envy that might have rankled in the hearts of all the poor
wayfarers who had in eight hundred years peered through the park gate
and looked at those broad acres that his race so long had held. The
carriage rolled swiftly by him, with a glitter of silver harness and
liveries; on one seat were an elderly man and a young girl. As he saw
her face Ripon started in surprise. Then, after a moment, he walked to
the table and filled his pipe.
"Bah!" he said to himself, "it cannot be possible." Again he threw
himself on a chair by the fireplace, and tried to read the Saturday
Review. There was a long leader against Richard Lincoln; but as
Lincoln was the one member in the House for whom Geoffrey had any
respect, he threw it aside in disgust. He heard a timid knock at the door.
"Come in!" growled Geoffrey, as he turned to light his pipe.
An old family servant, the last survivor of an extinct race, entered with
a battered silver tray.
"Please, my lord, a letter from the persons at the castle; one of them is
waiting for an answer."
Reynolds made no distinction between the "persons at the castle" and
their servants; and he always called it the castle, now that Ripon House
was the gatekeeper's lodge.
"I suppose," grunted Geoffrey, as he took the letter, "they want to warn
me against poaching. So considerate, after I have been fined ten
shillings by their gamekeeper."
To his surprise the letter had a familiar look; it was addressed to him by
his title in the ancient fashion, and was in a handwriting which he
thought he should have known in Paris. Tearing open the envelope, he
read:
"MY DEAR LORD BROMPTON: I hear that you are back to your own
estate, and you will doubtless be surprised to learn that I am so near
you. Papa telephoned over last week for an estate, and here we are,
with a complete retinue of servants and a gallery of ancestors--yours,
by the way, as I found to my surprise. I felt so sorry when they called
you back from Paris; I had no idea I should see you again so soon. Papa
wanted to look after his affairs in England; so we have come over again
for the winter, and I was delighted to get out of the wild gayety of
America for this dear sleepy old country.
"If you have nothing better to do, will you dine with us to-morrow
night? Do not stay away because we are in your old family house. We
have no such feelings in America, you know. Richard Lincoln will be
here, and Sir John Dacre. Do you know Sir John? I admire him
immensely, you must know.
"Sincerely yours,
"MARGARET WINDSOR."
"P. S. The new minister and legation are not received in society. We
missed you so much."
"Maggie Windsor over here," thought Ripon, "with that curious old
father of hers, taking Ripon House as if it were furnished lodgings."
And he thought of the old house and of his great-uncle who fell at
Tel-el-Kebir, and of King George over the sea in America. But he said
to himself that Maggie Windsor was a nice girl, as he put out his pipe
and went out into the park for a walk.
CHAPTER II.
RICHARD LINCOLN.
The palace of a thousand wings, that nearly two thousand years had
gone to build, had been tumbled into ruins in a day, and out of the
monstrous confusion no fair structure had yet arisen.
Rich as a crimson sunset, with traditions splendid as sunlit clouds,
English Royalty had sunk into the night, and the whole sky was
lightless, except where the glory had descended.
The government which had lifted itself like a tower in the eyes and
minds of Englishmen for a hundred generations had disappeared, and
the ideal government of the people had not yet filled its place.
The British Republic was seventeen years old. For seventeen years
King George the Fifth had been an exile in the United States, and the
fifty millions of British people had been on trial as self-governors.
Providence had smiled on the young Republic. Its first guardians had
been true to their trust; and like the fathers who laid the deep
foundations of American freedom, their souls expanded with the
magnitude of duty and responsibility.
The world looked on, sympathized, but for weeks and months almost
feared to speak. But half a year passed, and the dreadful crest of
Anarchy had not once been raised.
The French Republic, over seventy years old, strong, unenvious and
equitable, was the first to applaud.
The Commonwealths of Germany, thirty-three years old, one after
another spoke their congratulation.
The aristocratic Republic of Russia was
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