The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Newcomes

    Previous Page Next Page
    having shown Lord Kew the letter the moment after she had done that act,

      of which the poor young lady could not calculate the consequences that

      were now to ensue.

      Lord Kew, on glancing over the letter, at once divined the quarter whence

      it came. The portrait drawn of him was not unlike, as our characters

      described by those who hate us are not unlike. He had passed a reckless

      youth; indeed he was sad and ashamed of that past life, longed like the

      poor prodigal to return to better courses, and had embraced eagerly the

      chance afforded him of a union with a woman young, virtuous, and

      beautiful, against whom and against heaven he hoped to sin no more. If we

      have told or hinted at more of his story than will please the ear of

      modern conventionalism, I beseech the reader to believe that the writer's

      purpose at least is not dishonest, nor unkindly. The young gentleman hung

      his head with sorrow over that sad detail of his life and its follies.

      What would he have given to be able to say to Ethel, "This is not true"

      His reproaches to Miss Newcome of course were at once stopped by this

      terrible assault on himself. The letter had been put in the Baden

      post-box, and so had come to its destination. It was in a disguised

      handwriting. Lord Kew could form no idea even of the sex of the scribe.

      He put the envelope in his pocket, when Ethel's back was turned. He

      examined the paper when he left her. He could make little of the

      superscription or of the wafer which had served to close the note. He did

      not choose to caution Ethel as to whether she should burn the letter or

      divulge it to her friends. He took his share of the pain, as a boy at

      school takes his flogging, stoutly and in silence.

      When he saw Ethel again, which he did in an hour's time, the generous

      young gentleman held his hand out to her. "My dear," he said, "if you had

      loved me you never would have shown me that letter." It was his only

      reproof. After that he never again reproved or advised her.

      Ethel blushed. "You are very brave and generous, Frank," said, bending

      her head, "and I am captious and wicked." He felt the hot tear blotting

      on his hand from his cousin's downcast eyes.

      He kissed her little hand. Lady Anne, who was in the room with her

      children when these few words passed between the two in a very low tone,

      thought it was a reconciliation. Ethel knew it was a renunciation on

      Kew's part--she never liked him so much as at that moment. The young man

      was too modest and simple to guess himself what the girl's feelings were.

      Could he have told them, his fate and hers might have been changed.

      "You must not allow our kind letter-writing friend," Lord Kew continued,

      "to fancy we are hurt. We must walk out this afternoon, and we must

      appear very good friends."

      "Yes, always, Kew," said Ethel, holding out her hand again. The next

      minute her cousin was at the table carving roast-fowls, and distributing

      the portions to the hungry children.

      The assembly of the previous evening had been one of those which the

      fermier des jeux at Baden beneficently provides for the frequenters of

      the place, and now was to come off a much more brilliant entertainment,

      in which poor Clive, who is far into Switzerland by this time, was to

      have taken a share. The Bachelors had agreed to give a ball, one of the

      last entertainments of the season: a dozen or more of them had subscribed

      the funds, and we may be sure Lord Kew's name was at the head of the

      list, as it was of any list, of any scheme, whether of charity or fun.

      The English were invited, and the Russians were invited; the Spaniards

      and Italians, Poles, Prussians, and Hebrews; all the motley frequenters

      of the place, and the warriors in the Duke of Baden's army. Unlimited

      supper was set in the restaurant. The dancing-room glittered with extra

      lights, and a profusion of cut-paper flowers decorated the festive scene.

      Everybody was present, those crowds with whom our story has nothing to

      do, and those two or three groups of persons who enact minor or greater

      parts in it. Madame d'Ivry came in a dress of stupendous splendour, even

      more brilliant than that in which Miss Ethel had figured at the last

      assembly. If the Duchess intended to ecraser Miss Newcome by the superior

      magnificence of her toilet, she was disappointed. Miss Newcome wore a

      plain white frock on the occasion, and resumed, Madame d'Ivry said, her

      role of ingenue for that night.

      During the brief season in which gentlemen enjoyed the favour of Mary

      Queen of Scots, that wandering sovereign led them through all the paces

      and vagaries of a regular passion. As in a fair, where time is short and

      pleasures numerous, the master of the theatrical booth shows you a

      tragedy, a farce, and a pantomime, all in a quarter of an hour, having a

      dozen new audiences to witness his entertainments in the course of the

      forenoon; so this lady with her platonic lovers went through the complete

      dramatic course,--tragedies of jealousy, pantomimes of rapture, and

      farces of parting. There were billets on one side and the other; hints of

      a fatal destiny, and a ruthless, lynx-eyed tyrant, who held a demoniac

      grasp over the Duchess by means of certain secrets which he knew: there

      were regrets that we had not known each other sooner: why were we brought

      out of our convent and sacrificed to Monsieur le Duc? There were frolic

      interchanges of fancy and poesy: pretty bouderies; sweet reconciliations;

      yawns finally--and separation. Adolphe went out and Alphonse came in. It

      was the new audience; for which the bell rang, the band played, and the

      curtain rose; and the tragedy, comedy, and farce were repeated.

      Those Greenwich performers who appear in the theatrical pieces

      above-mentioned, make a great deal more noise than your stationary

      tragedians; and if they have to denounce a villain, to declare a passion,

      or to threaten an enemy, they roar, stamp, shake their fists, and

      brandish their sabres, so that every man who sees the play has surely a

      full pennyworth for his penny. Thus Madame la Duchesse d'Ivry perhaps a

      little exaggerated her heroines' parts liking to strike her audiences

      quickly, and also to change them often. Like good performers, she flung

      herself heart and soul into the business of the stage, and was what she

      acted. She was Phedre, and if in the first part of the play she was

      uncommonly tender to Hippolyte, in the second she hated him furiously.

      She was Medea, and if Jason was volage, woe to Creusa! Perhaps our poor

      Lord Kew had taken the first character in a performance with Madame

      d'Ivry; for his behaviour in which part it was difficult enough to

      forgive him; but when he appeared at Baden the affianced husband of one

      of the most beautiful young creatures in Europe,--when his relatives

      scorned Madame d'Ivry,--no wonder she was maddened and enraged, and would

      have recourse to revenge, steel, poison.

      There was in the Duchess's court a young fellow from the South of France,

      whose friends had sent him to faire son droit at Paris, where he had gone

      through the usual course of pleasure and studies of the young inhabitants
    r />   of the Latin Quarter. He had at one time exalted republican opinions, and

      had fired his shot with distinction at St. Meri. He was a poet of some

      little note--a book of his lyrics, Les Rales d'un Asphyxie, having made a

      sensation at the time of their appearance. He drank great quantities of

      absinthe of a morning; smoked incessantly; played roulette whenever he

      could get a few pieces; contributed to a small journal, and was

      especially great in his hatred of l'infame Angleterre. Delenda est

      Carthago was tattooed beneath his shirt-sleeves. Fifine and Clarisse,

      young milliners of the students' district, had punctured this terrible

      motto on his manly right arm. Le leopard, emblem of England, was his

      aversion; he shook his fist at the caged monster in the Garden of Plants.

      He desired to have "Here lies an enemy of England" engraved upon his

      early tomb. He was skilled at billiards and dominoes, adroit in the use

      of arms, of unquestionable courage and fierceness. Mr. Jones of England

      was afraid of M. de Castillonnes, and cowered before his scowls and

      sarcasms. Captain Blackball, the other English aide-de-camp of the

      Duchesse d'Ivry, a warrior of undoubted courage, who had been "on the

      ground" more than once, gave him a wide berth, and wondered what the

      little beggar meant when he used to say, "Since the days of the Prince

      Noir, monsieur, my family has been at feud with l'Angleterre!" His family

      were grocers at Bordeaux, and his father's name was M. Cabasse. He had

      married a noble in the revolutionary times; and the son at Paris himself

      himself Victor Cabasse de Castillonnes; then Victor C. de Castillonnes;

      then M. de Castillonnes. One of the followers of the Black Prince had

      insulted a lady of the house of Castillonnes, when the English were lords

      of Guienne; hence our friend's wrath against the Leopard. He had written,

      and afterwards dramatised a terrific legend describing the circumstances,

      and the punishment of the Briton by a knight of the Castillonnes family.

      A more awful coward never existed in a melodrama than that felon English

      knight. His blanche-fille, of course, died of hopeless love for the

      conquering Frenchman, her father's murderer. The paper in which the

      feuilleton appeared died at the sixth number of the story. The theatre of

      the Boulevard refused the drama; so the author's rage against l'infame

      Albion was yet unappeased. On beholding Miss Newcome, Victor had fancied

      a resemblance between her and Agnes de Calverley, the blanche Miss of his

      novel and drama, and cast an eye of favour upon the young creature. He

      even composed verses in her honour (for I presume that the "Miss Betti"

      and the Princess Crimhilde of the poems which he subsequently published,

      were no other than Miss Newcome, and the Duchess, her rival). He had been

      one of the lucky gentlemen who had danced with Ethel on the previous

      evening. On the occasion of the ball, he came to her with a highflown

      compliment, and a request to be once more allowed to waltz with her--a

      request to which he expected a favourable answer, thinking, no doubt,

      that his wit, his powers of conversation, and the amour qui flambait dans

      son regard, had had their effect upon the charming Meess. Perhaps he had

      a copy of the very verses in his breast-pocket, with which he intended to

      complete his work of fascination. For her sake alone, he had been heard

      to say that he would enter into a truce with England, and forget the

      hereditary wrongs of his race.

      But the blanche Miss on this evening declined to waltz with him. His

      compliments were not of the least avail. He retired with them and his

      unuttered verses in his crumpled bosom. Miss Newcome only danced in one

      quadrille with Lord Kew, and left the party quite early, to the despair

      of many of the bachelors, who lost the fairest ornament of their ball.

      Lord Kew, however, had been seen walking with her in public, and

      particularly attentive to her during her brief appearance in the

      ballroom; and the old Dowager, who regularly attended all places of

      amusement, and was at twenty parties and six dinners the week before she

      died, thought fit to be particularly gracious to Madame d'Ivry upon this

      evening, and, far from shunning the Duchesse's presence or being rude to

      her, as on former occasions, was entirely smiling and good-humoured. Lady

      Kew, too, thought there had been a reconciliation between Ethel and her

      cousin. Lady Anne had given her mother some account of the handshaking.

      Kew's walk with Ethel, the quadrille which she had danced with him alone,

      induced the elder lady to believe that matters had been made up between

      the young people.

      So, by way of showing the Duchesse that her little shot of the morning

      had failed in its effect, as Frank left the room with his cousin, Lady

      Kew gaily hinted, "that the young earl was aux petits soins with Miss

      Ethel; that she was sure her old friend, the Duc d'Ivry, would be glad to

      hear that his godson was about to range himself. He would settle down on

      his estates. He would attend to his duties as an English peer and a

      country gentleman. We shall go home," says the benevolent Countess, "and

      kill the veau gras, and you shall see our dear prodigal will become a

      very quiet gentleman."

      The Duchesse said, "my Lady Kew's plan was most edifying. She was charmed

      to hear that Lady Kew loved veal; there were some who thought that meat

      rather insipid." A waltzer came to claim her hand at this moment; and as

      she twirled round the room upon that gentleman's arm, wafting odours as

      she moved, her pink silks, pink feathers, pink ribands, making a mighty

      rustling, the Countess of Kew had the satisfaction of thinking that she

      had planted an arrow in that shrivelled little waist, which Count

      Punter's arms embraced, and had returned the stab which Madame d'Ivry had

      delivered in the morning.

      Mr. Barnes, and his elect bride, had also appeared, danced, and

      disappeared. Lady Kew soon followed her young ones; and the ball went on

      very gaily, in spite of the absence of these respectable personages.

      Being one of the managers of the entertainment, Lord Kew returned to it

      after conducting Lady Anne and her daughter to their carriage, and now

      danced with great vigour, and with his usual kindness, selecting those

      ladies whom other waltzers rejected because they were too old, or too

      plain, or too stout, or what not. But he did not ask Madame d'Ivry to

      dance. He could condescend to dissemble so far as to hide the pain which

      he felt; but did not care to engage in that more advanced hypocrisy of

      friendship, which for her part, his old grandmother had not shown the

      least scruple in assuming.

      Amongst other partners, my lord selected that intrepid waltzer, the

      Graefinn von Gumpelheim, who, in spite of her age, size, and large

      family, never lost a chance of enjoying her favourite recreation. "Look

      with what a camel my lord waltzes," said M. Victor to Madame d'Ivry,

      whose slim waist he had the honour of embracing to the same music. "What

      man but an Englishman would ever select such a dromedary?"

      "Avant de se marier," said Madame d'Ivry
    , "il faut avouer que my lord se

      permet d'enormes distractions."

      "My lord marries himself! And when and whom?" cried the Duchesse's

      partner.

      "Miss Newcome. Do not you approve of his choice? I thought the eyes of

      Stenio" (the Duchess called M. Victor, Stenio) "looked with some favour

      upon that little person. She is handsome, even very handsome. Is it not

      so often in life, Stenio? Are not youth and innocence (I give Miss Ethel

      the compliment of her innocence, now surtout that the little painter is

      dismissed)--are we not cast into the arms of jaded roues? Tender young

      flowers, are we not torn from our convent gardens, and flung into a world

      of which the air poisons our pure life, and withers the sainted buds of

      hope and love and faith? Faith! The mocking world tramples on it,

      n'est-ce pas? Love! The brutal world strangles the heaven-born infant at

      its birth. Hope! It smiled at me in my little convent chamber, played

      among the flowers which I cherished, warbled with the birds that I loved.

      But it quitted me at the door of the world, Stenio. It folded its white

      wings and veiled its radiant face! In return for my young love, they gave

      me--sixty years, the dregs of a selfish heart, egotism cowering over its

      fire, and cold for all its mantle of ermine! In place of the sweet

      flowers of my young years, they gave me these, Stenio!" and she pointed

      to her feathers and her artificial roses. "Oh, I should like to crush

      them under my feet!" and she put out the neatest little slipper. The

      Duchesse was great upon her wrongs, and paraded her blighted innocence to

      every one who would feel interested by that piteous spectacle. The music

      here burst out more swiftly and melodiously than before; the pretty

      little feet forgot their desire to trample upon the world. She shrugged

      the lean little shoulders--"Eh!" said the Queen of Scots, "dansons et

      oublions;" and Stenio's arm once more surrounded her fairy waist (she

      called herself a fairy; other ladies called her a skeleton); and they

      whirled away in the waltz again and presently she and Stenio came bumping

      up against the stalwart Lord Kew and the ponderous Madame de Gumpelheim,

      as a wherry dashes against the oaken ribs of a steamer.

      The little couple did not fall; they were struck on to a neighbouring

      bench, luckily: but there was a laugh at the expense of Stenio and the

      Queen of Scots--and Lord Kew, settling his panting partner on to a seat,

      came up to make excuses for his awkwardness to the lady who had been its

      victim. At the laugh produced by the catastrophe, the Duchesse's eyes

      gleamed with anger.

      "M. de Castillonnes," she said to her partner, "have you had any quarrel

      with that Englishman?"

      "With ce milor? But no," said Stenio.

      "He did it on purpose. There has been no day but his family has insulted

      me!" hissed out the Duchesse, and at this moment Lord Kew came up to make

      his apologies. He asked a thousand pardons of Madame la Duchesse for

      being so maladroit.

      "Maladroit! et tres maladroit, monsieur," says Stenio, curling his

      moustache; "c'est bien le mot, monsieur!

      "Also, I make my excuses to Madame la Duchesse, which I hope she will

      receive," said Lord Kew. The Duchesse shrugged her shoulders and sunk her

      head.

      "When one does not know how to dance, one ought not to dance," continued

      the Duchesse's knight.

      "Monsieur is very good to give me lessons in dancing," said Lord Kew.

      "Any lessons which you please, milor!" cries Stenio; "and everywhere

      where you will them."

      Lord Kew looked at the little man with surprise. He could not understand

      so much anger for so trifling an accident, which happens a dozen times in

      every crowded ball. He again bowed to the Duchesse, and walked away.

      "This is your Englishman--your Kew, whom you vaunt everywhere," said

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025