The Beetle eBook

Richard Marsh (author)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about The Beetle.

The Beetle eBook

Richard Marsh (author)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about The Beetle.

It was all Marjorie’s fault,—­everything! past, present, and to come.  I had known that girl when she was in long frocks—­I had, at that period of our acquaintance, pretty recently got out of them; when she was advanced to short ones; and when, once more, she returned to long.  And all that time,—­well, I was nearly persuaded that the whole of the time I had loved her.  If I had not mentioned it, it was because I had suffered my affection, ’like the worm, to lie hidden in the bud,’—­or whatever it is the fellow says.

At any rate, I was perfectly positive that if I had had the faintest nation that she would ever seriously consider such a man as Lessingham I should have loved her long ago.  Lessingham!  Why, he was old enough to be her father,—­at least he was a good many years older than I was.  And a wretched Radical!  It is true that on certain points I, also, am what some people would call a Radical, —­but not a Radical of the kind he is.  Thank Heaven, no!  No doubt I have admired traits in his character, until I learnt this thing of him.  I am even prepared to admit that he is a man of ability,—­in his way! which is, emphatically, not mine.  But to think of him in connection with such a girl as Marjorie Lindon,—­preposterous!  Why, the man’s as dry as a stick,—­drier!  And cold as an iceberg.  Nothing but a politician, absolutely.  He a lover!—­how I could fancy such a stroke of humour setting all the benches in a roar.  Both by education, and by nature, he was incapable of even playing such a part; as for being the thing,—­absurd!  If you were to sink a shaft from the crown of his head to the soles of his feet, you would find inside him nothing but the dry bones of parties and of politics.

What my Marjorie—­if everyone had his own, she is mine, and, in that sense, she always will be mine—­what my Marjorie could see in such a dry-as-dust out of which even to construct the rudiments of a husband was beyond my fathoming.

Suchlike agreeable reflections were fit company for the wind and the wet, so they bore me company all down the lane.  I crossed at the corner, going round the hospital towards the square.  This brought me to the abiding-place of Paul the Apostle.  Like the idiot I was, I went out into the middle of the street, and stood awhile in the mud to curse him and his house,—­on the whole, when one considers that that is the kind of man I can be, it is, perhaps, not surprising that Marjorie disdained me.

‘May your following,’ I cried,—­it is an absolute fact that the words were shouted!—­’both in the House and out of it, no longer regard you as a leader!  May your party follow after other gods!  May your political aspirations wither, and your speeches be listened to by empty benches!  May the Speaker persistently and strenuously refuse to allow you to catch his eye, and, at the next election, may your constituency reject you!—­Jehoram!—­what’s that?’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Beetle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.