Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

’Leave it to me for a day.  Let me have your word that you won’t take a step:  positively—­neither you nor Colonel Hartswood.  I’ll see you by appointment at your Club.’  Redworth looked up over the chimneys.  ’We ’re going to have a storm and a gale, I can tell you.’

‘Gale and storm!’ cried Sir Lukin; ‘what has that got to do with it?’

‘Think of something else for, a time.’

’And that brute of a woman—­deuced handsome she is!—­if you care for fair women, Redworth:—­she’s a Venus, jumped slap out of the waves, and the Devil for sire—­that you learn:  running about, sowing her lies.  She’s a yellow witch.  Oh! but she’s a shameless minx.  And a black-leg cur like Wroxeter!  Any woman intimate with a fellow like that, stamps herself.  I loathe her.  Sort of woman who swears in the morning you’re the only man on earth; and next day—­that evening-engaged!—­fee to Polly Hopkins—­and it’s a gentleman, a nobleman, my lord!—­been going on behind your back half the season!—­and she isn’t hissed when she abuses a lady, a saint in comparison!  You know the world, old fellow:—­Brighton, Richmond, visits to a friend as deep in the bog.  How Fryar-Gunnett—­a man, after all—­can stand it!  And drives of an afternoon for an airing-by heaven!  You’re out of that mess, Redworth:  not much taste for the sex; and you’re right, you’re lucky.  Upon my word, the corruption of society in the present day is awful; it’s appalling.—­I rattled at her:  and oh! dear me, perks on her hind heels and defies me to prove:  and she’s no pretender, but hopes she’s as good as any of my “chaste Dianas.”  My dear old friend, it’s when you come upon women of that kind you have a sickener.  And I’m bound by the best there is in a man-honour, gratitude, all the’ list—­to defend Diana Warwick.’

’So, you see, for your wife’s sake, your name can’t be hung on a woman of that kind,’ said Redworth.  ’I’ll call here the day after to-morrow at three P.M.’

Sir Lukin descended and vainly pressed Redworth to run up into his Club for refreshment.  Said he roguishly: 

’Who ‘s the lady?’

The tone threw Redworth on his frankness.

’The lady I ‘ve been doing business for in the City, is Miss Paynham.’

‘I saw her once at Copsley; good-looking.  Cleverish?’

‘She has ability.’

Entering his Club, Sir Lukin was accosted in the reading-room by a cavalry officer, a Colonel Launay, an old Harrovian, who stood at the window and asked him whether it was not Tom Redworth in the cab.  Another, of the same School, standing squared before a sheet of one of the evening newspapers, heard the name and joined them, saying:  ’Tom Redworth is going to be married, some fellow told me.’

‘He’ll make a deuced good husband to any woman—­if it’s true,’ said Sir Lukin, with Miss Paynham ringing in his head.  ’He’s a cold-blooded old boy, and likes women for their intellects.’

Colonel Launay hummed in meditative emphasis.  He stared at vacancy with a tranced eye, and turning a similar gaze on Sir Lukin, as if through him, burst out:  ’Oh, by George, I say, what a hugging that woman ‘ll get!’

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.