e up to the Countess for her sufferings: whereat the
Countess sighed again: asked him what he possibly could do, and doubted
his willingness to accede to the most trifling request.
'No; I do in verity believe that were I to desire you to do aught for
your own good alone, you would demur, Van.'
He assured her that she was mistaken.
'We shall see,' she said.
'And if once or twice, I have run counter to you, Louisa--'
'Abominable language!' cried the Countess, stopping her ears like a
child. 'Do not excruciate me so. You laugh! My goodness! what will you
come to!'
Evan checked his smile, and, taking her hand, said:
'I must tell you; that, on the whole, I see nothing to regret in what
has happened to-day. You may notice a change in the manners of the
servants and some of the country squiresses, but I find none in the
bearing of the real ladies, the true gentlemen, to me.'
'Because the change is too fine for you to perceive it,' interposed the
Countess.
'Rose, then, and her mother, and her father!' Evan cried impetuously.
'As for Lady Jocelyn!' the Countess shrugged:
'And Sir Franks!' her head shook: 'and Rose, Rose is, simply
self-willed; a "she will" or "she won't" sort of little person. No
criterion! Henceforth the world is against us. We have to struggle with
it: it does not rank us of it!'
'Your feeling on the point is so exaggerated, my dear Louisa', said
Evan, 'one can't bring reason to your ears. The tattle we shall hear
we shall outlive. I care extremely for the good opinion of men, but I
prefer my own; and I do not lose it because my father was in trade.'
'And your own name, Evan Harrington, is on a shop,' the Countess struck
in, and watched him severely from under her brow, glad to mark that he
could still blush.
'Oh, heaven!' she wailed to increase the effect, 'on a shop! a brother
of mine!'
'Yes, Louisa. It may not last... I did it--is it not better that a son
should blush, than cast dishonour on his father's memory?'
'Ridiculous boy-notion!'
'Rose has pardoned it, Louisa--cannot you? I find that the naturally
vulgar and narrow-headed people, and cowards who never forego mean
advantages, are those only who would condemn me and my conduct in that.'
'And you have joy in your fraction of the world left to you!' exclaimed
his female-elder.
Changeing her manner to a winning softness, she said:
'Let me also belong to the very small party! You have been really
romantic, and
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