Stories in Light and Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 225 pages of information about Stories in Light and Shadow.

Stories in Light and Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 225 pages of information about Stories in Light and Shadow.

“You might put an advertisement in the papers, like the ’next of kin’ notice, intimating, in the regular way, that they would ’hear of something to their advantage’—­as they certainly would,” continued the consul, with a bow.  “It would be such a refreshing change to the kind of thing I’m accustomed to, don’t you know—­this idea of one of my countrywomen coming over just to benefit English relatives!  By Jove!  I wouldn’t mind undertaking the whole thing for you—­it’s such a novelty.”  He was quite carried away with the idea.

But the two ladies were far from participating in this joyous outlook.  “No,” said Mrs. Desborough promptly, “that wouldn’t do.  You see,” she went on with superb frankness, “that would be just giving ourselves away, and saying who we were before we found out what they were like.  Mr. Desborough was all right in his way, but we don’t know anything about his folks!  We ain’t here on a mission to improve the Desboroughs, nor to gather in any ‘lost tribes.’”

It was evident that, in spite of the humor of the situation and the levity of the ladies, there was a characteristic national practicalness about them, and the consul, with a sigh, at last gave the address of one or two responsible experts in genealogical inquiry, as he had often done before.  He felt it was impossible to offer any advice to ladies as thoroughly capable of managing their own affairs as his fair countrywomen, yet he was not without some curiosity to know the result of their practical sentimental quest.  That he should ever hear of them again he doubted.  He knew that after their first loneliness had worn off in their gregarious gathering at a London hotel they were not likely to consort with their own country people, who indeed were apt to fight shy of one another, and even to indulge in invidious criticism of one another when admitted in that society to which they were all equally strangers.  So he took leave of them on their way back to London with the belief that their acquaintance terminated with that brief incident.  But he was mistaken.

In the year following he was spending his autumn vacation at a country house.  It was an historic house, and had always struck him as being—­even in that country of historic seats—­a singular example of the vicissitudes of English manorial estates and the mutations of its lords.  His host in his prime had been recalled from foreign service to unexpectedly succeed to an uncle’s title and estate.  That estate, however, had come into the possession of the uncle only through his marriage with the daughter of an old family whose portraits still looked down from the walls upon the youngest and alien branch.  There were likenesses, effigies, memorials, and reminiscences of still older families who had occupied it through forfeiture by war or the favoritism of kings, and in its stately cloisters and ruined chapel was still felt the dead hand of its evicted religious founders, which could not be shaken off.

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Stories in Light and Shadow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.