ill--"
"The last!" interrupted Glanville. "Too--too generous Pelham, I
feel--these tears (the first I have shed for a long, long time) tell
you, that I feel to the heart--your friendship and disinterested
attachment; but the moment your love for Ellen has become successful,
I will not tear you from its enjoyment. Believe me, all that I could
derive from your society, could not afford me half the happiness I
should have in knowing that you and Ellen were blest in each other.
No--no, my solitude will, at that reflection, be deprived of its sting.
You shall hear from me once again; my letter shall contain a request,
and your executing that last favour must console and satisfy the
kindness of your heart. For myself, I shall die as I have lived--alone.
All fellowship with my griefs would seem to me strange and unwelcome."
I would not suffer Glanville to proceed. I interrupted him with fresh
arguments and entreaties, to which he seemed at last to submit, and I
was in the firm hope of having conquered his determination, when we were
startled by a sudden and violent noise in the hall.
"It is Thornton," said Glanville, calmly. "I told them not to admit him,
and he is forcing his way."
Scarcely had Sir Reginald said this, before Thornton burst abruptly into
the room.
Although it was scarcely noon, he was more than half intoxicated, and
his eyes swam in his head with a maudlin expression of triumph and
insolence, as he rolled towards us.
"Oh, oh! Sir Reginald," he said, "thought of giving me the slip, eh?
Your d--d servants said you were out; but I soon silenced them. 'Egad I
made them as nimble as cows in a cage--I have not learnt the use of my
fists for nothing. So, you're going abroad to-morrow; without my leave,
too--pretty good joke that, indeed. Come, come, my brave fellow, you
need not scowl at me in that way. Why, you look as surly as a butcher's
dog with a broken head."
Glanville, who was lived with ill-suppressed rage, rose haughtily.
"Mr. Thornton," he said, in a calm voice, although he was trembling in
his extreme passion, from head to foot, "I am not now prepared to submit
to your insolence and intrusion. You will leave this room instantly. If
you have any further demands upon me, I will hear them to-night at any
hour you please to appoint."
"No, no, my fine fellow," said Thornton, with a coarse chuckle; "you
have as much wit as three folks, two fools, and a madman; but you won't
do me, for all tha
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