Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,366 pages of information about Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill.

Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,366 pages of information about Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill.

Euphrasia knew that in his secret soul Mr. Vane attributed this wildness, and what he was pleased to designate as profligacy, to the Austen blood.  And Euphrasia resented it bitterly.  Sarah Austen had been a young, elfish thing when he married her,—­a dryad, the elderly and learned Mrs. Tredway had called her.  Mr Vane had understood her about as well as he would have understood Mary, Queen of Scots, if he had been married to that lady.  Sarah Austen had a wild, shy beauty, startled, alert eyes like an animal, and rebellious black hair that curled about her ears and gave her a faun-like appearance.  With a pipe and the costume of Rosalind she would have been perfect.  She had had a habit of running off for the day into the hills with her son, and the conventions of Ripton had been to her as so many defunct blue laws.  During her brief married life there had been periods of defiance from her lasting a week, when she would not speak to Hilary or look at him, and these periods would be followed by violent spells of weeping in Euphrasia’s arms, when the house was no place for Hilary.  He possessed by matrimony and intricate mechanism of which his really admirable brain could not grasp the first principles; he felt for her a real if uncomfortable affection, but when she died he heaved a sigh of relief, at which he was immediately horrified.

Austen he understood little better, but his affection for the child may be likened to the force of a great river rushing through a narrow gorge, and he vied with Euphrasia in spoiling him.  Neither knew what they were doing, and the spoiling process was interspersed with occasional and (to Austen) unmeaning intervals of severe discipline.  The boy loved the streets and the woods and his fellow-beings; his punishments were a series of afternoons in the house, during one of which he wrecked the bedroom where he was confined, and was soundly whaled with an old slipper that broke under the process.  Euphrasia kept the slipper, and once showed it to Hilary during a quarrel they had when the boy was grown up and gone and the house was silent, and Hilary had turned away, choking, and left the room.  Such was his cross.

To make it worse, the boy had love his father.  Nay, still loved him.  As a little fellow, after a scolding for some wayward prank, he would throw himself into Hilary’s arms and cling to him, and would never know how near he came to unmanning him.  As Austen grew up, they saw the world in different colours:  blue to Hilary was red to Austen, and white, black; essentials to one were non-essentials to the other; boys and girls, men and women, abhorred by one were boon companions to the other.

Austen made fun of the minister, and was compelled to go church twice on Sundays and to prayer-meeting on Wednesdays.  Then he went to Camden Street, to live with his grandparents in the old Vane house and attend Camden Wentworth Academy.  His letters, such as they were, were inimitable if crude, but contained not the kind of humour Hilary Vane knew.  Camden Wentworth, principal and teachers, was painted to the life; and the lad could hardly wait for vacation time to see his father, only to begin quarreling with him again.

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Project Gutenberg Complete Works of Winston Churchill from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.