The Judge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 707 pages of information about The Judge.

The Judge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 707 pages of information about The Judge.
an entire obliviousness of his personal presence, just as a church circle might pray fervently for some missionary without attempting to visualise his face; and though he missed this quaint meaning of her abstraction, he was well content to watch it and nurse his private satisfaction.  He was still aware that he was Mr. Philip of the firm, so he was not going to tell her that for two nights after he had heard the decision of the Medical Examiners he had cried himself to sleep, though he was fourteen past.  But it was exquisite to know that if he had told her she would have been moved to some glorious gesture of pity.  His imagination trembled at the thought of its glory as she turned to him with a benignity that was really good enough, and said diffidently, because her ambition was such a holy thing that she feared to speak of his:  “Still, there are lots of things for you to do.  I’ve heard....”

He was kindly and indulgent.  “What have you heard?”

Ellen had, as her mother used to say, a great notion of politics.  “Why, that you’re going to stand for Parliament.”

“That’s true enough,” he said, swelling a little.

“Could anything be finer?” she breathed.  “What are you going to do?”

“I’ll have to contest two-three hopeless seats.  Then they’ll give me something safe.”

“But what will you do?”

He didn’t follow.

“What’ll you do after that?” She towered above him, her cheeks flushed with intellectual passion.  “In Parliament, I mean.  There’s so much to do.  Will it be housing?  If it was me it would be housing.  But what are you going to do?”

“I’ll sit as a Liberal,” he said, with an air of quiet competence.  “We’ve always been Liberals.”

“Ach! Liberal!” she said, with the spirit of one who had cried, “Keep the Liberal out!” at a Leith polling-booth and had been haled backwards by the hair from the person of Mr. Winston Churchill.  Mr. Philip laughed again and felt a kind of glow.  He never could get over a feeling that to discover a woman excited about an intellectual thing was like coming on her bathing; her cast-off femininity affected him as a heap of her clothes on the beach might have done.  But the flash in her eyes died to the homelier fires of a more personal quarrel.  “Is yon Mrs. Powell’s heavy feet coming up the stair?” she enquired.

“It is so.  I asked her to do a chop for me, so that I won’t need to dine on the train....”

“Mercy me!  We’ll see the fine cook she is!” She ran out to the landing (she had never known he was so nice).  Mr. Philip found that her absence acted curiously as a relief to an excitement that was beginning to buzz in his head.  Then she came back with the tray, her cheeks bright and her mouth pursed, for she and the caretaker had been sandpapering each other’s temperaments with a few words.  “Be thankful she thought to boil a potato.  No greens.  And I had to ask for a bit bread.  And the reason’s not far to seek.  She’s had a drop again.  It staggers me how your father, who’s so particular with the rest of us, stands such a body in the place.”

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The Judge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.