Demos eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 744 pages of information about Demos.

Demos eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 744 pages of information about Demos.
day; a servant who met her downstairs in the early morning reported that she ’looked very bad indeed.’  The case of the latter was as hard to deal with.  ’Arry had long ceased to attend his classes with any regularity, and he was once more asserting the freeman’s right to immunity from day labour.  Moreover, he claimed in practice the freeman’s right to get drunk four nights out of the seven.  No one knew whence he got his money; Richard purposely stinted him, but the provision was useless.  Mr. Keene declared with lamentations that his influence over ’Arry was at an end; nay, the youth had so far forgotten gratitude as to frankly announce his intention of ‘knockin’ Keene’s lights out’ if he were further interfered with.  To the journalist his ‘lights’ were indispensable; in no sense of the word did he possess too many of them; so it was clear that he must abdicate his tutorial functions.  Alice implored her brother to come and ‘do something.’

Richard, though a married man of only six weeks’ standing, had troubles altogether in excess of his satisfactions.  Things were not as they should have been in that earthly paradise called New Wanley.  It was not to be expected that the profits of that undertaking would be worth speaking of for some little time to come, but it was extremely desirable that it should pay its own expenses, and it began to be doubtful whether even this moderate success was being achieved.  Various members of the directing committee had visited New Wanley recently, and Richard had talked to them in a somewhat discouraging tone; his fortune was not limitless, it had to be remembered; a considerable portion of old Mutimer’s money had lain in the vast Belwick concern of which he was senior partner; the surviving members of the firm were under no specified obligation to receive Richard himself as partner, and the product of the realised capital was a very different thing from the share in the profits which the old man had enjoyed.  Other capital Richard had at his command, but already he was growing chary of encroachments upon principal.  He began to murmur inwardly that the entire fortune did not lie at his disposal; willingly he would have allowed Alice a handsome portion; and as for ’Arry, the inheritance was clearly going to be his ruin.  The practical difficulties at New Wanley were proving considerable; the affair was viewed with hostility by ironmasters in general, and the results of such hostility were felt.  But Richard was committed to his scheme; all his ambitions based themselves thereupon.  And those ambitions grew daily.

These greater troubles must to a certain extent solve themselves, but in Highbury it was evidently time, as Alice said, to ’do something.’  His mother’s obstinacy stood in the way of almost every scheme that suggested itself.  Richard was losing patience with the poor old woman, and suffered the more from his irritation because he would so gladly have behaved to her with filial kindness.  One

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Demos from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.