“Precisely,” said Aldous.
Lord Maxwell meditated; then rose.
“Let me now appease the memory of Clarke by going to bed!” (Clarke was his lordship’s medical attendant and autocrat.) “I must sleep upon this, Aldous.”
“I only hope I shall not have tired you out.”
Aldous moved to extinguish a lamp standing on a table near.
Suddenly his grandfather called him.
“Aldous!”
“Yes.”
But, as no words followed, Aldous turned. He saw his grandfather standing erect before the fire, and was startled by the emotion he instantly perceived in eye and mouth.
“You understand, Aldous, that for twenty years—it is twenty years last month since your father died—you have been the blessing of my life? Oh! don’t say anything, my boy; I don’t want any more agitation. I have spoken strongly; it was hardly possible but that on such a matter I should feel strongly. But don’t go away misunderstanding me—don’t imagine for one instant that there is anything in the world that really matters to me in comparison with your happiness and your future!”
The venerable old man wrung the hand he held, walked quickly to the door, and shut it behind him.
* * * * *
An hour later, Aldous was writing in his own sitting-room, a room on the first floor, at the western corner of the house, and commanding by daylight the falling slopes of wood below the Court, and all the wide expanses of the plain. To-night, too, the blinds were up, and the great view drawn in black and pearl, streaked with white mists in the ground hollows and overarched by a wide sky holding a haloed moon, lay spread before the windows. On a clear night Aldous felt himself stifled by blinds and curtains, and would often sit late, reading and writing, with a lamp so screened that it threw light upon his book or paper, while not interfering with the full range of his eye over the night-world without. He secretly believed that human beings see far too little of the night, and so lose a host of august or beautiful impressions, which might be honestly theirs if they pleased, without borrowing or stealing from anybody, poet or painter.
The room was lined with books, partly temporary visitors from the great library downstairs, partly his old college books and prizes, and partly representing small collections for special studies. Here were a large number of volumes, blue books, and pamphlets, bearing on the condition of agriculture and the rural poor in England and abroad; there were some shelves devoted to general economics, and on a little table by the fire lay the recent numbers of various economic journals, English and foreign. Between the windows stood a small philosophical bookcase, the volumes of it full of small reference slips, and marked from end to end; and on the other side of the room was a revolving book-table crowded with miscellaneous