learned from him that it had been long a wish which
your delicacy prevented your naming to me, that I,
to whom the fee-simple descends, should join with
you in cutting off the entail and resettling the estate.
He showed me what an advantage this would be to the
property, because it would leave your hands free for
many improvements in which I heartily go with the progress
of the age, for which, as merely tenant for life,
you could not raise the money except upon ruinous
terms; new cottages for labourers, new buildings for
tenants, the consolidation of some old mortgages and
charges on the rent-roll, etc. And allow
me to add that I should like to make a large increase
to the jointure of my dear mother. Vining says,
too, that there is a part of the outlying land which,
as being near a town, could be sold to considerable
profit if the estate were resettled.
Let us hasten to complete the necessary deeds, and
so obtain the L20,000 required for the realization
of your noble and, let me add, your just desire to
do something for Chillingly Gordon. In the new
deeds of settlement we could insure the power of willing
the estate as we pleased, and I am strongly against
devising it to Chillingly Gordon. It may be
a crotchet of mine, but one which I think you share,
that the owner of English soil should have a son’s
love for the native land, and Gordon will never have
that. I think, too, that it will be best for
his own career, and for the establishment of a frank
understanding between us and himself, that he should
be fairly told that he would not be benefited in the
event of our death. Twenty thousand pounds given
to him now would be a greater boon to him than ten
times the sum twenty years later. With that at
his command, he can enter Parliament, and have an
income, added to what he now possesses, if modest,
still sufficient to make him independent of a minister’s
patronage.
Pray humour me, my dearest father, in the proposition
I venture to submit to you.
Your affectionate son,
KENELM.
FROM SIR PETER CHILLINGLY TO KENELM CHILLINGLY.
MY DEAR BOY,—You are not worthy to be a
Chillingly; you are decidedly warm-blooded: never
was a load lifted off a man’s mind with a gentler
hand. Yes, I have wished to cut off the entail
and resettle the property; but, as it was eminently
to my advantage to do so, I shrank from asking it,
though eventually it would be almost as much to your
own advantage. What with the purchase I made
of the Faircleuch lands—which I could only
effect by money borrowed at high interest on my personal
security, and paid off by yearly instalments, eating
largely into income—and the old mortgages,
etc., I own I have been pinched of late years.
But what rejoices me the most is the power to make
homes for our honest labourers more comfortable, and
nearer to their work, which last is the chief point,
for the old cottages in themselves are not bad; the
misfortune is, when you build an extra room for the
children, the silly people let it out to a lodger.
Copyrights
Kenelm Chillingly — Volume 04 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.