Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

The door was open, and the company of jolly yeomen, tradesmen, farmers, and the like, had become intent on observing all the ceremonies of precedence:  not one would broaden his back on the other; and there was bowing, and scraping, and grimacing, till Farmer Broadmead was hailed aloud, and the old boy stepped forth, and was summarily pushed through:  the chairman calling from the rear, ‘Hulloa! no names to-night!’ to which was answered lustily:  ‘All right, Mr. Tom!’ and the speaker was reproved with, ‘There you go! at it again!’ and out and up they hustled.

The chairman said quietly to Evan, as they were ascending the stairs:  ’We don’t have names to-night; may as well drop titles.’  Which presented no peculiar meaning to Evan’s mind, and he smiled the usual smile.

To Raikes, at the door of the supper-room, the chairman repeated the same; and with extreme affability and alacrity of abnegation, the other rejoined, ‘Oh, certainly!’

No wonder that he rubbed his hands with more delight than aristocrats and people with gentlemanly connections are in the habit of betraying at the prospect of refection, for the release from bread and cheese was rendered overpoweringly glorious, in his eyes, by the bountiful contrast exhibited on the board before him.

CHAPTER XII

IN WHICH ALE IS SHOWN TO HAVE ONE QUALITY OF WINE

To proclaim that yon ribs of beef and yonder ruddy Britons have met, is to furnish matter for an hour’s comfortable meditation.

Digest the fact.  Here the Fates have put their seal to something Nature clearly devised.  It was intended; and it has come to pass.  A thing has come to pass which we feel to be right!  The machinery of the world, then, is not entirely dislocated:  there is harmony, on one point, among the mysterious powers who have to do with us.

Apart from its eloquent and consoling philosophy, the picture is pleasant.  You see two rows of shoulders resolutely set for action:  heads in divers degrees of proximity to their plates:  eyes variously twinkling, or hypocritically composed:  chaps in vigorous exercise.  Now leans a fellow right back with his whole face to the firmament:  Ale is his adoration.  He sighs not till he sees the end of the mug.  Now from one a laugh is sprung; but, as if too early tapped, he turns off the cock, and primes himself anew.  Occupied by their own requirements, these Britons allow that their neighbours have rights:  no cursing at waste of time is heard when plates have to be passed:  disagreeable, it is still duty.  Field-Marshal Duty, the Briton’s chief star, shines here.  If one usurps more than his allowance of elbow-room, bring your charge against them that fashioned him:  work away to arrive at some compass yourself.

Now the mustard ceases to travel, and the salt:  the guests have leisure to contemplate their achievements.  Laughs are more prolonged, and come from the depths.

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.