Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.

Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science.

“Then she is coming out to you?” said his host with a grin.

Roscorla’s face flushed with anger.  “There is no she in the matter,” he said abruptly, almost fiercely.  “I thank God I am not tied to any woman!”

“Oh, I beg your pardon,” said his host good-naturedly, who did not care to recall the occasions on which Mr. Roscorla had been rather pleased to admit that certain tender ties bound him to his native land.

“No, there is not,” he said.  “What fool would have his comfort and peace of mind depend on the caprice of a woman?  I like your plan better, Rogers:  when they’re dependent on you, you can do as you like, but when they’ve got to be treated as equals, they’re the devil.  No, my boys, you don’t find me going in for the angel in the house—­she’s too exacting.  Is it to be unlimited?”

Now to play unlimited loo in a reckless fashion is about the easiest way of getting rid of money that the ingenuity of man has devised.  The other players were much better qualified to run such risks than Mr. Roscorla, but none played half so wildly as he.  His I.O.U.’s went freely about.  At one point in the evening the floating paper bearing the signature of Mr. Roscorla represented a sum of about three hundred pounds, and yet his losses did not weigh heavily on him.  At length every one got tired, and it was resolved to stop short at a certain hour.  But from this point the luck changed:  nothing could stand against his cards; one by one his I.O.U.’s were recalled; and when they all rose from the table he had won about forty-eight pounds.  He was not elated.

He went to his room and sat down in an easy-chair; and then it seemed to him that he saw Eglosilyan once more, and the far coasts of Cornwall, and the broad uplands lying under a blue English sky.  That was his home, and he had cut himself away from it, and from the little glimmer of romance that had recently brightened it for him.  Every bit of the place, too, was associated somehow with Wenna Rosewarne.  He could see the seat fronting the Atlantic on which she used to sit and sew on the fine summer forenoons.  He could see the rough road leading over the downs on which he met her one wintry morning, she wrapped up and driving her father’s dog-cart, while the red sun in the sky seemed to brighten the pink color the cold wind had brought into her cheeks.  He thought of her walking sedately up to church; of her wild scramblings among the rocks with Mabyn; of her enjoyment of a fierce wind when it came laden with the spray of the great rollers breaking on the cliff outside.  What was the song she used to sing to herself as she went along the quiet woodland ways?—­

    Your Polly has never been false, she declares,
    Since last time we parted at Wapping Old Stairs.

He could not let her go.  All the anger of wounded vanity had left his heart:  he thought now only of the chance he was throwing away.  Where else could he hope to find for himself so pleasant a companion and friend, who would cheer up his dull daily life with her warm sympathies, her quick humor, her winning womanly ways?

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Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.