Double Harness
village lay, and thence over rolling stretches of close turf, till the prospect ended in the gleam of waves and the silver-grey mist that lay over the sea.
itting up straight, gave utterance to what his surr
leave this and g
ho lay full length on his back on the turf, with a straw hat over
tland went on, without
at on his head, and knocked out his pipe. He glance
ny for a man who's just g
would write a book about. But it's not worth a book. A page of str
acco-pouch. The sigh seemed to hover doubtfully
ow whether it's legal cruelty to throw libr
im, I should think; and they'd pro
look if I went into cour
tley agreed. "Doesn't she give you
low, she's most aggre
't you give h
you m
c?" murmured Grantle
mber of P
ot. That's a
nk their father a scoundrel." He paused, and added grimly: "And I
ve exhausted the re
t so. Wait till you have s
e bloom's still on my romance, old chap. Talking of children to a man who's only been engaged a week!" Hi
stiff black hair which stood up on his head. His face was not wanting in character, but a look of pla
explanation,"
or Harriet'll blow the roof off over tha
e warning of its character. At the foot of it stood the Old Mill House, backing on to a little stream. Farther on lay the church and the parsonage; opposite to them was the post-office, which was also a general shop and also had rooms to let to visitors. The village inn, next to the post-office, and a dozen or so of labourers' cottages
ourtland as they passed Old Mill House, a rambling,
e uneuphonious name of Mumple living with them. She's been a sort of nurse-housekeeper-companion: a mixed kind of position-breakfast and midday dinner with the family, but didn't join his reverence's evening meal. You know the sort of thing. She's monstrously fat; but Sibylla loves her. And the new rector moved in a fortnight ago, and everybody hates him. And the temporary curate, who was here because the ne
share in a solid old-fashioned banking-house; was now a director of the great joint-stock undertaking in which the family business had consented to merge itself on handsome terms; had just as much work to do as he liked, and possessed, and always had enjoyed, more money th
ked country girl for wife! That's
ding-and there's the post-office. Go in, a
r men's wives are generally received with much the same mixture of scepticism and disdain as the witticisms
by the inn and conversing with a young man who wore a very old coat and rough tweed knickerbockers. Grantley introduced him as Mr. Jeremy Chiddingfold, and Courtland knew that he was Sibylla's brot
; for though Jeremy was a vigorous, if not a handsome, masculi
ry his sister-oh, we can talk away, Jeremy; Tom Courtland doesn't matter. He knows a
means embarrassed Jeremy; per
, you know," Grantley went on, smiling and stretch
e altogether!"
o him with a quick
g. "It's early in life to have come
, quite so; but--
of priests," Jeremy
y attacked, was immensely diverted, though his own feelings gave a rather bitter
fall in love
en fo
world must be p
t necessary to
histled
theory," said Grantley; "in p
a thump on the bench. "Because they're hidebound, and, as I say, th
You speak feelingly. Your father, perhaps-
However that's got nothing to do with it. I'm going o
t one another, smiled,
pretending we do. You tell
expect marriage, as we have it, to succeed when women are what they are? And haven't they always been the same? Of course
in much more than the valley in which
age," said Courtland, "I should
pt out of a lot of sc
ou would!" s
needed no e
ng women, Jeremy?" Grantley pursued
eremy. "Well, let me reco
ll us more about wo
pose you're thin
Grantley. "You know h
which he had been in the end obliged to refer his listeners to another authority, Jeremy lost at the same time
n, perhaps, than Sibyll
ght, if you know
ed to say to me about Harriet,"
ey used to have awful rows-do still now and then. Sibylla used to fly out at Mumples, then Mumples sat on Sibylla, and then, w
t consciousness of recti
d tempers, and Mumples is infernally religious and Sibylla's generous to the point of idiocy in my opinion. So after a row, when Sibylla h
deep into family
, and the governor and I could hea
e and that sor
really loved Mumples better than anything on earth. Then Mumples would weigh in, and call Sibylla the sweetest and meekest lamb on earth, and say that she loved Sibylla more than anything on earth, and that she-Mumples-was the worst-tempered and cruellest and unjustest woman alive, not fit to be near such an angel as Sibylla. Then Sibylla used to say that was
ay back an
ve your things to-er-Mump
my, but with a more resigned and better-tempered air. His remi
to have a preceptress of more
oth awfully fond of her. Besides she's had such beastly
not
nt to quod, you kno
years! B
n; but it seems to have been a cold sort of passion, because he waited twelve hours for him befor
he d
t out in about three years.
n! Does she go
. The governor was high sheriff's chaplain at the time, so he got to know Mumples, a
comes across!" si
ve for a moment, but he
umples-I can't thump her. I should be better than Mumples in one way, t
n if you didn't think
Grantley, and to sober him. He spent a
at last. "But at any rate
er think so. But if it wasn't
ight, J
fe. She sees things uncommonly sha
ack to H
on the subject of his theories. The two watched him stride
a country parso
an embryo. But I think he's a promi
ow you're going to m
n't be expected to take a cheerful view. Poor old
thereabouts-a slim long-legged child, almost gaunt in her immaturity, and lamentably grown out of her frock. She cried shrill g
have come to live in the village is a gross personal affront to Jeremy Chiddingfold. He's especial
laughed in
get that wire in
a fool to stand what he did from the woman. But what was the use of that? Tom Court