A Great Success eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about A Great Success.

A Great Success eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 130 pages of information about A Great Success.

                              Yours sincerely,
                                   DORIS MEADOWS.

* * * * *

The month which elapsed between Lady Dunstable’s invitation and the Crosby Ledgers party was spent by Doris first in “doing up” her frock, and then in taking the bloom off it at various dinner-parties to which they were already invited as the “celebrities” of the moment; in making Arthur’s wardrobe presentable; in watching over the tickets and receipts of the weekly lectures; in collecting the press cuttings about them; in finishing her illustrations; and in instructing the awe-struck Jane, now perfectly amenable, in the mysteries that would be expected of her.

Meanwhile Mrs. Meadows heard various accounts from artistic and literary friends of the parties at Crosby Ledgers.  These accounts were generally prefaced by the laughing remark, “But anything I can say is ancient history.  Lady Dunstable dropped us long ago!”

Anyway, it appeared that the mistress of Crosby Ledgers could be charming, and could also be exactly the reverse.  She was a creature of whims and did precisely as she pleased.  Everything she did apparently was acceptable to Lord Dunstable, who admired her blindly.  But in one point at least she was a disappointed woman.  Her son, an unsatisfactory youth of two-and-twenty, was seldom to be seen under his parents’ roof, and it was rumoured that he had already given them a great deal of trouble.

“The dreadful thing, my dear, is the games they play!” said the wife of a dramatist, whose one successful piece had been followed by years of ill-fortune.

Games?” said Doris.  “Do you mean cards—­for money?”

“Oh, dear no!  Intellectual games. Bouts-rimes; translations—­Lady Dunstable looks out the bits and some people think the words—­beforehand; paragraphs on a subject—­in a particular style—­Pater’s, or Ruskin’s, or Carlyle’s.  Each person throws two slips into a hat.  On one you write the subject, on another the name of the author whose style is to be imitated.  Then you draw.  Of course Lady Dunstable carries off all the honours.  But then everybody believes she spends all the mornings preparing these things.  She never comes down till nearly lunch.”

“This is really appalling!” said Doris, with round eyes.  “I have forgotten everything I ever knew.”

As for her own impressions of the great lady, she had only seen her once in the semi-darkness of the lecture-room, and could only remember a long, sallow face, with striking black eyes and a pointed chin, a general look of distinction and an air of one accustomed to the “chief seat” at any board—­whether the feasts of reason or those of a more ordinary kind.

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A Great Success from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.