Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

He dramatized to Nataly some of the scene going on at the Wells:  Victor’s petition; his fugue in urgency of it; the brief reply of Miss Dorothea and her muted echo Miss Virginia.  He was rather their apologist for refusing.  But, as when, after himself listening to their ‘views,’ he had deferentially withdrawn from the ladies of Moorsedge, and had then beheld their strangely-hatted lieutenants and the regiments of the toneless respectable on the pantiles and the mounts, the curse upon the satirist impelled him to generalize.  The quiet good ladies were multiplied:  they were ’the thousands of their sisters, petticoated or long-coated or buck-skinned; comfortable annuitants under clerical shepherding, close upon outnumbering the labourers they paralyze at home and stultify abroad.’  Colney thumped away.  The country’s annuitants had for type ’the figure with the helmet of the Owl-Goddess and the trident of the Earth-shaker, seated on a wheel, at the back of penny-pieces; in whom you see neither the beauty of nakedness nor the charm of drapery; not the helmet’s dignity or the trident’s power; but she has patently that which stops the wheel; and poseing for representative of an imperial nation, she helps to pass a penny.’  So he passed his epigram, heedless of the understanding or attention of his hearer; who temporarily misjudged him for a man impelled by the vanity of literary point and finish, when indeed it was hot satiric spite, justified of its aim, which crushed a class to extract a drop of scathing acid, in the interests of the country, mankind as well.  Nataly wanted a picture painted, colours and details, that she might get a vision of the scene at Moorsedge.  She did her best to feel an omen and sound it, in his question ’whether the yearly increasing army of the orderly annuitants and their parasites does not demonstrate the proud old country as a sheath for pith rather than of the vital run of sap.’

Perhaps it was patriotic to inquire; and doubtless she was the weakest of women; she could follow no thought; her heart was beating blindly beside Victor, hopeing for the refusal painful to her through his disappointment.

‘You think me foolish,’ she made answer to one of Colney’s shrugs; ’and it has come to that pitch with me, that I cannot be sensible of a merit except in being one with him—­obeying, is the word.  And I have never yet known him fail.  That terrible Lakelands wears a different look to me, when I think of what he can do; though I would give half my days to escape it.’

She harped on the chord of feverish extravagance; the more hateful to Colney because of his perceiving, that she simulated a blind devotedness to stupefy her natural pride; and he was divided between stamping on her for an imbecile and dashing at Victor for a maniac.  But her situation rendered her pitiable.  ‘You will learn tomorrow what Victor has done,’ he said, and thought how the simple words carried the bitterness.

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.