No Name by Wilkie Collins (good books for 7th graders TXT) 📕
Description
No Name is set in England during the 1840s. It follows the fortunes of two sisters, Magdalen Vanstone and her older sister Norah. Their comfortable upper-middle-class lives are shockingly disrupted when, after the sudden deaths of their parents, they discover that they are disinherited and left without either name or fortune. The headstrong Magdalen vows to recover their inheritance, by fair means or foul. Her increasing desperation makes her vulnerable to a wily confidence trickster, Captain Wragge, who promises to assist her in return for a cut of the profits.
No Name was published in serial form like many of Wilkie Collins’ other works. They were tremendously popular in their time, with long queues forming awaiting the publication of each episode. Though not as well known as his The Woman in White and The Moonstone, No Name is their equal in boasting a gripping plot and strong women characters (a rarity in the Victorian era). Collins’ mentor Charles Dickens is on record as considering it to be far the superior of The Woman in White.
Read free book «No Name by Wilkie Collins (good books for 7th graders TXT) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Wilkie Collins
Read book online «No Name by Wilkie Collins (good books for 7th graders TXT) 📕». Author - Wilkie Collins
“I think you would,” said the captain. “And what next?”
“Mr. Michael Vanstone would have changed his man of business next. You would have succeeded to the place; and those clever speculations on which he was so fond of venturing would have cost him the fortunes of which he had robbed my sister and myself. To the last farthing, Captain Wragge, as certainly as you sit there, to the last farthing! A bold conspiracy, a shocking deception—wasn’t it? I don’t care! Any conspiracy, any deception, is justified to my conscience by the vile law which has left us helpless. You talked of my reserve just now. Have I dropped it at last? Have I spoken out at the eleventh hour?”
The captain laid his hand solemnly on his heart, and launched himself once more on his broadest flow of language.
“You fill me with unavailing regret,” he said. “If that old man had lived, what a crop I might have reaped from him! What enormous transactions in moral agriculture it might have been my privilege to carry on! Ars longa,” said Captain Wragge, pathetically drifting into Latin—“vita brevis! Let us drop a tear on the lost opportunities of the past, and try what the present can do to console us. One conclusion is clear to my mind—the experiment you proposed to try with Mr. Michael Vanstone is totally hopeless, my dear girl, in the case of his son. His son is impervious to all common forms of pecuniary temptation. You may trust my solemn assurance,” continued the captain, speaking with an indignant recollection of the answer to his advertisement in the Times, “when I inform you that Mr. Noel Vanstone is emphatically the meanest of mankind.”
“I can trust my own experience as well,” said Magdalen. “I have seen him, and spoken to him—I know him better than you do. Another disclosure, Captain Wragge, for your private ear! I sent you back certain articles of costume when they had served the purpose for which I took them to London. That purpose was to find my way to Noel Vanstone in disguise, and to judge for myself of Mrs. Lecount and her master. I gained my object; and I tell you again, I know the two people in that house yonder whom we have now to deal with better than you do.”
Captain Wragge expressed the profound astonishment, and asked the innocent questions appropriate to the mental condition of a person taken completely by surprise.
“Well,” he resumed, when Magdalen had briefly answered him, “and what is the result on your own mind? There must be a result, or we should not be here. You see your way? Of course, my dear girl, you see your way?”
“Yes,” she said, quickly. “I see my way.”
The captain drew a little nearer to her, with eager curiosity expressed in every line of his vagabond face.
“Go on,” he said, in an anxious whisper; “pray go on.”
She looked out thoughtfully into the gathering darkness, without answering, without appearing to have heard him. Her lips closed, and her clasped hands tightened mechanically round her knees.
“There is no disguising the fact,” said Captain Wragge, warily rousing her into speaking to him. “The son is harder to deal with than the father—”
“Not in my way,” she interposed, suddenly.
“Indeed!” said the captain. “Well! they say there is a shortcut to everything, if we only look long enough to find it. You have looked long enough, I suppose, and the natural result has followed—you have found it.”
“I have not troubled myself to look; I have found it without looking.”
“The deuce you have!” cried Captain Wragge, in great perplexity. “My dear girl, is my view of your present position leading me altogether astray? As I understand it, here is Mr. Noel Vanstone in possession of your fortune and your sister’s, as his father was, and determined to keep it, as his father was?”
“Yes.”
“And here are you—quite helpless to get it by persuasion—quite helpless to get it by law—just as resolute in his ease as you were in his father’s, to take it by stratagem in spite of him?”
“Just as resolute. Not for the sake of the fortune—mind that! For the sake of the right.”
“Just so. And the means of coming at that right which were hard with the father—who was not a miser—are easy with the son, who is?”
“Perfectly easy.”
“Write me down an ass for the first time in my life!” cried the captain, at the end of his patience. “Hang me if I know what you mean!”
She looked round at him for the first time—looked him straight and steadily in the face.
“I will tell you what I mean,” she said. “I mean to marry him.”
Captain Wragge started up on his knees, and stopped on them, petrified by astonishment.
“Remember what I told
Comments (0)