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ems to be a piece of advice you have adopted too literally. I quote what you have observed of some one else." "It is possible, sir," said Edward. "I was not particularly sparing when I sat in the high seat. 'Non eadem est aetas, non mens." I now think differently." "I must take your present conduct as the fruit of your premature sagacity, I suppose. By the same rule, your cousin Algernon may prove to be some comfort to his father, in the end." "Let us hope he will, sir. His father will not have deserved it so well as mine." "The time is morning," said Sir William, looking at his watch, and bestowing, in the bitterness of his reflections, a hue of triumph on the sleep of his brother upstairs. "You are your own master, Edward. I will detain you no more." Edward shook his limbs, rejoicing. "You prepare for a life of hard work," Sir William resumed, not without some instigation to sternness from this display of alacrity. "I counsel you to try the Colonial Bar." Edward read in the first sentence, that his income would be restricted; and in the second, that his father's social sphere was no longer to be his. "Exactly, sir; I have entertained that notion myself," he said; and his breast narrowed and his features grew sharp. "And, if I may suggest such matters to you, I would advise you to see very little company for some years to come." "There, sir, you only anticipate my previously formed resolution. With a knavery on my conscience, and a giddy-pated girl on my hands, and the doors of the London world open to me, I should scarcely have been capable of serious work. The precious metal, which is Knowledge, sir, is only to be obtained by mining for it; and that excellent occupation necessarily sends a man out of sight for a number of years. In the meantime, 'mea virtute me involvo.'" "You need not stop short," said his father, with a sardonic look for the concluding lines. "The continuation is becoming in the mouth of a hero; but humbler persons must content themselves not to boast the patent fact, I think." Edward warmed as he spoke. "I am ready to bear it. I dislike poverty; but, as I say, I am ready to bear it. Come, sir; you did me the honour once to let me talk to you as a friend, with the limits which I have never consciously overstepped; let me explain myself plainly and simply." Sir William signified, "Pray speak," from the arms of his chair! and Edward, standing, went on: "After all, a woma
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