The Belton Estate eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Belton Estate.

The Belton Estate eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 582 pages of information about The Belton Estate.

Title:  The Belton Estate

Author:  Anthony Trollope

Release Date:  January, 2004 [EBook #4969] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on April 7, 2002] [Most recently updated November 30, 2002]

Edition:  10

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

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This eBook was produced by Andrew Turek.

THE BELTON ESTATE

by Anthony Trollope

CHAPTER I

Mrs Amedroz, the wife of Bernard Amedroz, Esq, of Belton Castle, and mother of Charles and Clara Amedroz, died when those children were only eight and six years old, thereby subjecting them to the greatest misfortune which children born in that sphere of life can be made to suffer.  And, in the case of this boy and girl, the misfortune was aggravated greatly by the peculiarities of the father’s character.  Mr Amedroz was not a bad man as men are held to be bad in the world’s esteem.  He was not vicious was not a gambler or a drunkard was not self-indulgent to a degree that brought upon him any reproach; nor was he regardless of his children.  But he was an idle, thriftless man, who, at the age of sixty-seven, when the reader will first make his acquaintance, had as yet done no good in the world whatever.  Indeed he had done terrible evil; for his son Charles was now dead had perished by his own hand and the state of things which had brought about this woeful event had been chiefly due to the father’s neglect.

Belton Castle is a pretty country seat, standing in a small but beautifully wooded park, close under the Quantock hills in Somersetshire; and the little town of Belton clusters round the park gates.  Few Englishmen know the scenery of England well, and the prettinesses of Somersetshire are among those which are the least known.  But the Quantock hills are very lovely, with their rich valleys lying close among them, and their outlying moorlands running off towards Dulverton and the borders of Devonshire moorlands which are not flat, like Salisbury Plain, but are broken into ravines and deep watercourses and rugged dells hither and thither; where old oaks are standing, in which life seems to have dwindled down to the last spark; but the last spark is still there, and the old oaks give forth their scanty leaves from year to year.

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The Belton Estate from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.