Evan Harrington. Complete. George Meredith
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‘But it is not that. Oh, how you trifle!’ she cried. ‘There’s nothing vexes me so much as that way you have. Wouldn’t my eyes have sparkled if anybody had come up to me to thank me for such a thing? I would let them know how glad I was to have done such a thing! Doesn’t it make them happier, dear Evan?’
‘My dear Miss Jocelyn!’
‘What?’
The honest grey eyes fixed on him, narrowed their enlarged lids. She gazed before her on the deck, saying:
‘I’m sure I can’t understand you. I suppose it’s because I’m a girl, and I never shall till I’m a woman. Heigho!’
A youth who is engaged in the occupation of eating his heart, cannot shine to advantage, and is as much a burden to himself as he is an enigma to others. Evan felt this; but he could do nothing and say nothing; so he retired deeper into the folds of the Don, and remained picturesque and scarcely pleasant.
They were relieved by a summons to breakfast from below.
She brightened and laughed. ‘Now, what will you wager me, Evan, that the Countess doesn’t begin:
“Sweet child! how does she this morning? blooming?” when she kisses me?’
Her capital imitation of his sister’s manner constrained him to join in her laugh, and he said:
‘I’ll back against that, I get three fingers from your uncle, and “Morrow, young sir!”’
Down they ran together, laughing; and, sure enough, the identical words of the respective greetings were employed, which they had to enjoy with all the discretion they could muster.
Rose went round the table to her little cousin Alec, aged seven, kissed his reluctant cheek, and sat beside him, announcing a sea appetite and great capabilities, while Evan silently broke bread. The Count de Saldar, a diminutive tawny man, just a head and neck above the tablecloth, sat sipping chocolate and fingering dry toast, which he would now and then dip in jelly, and suck with placidity, in the intervals of a curt exchange of French with the wife of the Hon. Melville, a ringleted English lady, or of Portuguese with the Countess; who likewise sipped chocolate and fingered dry toast, and was mournfully melodious. The Hon. Melville, as became a tall islander, carved beef, and ate of it, like a ruler of men. Beautiful to see was the compassionate sympathy of the Countess’s face when Rose offered her plate for a portion of the world-subjugating viand, as who should say: ‘Sweet child! thou knowest not yet of sorrows, thou canst ballast thy stomach with beef!’ In any other than an heiress, she would probably have thought: ‘This is indeed a disgusting little animal, and most unfeminine conduct!’
Rose, unconscious of praise or blame, rivalled her uncle in enjoyment of the fare, and talked of her delight in seeing England again, and anything that belonged to her native land. Mrs. Melville perceived that it pained the refugee Countess, and gave her the glance intelligible; but the Countess never missed glances, or failed to interpret them. She said:
‘Let her. I love to hear the sweet child’s prattle.’
‘It was fortunate’ (she addressed the diplomatist) ‘that we touched at Southampton and procured fresh provision!’
‘Very lucky for US!’ said he, glaring shrewdly between a mouthful.
The Count heard the word ‘Southampton,’ and wished to know how it was comprised. A passage of Portuguese ensued, and then the Countess said:
‘Silva, you know, desired to relinquish the vessel at Southampton. He does not comprehend the word “expense,” but’ (she shook a dumb Alas!) ‘I must think of that for him now!’
‘Oh! always avoid expense,’ said the Hon. Melville, accustomed to be paid for by his country.
‘At what time shall we arrive, may I ask, do you think?’ the Countess gently inquired.
The watch of a man who had his eye on Time was pulled out, and she was told it might be two hours before dark. Another reckoning, keenly balanced, informed the company that the day’s papers could be expected on board somewhere about three o’clock in the afternoon.
‘And then,’ said the Hon. Melville, nodding general gratulation, ‘we shall know how the world wags.’
How it had been wagging the Countess’s straining eyes under closed eyelids were eloquent of.
‘Too late, I fear me, to wait upon Lord Livelyston to-night?’ she suggested.
‘To-night?’ The Hon. Melville gazed blank astonishment at the notion. ‘Oh! certainly, too late tonight. A-hum! I think, madam, you had better not be in too great a hurry to see him. Repose a little. Recover your fatigue.’
‘Oh!’ exclaimed the Countess, with a beam of utter confidence in him, ‘I shall be too happy to place myself in your hands—believe me.’
This was scarcely more to the taste of the diplomatist. He put up his mouth, and said, blandly:
‘I fear—you know, madam, I must warn you beforehand—I, personally, am but an insignificant unit over here, you know; I, personally, can’t guarantee much assistance to you—not positive. What I can do—of course, very happy!’ And he fell to again upon the beef.
‘Not so very insignificant!’ said the Countess, smiling, as at a softly radiant conception of him.
‘Have to bob and bow like the rest of them over here,’ he added, proof against the flattery.
‘But that you will not forsake Silva, I am convinced,’ said the Countess; and, paying little heed to his brief ‘Oh! what I can do,’ continued: ‘For over here, in England, we are almost friendless. My relations—such as are left of them—are not in high place.’ She turned to Mrs. Melville, and renewed the confession with a proud humility. ‘Truly, I have not a distant cousin in the Cabinet!’
Mrs. Melville met her sad smile, and returned it, as one who understood its entire import.
‘My brother-in-law-my sister, I think, you know—married a—a brewer! He is rich; but, well! such was her taste! My brother-in-law is indeed in Parliament, and he—’
‘Very little use, seeing he votes with the opposite party,’ the diplomatist interrupted her.
‘Ah! but he will not,’ said the Countess, serenely. ‘I can trust with confidence that, if it is for Silva’s interest, he will assuredly so dispose of his influence as to suit the desiderations of his family, and not in any way oppose his opinions to the powers that would willingly stoop to serve us!’
It was impossible for the Hon. Melville to withhold a slight grimace at his beef, when he heard this extremely alienized idea of the nature of a member of the Parliament of Great Britain. He allowed her to enjoy her delusion, as she pursued:
‘No. So much we could offer in repayment. It is little! But this, in verity, is a case. Silva’s wrongs have only to be known in England, and I am most assured that the English people will not permit it. In the days of his prosperity, Silva was a friend to England, and England should not—should not—forget it now. Had we money! But of that arm our enemies have deprived us: and, I fear, without it we cannot hope to have the justice of our cause pleaded in the English papers. Mr. Redner, you know, the correspondent