Lady Connie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Lady Connie.

Lady Connie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Lady Connie.

“DEAREST NORA,—­I have only been at Scarfedale Manor a week, and already I seem to have been living here for months.  It is a dear old house, very like the houses one used to draw when one was four years old—­a doorway in the middle, with a nice semicircular top, and three windows on either side; two stories above with seven windows each, and a pretty dormered roof, with twisted brick chimneys, and a rookery behind it; also a walled garden, and a green oval grass-plot between it and the road.  It seems to me that everywhere you go in England you find these houses, and, I dare say, people like my aunts living in them.

“They are very nice to me, and as different as possible from each other.  Aunt Marcia must have been quite good-looking, and since she gave up wearing a rational dress which she patented twenty-five years ago, she has always worn either black silk or black satin, a large black satin hat, rather like the old ‘pokes,’ with black feathers in winter and white feathers in summer, and a variety of lace scarves—­real lace—­which she seems to have collected all over the world.  Aunt Winifred says that the Unipantaloonicoat’—­the name of the patented thing—­lost Aunt Marcia all her lovers.  They were scared by so much strength of character, and could not make up their minds to tackle her.  She gave it up in order to capture the last of them—­a dear old general who had adored her—­but he shook his head, went off to Malta to think it out, and there died of Malta fever.  She considers herself his widow and his portrait adorns her sitting-room.  She has a poor opinion of the lower orders, especially of domestic servants.  But her own servants don’t seem to mind her much.  The butler has been here twenty years, and does just what he pleases.  The amusing thing is that she considers herself extremely intellectual, because she learnt Latin in her youth—­she doesn’t remember a word of it now!—­because she always read the reviews of papa’s books—­and because she reads poetry every morning before breakfast.  Just now she is wrestling with George Meredith; and she asks me to explain ‘Modern Love’ to her.  I can’t make head or tail of it.  Nor can she.  But when people come to tea she begins to talk about Meredith, and asks them if they don’t think him very obscure.  And as most people here who come to tea have never heard of him, it keeps up her dignity.  All the same, she is a dear old thing—­and she put a large case of chocolate in my room before I arrived!

“Aunt Winifred is quite different.  Aunt Marcia calls her a ‘reactionary,’ because she is very high church and great friends with all the clergy.  She is a very quiet little thing, short and fair, with a long thin nose and eyes that look you through.  Her two great passions are—­curates, especially consumptive curates—­and animals.  There is generally a consumptive curate living the open-air life in the garden.  Mercifully the last patient has just left.  As for animals, the house

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Project Gutenberg
Lady Connie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.