The Heir of Redclyffe
irit have so
ill strive to
TEM
er room opened into it on one side, and Charles's on the other; it was a sort of up-stairs parlour, where she taught Charlotte, cast up accounts, spoke to servants, and wrote notes, and where Charles was usually to be found, when unequal to coming down-stairs. It had a
ttern, all over pagodas, while little Charlotte sat opposite to him, curled up on a footstool. He was not always very civil to Charlotte; she sometimes came into coll
be here. I wish mamma would let me go d
n, hold up your hands, and exclaim, "Wh
ma and Laura that you should
e you make had better dep
will be too sorrowful to like a racket; and when A
said Charle
k you shall
s, sententiously, 'when I have seen whether
shes his to
Sir Guy will brush
te. 'I asked Laura, and she told me not to be curious, so I knew there was somethi
ld have yo
ear Charlie! are you re
r hear of a
and killing each other for ever. There was one man who made his enemy
s o
the table, at breakfast, with
Philip's head at breakfast, with a pi
rles, what do you mean? Su
dly feud between the two bran
g,' said Charlotte,
Of cours
hing wrong. But how w
ious endeavour to keep the peace,
k anything w
apprehended,' said
ost of observation, leaving her brother delighted at having mystified her. She return
ooked in Sir Guy's
t plague me so! You
And he continued to tease her in the same style till Laura
they cried,
emanlike!'
oking,' said Amy.
xpression,' sa
en left partly open. 'Here is poor Charles,' it said, 'come in, and see him; get over the first introduction-eh, Guy?' And bef
s; but I have brought Guy to see you.' Then, as Charles sat up and shook hands with Sir Guy, he continued-'
s he looked up at the frank, open face, and lustrous hazel eyes turned on him with compassion
y appeared a large beautiful spaniel, with a long silky black and white coat, jetty curled ears, tan spots above his intelligent eyes, and tan legs,
d Charles. 'Come her
at his master, and moved noth
repent of your kindness,' sa
the answer; 'mamma never obj
, papa,' said Lau
ide her glowing face, and held out her hand to the dog, which at last ventured to advance, still creeping wi
t dislike it?' inquire
ere, you fi
curled himself into the shape of a comma, but bounded, wagged his tail, thrust his nose into his master's hand and then proceeded to reconnoitre the rest of the company,
e like of such a dressing-gown? Are you satisfied? Giv
id Laura, and, after a few more compliments, Bustle a
a dozen, miles further than have been lugged in here. Really, if papa chooses to inflict such dressin
said Laura. 'Will m
ot hear,' said Am
Philip?' said Charlotte
ale, and then going to S
her brother; and she looked in d
o you think
orthy of his dog!
are neither worthy of thei
is the foundation of tha
could hardly be too worthy,' said Laura. 'T
uld not lose tha
the former rubbing his hands, as he always did when much pleased, and sending his voice be
er-sized,'
very good height; you can't expect every one to be as tall as Phi
rtly, for he hated answering ki
awing-room, but I thought you would have liked just to se
your intention,' said Charles, 'I wo
g,' said poor Mr. Edmonstone, only half conscious of
out of humour; and seeing, as he did, his mother's motive, he was stil
to them. Every one said the same-clergyman, old Markham, all of them. Such attention to his grandfather, such proper
his eyebrows
on with Philip?
he is quite inclined to look up to him.' Charles made an exaggerated gesture of astonishment, unseen by his father. 'I told him to bring his dog. He would
am very glad y
le. A beautiful chestnut-anything to raise his sp
ost imploring him to like them, and had at last ungraciously given her leave to send what he could not quite say he disliked, he was left to carry o
ed. 'Another swan
you like
an angular
Redclyffe speaks
owever, I could have swallowed everything but the disposition to adore Philip.
ame, Ch
ct and sententious cousin, a poor subaltern, and the next in the entail? Depend upon it, it is a fiction created either by papa's ho
s willing to loo
a friend of his own picking and choosing, and so his father's adoption did not succeed in repelling him. But that Morville should receive this "young man's c
ghtful creature I ever saw, s
the man tha
uld not bear to be called Sir Guy, so papa said we should call him only by his name, if he would do
, those moors to shoot over, his own master, and with health to enjoy it, ther
ith that horri
oneself upon. I rather c
his face, I think you
h of November is enough in the year. Here, fin
s of age, and Philip, just seventeen. The boy was at the head of his school, highly distinguished for application and good conduct; he had attained every honour there open to him, won golden opinions from all concerned with him, and made proof of talents which could not have failed to raise him to the highest university distinctions. He was absent from home
d: 'Noble!' he cried, 'and yet what a p
t he knew we should never have given our consent, so he acted quite by himself, wrote to Lord Thorndale, a
tunity of making such a sacrifice,'
d Mrs. Edmonstone; 'I believe if he had got a fellow
rried, there is all his expensive education throw
ylehurst, so that it would still have been his home. It is a great pit
I had rather take his opinion than any one's, especially about a horse, and there is n
bout Mr. Thorndale
hilip's cap; besides, he is your
Thorndale?' said Mrs. E
,' said Sir Guy; 'but he lives on the other s
s Thorndale, the second
lways licking him!' i
on purpose to have him under Philip's eye. There he is at Broadstone, as gentlemanlike a youth as I would wish to see. We will have him to dinner some day, and Maurice too-eh, mamma? Maurice-he is a young Irish cousin of my own, a capital fellow at the bottom, but a regular thoroughg
on a hired horse, racing with Mr. Gordon, and the horse tu
Mr. Edmonstone, 'the in
scussion of home affairs, and thoug