Sybil, Or, The Two Nations by Earl of Beaconsfield Benjamin Disraeli (10 best novels of all time txt) ๐
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โI was with him more than an hour,โ continued Morley. โAt first he recollected nothing: even the name of Gerard, though he received it as familiar to him, seemed to produce little impression; he recollected nothing of any papers; was clear that they must have been quite insignificant; whatever they were, he doubtless had them now, as he never destroyed papers: would order a search to be made for them, and so on. I was about to withdraw, when he asked me carelessly a question about your father; what he was doing, and whether he were married and had children. This led to a very long conversation in which he suddenly seemed to take great interest. At first he talked of writing to see your father, and I offered that Gerard should call upon him. He took down your direction in order that he might write to your father and give him an appointment; when observing that it was Westminster, he said that his carriage was ordered to go to the House of Lords in a quarter of an hour, and that if not inconvenient to me, he would propose that I should at once accompany him. I thought, whatever might be the result, it must be a satisfaction to Gerard at last to see this man of whom he has talked and thought so muchโand so we are here.โ
โYou did well, good Stephen, as you always do,โ said Sybil with a musing and abstracted air; โno one has so much forethought and so much energy as you.โ
He threw a glance at her: and immediately withdrew it. Their eyes had met: hers were kind and calm.
โAnd this Egremont,โ said Morley rather hurriedly and abruptly, and looking on the ground, โhow came he here? When we discovered him yesterday your father and myself agreed that we should not mention to you theโthe mystification of which we had been dupes.โ
โAnd you did wrong,โ said Sybil. โThere is no wisdom like frankness. Had you told me, he would not have been here today. He met and addressed me, and I only recognised an acquaintance who had once contributed so much to the pleasantness of our life. Had he not accompanied me to this door and met my father, which precipitated an explanation on his part which he found had not been given by others, I might have remained in an ignorance which hereafter might have produced inconvenience.โ
โYou are right,โ said Morley, looking at her rather keenly. โWe have all of us opened ourselves too unreservedly before this aristocrat.โ
โI should hope that none of us have said to him a word that we wish to be forgotten,โ said Sybil. โHe chose to wear a disguise, and can hardly quarrel with the frankness with which we spoke of his order or his family. And for the rest, he has not been injured from learning something of the feelings of the people by living among them.โ
โAnd yet if anything were to happen to-morrow,โ said Morley, โrest assured this man has his eye on us. He can walk into the government offices like themselves and tell his tale, for though one of the pseudo-opposition, the moment the people move, the factions become united.โ
Sybil turned and looked at him, and then said, โAnd what could happen to-morrow, that we should care for the government being acquainted with it or us? Do not they know everything? Do not you meet in their very sight? You pursue an avowed and legal aim by legal meansโdo you not? What then is there to fear? And why should anything happen that should make us apprehensive?โ
โAll is very well at this moment,โ said Morley, โand all may continue well; but popular assemblies breed turbulent spirits, Sybil. Your father takes a leading part; he is a great orator, and is in his element in this clamorous and fiery life. It does not much suit me; I am a man of the closet. This Convention, as you well know, was never much to my taste. Their Charter is a coarse specific for our social evils. The spirit that would cure our ills must be of a deeper and finer mood.โ
โThen why are you here?โ said Sybil.
Morley shrugged his shoulders, and then said โAn easy question. Questions are always easy. The fact is, in active life one cannot afford to refine. I could have wished the movement to have taken a different shape and to have worked for a different end; but it has not done this. But it is still a movement and a great one, and I must work it for my end and try to shape it to my form. If I had refused to be a leader, I should not have prevented the movement; I should only have secured my own insignificance.โ
โBut my father has not these fears; he is full of hope and exultation,โ said Sybil. โAnd surely it is a great thing that the people should have their Parliament lawfully meeting in open day, and their delegates from the whole realm declaring their grievances in language which would not disgrace the conquering race which has in vain endeavoured to degrade them. When I heard my father speak the other night, my heart glowed with emotion; my eyes were suffused with tears; I was proud to be his daughter; and I gloried in a race of forefathers who belonged to the oppressed and not to the oppressors.โ
Morley watched the deep splendour of her eye and the mantling of her radiant cheek, as she spoke these latter words with not merely animation but fervour. Her bright hair, that hung on either side her face in long tresses of luxuriant richness, was drawn off a forehead that was the very throne of thought and majesty, while her rich lip still quivered with the sensibility which expressed its impassioned truth.
โBut your father, Sybil, stands alone,โ at length Morley replied; โsurrounded by votaries who have nothing but enthusiasm to recommend them; and by emulous and intriguing rivals, who watch every word and action, in order that they may discredit his conduct, and ultimately secure his downfall.โ
โMy fatherโs downfall!โ said Sybil. โIs he not one of themselves! And is it possible, that among the delegates of the People there can be other than one and the same object?โ
โA thousand,โ said Morley; โwe have already as many parties as in St Stephenโs itself.โ
โYou terrify me,โ said Sybil. โI knew we had fearful odds to combat against. My visit to this city alone has taught me how strong are our enemies. But I believed that we had on our side God and Truth.โ
โThey know neither of them in the National Convention,โ said Morley. โOur career will be a vulgar caricature of the bad passions and the low intrigues, the factions and the failures, of our oppressors.โ
At this moment Gerard and Hatton who were sitting in the remote part of the room rose together and advanced forward; and this movement interrupted the conversation of Sybil and Morley. Before however her father and his new friend could reach them, Hatton as if some point on which he had not been sufficiently explicit, had occurred to him, stopped and placing his hand on Gerardโs arm, withdrew him again, saying in a voice which could only be heard by the individual whom he addressed. โYou understandโI have not the slightest doubt myself of your moral right: I believe on every principle of justice, that Mowbray Castle is as much yours as the
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