The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 704 pages of information about The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer — Complete.

The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 704 pages of information about The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer — Complete.
“My dear Mr. Lorrequer—­As her ladyship and my son have in vain essayed to get any thing from you in the shape of reply to their letters, it has devolved upon me to try my fortune, which were I to augur from the legibility of my writing, may not, I should fear, prove more successful than the”—­(what can the word be?) “the—­the” —­why, it can’t be damnable, surely?—­no, it is amiable, I see —­“than the amiable epistle of my lady.  I cannot, however, permit myself to leave this without apprising you that we are about to start for Baden, where we purpose remaining a month or two.  Your cousin Guy, who has been staying for some time with us, has been obliged to set out for Geneva, but hopes to join in some weeks hence.  He is a great favourite with us all, but has not effaced the memory of our older friend, yourself.  Could you not find means to come over and see us—­if only a flying visit?  Rotterdam is the route, and a few days would bring you to our quarters.  Hoping that you may feel so disposed, I have enclosed herewith a letter to the Horse Guards, which I trust may facilitate your obtaining leave of absence.  I know of no other mode of making your peace with the ladies, who are too highly incensed at your desertion to send one civil postscript to this letter; and Kilkee and myself are absolutely exhausted in our defence of you.  Believe me, yours truly,

“Callonby.”

Had I received an official notification of my being appointed paymaster to the forces, or chaplain to Chelsea hospital, I believe I should have received the information with less surprise than I perused this letter —­that after the long interval which had elapsed, during which I had considered myself totally forgotten by this family, I should now receive a letter—­and such a letter, too—­quite in the vein of our former intimacy and good feeling, inviting me to their house, and again professing their willingness that I should be on the terms of our old familiarity—­was little short of wonderful to me.  I read, too—­with what pleasure?—­that slight mention of my cousin, whom I had so long regarded as my successful rival, but who I began now to hope had not been preferred to me.  Perhaps it was not yet too late to think that all was not hopeless.  It appeared, too, that several letters had been written which had never reached me; so, while I accused them of neglect and forgetfulness, I was really more amenable to the charge myself; for, from the moment I had heard of my cousin Guy’s having been domesticated amongst them, and the rumours of his marriage had reached me, I suffered my absurd jealousy to blind my reason, and never wrote another line after.  I ought to have known how “bavarde” [boasting] Guy always was —­that he never met with the most commonplace attentions any where, that he did not immediately write home about settlements and pin-money, and portions for younger children, and all that sort of nonsense.  Now I saw it all

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The Confessions of Harry Lorrequer — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.