Richard Carvel — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about Richard Carvel — Volume 05.

Richard Carvel — Volume 05 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 104 pages of information about Richard Carvel — Volume 05.

“A dozen vin de Graves, Brooks!” cries Mr. Fox, and ushers me into a dining room, with high curtained windows and painted ceiling, and chandeliers throwing a glitter of light.  There, at a long table, surrounded by powdered lackeys, sat a bevy of wits, mostly in blue and silver, with point ruffles, to match Mr. Fox’s costume.  They greeted my companions uproariously.  It was “Here’s Charles at last!” “Howdy, Charles!” “Hello, Richard!” and “What have you there? a new Caribbee?” They made way for Mr. Fox at the head of the table, and he took the seat as though it were his right.

“This is Mr. Richard Carvel, gentlemen, of Carvel Hall, in Maryland.”

They stirred with interest when my name was called, and most of them turned in their chairs to look at me.  I knew well the reason, and felt my face grow hot.  Although you may read much of the courtesy of that age, there was a deal of brutal frankness among young men of fashion.

“Egad, Charles, is this he the Beauty rescued from Castle Yard?”

A familiar voice relieved my embarrassment.

“Give the devil his due, Bully.  You forget that I had a hand in that.”

“Faith, Jack Comyn,” retorted the gentleman addressed, “you’re already famous for clinging to her skirt.”

“But cling to mine, Bully, and we’ll all enter the temple together.  But I bid you welcome, Richard,” said his Lordship; “you come with two of the most delightful vagabonds in the world.”

Mr. Fox introduced me in succession to Colonel St. John, known in St. James’s Street as the Baptist; to my Lord Bolingbroke, Colonel St. John’s brother, who was more familiarly called Bully; to Mr. Fitzpatrick’s brother, the Earl of Upper Ossory, who had come up to London, so he said, to see a little Italian dance at the Garden; to Gilly Williams; to Sir Charles Bunbury, who had married Lady Sarah Lennox, Fox’s cousin, the beauty who had come so near to being queen of all England; to Mr. Storer, who was at once a Caribbee and a Crichton; to Mr. Uvedale Price.  These I remember, but there are more that escape me.  Most good-naturedly they drank my health in Charles’s vin de grave, at four shillings the bottle; and soon I was astonished to find myself launched upon the story of my adventures, which they had besought me to tell them.  When I had done, they pledged me again, and, beginning to feel at home, I pledged them handsomely in return.  Then the conversation began.  The like of it I have never heard anywhere else in the world.  There was a deal that might not be written here, and a deal more that might, to make these pages sparkle.  They went through the meetings, of course, and thrashed over the list of horses entered at Ipswich, and York, and Newmarket, and how many were thought to be pulled.  Then followed the recent gains and losses of each and every individual of the company.  After that there was a roar of merriment over Mr. Storer cracking mottoes with a certain Lady Jane;

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Richard Carvel — Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.