e O'Mahonys; and
by what he said showed also his intimacy with Mrs. Peacock.
"They are Americans," said O'Mahony.
"And so are you," said the lord. "There can be good Americans and bad
Americans. You don't mean to say that you think worse of an American
than of an Englishman."
"I think higher of an Englishman than of an American, and lower also.
If I meet an American where a gentleman ought to be, I entertain
a doubt; if I meet him where a labourer ought to be, I feel very
confident. I suppose that the manager of a theatre ought to be a
gentleman."
"I don't quite understand it all," said Mrs. Peacock.
"Nor anybody else," said Rachel. "Father does fly so very high in the
air when he talks about people."
After that the lord drove Miss O'Mahony and her father back to
Cecil Street, and they all agreed that they had had a very pleasant
evening.
END OF VOL. II.
Charles Dickens And Evans, Crystal Palace Press.
* * * * *
THE LANDLEAGUERS
by
ANTHONY TROLLOPE
In Three Volumes--VOL. III.
London
Chatto & Windus, Piccadilly
1883
[All rights reserved]
Charles Dickens and Evans,
Crystal Palace Press.
CONTENTS
Chapter
XXXIII. CAPTAIN CLAYTON'S LOVE-MAKING.
XXXIV. LORD CASTLEWELL'S LOVE-MAKING.
XXXV. MR. O'MAHONY'S APOLOGY.
XXXVI. RACHEL WRITES ABOUT HER LOVERS.
XXXVII. RACHEL IS ILL.
XXXVIII. LORD CASTLEWELL IS MUCH TROUBLED.
XXXIX. CAPTAIN CLAYTON'S FIRST TRIUMPH.
XL. YORKE CLAYTON AGAIN MAKES LOVE.
XLI. THE STATE OF IRELAND.
XLII. LORD CASTLEWELL'S FAREWELL.
XLIII. MR. MOSS IS FINALLY ANSWERED.
XLIV. FRANK JONES COMES BACK AGAIN.
XLV. MR. ROBERT MORRIS.
XLVI. CONG.
XLVII. KERRYCULLION.
XLVIII. THE NEW ARISTOCRACY FAILS.
XLIX.
THE LANDLEAGUERS.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
CAPTAIN CLAYTON'S LOVE-MAKING.
The household at Castle Morony was very sad for some time after the
trial. They had hardly begun to feel the death of Florian while the
excitement existed as they felt it afterwards. Mr. Jones, his father,
seemed to regard the lost boy as though he had been his favourite
child. It was not many months since he had refused to allow him to
eat in his presence, and had been persuaded by such a stranger as was
Captain Clayton, to treat him with some show of affection. When he
had driven him into Ballyglunin, he had been stern and har
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