The Inheritors eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 241 pages of information about The Inheritors.

The Inheritors eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 241 pages of information about The Inheritors.
irritation; not of madness or of depression, but of simple wildness at the continual recurrence of small obstacles.  I couldn’t read, couldn’t bring myself to it.  I used to sit and look dazedly at the English newspapers—­at any newspaper but the Hour.  De Mersch had, for the moment, disappeared.  There were troubles in his elective grand duchy—­he had, indeed, contrived to make himself unpopular with the electors, excessively unpopular.  I used to read piquant articles about his embroglio in an American paper that devoted itself to matters of the sort.  All sorts of international difficulties were to arise if de Mersch were ejected.  There was some other obscure prince of a rival house, Prussian or Russian, who had desires for the degree of royalty that sat so heavily on de Mersch.  Indeed, I think there were two rival princes, each waiting with portmanteaux packed and manifestos in their breast pockets, ready to pass de Mersch’s frontiers.

The grievances of his subjects—­so the Paris-American Gazette said—­were intimately connected with matters of finance, and de Mersch’s personal finances and his grand ducal were inextricably mixed up with the wild-cat schemes with which he was seeking to make a fortune large enough to enable him to laugh at half a dozen elective grand duchies.  Indeed, de Mersch’s own portmanteau was reported to be packed against the day when British support of his Greenland schemes would let him afford to laugh at his cantankerous Diet.

The thing interested me so little that I never quite mastered the details of it.  I wished the man no good, but so long as he kept out of my way I was not going to hate him actively.  Finally the affairs of Holstein-Launewitz ceased to occupy the papers—­the thing was arranged and the Russian and Prussian princes unpacked their portmanteaux, and, I suppose, consigned their manifestos to the flames, or adapted them to the needs of other principalities.  De Mersch’s affairs ceded their space in the public prints to the topic of the dearness of money.  Somebody, somewhere, was said to be up to something.  I used to try to read the articles, to master the details, because I disliked finding a whole field of thought of which I knew absolutely nothing.  I used to read about the great discount houses and other things that conveyed absolutely nothing to my mind.  I only gathered that the said great houses were having a very bad time, and that everybody else was having a very much worse.

One day, indeed, the matter was brought home to me by the receipt from Polehampton of bills instead of my usual cheques.  I had a good deal of trouble in cashing the things; indeed, people seemed to look askance at them.  I consulted my aunt on the subject, at breakfast.  It was the sort of thing that interested the woman of business in her, and we were always short of topics of conversation.

We breakfasted in rather a small room, as rooms went there; my aunt sitting at the head of the table, with an early morning air of being en famille that she wore at no other time of day.  It was not a matter of garments, for she was not the woman to wear a peignoir; but lay, I supposed, in her manner, which did not begin to assume frigidity until several watches of the day had passed.

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The Inheritors from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.