages of information about The King's Highway.

“But never in that sense, sir, never in that sense!” ex claimed the Duke, glad to catch at any word to cut short a detail which was telling somewhat strongly against him.  “A son, sir, I said, a son, not a son-in-law.  But, however, to end the whole matter at once, Mr. Wilton Brown, I am very willing to acknowledge the various services you have rendered me, and which you have recapitulated somewhat at length, and to acknowledge that there might be a great many motives for falling in love with my daughter, without my attributing to you any mercenary or ambitious motives.  It is not that I blame you at all for falling in love with her; that was but a folly for which you must suffer your own punishment:  but I do blame you very much, sir, for trying to make her fall in love with you, when you must have known perfectly well that her so doing would meet with the most decided disapprobation from her father, and that your marriage was altogether out of the question.  I think that this very grave error might well cancel all obligations between us; but, nevertheless, I am very willing to recompense those services—­” Wilton waved his hand indignantly—­“to recompense those services,” continued the Duke; “to testify my sense of them, in short, in any way that you will point out.”

“My lord, my lord,” replied Wilton, “you surely must wish to give me more pain than that which I feel already.  The services which I have rendered were freely rendered.  They have been repaid already, not by your grace, but by my own heart and feelings.  The only recompence I ever proposed to myself was to know that they were really serviceable and beneficial to those for whom they were done.  I ask nothing of your grace but that which you will not grant.  But the time will come, my lord,—­”

“Do not flatter yourself, to your own disappointment!” interrupted the Duke:  “the time will never come when I shall change in this respect.  I grant my daughter a veto, as I promised her dear mother I would, and she shall never marry a man she does not love; but I claim a veto, too, Mr. Wilton Brown, and will not see her cast herself away, even though she should wish it.  The matter, sir, is altogether at an end:  it is out of the question, impossible, and it shall never be.”

The Duke rose from his chair as he spoke; and then went on, in a cold tone:—­“I certainly expected that you might come to-morrow, sir, but not to-night, and I should have made in the morning such preparations as would have prevented any unpleasant meeting between my daughter and yourself in these circumstances.  I must now give orders for her to keep her room, as I cannot consent to your meeting, and of course must not treat you inhospitably; but you will understand that the circumstances prevent me from requesting you to protract your visit beyond an early hour to-morrow morning.”

“Your grace, I believe, mistakes my character a good deal,” replied Wilton:  “I remain not an hour in a house where I am not welcome, and I shall beg instantly to take my leave, as Somersbury must not be my abode to-night.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The King's Highway from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.