He Knew He Was Right by Anthony Trollope (books you need to read .txt) ๐
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to Uncle Barty. I donโt know what it is yet, but I am to take it. As
far as I can understand, she has sent all the way to London for me, in
order that I may take a message across the Close.โ
โYou talk as though it were very disagreeable, coming to Exeter,โ said
Dorothy, with a little pout.
โSo it is very disagreeable.โ
โOh, Brooke!โ
โVery disagreeable if our marriage is to be put off by it. I think it
will be so much nicer making love somewhere on the Rhine than having
snatches of it here, and talking all the time about wills and tenements
and settlements.โ As he said this, with his arm round her waist and his
face quite close to hers, shewing thereby that he was not altogether
averse even to his present privileges, she forgave him.
On that same afternoon, just before the banking hours were over, Brooke
went across to the house of Cropper and Burgess, having first been
closeted for nearly an hour with his aunt and, as he went, his step was
sedate and his air was serious. He found his uncle Barty, and was not
very long in delivering his message. It was to this effect, that Miss
Stanbury particularly wished to see Mr Bartholomew Burgess on business,
at some hour on that afternoon or that evening. Brooke himself had been
made acquainted with the subject in regard to which this singular
interview was desired; but it was not a part of his duty to communicate
any information respecting it. It had been necessary that his consent
to certain arrangements should be asked before the invitation to Barty
Burgess could be given; but his present mission was confined to an
authority to give the invitation.
Old Mr Burgess was much surprised, and was at first disposed to decline
the proposition made by the โold harridan,โ as he called her. He had
never put any restraint on his language in talking of Miss Stanbury
with his nephew, and was not disposed to do so now, because she had
taken a new vagary into her head. But there was something in his
nephewโs manner which at last induced him to discuss the matter
rationally.
โAnd you donโt know what itโs all about?โ said Uncle Barty.
โI canโt quite say that. I suppose I do know pretty well. At any rate,
I know enough to think that you ought to come. But I must not say what
it is.โ
โWill it do me or anybody else any good?โ
โIt canโt do you any harm. She wonโt eat you.โ
โBut she can abuse me like a pickpocket, and I should return it, and
then there would be a scolding match. I always have kept out of her
way, and I think I had better do so still.โ
Nevertheless Brooke prevailed, or rather the feeling of curiosity which
was naturally engendered prevailed. For very, very many years Barty
Burgess had never entered or left his own house of business without
seeing the door of that in which Miss Stanbury lived, and he had never
seen that door without a feeling of detestation for the owner of it. It
would, perhaps, have been a more rational feeling on his part had he
confined his hatred to the memory of his brother, by whose will Miss
Stanbury had been enriched, and he had been, as he thought,
impoverished. But there had been a contest, and litigation, and
disputes, and contradictions, and a long course of those incidents in
life which lead to rancour and ill blood, after the death of the former
Brooke Burgess; and, as the result of all this, Miss Stanbury held the
property and Barty Burgess held his hatred. He had never been ashamed
of it, and had spoken his mind out to all who would hear him. And, to
give Miss Stanbury her due, it must be admitted that she had hardly
been behind him in the warmth of her expression, of which old Barty was
well aware. He hated, and knew that he was hated in return. And he
knew, or thought that he knew, that his enemy was not a woman to relent
because old age and weakness and the fear of death were coming on her.
His enemy, with all her faults, was no coward. It could not be that now
at the eleventh hour she should desire to reconcile him by any act of
tardy justice, nor did he wish to be reconciled at this, the eleventh
hour. His hatred was a pleasant excitement to him. His abuse of Miss
Stanbury was a chosen recreation. His unuttered daily curse, as he
looked over to her door, was a relief to him. Nevertheless he would go.
As Brooke had said, no harm could come of his going. He would go, and at
least listen to her proposition.
About seven in the evening his knock was heard at the door. Miss
Stanbury was sitting in the small upstairs parlour, dressed in her
second best gown, and was prepared with considerable stiffness and
state for the occasion. Dorothy was with her, but was desired in a
quick voice to hurry away the moment the knock was heard, as though old
Barty would have jumped from the hall door into the room at a bound.
Dorothy collected herself with a little start, and went without a word.
She had heard much of Barty Burgess, but had never spoken to him, and
was subject to a feeling of great awe when she would remember that the
grim old man of whom she had heard so much evil would soon be her
uncle. According to arrangement, Mr Burgess was shewn upstairs by his
nephew. Barty Burgess had been born in this very house, but had not
been inside the walls of it for more than thirty years. He also was
somewhat awed by the occasion, and followed his nephew without a word.
Brooke was to remain at hand, so that he might be summoned should he be
wanted; but it had been decided by Miss Stanbury that he should not be
present at the interview. As soon as her visitor entered the room she
rose in a stately way, and curtseyed, propping herself with one hand
upon the table as she did so. She looked him full in the face
meanwhile, and curtseying a second time, asked him to seat himself in a
chair which had been prepared for him. She did it all very well, and it
may be surmised that she had rehearsed the little scene, perhaps more
than once, when nobody was looking at her. He bowed, and walked round
to the chair and seated himself; but finding that he was so placed that
he could not see his neighbourโs face, he moved his chair. He was not
going to fight such a duel as this with the disadvantage of the sun in
his eyes.
Hitherto there had hardly been a word spoken. Miss Stanbury had
muttered something as she was curtseying, and Barty Burgess had made
some return. Then she began: โMr Burgess,โ she said, โI am indebted to
you for your complaisance in coming here at my request.โ To this he
bowed again. โI should not have ventured thus to trouble you were it
not that years are dealing more hardly with me than they are with you,
and that I could not have ventured to discuss a matter of deep interest
otherwise than in my own room.โ It was her room now, certainly, by law;
but Barty Burgess remembered it when it was his motherโs room, and when
she used to give them all their meals there now so many, many years
ago! He bowed again, and said not a word. He knew well that she could
sooner be brought to her point by his silence than by his speech.
She was a long time coming to her point. Before she could do so she was
forced to allude to times long past, and to subjects which she found it
very difficult to touch without saying that which would either belie
herself, or seem to be severe upon him. Though she had prepared
herself, she could hardly get the words spoken, and she was greatly
impeded by the obstinacy of his silence. But at last her proposition
was made to him. She told him that his nephew, Brooke, was about to be
married to her niece, Dorothy; and that it was her intention to make
Brooke her heir in the bulk of the property which she had received
under the will of the late Mr Brooke Burgess. โIndeed,โ she said, โall
that I received at your brotherโs hands shall go back to your brotherโs
family unimpairedโ He only bowed, and would not say a word. Then she
went on to say that it had at first been a mater to her of deep regret
that Brooke should have set his affections upon her niece, as there had
been in her mind a strong desire that none of her own people should
enjoy the reversion of the wealth, which she had always regarded as
being hers only for the term of her life; but that she had found that
the young people had been so much in earnest, and that her own feeling
had been so near akin to a prejudice, that she had yielded. When this
was said Barty smiled instead of bowing, and Miss Stanbury felt that
there might be something worse even than his silence. His smile told
her that he believed her to be lying. Nevertheless she went on. She was
not fool enough to suppose that the whole nature of the man was to be
changed by a few words from her. So she went on. The marriage was a
thing fixed, and she was thinking of settlements, and had been talking
to lawyers about a new will.
โI do not know that I can help you,โ said Barty, finding that a longer
pause than usual made some word from him absolutely necessary.
โI am going on to that, and I regret that my story should detain you so
long, Mr Burgessโ And she did go on. She had, she said, made some
saving out of her income. She was not going to trouble Mr Burgess with
this matter, only that she might explain to him that what she would at
once give to the young couple, and what she would settle on Dorothy
after her own death, would all come from such savings, and that such
gifts and bequests would not diminish the family property. Barty again
smiled as he heard this, and Miss Stanbury in her heart likened him to
the devil in person. But still she went on. She was very desirous that
Brooke Burgess should come and live at Exeter. His property would be in
the town and the neighbourhood. It would be a seemly thing, such was her
word, that he should occupy the house that had belonged to his
grandfather and his great-grandfather; and then, moreover, she
acknowledged that she spoke selfishly; she dreaded the idea of being
left alone for the remainder of her own years. Her proposition at last
was uttered. It was simply this, that Barty Burgess should give to his
nephew, Brooke, his share in the bank.
โI am damned, if I do!โ said Barty Burgess, rising up from his chair.
But before he had left the room he had agreed to consider the
proposition. Miss Stanbury had of course known that any such suggestion
coming from her without an adequate reason assigned, would have been
mere idle wind. She was prepared with such adequate reason. If Mr
Burgess could see his
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