The Small House at Allington eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 972 pages of information about The Small House at Allington.

The Small House at Allington eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 972 pages of information about The Small House at Allington.

“That may be all very well for Miss Lily Dale—­” Amelia said, and then she hesitated.  It would not be well, she thought, absolutely to threaten him as yet,—­not as long as there was any possibility that he might be won without a threat.  “Of course I know all about it,” she continued.  “She was your L. D., you know.  Not that I was ever jealous of her.  To you she was no more than one of childhood’s friends.  Was she, Johnny?”

He stamped his foot upon the floor, and then jumped up from his seat.  “I hate all that sort of twaddle about childhood’s friends, and you know I do.  You’ll make me swear that I’ll never come into this room again.”

“Johnny!”

“So I will.  The whole thing makes me sick.  And as for that Mrs Lupex—­”

“If this is what you learn, John, by going to a lord’s house, I think you had better stay at home with your own friends.”

“Of course I had;—­much better stay at home with my own friends.  Here’s Mrs Lupex, and at any rate I can’t stand her.”  So he went off, and walked round the Crescent, and down to the New Road, and almost into the Regent’s Park, thinking of Lily Dale and of his own cowardice with Amelia Roper.

On the following morning he received a message, at about one o’clock, by the mouth of the Board-room messenger, informing him that his presence was required in the Board-room.  “Sir Raffle Buffle has desired your presence, Mr Eames.”

“My presence, Tupper! what for?” said Johnny, turning upon the messenger, almost with dismay.

“Indeed I can’t say, Mr Eames; but Sir Raffle Buffle has desired your presence in the Board-room.”

Such a message as that in official life always strikes awe into the heart of a young man.  And yet, young men generally come forth from such interviews without having received any serious damage, and generally talk about the old gentlemen whom they have encountered with a good deal of light-spirited sarcasm,—­or chaff as it is called in the slang phraseology of the day.  It is that same “majesty which doth hedge a king” that does it.  The turkey-cock in his own farmyard is master of the occasion, and the thought of him creates fear.  A bishop in his lawn, a judge on the bench, a chairman in the big room at the end of a long table, or a policeman with his bull’s-eye lamp upon his beat, can all make themselves terrible by means of those appanages of majesty which have been vouchsafed to them.  But how mean is the policeman in his own home, and how few thought much of Sir Raffle Buffle as he sat asleep after dinner in his old slippers.  How well can I remember the terror created within me by the air of outraged dignity with which a certain fine old gentleman, now long since gone, could rub his hands slowly, one on the other, and look up to the ceiling, slightly shaking his head, as though lost in the contemplation of my iniquities!  I would become sick in my stomach, and feel as though my ankles had been broken.  That upward turn of the eye unmanned me so completely that I was speechless as regarded any defence.  I think that that old man could hardly have known the extent of his own power.

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The Small House at Allington from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.