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.

She was developing; she might hold her ground with the husband, if the alliance should be resumed; and she would be a companion for Henrietta in England:  she was now independent, as to money, and she could break an intolerable yoke without suffering privation.  He kept his wrath under, determined not to use his influence either way, sure though he was of her old father’s voting for her to quit the man and enter the field where qualities would be serviceable.  The man probably feared a scandal more than the loss of his wife in her going.  He had never been thrashed—­the sole apology Chillon discovered for him, in a flushed review of the unavenged list of injuries Carinthia had sustained.  His wise old father insisted on the value of an early thrashing to trim and shape the growth of most young men.  There was no proof of Lord Fleetwood’s having schemed to thwart his wager, so he put that accusation by:  thinking for an instant, that if the man desired to have his wife with him, and she left the country with her brother, his own act would recoil; or if she stayed to hear of a villany, Carinthia’s show of scorn could lash.  Henrietta praised my lord’s kindness.  He had been one of the adorers—­as what man would not be!—­and upon her at least (he could hardly love her husband) he had not wreaked his disappointment.  A young man of huge wealth, having nothing to do but fatten his whims, is the monster a rich country breeds under the blessing of peace.  His wife, if a match for him, has her work traced out:—­mean work for the child of their father, Chillon thought.  She might be doing braver, more suitable to the blood in her veins.  But women have to be considered as women, not as possible heroines; and supposing she held her own with this husband of hers, which meant, judging by the view of their unfolded characters at present, a certain command of the freakish beast; she, whatever her task, would not be the one set trotting.  He came to his opinion through the estimate he had recently formed of Lord Fleetwood, and a study of his changed sister.

Her brows gloomed at a recurrence to that subject.  Their business of the expedition absorbed her, each detail, all the remarks he quoted of his chief, hopeful or weariful; for difficulties with the Spanish Government, and with the English too, started up at every turn; and the rank and file of the contingent were mostly a rough lot, where they were rather better than soaked weeds.  A small body of trained soldiers had sprung to the call to arms; here and there an officer could wheel a regiment.

Carinthia breasted discouragement.  ‘English learn from blows, Chillon.’

’He might have added, they lose half their number by having to learn from blows, Carin.’

‘He said, “Let me lead Britons!"’

‘When the canteen’s fifty leagues to the rear, yes!’

‘Yes, it is a wine country,’ she sighed.  ’But would the Spaniards have sent for us if their experience told them they could not trust us?’

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