Prince Fortunatus eBook

William Black
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 661 pages of information about Prince Fortunatus.

Prince Fortunatus eBook

William Black
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 661 pages of information about Prince Fortunatus.

“Certainly not!” he said, with unnecessary warmth.  “I mean here.  If I could run down of a Sunday to a beautiful, quiet, old-fashioned place like this, and find myself in my own home, among my own people, I wonder how many Sundays would find me in London?  You can’t imagine, you have no idea, what it is to live quite alone in London, with no one to turn to but club acquaintances; and I think Sunday is the worst day of all, especially if it is fine weather, and all the people have gone to the country or the seaside to spend the day with their friends.”

“But, Mr. Mangan,” said Miss Francie Wright, gently, “I am sure, whenever you have a Sunday free like that, we should be only too glad if you would consider us your friends—­unless you think the place too dreadfully tedious, as I’m afraid my cousin finds it.”

“It is very kind of you—­very,” said he.  “And I know the old doctor and Mrs. Moore like to see me well enough, for I bring down their boy to them; but if I came by myself, I’m afraid they wouldn’t care to have an idling, dawdling fellow like me lounging about the place of a Sunday afternoon.”

“Will you come and try, Mr. Mangan?” said she, quietly.  “For Linn’s sake alone I know they would be delighted to have you here.  And if it is rest and quiet you want, can’t we give you the garden and a book?”

“You mustn’t put such visions before me,” he said.  “It’s too good to be true.  I should be sighing for Paradise all through the week and forgetting my work.  And shouldn’t I hate to wake up on Monday morning and find myself in London!”

“You might wake up on Monday morning, and find yourself in Winstead,” said she, “if you would take Linn’s room for the night.”

“Ah, no,” he said, “it isn’t for the like of me to try to take Linn’s place in any way whatever.  He has always had everything—­everything seemed to come to him by natural right; and then he has always been such a capital fellow, so modest and unaffected and generous, that nobody could ever grudge him his good-fortune.  Prince Fortunatus he always has been.”

“In what way, Mr. Mangan?” his companion asked, rather wonderingly.

“In every way.  People are fond of him; he wins affection without trying for it; as I say, it all comes to him as if by natural right.”

“Yes, they say he is very popular in London, among those fine folk,” observed Miss Francie, quite good-naturedly.

“Oh, I wasn’t thinking of his fashionable friends,” Mangan rejoined.  “Being made much of by those people doesn’t seem to me one of the great gifts of fortune.  And yet I wonder it hasn’t spoiled him.  He doesn’t seem the least bit spoiled, does he?”

“Really, I see so little of him,” Miss Francie said, with a smile, “he honors us with so few visits, that I can hardly tell.”

“No, he is not spoiled—­you may take my word for it,” her companion said, with decision.  And then he added, “I suppose he gets too much of that petting; he is kept in such a turmoil of gayety that its evil effects have no time to sink into him.  He is too busy—­as he said this morning about marrying.”

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Project Gutenberg
Prince Fortunatus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.