The Amazing Marriage — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 585 pages of information about The Amazing Marriage — Complete.

The Amazing Marriage — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 585 pages of information about The Amazing Marriage — Complete.

’My lawyers will send down the settlement on her, to be read to them to-day or to-morrow.  With the interest on that and the sum he tells me he has in the Funds, they keep the wolf from the door—­a cottage door.  They have their cottage.  There’s an old song of love in a cottage.  His liking for it makes him seem wiser than his clever sayings.  He’ll work in that cottage.’

’They have a good friend to them in you, my lord.  It will not be poverty for their simple wants.  I hear of the little cottage in Surrey where they are to lodge at first, before they take one of their own.’

‘We will visit them.’

‘When I am in England I shall visit them often.’

He submitted.

‘The man up here wounded is recovering?’

’Yes, my lord.  I am learning to nurse the wounded, with the surgeon to direct me.’

‘Matters are sobering down?—­The workmen?’

‘They listen to reason so willingly when we speak personally, we find.’

The earl addressed Chillon.  ’Your project of a Spanish expedition reminds me of favourable reports of your chief.’

‘Thoroughly able and up to the work,’ Chillon answered.

‘Queer people to meddle with.’

’We ‘re on the right side on the dispute.’

‘It counts, Napoleon says.  A Spanish civil war promises bloody doings.’

‘Any war does that.’

‘In the Peninsula it’s war to the knife, a merciless business.’

‘Good schooling for the profession.’

Fleetwood glanced:  she was collected and attentive.  ’I hear from Mrs.
Levellier that Carinthia would like to be your companion.’

‘My sister has the making of a serviceable hospital nurse.’

‘You hear the chatter of London!’

‘I have heard it.’

‘You encourage her, Mr. Levellier?’

‘She will be useful—­better there than here, my lord.’

‘I claim a part in the consultation.’

’There ‘s no consultation; she determines to go.’

‘We can advise her of all the risks.’

‘She has weighed them, every one.’

’In the event of accidents, the responsibility for having persuaded her would rest on you.’

‘My brother has not persuaded me,’ Carinthia’s belltones intervened.  ’I proposed it.  The persuasion was mine.  It is my happiness to be near him, helping, if I can.’

’Lady Fleetwood, I am entitled to think that your brother yielded to a request urged in ignorance of the nature of the risks a woman runs.’

’My brother does not yield to a request without examining it all round, my lord, and I do not.  I know the risks.  An evil that we should not endure,—­life may go.  There can be no fear for me.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Amazing Marriage — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.