He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (books you need to read .txt) 📕
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her to live apart from him by his own bad conduct, then probably the
custody of her boy might be awarded to her, until the child should be
seven years old. But when the circumstances of the case were explained
to Sir Marmaduke’s lawyer by Lady Rowley, that gentleman shook his
head. Mrs Trevelyan had, he said, no case with which she could go into
court. Then by degrees there were words whispered as to the husband’s
madness. The lawyer said that that was a matter for the doctors. If a
certain amount of medical evidence could be obtained to show that the
husband was in truth mad, the wife could, no doubt, obtain the custody
of the child. When this was reported to Mrs Trevelyan, she declared
that conduct such as her husband’s must suffice to prove any man to be
mad; but at this Sir Marmaduke shook his head, and Lady Rowley sat,
sadly silent, with her daughter’s hand within her own. They would not
dare to tell her that she could regain her child by that plea.
During those ten days they did not learn whither the boy had been
carried, nor did they know even where the father might be found. Sir
Marmaduke followed up the address as given in the letter, and learned
from the porter at ‘The Acrobats’ that the gentleman’s letters were
sent to No. 65, Stony Walk, Union Street, Borough. To this
uncomfortable locality Sir Marmaduke travelled more than once. Thrice
he went thither, intent on finding his son-in-law’s residence. On the
two first occasions he saw no one but Mrs Bozzle; and the discretion of
that lady in declining to give any information was most admirable.
‘Trewillian!’ Yes, she had heard the name certainly. It might be that
her husband had business engagements with a gent of that name. She
would not say even that for certain, as it was not her custom ever to
make any inquiries as to her husband’s business engagements. Her
husband’s business engagements were, she said, much too important for
the ‘likes of she’ to know anything about them. When was Bozzle likely
to be at home? Bozzle was never likely to be at home. According to her
showing, Bozzle was of all husbands the most erratic. He might perhaps
come in for an hour or two in the middle of the day on a Wednesday, or
perhaps would take a cup of tea at home on Friday evening. But anything
so fitful and uncertain as were Bozzle’s appearances in the bosom of
his family was not to be conceived in the mind of woman. Sir Marmaduke
then called in the middle of the day on Wednesday, but Bozzle was
reported to be away in the provinces. His wife had no idea in which of
the provinces he was at that moment engaged. The persevering governor
from the islands called again on the Friday evening, and then, by
chance, Bozzle was found at home. But Sir Marmaduke succeeded in
gaining very little information even from Bozzle. The man acknowledged
that he was employed by Mr Trevelyan. Any letter or parcel left with
him for Mr Trevelyan should be duly sent to that gentleman. If Sir
Marmaduke wanted Mr Trevelyan’s address, he could write to Mr Trevelyan
and ask for it. If Mr Trevelyan declined to give it, was it likely that
he, Bozzle, should betray it? Sir Marmaduke explained who he was at
some length. Bozzle with a smile assured the governor that he knew very
well who he was. He let drop a few words to show that he was intimately
acquainted with the whole course of Sir Marmaduke’s family affairs. He
knew all about the Mandarins, and Colonel Osborne, and Gregg’s Hotel—
not that he said anything about Parker’s Hotel—and the Colonial Office.
He spoke of Miss Nora, and even knew the names of the other two young
ladies, Miss Sophia and Miss Lucy. It was a weakness with Bozzle, that
of displaying his information. He would have much liked to be able to
startle Sir Marmaduke by describing the Government House in the island,
or by telling him something of his old carriage-horses. But of such
information as Sir Marmaduke desired, Sir Marmaduke got none.
And there were other troubles which fell very heavily upon the poor
governor, who had come home as it were for a holiday, and who was a man
hating work naturally, and who, from the circumstances of his life, had
never been called on to do much work. A man may govern the Mandarins
and yet live in comparative idleness. To do such governing work well a
man should have a good presence, a flow of words which should mean
nothing, an excellent temper, and a love of hospitality. With these
attributes Sir Rowley was endowed; for, though his disposition was by
nature hot, for governing purposes it had been brought by practice
under good control. He had now been summoned home through the
machinations of his dangerous old friend Colonel Osborne, in order that
he might give the results of his experience in governing before a
committee of the House of Commons. In coming to England on this
business he had thought much more of his holiday, of his wife and
children, of his daughters at home, of his allowance per day while he
was to be away from his government, and of his salary to be paid to him
entire during his absence, instead of being halved as it would be if he
were away on leave; he had thought much more in coming home on these
easy and pleasant matters, than he did on the work that was to be
required from him when he arrived. And then it came to pass that he
felt himself almost injured, when the Colonial Office demanded his
presence from day to day, and when clerks bothered him with questions
as to which they expected ready replies, but in replying to which Sir
Marmaduke was by no means ready. The working men at the Colonial Office
had not quite thought that Sir Marmaduke was the most fitting man for
the job in hand. There was a certain Mr Thomas Smith at another set of
islands in quite another part of the world, who was supposed by these
working men at home to be a very paragon of a governor. If he had been
had home, so said the working men, no Committee of the House would have
been able to make anything of him. They might have asked him questions
week after week, and he would have answered them all fluently and would
have committed nobody. He knew all the ins and outs of governing, did Mr
Thomas Smith, and was a match for the sharpest Committee that ever sat
at Westminster. Poor Sir Marmaduke was a man of a very different sort;
all of which was known by the working men; but the Parliamentary
interest had been too strong, and here was Sir Marmaduke at home. But
the working men were not disposed to make matters so pleasant for Sir
Marmaduke as Sir Marmaduke had expected. The Committee would not
examine Sir Marmaduke till after Easter, in the middle of April; but it
was expected of him that, he should read blue-books without number, and
he was so catechised by the working men that he almost began to wish
himself back at the Mandarins. In this way the new establishment in
Manchester Street was not at first in a happy or even in a contented
condition.
At last, after about ten days, Lady Rowley did succeed in obtaining an
interview with Trevelyan. A meeting was arranged through Bozzle, and
took place in a very dark and gloomy room at an inn in the City. Why
Bozzle should have selected the Bremen Coffee House, in Poulter’s
Alley, for this meeting no fit reason can surely be given, unless it
was that he conceived himself bound to select the most dreary locality
within his knowledge on so melancholy an occasion. Poulter’s Alley is a
narrow dark passage somewhere behind the Mansion House; and the Bremen
Coffee House—why so called no one can now tell—is one of those strange
houses of public resort in the City at which the guests seem never to
eat, never to drink, never to sleep, but to come in and out after a
mysterious and almost ghostly fashion, seeing their friends or perhaps
their enemies, in nooks and corners, and carrying on their conferences
in low melancholy whispers. There is an aged waiter at the Bremen
Coffee House; and there is certainly one private sitting-room upstairs.
It was a dingy, ill-furnished room, with an old large mahogany table,
an old horse-hair sofa, six horse-hair chairs, two old round mirrors,
and an old mahogany press in a corner. It was a chamber so sad in its
appearance that no wholesome useful work could have been done within
it; nor could men have eaten there with any appetite, or have drained
the flowing bowl with any touch of joviality. It was generally used for
such purposes as that to which it was now appropriated, and no doubt
had been taken by Bozzle on more than one previous occasion. Here Lady
Rowley arrived precisely at the hour fixed, and was told that the
gentleman was waiting up stairs for her.
There had, of course, been many family consultations as to the manner
in which this meeting should be arranged. Should Sir Marmaduke
accompany his wife or, perhaps, should Sir Marmaduke go alone? Lady
Rowley had been very much in favour of meeting Mr Trevelyan without any
one to assist her in the conference. As for Sir Marmaduke, no meeting
could be concluded between him and his son-in-law without a personal,
and probably a violent quarrel. Of that Lady Rowley had been quite
sure. Sir Marmaduke, since he had been home, had, in the midst of his
various troubles, been driven into so vehement a state of indignation
against his son-in-law as to be unable to speak of the wretched man
without strongest terms of opprobrium. Nothing was too bad to be said
by him of one who had ill-treated his dearest daughter. It must be
admitted that Sir Marmaduke had heard only one side of the question. He
had questioned his daughter, and had constantly seen his old friend
Osborne. The colonel’s journey down to Devonshire had been made to
appear the most natural proceeding in the world. The correspondence of
which Trevelyan thought so much had been shown to consist of such notes
as might pass between any old gentleman and any young woman. The
promise which Trevelyan had endeavoured to exact, and which Mrs
Trevelyan had declined to give, appeared to the angry father to be a
monstrous insult. He knew that the colonel was an older man than
himself, and his Emily was still to him only a young girl. It was
incredible to him that anybody should have regarded his old comrade as
his daughter’s lover. He did not believe that anybody had, in truth, so
regarded the man. The tale had been a monstrous invention on the part
of the husband, got up because he had become tired of his young wife.
According to Sir Marmaduke’s way of thinking, Trevelyan should either
be thrashed within an inch of his life, or else locked up in a
madhouse. Colonel Osborne shook his head, and expressed a conviction
that the poor man was mad.
But Lady Rowley was more hopeful. Though she was as confident about her
daughter as was the father, she was less confident about the old
friend. She, probably, was alive to the fact that a man of fifty might
put on the airs and assume the character of a young lover; and acting
on that suspicion, entertaining also some hope that bad as matters now
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