FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3565   3566   3567   3568   3569   3570   3571   3572   3573   3574   3575   3576   3577   3578   3579   3580   3581   3582   3583   3584   3585   3586   3587   3588   3589  
3590   3591   3592   3593   3594   3595   3596   3597   3598   3599   3600   3601   3602   3603   3604   3605   3606   3607   3608   3609   3610   3611   3612   3613   3614   >>   >|  
is not your opinion, ladies. It is firmly mine. Time has taught it me. So, if you and I are at such variance, how can we live together? It is an impossibility." They looked at Willoughby. He nodded imperiously. "We have never affirmed that our dear nephew is devoid of faults, if he is offended . . . And supposing he claims to be foremost, is it not his rightful claim, made good by much generosity? Reflect, dear Laetitia. We are your friends too." She could not chastise the kind ladies any further. "You have always been my good friends." "And you have no other charge against him?" Laetitia was milder in saying, "He is unpardoning." "Name one instance, Laetitia." "He has turned Crossjay out of his house, interdicting the poor boy ever to enter it again." "Crossjay," said Willoughby, "was guilty of a piece of infamous treachery." "Which is the cause of your persecuting me to become your wife!" There was a cry of "Persecuting!" "No young fellow behaving so basely can come to good," said Willoughby, stained about the face with flecks of redness at the lashings he received. "Honestly," she retorted. "He told of himself: and he must have anticipated the punishment he would meet. He should have been studying with a master for his profession. He has been kept here in comparative idleness to be alternately petted and discarded: no one but Vernon Whitford, a poor gentleman doomed to struggle for a livelihood by literature--I know something of that struggle--too much for me!--no one but Mr. Whitford for his friend." "Crossjay is forgiven," said Willoughby. "You promise me that?" "He shall be packed off to a crammer at once." "But my home must be Crossjay's home." "You are mistress of my house, Laetitia." She hesitated. Her eyelashes grew moist. "You can be generous." "He is, dear child!" the ladies cried. "He is. Forget his errors, in his generosity, as we do." "There is that wretched man Flitch." "That sot has gone about the county for years to get me a bad character," said Willoughby. "It would have been generous in you to have offered him another chance. He has children." "Nine. And I am responsible for them?" "I speak of being generous." "Dictate." Willoughby spread out his arms. "Surely now you should be satisfied, Laetitia?" said the ladies. "Is he?" Willoughby perceived Mrs. Mountstuart's carriage coming down the avenue. "To the full." He presented his h
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3565   3566   3567   3568   3569   3570   3571   3572   3573   3574   3575   3576   3577   3578   3579   3580   3581   3582   3583   3584   3585   3586   3587   3588   3589  
3590   3591   3592   3593   3594   3595   3596   3597   3598   3599   3600   3601   3602   3603   3604   3605   3606   3607   3608   3609   3610   3611   3612   3613   3614   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Willoughby

 

Laetitia

 

ladies

 

Crossjay

 

generous

 

friends

 
generosity
 

Whitford

 

struggle

 

firmly


mistress

 

crammer

 

packed

 
hesitated
 
Forget
 

errors

 

opinion

 

eyelashes

 
promise
 

forgiven


discarded
 

Vernon

 

petted

 

alternately

 

comparative

 

idleness

 
taught
 

gentleman

 

friend

 

literature


doomed

 

livelihood

 

satisfied

 

perceived

 

Surely

 

Dictate

 

spread

 

Mountstuart

 

presented

 

avenue


carriage

 
coming
 
county
 
wretched
 

Flitch

 
responsible
 
children
 
chance
 

character

 

offered