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.
O’Donnells had in old days played the adventurer and charmed a maid of a certain age into yielding her hand to him; and the lady was the squire of Earlsfont’s only sister:  she possessed funded property.  Shortly after the union, as one that has achieved the goal of enterprise, the gallant officer retired from the service nor did north-western England put much to his credit the declaration of his wife’s pronouncing him to be the best of husbands.  She naturally said it of him in eulogy; his own relatives accepted it in some contempt, mixed with a relish of his hospitality:  his wife’s were constant in citing his gain by the marriage.  Could he possibly have been less than that? they exclaimed.  An excellent husband, who might easily have been less than that, he was the most devoted of cousins, and the liberal expenditure of his native eloquence for the furtherance of Philip’s love-suit was the principal cause of the misfortune, if misfortune it could subsequently be called to lose an Adiante.

The Adister family were not gifted to read into the heart of a young man of a fanciful turn.  Patrick had not a thought of shame devolving on him from a kinsman that had shot at a mark and hit it.  Who sees the shame of taking an apple from a garden of the Hesperides?  And as England cultivates those golden, if sometimes wrinkled, fruits, it would have seemed to him, in thinking about it, an entirely lucky thing for the finder; while a question of blood would have fired his veins to rival heat of self-assertion, very loftily towering:  there were Kings in Ireland:  cry for one of them in Uladh and you will hear his name, and he has descendants yet!  But the youth was not disposed unnecessarily to blazon his princeliness.  He kept it in modest reserve, as common gentlemen keep their physical strength.  His reluctance to look on Earlsfont sprang from the same source as unacknowledged craving to see the place, which had precipitated him thus far upon his road:  he had a horror of scenes where a faithless girl had betrayed her lover.  Love was his visionary temple, and his idea of love was the solitary light in it, painfully susceptible to coldair currents from the stories of love abroad over the world.  Faithlessness he conceived to be obnoxious to nature; it stained the earth and was excommunicated; there could be no pardon of the crime, barely any for repentance.  He conceived it in the feminine; for men are not those holy creatures whose conduct strikes on the soul with direct edge:  a faithless man is but a general villain or funny monster, a subject rejected of poets, taking no hue in the flat chronicle of history:  but a faithless woman, how shall we speak of her!  Women, sacredly endowed with beauty and the wonderful vibrating note about the very mention of them, are criminal to hideousness when they betray.  Cry, False! on them, and there is an instant echo of bleeding males in many circles, like the poor quavering flute-howl of transformed beasts, which at some remembering touch bewail their higher state.  Those women are sovereignly attractive, too, loathsomely.  Therein you may detect the fiend.

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