With Marlborough to Malplaquet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 143 pages of information about With Marlborough to Malplaquet.

With Marlborough to Malplaquet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 143 pages of information about With Marlborough to Malplaquet.

“I’ve relatives somewhere in Darlington, Blackett,” George explained, in a rather pleasanter tone, as if ashamed of his former surly speech, “and I’m going to hunt them up.”

“Look here, Fairburn,” said the other, springing from his seat and placing a patronizing hand on his companion’s shoulder, “just make yourself comfortable here with me for the night, and I’ll settle the bill for both of us in the morning.”  He spoke rather grandly, jingling the coins in his pocket the while.

“I can settle my own bills, thank you,” answered Fairburn, a proud hot flush overspreading his face.  And, seizing his little bag, the lad strode from the room and out of the inn, shivering as the chill northeasterly breeze caught him in the now dark and almost deserted street.

“Confound the fellow with his purse-proud patronage!” he muttered as he hurried along.

“Bless me, why is he so touchy?” Blackett was asking himself at the same moment.  “We seem fated to quarrel, Fairburn’s family and ours.  Whose is the pride now, I wonder!  Fairburn thinks a deal of his independence, as he calls it; I should call it simply pride, myself.  But I might have known that he wouldn’t accept my offer after his refusal of an inside place with me this morning, and after riding all those miles from York to-day in the bitter cold.  Heigh-ho, the quarrel won’t be of my seeking anyhow.”

These two lads were both sons of colliery owners, and both pupils of the ancient school of St. Peter of York, the most notable foundation north of the Humber.  But there the likeness ended.  Matthew Blackett’s father was a rich man and descended from generations of rich men.  He owned a large colliery and employed many men and not a few ships.  He was, moreover, a county magnate, and held his head high on Tyneside.  In politics he was a strong supporter of the Tory party, and had never been easy under the rule of Dutch William.  He was proud and somewhat arrogant, yet not wanting his good points.  George Fairburn, on the other hand, was the son of a much smaller man, of one, in truth, who had by his energy and thrift become the proprietor of a small pit, of which he himself acted as manager.  The elder Fairburn was of a sturdy independent character, his independence, however, sometimes asserting itself at the expense of his manners; that at least was the way Mr. Blackett put it.  Fairburn had been thrown much in his boyhood among the Quakers, of which new sect there were several little groups in the northern counties.  He was a firm Whig, and as firm a hater of the exiled James II.  He had made some sacrifice to send his boy to a good school, being a great believer in education, at a time when men of his class were little disposed to set much store by book learning.

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With Marlborough to Malplaquet from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.