The Forsyte Saga - Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,232 pages of information about The Forsyte Saga.

The Forsyte Saga - Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,232 pages of information about The Forsyte Saga.
so deeply!  Slowly—­inevitably—­he would lose this flower of his life!  And suddenly he was conscious that his hand was wet.  His heart gave a little painful jump.  He couldn’t bear her to cry.  He put his other hand quickly over hers, and a tear dropped on that, too.  He couldn’t go on like this!  “Well, well,” he said, “I’ll think it over, and do what I can.  Come, come!” If she must have it for her happiness—­she must; he couldn’t refuse to help her.  And lest she should begin to thank him he got out of his chair and went up to the piano-player—­making that noise!  It ran down, as he reached it, with a faint buzz.  That musical box of his nursery days:  “The Harmonious Blacksmith,” “Glorious Port”—­the thing had always made him miserable when his mother set it going on Sunday afternoons.  Here it was again—­the same thing, only larger, more expensive, and now it played “The Wild, Wild Women,” and “The Policeman’s Holiday,” and he was no longer in black velvet with a sky blue collar.  ‘Profond’s right,’ he thought, ‘there’s nothing in it!  We’re all progressing to the grave!’ And with that surprising mental comment he walked out.

He did not see Fleur again that night.  But, at breakfast, her eyes followed him about with an appeal he could not escape—­not that he intended to try.  No!  He had made up his mind to the nerve-racking business.  He would go to Robin Hill—­to that house of memories.  Pleasant memory—­the last!  Of going down to keep that boy’s father and Irene apart by threatening divorce.  He had often thought, since, that it had clinched their union.  And, now, he was going to clinch the union of that boy with his girl.  ‘I don’t know what I’ve done,’ he thought, ’to have such things thrust on me!’ He went up by train and down by train, and from the station walked by the long rising lane, still very much as he remembered it over thirty years ago.  Funny—­so near London!  Some one evidently was holding on to the land there.  This speculation soothed him, moving between the high hedges slowly, so as not to get overheated, though the day was chill enough.  After all was said and done there was something real about land, it didn’t shift.  Land, and good pictures!  The values might fluctuate a bit, but on the whole they were always going up—­worth holding on to, in a world where there was such a lot of unreality, cheap building, changing fashions, such a “Here to-day and gone to-morrow” spirit.  The French were right, perhaps, with their peasant proprietorship, though he had no opinion of the French.  One’s bit of land!  Something solid in it!  He had heard peasant proprietors described as a pig-headed lot; had heard young Mont call his father a pigheaded Morning Poster—­disrespectful young devil.  Well, there were worse things than being pig-headed or reading the Morning Post.  There was Profond and his tribe, and all these Labour chaps, and loud-mouthed politicians and ‘wild, wild women’!  A lot of worse things! 

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The Forsyte Saga - Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.