Marcella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 947 pages of information about Marcella.

Marcella eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 947 pages of information about Marcella.

“No more than I think it would be the better,” said Aldous, quietly, “if we could do away with gold-plate and false hair to-morrow.  There would be too many hungry goldsmiths and wig-makers on the streets.”

Marcella turned to him, half defiant, half softened.

“Of course, your point lies in to-morrow," she said.  “I accept that.  We can’t carry reform by starving innocent people.  But the question is, what are we to work towards?  Mayn’t we regard the game laws as one of the obvious crying abuses to be attacked first—­in the great campaign!—­the campaign which is to bring liberty and self-respect back to the country districts, and make the labourer feel himself as much of a man as the squire?”

“What a head!  What an attitude!” thought Hallin, half repelled, half fascinated.  “But a girl that can talk politics—­hostile politics—­to her lover, and mean them too—­or am I inexperienced?—­and is it merely that she is so much interested in him that she wants to be quarrelling with him?”

Aldous looked up.  “I am not sure,” he said, answering her.  “That is always my difficulty, you know,” and he smiled at her.  “Game preserving is not to me personally an attractive form of private property, but it seems to me bound up with other forms, and I want to see where the attack is going to lead me.  But I would protect your farmer—­mind!—­as zealously as you.”

Hallin caught the impatient quiver of the girl’s lip.  The tea had just been taken away, and Marcella had gone to sit upon an old sofa near the fire, whither Aldous had followed her.  Wharton, who had so far said nothing, had left his post of observation on the hearth-rug, and was sitting under the lamp balancing a paper-knife with great attention on two fingers.  In the half light Hallin by chance saw a movement of Raeburn’s hand towards Marcella’s, which lay hidden among the folds of her dress—­quick resistance on her part, then acquiescence.  He felt a sudden pleasure in his friend’s small triumph.

“Aldous and I have worn these things threadbare many a time,” he said, addressing his hostess.  “You don’t know how kind he is to my dreams.  I am no sportsman and have no landowning relations, so he ought to bid me hold my tongue.  But he lets me rave.  To me the simple fact is that game preserving creates crime.  Agricultural life is naturally simpler—­might be, it always seems to me, so much more easily moralised and fraternised than the industrial form.  And you split it up and poison it all by the emphasis laid on this class pleasure.  It is a natural pleasure, you say.  Perhaps it is—­the survival, perhaps, of some primitive instinct in our northern blood—­but, if so, why should it be impossible for the rich to share it with the poor?  I have little plans—­dreams.  I throw them out sometimes to catch Aldous, but he hardly rises to them!”

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Project Gutenberg
Marcella from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.