Doctor Thorne - Anthony Trollope (historical books to read .txt) 📗
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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“Of course I am. Am I not always to be so?”
“Well, well; let me have some tea, at any rate, for I’m in a fever of
thirst. They may call that tea at the Junction if they will; but if
China were sunk under the sea it would make no difference to them.”
Dr Thorne always was in a fever of thirst when he got home from the
railway, and always made complaint as to the tea at the Junction.
Mary went about her usual work with almost more than her usual
alacrity, and so they were soon seated in the drawing-room together.
She soon found that his manner was more than ordinarily kind to her;
and there was moreover something about him which seemed to make him
sparkle with contentment, but he said no word about Frank, nor did he
make any allusion to the business which had taken him up to town.
“Have you got through all your work?” she said to him once.
“Yes, yes; I think all.”
“And thoroughly?”
“Yes; thoroughly, I think. But I am very tired, and so are you too,
darling, with waiting for me.”
“Oh, no, I am not,” said she, as she went on continually filling his
cup; “but I am so happy to have you home again. You have been away so
much lately.”
“Ah, yes; well I suppose I shall not go away any more now. It will be
somebody else’s turn now.”
“Uncle, I think you’re going to take up writing mystery romances,
like Mrs Radcliffe’s.”
“Yes; and I’ll begin to-morrow, certainly with— But, Mary, I will
not say another word to-night. Give me a kiss, dearest, and I’ll go.”
Mary did kiss him, and he did go. But as she was still lingering in
the room, putting away a book, or a reel of thread, and then sitting
down to think what the morrow would bring forth, the doctor again
came into the room in his dressing-gown, and with the slippers on.
“What, not gone yet?” said he.
“No, not yet; I’m going now.”
“You and I, Mary, have always affected a good deal of indifference as
to money, and all that sort of thing.”
“I won’t acknowledge that it has been an affectation at all,” she
answered.
“Perhaps not; but we have often expressed it, have we not?”
“I suppose, uncle, you think that we are like the fox that lost his
tail, or rather some unfortunate fox that might be born without one.”
“I wonder how we should either of us bear it if we found ourselves
suddenly rich. It would be a great temptation—a sore temptation. I
fear, Mary, that when poor people talk disdainfully of money, they
often are like your fox, born without a tail. If nature suddenly
should give that beast a tail, would he not be prouder of it than all
the other foxes in the wood?”
“Well, I suppose he would. That’s the very meaning of the story. But
how moral you’ve become all of a sudden at twelve o’clock at night!
Instead of being Mrs Radcliffe, I shall think you’re Mr Æsop.”
He took up the article which he had come to seek, and kissing her
again on the forehead, went away to his bedroom without further
speech. “What can he mean by all this about money?” said Mary to
herself. “It cannot be that by Sir Louis’s death he will get any of
all this property;” and then she began to bethink herself whether,
after all, she would wish him to be a rich man. “If he were very
rich, he might do something to assist Frank; and then—”
There never was a fox yet without a tail who would not be delighted
to find himself suddenly possessed of that appendage. Never; let the
untailed fox have been ever so sincere in his advice to his friends!
We are all of us, the good and the bad, looking for tails—for one
tail, or for more than one; we do so too often by ways that are
mean enough: but perhaps there is no tail-seeker more mean, more
sneakingly mean than he who looks out to adorn his bare back with a
tail by marriage.
The doctor was up very early the next morning, long before Mary was
ready with her teacups. He was up, and in his own study behind the
shop, arranging dingy papers, pulling about tin boxes which he had
brought down with him from London, and piling on his writing-table
one set of documents in one place, and one in another. “I think I
understand it all,” said he; “but yet I know I shall be bothered.
Well, I never will be anybody’s trustee again. Let me see!” and then
he sat down, and with bewildered look recapitulated to himself sundry
heavy items. “What those shares are really worth I cannot understand,
and nobody seems able to tell one. They must make it out among
them as best they can. Let me see; that’s Boxall Hill, and this is
Greshamsbury. I’ll put a newspaper over Greshamsbury, or the squire
will know it!” and then, having made his arrangements, he went to his
breakfast.
I know I am wrong, my much and truly honoured critic, about these
title-deeds and documents. But when we’ve got that barrister in
hand, then if I go wrong after that, let the blame be on my own
shoulders—or on his.
The doctor ate his breakfast quickly; and did not talk much to his
niece. But what he did say was of a nature to make her feel strangely
happy. She could not analyse her own feelings, or give a reason for
her own confidence; but she certainly did feel, and even trust, that
something was going to happen after breakfast which would make her
more happy than she had been for many months.
“Janet,” said he, looking at his watch, “if Mr Gresham and Mr
Frank call, show them into my study. What are you going to do with
yourself, my dear?”
“I don’t know, uncle; you are so mysterious, and I am in such a
twitter, that I don’t know what to do. Why is Mr Gresham coming
here—that is, the squire?”
“Because I have business with him about the Scatcherd property. You
know that he owed Sir Louis money. But don’t go out, Mary. I want you
to be in the way if I should have to call for you. You can stay in
the drawing-room, can’t you?”
“Oh, yes, uncle; or here.”
“No, dearest; go into the drawing-room.” Mary obediently did as she
was bid; and there she sat, for the next three hours, wondering,
wondering, wondering. During the greater part of that time, however,
she well knew that Mr Gresham, senior, and Mr Gresham, junior, were
both with her uncle, below.
At eleven o’clock the doctor’s visitors came. He had expected them
somewhat earlier, and was beginning to become fidgety. He had so much
on his hands that he could not sit still for a moment till he had, at
any rate, commenced it. The expected footsteps were at last heard on
the gravel-path, and a moment or two afterwards Janet ushered the
father and son into the room.
The squire did not look very well. He was worn and sorrowful, and
rather pale. The death of his young creditor might be supposed to
have given him some relief from his more pressing cares, but the
necessity of yielding to Frank’s wishes had almost more than balanced
this. When a man has daily to reflect that he is poorer than he was
the day before, he soon becomes worn and sorrowful.
But Frank was well; both in health and spirits. He also felt as Mary
did, that the day was to bring forth something which should end his
present troubles; and he could not but be happy to think that he
could now tell Dr Thorne that his father’s consent to his marriage
had been given.
The doctor shook hands with them both, and then they sat down. They
were all rather constrained in their manner; and at first it seemed
that nothing but little speeches of compliment were to be made. At
last, the squire remarked that Frank had been talking to him about
Miss Thorne.
“About Mary?” said the doctor.
“Yes; about Mary,” said the squire, correcting himself. It was quite
unnecessary that he should use so cold a name as the other, now that
he had agreed to the match.
“Well!” said Dr Thorne.
“I suppose it must be so, doctor. He has set his heart upon it, and
God knows, I have nothing to say against her—against her personally.
No one could say a word against her. She is a sweet, good girl,
excellently brought up; and, as for myself, I have always loved her.”
Frank drew near to his father, and pressed his hand against the
squire’s arm, by way of giving him, in some sort, a filial embrace
for his kindness.
“Thank you, squire, thank you,” said the doctor. “It is very good of
you to say that. She is a good girl, and if Frank chooses to take
her, he will, in my estimation, have made a good choice.”
“Chooses!” said Frank, with all the enthusiasm of a lover.
The squire felt himself perhaps a little ruffled at the way in which
the doctor received his gracious intimation; but he did now show it
as he went on. “They cannot, you know, doctor, look to be rich
people—”
“Ah! well, well,” interrupted the doctor.
“I have told Frank so, and I think that you should tell Mary. Frank
means to take some land into his hand, and he must farm it as a
farmer. I will endeavour to give him three, or perhaps four hundred a
year. But you know better—”
“Stop, squire; stop a minute. We will talk about that presently. This
death of poor Sir Louis will make a difference.”
“Not permanently,” said the squire mournfully.
“And now, Frank,” said the doctor, not attending to the squire’s last
words, “what do you say?”
“What do I say? I say what I said to you in London the other day. I
believe Mary loves me; indeed, I won’t be affected—I know she does.
I have loved her—I was going to say always; and, indeed, I almost
might say so. My father knows that this is no light fancy of mine. As
to what he says about our being poor, why—”
The doctor was very arbitrary, and would hear neither of them on this
subject.
“Mr Gresham,” said he, interrupting Frank, “of course I am well aware
how very little suited Mary is by birth to marry your only son.”
“It is too late to think about it now,” said the squire.
“It is not too late for me to justify myself,” replied the doctor.
“We have long known each other, Mr Gresham, and you said here the
other day, that this is a subject as to which we have been both of
one mind. Birth and blood are very valuable gifts.”
“I certainly think so,” said the squire; “but one can’t have
everything.”
“No; one can’t have everything.”
“If I am satisfied in that matter—” began Frank.
“Stop a moment, my dear boy,” said the doctor. “As your father says,
one can’t have everything. My dear friend—” and he gave his hand to
the squire—“do not be angry if I alluded for a moment to the estate.
It has grieved me to see it melting away—the old family acres that
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