The Egoist eBook

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

The Egoist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 707 pages of information about The Egoist.
Patterne!  It might have been that she . . .  But she is a woman of women!  With a father-in-law!  Just heaven!  Could I have stood by her then with the same feelings of reverence?  A very little, my love, and everything gained for us by civilization crumbles; we fall back to the first mortar-bowl we were bruised and stirred in.  My thoughts, when I take my stand to watch by her, come to this conclusion, that, especially in women, distinction is the thing to be aimed at.  Otherwise we are a weltering human mass.  Women must teach us to venerate them, or we may as well be bleating and barking and bellowing.  So, now enough.  You have but to think a little.  I must be off.  It may have happened during my absence.  I will write.  I shall hear from you?  Come and see me mount Black Norman.  My respects to your father.  I have no time to pay them in person.  One!”

He took the one—­love’s mystical number—­from which commonly spring multitudes; but, on the present occasion, it was a single one, and cold.  She watched him riding away on his gallant horse, as handsome a cavalier as the world could show, and the contrast of his recent language and his fine figure was a riddle that froze her blood.  Speech so foreign to her ears, unnatural in tone, unmanlike even for a lover (who is allowed a softer dialect), set her vainly sounding for the source and drift of it.  She was glad of not having to encounter eyes like Mr. Vernon Whitford’s.

On behalf of Sir Willoughby, it is to be said that his mother, without infringing on the degree of respect for his decisions and sentiments exacted by him, had talked to him of Miss Middleton, suggesting a volatility of temperament in the young lady that struck him as consentaneous with Mrs Mountstuart’s “rogue in porcelain”, and alarmed him as the independent observations of two world-wise women.  Nor was it incumbent upon him personally to credit the volatility in order, as far as he could, to effect the soul-insurance of his bride, that he might hold the security of the policy.  The desire for it was in him; his mother had merely tolled a warning bell that he had put in motion before.  Clara was not a Constantia.  But she was a woman, and he had been deceived by women, as a man fostering his high ideal of them will surely be.  The strain he adopted was quite natural to his passion and his theme.  The language of the primitive sentiments of men is of the same expression at all times, minus the primitive colours when a modern gentleman addresses his lady.

Lady Patterne died in the winter season of the new year.  In April Dr Middleton had to quit Upton Park, and he had not found a place of residence, nor did he quite know what to do with himself in the prospect of his daughter’s marriage and desertion of him.  Sir Willoughby proposed to find him a house within a circuit of the neighbourhood of Patterne.  Moreover, he invited the Rev. Doctor and his daughter to come to Patterne from Upton for a month, and make acquaintance with his aunts, the ladies Eleanor and Isabel Patterne, so that it might not be so strange to Clara to have them as her housemates after her marriage.  Dr. Middleton omitted to consult his daughter before accepting the invitation, and it appeared, when he did speak to her, that it should have been done.  But she said, mildly, “Very well, papa.”

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The Egoist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.