Vellenaux A Novel by Edmund William Edmund William (e book reader pc TXT) π
Sending A Flood Of Soft, Mellow Rainbow Tinted Light Through The
Quaintly Curved And Deeply Mullioned Windows Which Adorned A Portion Of
The Eastern Wing Of That Grand Old Baronial Residence, Vellenaux, On A
Fine September Morning, At The Period During Which Our Story Opens. This
Handsome Pile, Now The Property Of Sir Jasper Coleman, Had Been Erected
By One Of His Ancestors, Reginald De Coleman, During The Reign Of The
Fifth Henry.
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- Author: Edmund William Edmund William
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Walked In The Direction Indicated.
"Pretty Spoken Woman That; Devilish Good Looting, Too; What Can She Want
With Old Castigan?" Remarked One Of The Party.
"Missed Her Passage In The Last Ship, Perhaps, And Wants To Know If
There Be Any Room In The 'Kaffir Chief,'" Replied Another Of The
Bystanders, "Go Over At Once To The 'Jolly Sailor'; I Will Be With You
As Soon As I Deliver The Lady'S Message, And Then We Will Drink Her
Health," Said The Old Salt Who Had Received The Lady'S Bounty.
"Captain Costigan, Of The 'Kaffir Chief,' I Believe," Said Mrs.
Fraudhurst As She Advanced From Under The Trees, From Whence She Had
Been Watching His Approach.
"The Same At Your Service Madam," Was The Reply Of The Polite Seaman, As
He Lifted His Glazed Hat And Bowed To The Person Who Addressed Him.
"I Have, Unfortunately, Lost My Passage In The 'Eastern Monarch,' Which
Sailed Some Days Since From London, And Am Anxious To Return To The Cape
With As Little Delay As Possible. I Noticed In The Newspaper That Your
Vessel Was Bound To That Port,--Am I Too Late, Or Have You Room For
Another?" The Captain Eyed Her For A Moment, And Apparently Satisfied
With His Scrutiny, Replied:
"I Have But Few Passengers, And There Is A First-Class Berth Vacant,
With Excellent Accommodation. You Will I Trust Take A Sailor'S Word For
That, As The Time Is Short, And I Sail At Sunset."
"The Truth And Honesty Of Our Sailors Are Proverbial," Said The Lady
With One Of Her Blandest Smiles. He Then Accompanied Her To The Hotel;
Here Matters Were Quickly Arranged, The Passage Money Paid Down, And
Captain Costigan Promised To Call For Her, And Convey Her And Her
Effects On Board On His Return Call. This Had Been So Quietly
Managed--No Agent Or Go Between Employed--That No Person, Not Even The
Landlord Of The Hotel, Was Aware Of Her Intentions. He Was Under The
Impression That The Lady, Who Occupied Two Of The Best Rooms In His
House, Would In all Probability Remain There For The Rest Of The
Summer. This He Judged From What She Had Let Fall During A Conversation
He Had Had With Her An Hour After Her Arrival, And The Worthy Man Was
Quite Taken Aback When She Paid Her Bill, And Leaning On The Arm Of
Captain Costigan, Left His Establishment, To Take Up Her Quarters On
Board The Good Ship, Now Lying With Her Anchor Apeak In The Offing.
From The Quarter Deck Of The "Kaffir Chief," Towards The Close Of That
Beautiful Summer Day, Could Be Seen A Magnificent Panoramic View Of One
Of The Finest Harbors In europe, With The Purple-Tinted Hills Of Munster
In The Distance, And The Iron-Bound Coast Standing Boldly Out On Either
Side, And Beaten With The Surges Which Impetuously Dashed Against The
Rugged Steeps. In Stormy Weather The Billows Rolled In From The Dark
Ocean In Long Arching Waves, Bursting With A Deafening Noise On The
Beething Cliffs, And Scattering The Salt Spray Hundreds Of Feet In The
Air. Then Again Met The Eye The Fortifications On Spike Island, Convict
Depot, Carlisle Fort, Light House, Camden Fort, Black Point, And The
Handsome City Of Cork, With Its Bustling Streets And Its Quays And
Docks, Crowded With Vessels Of All Nations, Presenting A Picture Well
Worth Travelling Miles To Behold. But What A Bright Change Has Come Over
The Spirit Of The Age, Since The Days Of Elizabeth And Religious
Persecution, When Cork Was Made A Howling Wilderness, Because Its
Inhabitants Refused To Attend The Protestant Places Of Worship As
Ordered By Law. Verily, In every Country, And In every Age, Mad
Fanaticism Has Played Such Pranks Before High Heaven As To Make Even The
Angels Weep For Poor Humanity. But We Live In Happier Times Now, And
Enjoy That Great Blessing, Liberty Of Conscience, To Its Fullest
Extent.
The Wind Was Fair, And, With Every Sail Set, The Gallant Bark, On The
Top Of The White Crested Foam Of The Rippling Waves, Floated Proudly Out
To Sea, And Was Soon Hull Down In The Distance, Her Tall Tapering Spars
Fading From View, For The Bright Orb Of Day Had Already Sank Beneath Its
Ocean Bed, And The Golden Tints Of The Horizon Were Fast Deepening To
The Purple Shades Of Night. There Were But Three Other Passengers, An
Old Major Of Artillery, A Merchant Of Cape Town, And A Juvenile Ensign
Of Infantry, Going Out To Join His Regiment. There Were No Other Ladies
On Board; This Was A Source Of Infinite Satisfaction To The Flying
Widow, Who, From Prudential Motives, Had Engaged Her Passage Under The
Name Of Mrs. Harcourt Grenville, And Fears For Her Personal Safety Were
Completely Set At Rest On Finding That The News Of The Accident By Rail,
Which Had Cost Sir Ralph Coleman His Life, Had Not Reached The Ear Of
Any Person On Board, And She, Herself, Was Not Quite Certain But That
Her Accomplice In Fraud Might Yet Survive; If So, Her Condition Was
Still Very Precarious, But She Argued That He Would Scarcely Recover, Or
He Would Not Have Committed Himself By Making Known To The World His
Share In The Transaction Concerning The Stolen Will, And Under The
Assumed Name, And In a Distant Land, She Would Be Secure From Detection.
She Had No Intention Of Remaining At The Cape; Her Object Was To Try Her
Fortune In India, And Had Only Come On Board The "Kaffir Chief," As It
Afforded Her The Earliest Opportunity For Evading Pursuit. She Was Well
Aware That She Could Easily Proceed To India From The Cape In One Of The
Indiamen That So Frequently Touched At That Port, And So, On The Whole,
She Felt Tolerably Easy In Her New Position, And Set To Work, With Her
Usual Tact, To Make Herself Agreeable To The Captain And Her Fellow
Travellers. Ensign Winterton She Took Under Her Especial Protection,
Which Very Much Flattered His Boyish Pride; Made Considerable Headway
With Major Dowlas, Who, By The Way, Was A Bachelor; And Never Failed To
Accept The Proffered Arm Of The Attentive Captain, When On Deck; For
Although Married And On The Wrong Side Of Fifty, Being An Irishman And A
Corkonian, He Was Not Insensible To The Charms Of A Handsome Woman Some
Years His Junior.
Her Account Of Herself Was, That She Was The Wife Of A Surgeon At
Graham'S Town, Had Been Some Time In england, And Had Spent The Spring
And Part Of The Summer In London, And Intended To Remain At Cape Town
Until Her Husband Came For Her. She Had Several Thousand Pounds, The
Savings Of Some Twenty Years, Dressed With Excellent Taste, And Had
Taken Such Good Care Of Her Constitution, That She Looked At Least Ten
Years Younger Than She Really Was, And Felt Convinced From All She Had
Heard And Read, That She Would Experience But Little Difficulty In
Procuring A Suitable Husband And Establishment In One Of The Indian
Presidencies, She Cared Not Which, And Having No Acquaintances In The
Army, Was Not At All Likely To Be Recognized As The Ex-Governess Of
Vellenaux.
Chapter 17
There Was Another Change That Had Taken Place In The Little Village Of
Vellenaux Which Has Not Been Brought To The Notice Of The Reader, And
May As Well Be Introduced Here As Elsewhere, Since It Must Be Known
Sooner Or Later. The Venerable Rector Who Had Performed The Last Sad
Rites Over Sir Jasper, Did Not Long Survive His Old And Esteemed Friend.
He Had Been Ailing For Several Months Prior To His Decease, And Had Been
Assisted In His Clerical Duties By A Curate, A Gentleman Of
Pre-Possessing Appearance; About Twenty-Eight Years Of Age. He Appeared
To Be Eminently Qualified For The Profession He Had Chosen, And Entered
With Spirit And Energy Upon The Various Duties That Now Devolved Upon
Him; His Quiet And Unassuming Manner Gained Him The Respect Of The Whole
Neighborhood. He Read With A Clear, Distinct Tone, And His Sermons Were
Such As Had Not Been Heard In Vellenaux For Many Years. He Was Always
Welcome Whenever He Visited His Parishioners Or Attended The Sick. He
Took A Very Great Interest In The Sunday School That Had Been
Inaugurated By Edith Who Had, On Leaving The Willows, Transferred That
Responsibility To Julia And Emily Barton, And On Her Sister'S Marriage
Emily Presided Over The Classes. This Just Suited One Of Her Tastes And
Habits, Who Was Ever Ready To Perform Some Errand Of Mercy To The Poor
And The Invalid, And Was Untiring In Her Efforts To Teach The Young
Children. She Had Often Been Thanked By The Clergyman For Her Valuable
Assistance, Without Which, He Was Wont To Observe, He Scarcely Knew What
He Should Do.
When The Rector Was Removed From This Sublunary Sphere, The Rev. Charles
Denham, Through The Interest Of Lord Patronage, Whose Fag He Had Been
While At Eton, Obtained The Vacant Rectorship. This Was Considered By
The Good Folks Of The District To Be A Fortunate Circumstance, And
Things Went Smoothly On As In The Good Old Time. But On The Death Of Her
Parents Emily Barton, As The Reader Already Knows, Left Vellenaux To
Reside In London. The Rev. Gentleman Did Not Know Which Way To Turn; He
Was Sorely Puzzled; He Had Depended So Much On Emily That He Began To
Think Seriously Of The Possibility Of Being Able To Induce Miss Barton
To Exchange That Name For The One Of Denham. This Matter Had Been
Revolving In His Mind For Some Time Past, Though He Had Given No
Utterance To His Feelings, And Now She Was About To Leave That Part Of
The Country, Perhaps For A Lengthened Period. "If," Thought He, "The
Sunday School Had Emily At Its Head, It Would Materially Assist Me," And
He Felt Convinced That The Rectory, Without A Wife To Superintend It,
Would Be, After All, A Very Lonely Place To Pass His Days In, Would She
Not Consent To Undertake The Double Duties. "I Have Never Spoken To
Her," He Said Musingly, As He Paced Up And Down His Study, "But I Shall,
When Grief For The Loss Of Her Parents Will Allow Her To Listen To Such
A Proposal."
On Parting With Him On The Morning Of Her Departure, She Was Somewhat
Embarassed At His Altered Manner Towards Her. She Could Not But Notice
His Warm Pressure Of Her Hand, And His Earnestness Of Manner, When
Asking Permission To Visit Her In London.
"My Aunt And Sister Will, I Am Sure, Be Always Happy To Receive You When
In London," She Quietly Replied, And After A Moment'S Pause, Continued:
"I Shall Likewise Still Take An Interest In The School, And Shall Be
Glad To Learn How My Little Scholars Are Getting On."
The Young Rector Found It Necessary To Visit London On Several Occasions
During The Next Twelvemonth.
In One Of The Broad Gravelled Avenues Of Kensington Gardens, Slowly
Walking Beneath The Magnificent Trees, The Soft Mossy Grass, Yellow And
White Daisy, Bending Beneath Their Footsteps, Were Two Figures,--The One
A Gentleman Dressed In black, With A White Clerical Neck-Tie, The Other
A Lady About The Medium Height, With Pretty Features, And Decidedly
Elegant Figure, Which Was Set Off To Advantage By The Cut And Fit Of The
Pale Lavender Silk Dress She Wore. They Were Progressing Slowly Towards
The Gate Leading Into Hyde Park; Their Conversation Was Somewhat
Interrupted By A Knot Of Passing Guardsmen And Other Fashionable
Loungers, To Be Again Resumed When They Were Beyond Ear Shot. They
Continued Their Walk Along The Bank Of The Serpentine, And Could The
Passer By Have Peered Through The Lady'S Veil, He Would Have Found Her
Face Suffused With Blushes At Different Turns In The Conversation, But
They Were Those Of Pleasure, For Certainly The Crimson Flush Of Anger
Found No Place There. They Crossed The Park And Passed Out At Stanhope
Gate And Turned In The Direction Of Berkly Square.
"You Have Made Me So Happy, Dear Emily, Since You Grant Me Permission To
Speak To Your Aunt And Brother On The Subject Nearest My Heart," And
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