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.

Homeware:  ‘Her uncle Homeware’?

Arden:  You read through us all, sir.

Homeware:  It may interest you to learn that you are the third of the gentlemen commissioned to consult the lady’s uncle Homeware.

Arden:  The third.

Homeware:  Yes, she is pursued.  It could hardly be otherwise.  Her attractions are acknowledged, and the house is not a convent.  Yet, Mr. Arden, I must remind you that all of you are upon an enterprise held to be profane by the laws of this region.  Can you again forget that Astraea is a widow?

Arden:  She was a wife two months; she has been a widow two years.

Homeware:  The widow of the great and venerable Professor Towers is not to measure her widowhood by years.  His, from the altar to the tomb.  As it might be read, a one day’s walk!

Arden:  Is she, in the pride of her youth, to be sacrificed to a whimsical feminine delicacy?

Homeware:  You have argued it with her?

Arden:  I have presumed.

Homeware:  And still she refused her hand!

Arden:  She commended me to you, sir.  She has a sound judgement of persons.

Homeware:  I should put it that she passes the Commissioners of Lunacy, on the ground of her being a humorous damsel.  Your predecessors had also argued it with her; and they, too, discovered their enemy in a whimsical feminine delicacy.  Where is the difference between you?  Evidently she cannot perceive it, and I have to seek:  You will have had many conversations with Astraea?

Arden:  I can say, that I am thrice the man I was before I had them.

Homeware:  You have gained in manhood from conversations with a widow in her twenty-second year; and you want more of her.

Arden:  As much as I want more wisdom.

Homeware:  You would call her your Muse?

Arden:  So prosaic a creature as I would not dare to call her that.

Homeware:  You have the timely mantle of modesty, Mr. Arden.  She has prepared you for some of the tests with her uncle Homeware.

Arden:  She warned me to be myself, without a spice of affectation.

Homeware:  No harder task could be set a young man in modern days.  Oh, the humorous damsel.  You sketch me the dimple at her mouth.

Arden:  Frankly, sir, I wish you to know me better; and I think I can bear inspection.  Astraea sent me to hear the reasons why she refuses me a hearing.

Homeware:  Her reason, I repeat, is this; to her idea, a second wedlock is unholy.  Further, it passes me to explain.  The young lady lands us where we were at the beginning; such must have been her humorous intention.

Arden:  What can I do?

Homeware:  Love and war have been compared.  Both require strategy and tactics, according to my recollection of the campaign.

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