Doctor Thorne - Anthony Trollope (historical books to read .txt) 📗
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quite a distingué air, and will grace any circle to which she may
be introduced. I will introduce you before dinner, and you can take
her out.”
“I couldn’t propose to her to-night, I suppose?” said Frank,
maliciously.
“Don’t talk nonsense, Frank,” said the countess, angrily. “I am doing
what I can for you, and taking on an infinity of trouble to endeavour
to place you in an independent position; and now you talk nonsense to
me.”
Frank muttered some sort of apology, and then went to prepare himself
for the encounter.
Miss Dunstable, though she had come by train, had brought with her
her own carriage, her own horses, her own coachman and footman, and
her own maid, of course. She had also brought with her half a score
of trunks, full of wearing apparel; some of them nearly as rich as
that wonderful box which was stolen a short time since from the top
of a cab. But she brought all these things, not in the least because
she wanted them herself, but because she had been instructed to do
so.
Frank was a little more than ordinarily careful in dressing. He
spoilt a couple of white neckties before he was satisfied, and was
rather fastidious as the set of his hair. There was not much of the
dandy about him in the ordinary meaning of the word; but he felt that
it was incumbent on him to look his best, seeing what it was expected
that he should now do. He certainly did not mean to marry Miss
Dunstable; but as he was to have a flirtation with her, it was well
that he should do so under the best possible auspices.
When he entered the drawing-room he perceived at once that the lady
was there. She was seated between the countess and Mrs Proudie; and
mammon, in her person, was receiving worship from the temporalities
and spiritualities of the land. He tried to look unconcerned, and
remained in the farther part of the room, talking with some of his
cousins; but he could not keep his eye off the future possible Mrs
Frank Gresham; and it seemed as though she was as much constrained to
scrutinise him as he felt to scrutinise her.
Lady de Courcy had declared that she was looking extremely well, and
had particularly alluded to her distingué appearance. Frank at once
felt that he could not altogether go along with his aunt in this
opinion. Miss Dunstable might be very well; but her style of beauty
was one which did not quite meet with his warmest admiration.
In age she was about thirty; but Frank, who was no great judge in
these matters, and who was accustomed to have very young girls round
him, at once put her down as being ten years older. She had a very
high colour, very red cheeks, a large mouth, big white teeth, a broad
nose, and bright, small, black eyes. Her hair also was black and
bright, but very crisp, and strong, and was combed close round her
face in small crisp black ringlets. Since she had been brought out
into the fashionable world some one of her instructors in fashion
had given her to understand that curls were not the thing. “They’ll
always pass muster,” Miss Dunstable had replied, “when they are done
up with bank-notes.” It may therefore be presumed that Miss Dunstable
had a will of her own.
“Frank,” said the countess, in the most natural and unpremeditated
way, as soon as she caught her nephew’s eye, “come here. I want to
introduce you to Miss Dunstable.” The introduction was then made.
“Mrs Proudie, would you excuse me? I must positively go and say a few
words to Mrs Barlow, or the poor woman will feel herself huffed;”
and, so saying, she moved off, leaving the coast clear for Master
Frank.
He of course slipped into his aunt’s place, and expressed a hope that
Miss Dunstable was not fatigued by her journey.
“Fatigued!” said she, in a voice rather loud, but very good-humoured,
and not altogether unpleasing; “I am not to be fatigued by such a
thing as that. Why, in May we came through all the way from Rome to
Paris without sleeping—that is, without sleeping in a bed—and we
were upset three times out of the sledges coming over the Simplon. It
was such fun! Why, I wasn’t to say tired even then.”
“All the way from Rome to Paris!” said Mrs Proudie—in a tone of
astonishment, meant to flatter the heiress—“and what made you in
such a hurry?”
“Something about money matters,” said Miss Dunstable, speaking rather
louder than usual. “Something to do with the ointment. I was selling
the business just then.”
Mrs Proudie bowed, and immediately changed the conversation.
“Idolatry is, I believe, more rampant than ever in Rome,” said she;
“and I fear there is no such thing at all as Sabbath observance.”
“Oh, not in the least,” said Miss Dunstable, with rather a joyous
air; “Sundays and week-days are all the same there.”
“How very frightful!” said Mrs Proudie.
“But it’s a delicious place. I do like Rome, I must say. And as for
the Pope, if he wasn’t quite so fat he would be the nicest old fellow
in the world. Have you been in Rome, Mrs Proudie?”
Mrs Proudie sighed as she replied in the negative, and declared her
belief that danger was to be apprehended from such visits.
“Oh!—ah!—the malaria—of course—yes; if you go at the wrong time;
but nobody is such a fool as that now.”
“I was thinking of the soul, Miss Dunstable,” said the lady-bishop,
in her peculiar, grave tone. “A place where there are no Sabbath
observances—”
“And have you been in Rome, Mr Gresham?” said the young lady, turning
almost abruptly round to Frank, and giving a somewhat uncivilly cold
shoulder to Mrs Proudie’s exhortation. She, poor lady, was forced to
finish her speech to the Honourable George, who was standing near to
her. He having an idea that bishops and all their belongings, like
other things appertaining to religion, should, if possible, be
avoided; but if that were not possible, should be treated with
much assumed gravity, immediately put on a long face, and remarked
that—“it was a deuced shame: for his part he always liked to see
people go quiet on Sundays. The parsons had only one day out of
seven, and he thought they were fully entitled to that.” Satisfied
with which, or not satisfied, Mrs Proudie had to remain silent till
dinner-time.
“No,” said Frank; “I never was in Rome. I was in Paris once, and
that’s all.” And then, feeling a not unnatural anxiety as to the
present state of Miss Dunstable’s worldly concerns, he took an
opportunity of falling back on that part of the conversation which
Mrs Proudie had exercised so much tact in avoiding.
“And was it sold?” said he.
“Sold! what sold?”
“You were saying about the business—that you came back without going
to bed because of selling the business.”
“Oh!—the ointment. No; it was not sold. After all, the affair did
not come off, and I might have remained and had another roll in the
snow. Wasn’t it a pity?”
“So,” said Frank to himself, “if I should do it, I should be owner of
the ointment of Lebanon: how odd!” And then he gave her his arm and
handed her down to dinner.
He certainly found that the dinner was less dull than any other he
had sat down to at Courcy Castle. He did not fancy that he should
ever fall in love with Miss Dunstable; but she certainly was an
agreeable companion. She told him of her tour, and the fun she had in
her journeys; how she took a physician with her for the benefit of
her health, whom she generally was forced to nurse; of the trouble it
was to her to look after and wait upon her numerous servants; of the
tricks she played to bamboozle people who came to stare at her; and,
lastly, she told him of a lover who followed her from country to
country, and was now in hot pursuit of her, having arrived in London
the evening before she left.
“A lover?” said Frank, somewhat startled by the suddenness of the
confidence.
“A lover—yes—Mr Gresham; why should I not have a lover?”
“Oh!—no—of course not. I dare say you have a good many.”
“Only three or four, upon my word; that is, only three or four that I
favour. One is not bound to reckon the others, you know.”
“No, they’d be too numerous. And so you have three whom you favour,
Miss Dunstable;” and Frank sighed, as though he intended to say that
the number was too many for his peace of mind.
“Is not that quite enough? But of course I change them sometimes;”
and she smiled on him very good-naturedly. “It would be very dull if
I were always to keep the same.”
“Very dull indeed,” said Frank, who did not quite know what to say.
“Do you think the countess would mind my having one or two of them
here if I were to ask her?”
“I am quite sure she would,” said Frank, very briskly. “She would not
approve of it at all; nor should I.”
“You—why, what have you to do with it?”
“A great deal—so much so that I positively forbid it; but, Miss
Dunstable—”
“Well, Mr Gresham?”
“We will contrive to make up for the deficiency as well as possible,
if you will permit us to do so. Now for myself—”
“Well, for yourself?”
At this moment the countess gleamed her accomplished eye round the
table, and Miss Dunstable rose from her chair as Frank was preparing
his attack, and accompanied the other ladies into the drawing-room.
His aunt, as she passed him, touched his arm lightly with her fan, so
lightly that the action was perceived by no one else. But Frank well
understood the meaning of the touch, and appreciated the approbation
which it conveyed. He merely blushed, however, at his own
dissimulation; for he felt more certain that ever that he would never
marry Miss Dunstable, and he felt nearly equally sure that Miss
Dunstable would never marry him.
Lord de Courcy was now at home; but his presence did not add much
hilarity to the claret-cup. The young men, however, were very keen
about the election, and Mr Nearthewinde, who was one of the party,
was full of the most sanguine hopes.
“I have done one good at any rate,” said Frank; “I have secured the
chorister’s vote.”
“What! Bagley?” said Nearthewinde. “The fellow kept out of my way,
and I couldn’t see him.”
“I haven’t exactly seen him,” said Frank; “but I’ve got his vote all
the same.”
“What! by a letter?” said Mr Moffat.
“No, not by letter,” said Frank, speaking rather low as he looked at
the bishop and the earl; “I got a promise from his wife: I think he’s
a little in the henpecked line.”
“Ha—ha—ha!” laughed the good bishop, who, in spite of Frank’s
modulation of voice, had overheard what had passed. “Is that the way
you manage electioneering matters in our cathedral city? Ha—ha—ha!”
The idea of one of his choristers being in the henpecked line was
very amusing to the bishop.
“Oh, I got a distinct promise,” said Frank, in his pride; and then
added incautiously, “but I had to order bonnets for the whole
family.”
“Hush-h-h-h-h!” said Mr Nearthewinde, absolutely flabbergasted
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