FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   3151   3152   3153   3154   3155   3156   3157   3158   3159   3160   3161   3162   3163   3164   3165   3166   3167   3168   3169  
3170   3171   3172   3173   3174   3175   3176   3177   3178   3179   3180   3181   3182   3183   3184   3185   3186   3187   3188   3189   3190   3191   3192   3193   3194   >>   >|  
rength of his rank, perhaps likewise from the tale of his modesty: "he had only done his duty". Our Willoughby was then at College, emulous of the generous enthusiasm of his years, and strangely impressed by the report, and the printing of his name in the newspapers. He thought over it for several months, when, coming to his title and heritage, he sent Lieutenant Crossjay Patterne a cheque for a sum of money amounting to the gallant fellow's pay per annum, at the same time showing his acquaintance with the first, or chemical, principles of generosity, in the remark to friends at home, that "blood is thicker than water". The man is a Marine, but he is a Patterne. How any Patterne should have drifted into the Marines, is of the order of questions which are senselessly asked of the great dispensary. In the complimentary letter accompanying his cheque, the lieutenant was invited to present himself at the ancestral Hall, when convenient to him, and he was assured that he had given his relative and friend a taste for a soldier's life. Young Sir Willoughby was fond of talking of his "military namesake and distant cousin, young Patterne--the Marine". It was funny; and not less laughable was the description of his namesake's deed of valour: with the rescued British sailor inebriate, and the hauling off to captivity of the three braves of the black dragon on a yellow ground, and the tying of them together back to back by their pigtails, and driving of them into our lines upon a newly devised dying-top style of march that inclined to the oblique, like the astonished six eyes of the celestial prisoners, for straight they could not go. The humour of gentlemen at home is always highly excited by such cool feats. We are a small island, but you see what we do. The ladies at the Hall, Sir Willoughby's mother, and his aunts Eleanor and Isabel, were more affected than he by the circumstance of their having a Patterne in the Marines. But how then! We English have ducal blood in business: we have, genealogists tell us, royal blood in common trades. For all our pride we are a queer people; and you may be ordering butcher's meat of a Tudor, sitting on the cane-bottom chairs of a Plantagenet. By and by you may . . . but cherish your reverence. Young Willoughby made a kind of shock-head or football hero of his gallant distant cousin, and wondered occasionally that the fellow had been content to dispatch a letter of effusive thanks without availin
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3145   3146   3147   3148   3149   3150   3151   3152   3153   3154   3155   3156   3157   3158   3159   3160   3161   3162   3163   3164   3165   3166   3167   3168   3169  
3170   3171   3172   3173   3174   3175   3176   3177   3178   3179   3180   3181   3182   3183   3184   3185   3186   3187   3188   3189   3190   3191   3192   3193   3194   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Patterne
 

Willoughby

 

cheque

 

gallant

 

fellow

 
cousin
 

Marines

 

letter

 

distant

 

Marine


namesake
 

likewise

 
excited
 

highly

 

humour

 

gentlemen

 

island

 

mother

 

Eleanor

 

Isabel


ladies

 
devised
 

driving

 

modesty

 

pigtails

 

celestial

 

prisoners

 

straight

 

astonished

 
inclined

oblique

 
affected
 

reverence

 

cherish

 

bottom

 

chairs

 

Plantagenet

 
football
 

effusive

 
availin

dispatch

 
content
 

wondered

 

occasionally

 

sitting

 

genealogists

 

business

 

English

 

circumstance

 

common