never quoted the clever things he had said, nor mentioned
the generous things he had done. But a sort of
frigidly-tender faith in his unlimited goodness was
a part of their personal sense of right; and there
can, perhaps, be no better proof of the high esteem
in which he was held than the fact that no explicit
judgment was ever passed upon his actions. He
was no more praised than he was blamed; but he was
tacitly felt to be an ornament to his circle.
He was the man of the world of the family. He
had been to China and brought home a collection of
curiosities; he had made a fortune—or rather
he had quintupled a fortune already considerable;
he was distinguished by that combination of celibacy,
“property,” and good humor which appeals
to even the most subdued imaginations; and it was
taken for granted that he would presently place these
advantages at the disposal of some well-regulated
young woman of his own “set.” Mr.
Wentworth was not a man to admit to himself that—his
paternal duties apart—he liked any individual
much better than all other individuals; but he thought
Robert Acton extremely judicious; and this was perhaps
as near an approach as he was capable of to the eagerness
of preference, which his temperament repudiated as
it would have disengaged itself from something slightly
unchaste. Acton was, in fact, very judicious—and
something more beside; and indeed it must be claimed
for Mr. Wentworth that in the more illicit parts of
his preference there hovered the vague adumbration
of a belief that his cousin’s final merit was
a certain enviable capacity for whistling, rather
gallantly, at the sanctions of mere judgment—for
showing a larger courage, a finer quality of pluck,
than common occasion demanded. Mr. Wentworth
would never have risked the intimation that Acton was
made, in the smallest degree, of the stuff of a hero;
but this is small blame to him, for Robert would certainly
never have risked it himself. Acton certainly
exercised great discretion in all things—beginning
with his estimate of himself. He knew that he
was by no means so much of a man of the world as he
was supposed to be in local circles; but it must be
added that he knew also that his natural shrewdness
had a reach of which he had never quite given local
circles the measure. He was addicted to taking
the humorous view of things, and he had discovered
that even in the narrowest circles such a disposition
may find frequent opportunities. Such opportunities
had formed for some time—that is, since
his return from China, a year and a half before—the
most active element in this gentleman’s life,
which had just now a rather indolent air. He
was perfectly willing to get married. He was very
fond of books, and he had a handsome library; that
is, his books were much more numerous than Mr. Wentworth’s.
He was also very fond of pictures; but it must be
confessed, in the fierce light of contemporary criticism,
that his walls were adorned with several rather abortive
masterpieces. He had got his learning—and
there was more of it than commonly appeared—at
Harvard College; and he took a pleasure in old associations,
which made it a part of his daily contentment to live
so near this institution that he often passed it in
driving to Boston. He was extremely interested
in the Baroness Munster.