married Benedick--the bankrupt
beau--the outcast tenant of a Cheshire wilderness"; and, as he said this,
he looked at the neglected prospect before him with an eye almost of
hatred. "Aye, to see the nakedness of the land is he coming, but he shall
be disappointed. His money may buy him a cordial welcome at an inn,
but curse me if it shall purchase him a reception here."
He again opened and glanced through the letter.
"Aye, purposely put in such a way that I can't decline it without
affronting him," he continued doggedly. "Well, then, he has no one to
blame but himself--affronted he shall be; I shall effectually put an end
to this humorous excursion. Egad, it is rather hard if a man cannot keep
his poverty to himself."
Sir Wynston Berkley was a baronet of large fortune--a selfish,
fashionable man, and an inveterate bachelor. He and Marston had been
schoolfellows, and the violent and implacable temper of the latter had
as little impressed his companion with feelings of regard, as the
frivolity and selfishness of the baronet had won the esteem of his
relative. As boys, they had little in common upon which to rest the
basis of a friendship, or even a mutual liking. Berkley was gay, cold,
and satirical; his cousin--for cousins they were--was jealous, haughty,
and relentless. Their negative disinclination to one another's society,
not unnaturally engendered by uncongenial and unamiable dispositions,
had for a time given place to actual hostility, while the two young men
were at Oxford. In some intrigue, Marston discovered in his cousin a
too-successful rival; the consequence was, a bitter and furious quarrel,
which, but for the prompt and peremptory interference of friends,
Marston would undoubtedly have pushed to a bloody issue. Time had,
however, healed this rupture, and the young men came to regard one
another with the same feelings, and eventually to re-establish the same
sort of cold and indifferent intimacy which had subsisted between them
before their angry collision.
Under these circumstances, whatever suspicion Marston might have felt
on the receipt of the unexpected, and indeed unaccountable proposal,
which had just reached him, he certainly had little reason to complain
of any violation of early friendship in the neglect with which Sir
Wynston had hitherto treated him. In deciding to decline his proposed
visit, however, Marston had not consulted the impulses of spite or
anger. He knew the baronet well; he knew that he cherished no good
will towards him, and that in the project which he had thus
unexpectedly broached, whatever indirect or selfish schemes might
possibly be at the bottom of it, no friendly feeling had ever mingled. He
was therefore resolved to avoid the trouble and the expense of a visit in
all respects distasteful to him, and in a gentlemanlike way, but, at the
same time, as the reader may suppose, with very little anxiety as to
whether or not his gay correspondent should take offence at his reply,
to decline, once for all, the proposed distinction.
With this resolution, he entered the spacious and somewhat dilapidated
mansion which called him master; and entering a sitting room,
appropriated to his daughter's use, he found her there, in company with
her beautiful French governess. He kissed his child, and saluted her
young preceptress with formal courtesy.
"Mademoiselle," said he, "I have got a letter for you; and, Rhoda," he
continued, addressing his pretty daughter, "bring this to your mother,
and say, I request her to read it."
He gave her the letter he himself had just received, and the girl tripped
lightly away upon her mission.
Had he narrowly scrutinised the countenance of the fair Frenchwoman,
as she glanced at the direction of that which he had just placed in her
hand, he might have seen certain transient, but very unmistakable
evidences of excitement and agitation. She quickly concealed the letter,
however, and with a sigh, the momentary flush which it had called to
her cheek subsided, and she was tranquil as usual.
Mr. Marston remained for some minutes--five, eight, or ten, we cannot
say precisely--pretty much where he had stood on first entering the
chamber, doubtless awaiting the return of his messenger, or the
appearance of his wife. At length, however, he left the room himself to
seek her; but, during his brief stay, his previous resolution had been
removed. By what influence we cannot say; but removed completely it
unquestionably was, and a final determination that Sir Wynston
Berkley should become his guest had fixedly taken its place.
As Marston walked along the passages which led from this room, he
encountered Mrs. Marston and his daughter.
"Well," said he, "you have read Wynston's letter?"
"Yes," she replied, returning it to him; "and what answer, Richard, do
you purpose giving him?"
She was about to
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