Rhoda Fleming. Complete. George Meredith

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But more, the birds of air, nay, grave owls (who stand in this metaphor for whiskered experience) thronged, dashing at the apparition of terrible splendour. Was it her fault that she had a name in the world?

      Mrs. Margaret Lovell’s portrait hung in Edward’s room. It was a photograph exquisitely coloured, and was on the left of a dark Judith, dark with a serenity of sternness. On the right hung another coloured photograph of a young lady, also fair; and it was a point of taste to choose between them. Do you like the hollowed lily’s cheeks, or the plump rose’s? Do you like a thinnish fall of golden hair, or an abundant cluster of nut-brown? Do you like your blonde with limpid blue eyes, or prefer an endowment of sunny hazel? Finally, are you taken by an air of artistic innocence winding serpentine about your heart’s fibres; or is blushing simplicity sweeter to you? Mrs. Lovell’s eyebrows were the faintly-marked trace of a perfect arch. The other young person’s were thickish, more level; a full brown colour. She looked as if she had not yet attained to any sense of her being a professed beauty: but the fair widow was clearly bent upon winning you, and had a shy, playful intentness of aspect. Her pure white skin was flat on the bone; the lips came forward in a soft curve, and, if they were not artistically stained, were triumphantly fresh. Here, in any case, she beat her rival, whose mouth had the plebeian beauty’s fault of being too straight in a line, and was not trained, apparently, to tricks of dainty pouting.

      It was morning, and the cousins having sponged in pleasant cold water, arranged themselves for exercise, and came out simultaneously into the sitting-room, slippered, and in flannels. They nodded and went through certain curt greetings, and then Algernon stepped to a cupboard and tossed out the leather gloves. The room was large and they had a tolerable space for the work, when the breakfast-table had been drawn a little on one side. You saw at a glance which was the likelier man of the two, when they stood opposed. Algernon’s rounded features, full lips and falling chin, were not a match, though he was quick on his feet, for the wary, prompt eyes, set mouth, and hardness of Edward. Both had stout muscle, but in Edward there was vigour of brain as well, which seemed to knit and inform his shape without which, in fact, a man is as a ship under no command. Both looked their best; as, when sparring, men always do look.

      “Now, then,” said Algernon, squaring up to his cousin in good style, “now’s the time for that unwholesome old boy underneath to commence groaning.”

      “Step as light as you can,” replied Edward, meeting him with the pretty motion of the gloves.

      “I’ll step as light as a French dancing-master. Let’s go to Paris and learn the savate, Ned. It must be a new sensation to stand on one leg and knock a fellow’s hat off with the other.”

      “Stick to your fists.”

      “Hang it! I wish your fists wouldn’t stick to me so.”

      “You talk too much.”

      “Gad, I don’t get puffy half so soon as you.”

      “I want country air.”

      “You said you were going out, old Ned.”

      “I changed my mind.”

      Saying which, Edward shut his teeth, and talked for two or three hot minutes wholly with his fists. The room shook under Algernon’s boundings to right and left till a blow sent him back on the breakfast-table, shattered a cup on the floor, and bespattered his close flannel shirt with a funereal coffee-tinge.

      “What the deuce I said to bring that on myself, I don’t know,” Algernon remarked as he rose. “Anything connected with the country disagreeable to you, Ned? Come! a bout of quiet scientific boxing, and none of these beastly rushes, as if you were singling me out of a crowd of magsmen. Did you go to church yesterday, Ned? Confound it, you’re on me again, are you?”

      And Algernon went on spouting unintelligible talk under a torrent of blows. He lost his temper and fought out at them; but as it speedily became evident to him that the loss laid him open to punishment, he prudently recovered it, sparred, danced about, and contrived to shake the room in a manner that caused Edward to drop his arms, in consideration for the distracted occupant of the chambers below. Algernon accepted the truce, and made it peace by casting off one glove.

      “There! that’s a pleasant morning breather,” he said, and sauntered to the window to look at the river. “I always feel the want of it when I don’t get it. I could take a thrashing rather than not on with the gloves to begin the day. Look at those boats! Fancy my having to go down to the city. It makes me feel like my blood circulating the wrong way. My father’ll suffer some day, for keeping me at this low ebb of cash, by jingo!”

      He uttered this with a prophetic fierceness.

      “I cannot even scrape together enough for entrance money to a Club. It’s sickening! I wonder whether I shall ever get used to banking work? There’s an old clerk in our office who says he should feel ill if he missed a day. And the old porter beats him—bangs him to fits. I believe he’d die off if he didn’t see the house open to the minute. They say that old boy’s got a pretty niece; but he don’t bring her to the office now. Reward of merit!—Mr. Anthony Hackbut is going to receive ten pounds a year extra. That’s for his honesty. I wonder whether I could earn a reputation for the sake of a prospect of ten extra pounds to my salary. I’ve got a salary! hurrah! But if they keep me to my hundred and fifty per annum, don’t let them trust me every day with the bags, as they do that old fellow. Some of the men say he’s good to lend fifty pounds at a pinch.—Are the chops coming, Ned?”

      “The chops are coming,” said Edward, who had thrown on a boating-coat and plunged into a book, and spoke echoing.

      “Here’s little Peggy Lovell.” Algernon faced this portrait. “It don’t do her justice. She’s got more life, more change in her, more fire. She’s starting for town, I hear.”

      “She is starting for town,” said Edward.

      “How do you know that?” Algernon swung about to ask.

      Edward looked round to him. “By the fact of your not having fished for a holiday this week. How did you leave her yesterday, Algy? Quite well, I hope.”

      The ingenuous face of the young gentleman crimsoned.

      “Oh, she was well,” he said. “Ha! I see there can be some attraction in your dark women.”

      “You mean that Judith? Yes, she’s a good diversion.” Edward gave a two-edged response. “What train did you come up by last night?”

      “The last from Wrexby. That reminds me: I saw a young Judith just as I got out. She wanted a cab. I called it for her. She belongs to old Hackbut of the Bank—the old porter, you know. If it wasn’t that there’s always something about dark women which makes me think they’re going to have a moustache, I should take to that girl’s face.”

      Edward launched forth an invective against fair women.

      “What have they done to you-what have they done?” said Algernon.

      “My good fellow, they’re nothing but colour. They’ve no conscience. If they swear a thing to you one moment, they break it the next. They can’t help doing it. You don’t ask a gilt weathercock to keep faith with anything but the wind, do you? It’s an ass that trusts a fair woman at all, or has anything to do with the confounded set. Cleopatra was fair; so was Delilah; so is the Devil’s wife. Reach me that book of Reports.”

      “By jingo!” cried Algernon, “my stomach reports that if provision doesn’t soon approach–why don’t you keep a French cook here, Ned? Let’s give

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