The Evil Genius. Wilkie Collins

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The Evil Genius - Wilkie Collins

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CHAPTER XXXVII. MRS. NORMAN. 182

       FIFTH BOOK. 187

       CHAPTER XXXVIII. HEAR THE LAWYER. 187

       CHAPTER XXXIX. LISTEN TO REASON. 190

       CHAPTER XL. KEEP YOUR TEMPER. 194

       CHAPTER XLI. MAKE THE BEST OF IT. 198

       CHAPTER XLII. TRY TO EXCUSE HER. 201

       CHAPTER XLIII. KNOW YOUR OWN MIND. 207

       CHAPTER XLIV. THINK OF CONSEQUENCES. 211

       CHAPTER XLV. LOVE YOUR ENEMIES. 216

       CHAPTER XLVI. NIL DESPERANDUM. 220

       CHAPTER XLVII. BETTER DO IT THAN WISH IT DONE. 225

       CHAPTER XLVIII. BE CAREFUL! 231

       CHAPTER XLIX. KEEP THE SECRET. 234

       CHAPTER L. FORGIVENESS TO THE INJURED DOTH BELONG. 238

       CHAPTER LI. DUM SPIRO, SPERO. 241

       CHAPTER LII. L’HOMME PROPOSE, ET DIEU DISPOSE. 244

      CHAPTER LIII. THE LARGEST NATURE, THE LONGEST LOVE. 249

       CHAPTER LIV. LET BYGONES BE BYGONES. 253

       CHAPTER LV. LEAVE IT TO THE CHILD. 258

       AFTER THE STORY.. 264

      BEFORE THE STORY.

       Miss Westerfield’s Education

      1.—The Trial.

      THE gentlemen of the jury retired to consider their verdict.

      Their foreman was a person doubly distinguished among his colleagues. He had the clearest head, and the readiest tongue. For once the right man was in the right place.

      Of the eleven jurymen, four showed their characters on the surface. They were:

      The hungry juryman, who wanted his dinner.

      The inattentive juryman, who drew pictures on his blotting paper.

      The nervous juryman, who suffered from fidgets.

      The silent juryman, who decided the verdict.

      Of the seven remaining members, one was a little drowsy man who gave no trouble; one was an irritable invalid who served under protest; and five represented that vast majority of the population—easily governed, tranquilly happy—which has no opinion of its own.

      The foreman took his place at the head of the table. His colleagues seated themselves on either side of him. Then there fell upon that assembly of men a silence, never known among an assembly of women—the silence which proceeds from a general reluctance to be the person who speaks first.

      It was the foreman’s duty, under these circumstances, to treat his deliberative brethren as we treat our watches when they stop: he wound the jury up and set them going.

      “Gentlemen,” he began, “have you formed any decided opinion on the case—thus far?”

      Some of them said “Yes,” and some of them said “No.” The little drowsy man said nothing. The fretful invalid cried, “Go on!” The nervous juryman suddenly rose. His brethren all looked at him, inspired by the same fear of having got an orator among them. He was an essentially polite man; and he hastened to relieve their minds. “Pray don’t be alarmed, gentlemen: I am not going to make a speech. I suffer from fidgets. Excuse me if I occasionally change my position.” The hungry juryman (who dined early) looked at his watch. “Half-past four,” he said. “For Heaven’s sake cut it short.” He was the fattest person present; and he suggested a subject to the inattentive juryman who drew pictures on his blotting-paper. Deeply interested in the progress of the likeness, his neighbors on either side looked over his shoulders. The little drowsy man woke with a start, and begged pardon of everybody. The fretful invalid said to himself, “Damned fools, all of them!” The patient foreman, biding his time, stated the case.

      “The prisoner waiting our verdict, gentlemen, is the Honorable Roderick Westerfield, younger brother of the present Lord Le Basque. He is charged with willfully casting away the British bark John Jerniman, under his command, for the purpose of fraudulently obtaining a share of the insurance money; and further of possessing himself of certain Brazilian diamonds, which formed part of the cargo. In plain words, here is a gentleman born in the higher ranks of life accused of being a thief. Before we attempt to arrive at a decision, we shall only be doing him justice if we try to form some general estimate of his character, based on the evidence—and we may fairly begin by inquiring into his relations with the noble family to which he belongs. The evidence, so far, is not altogether creditable to him. Being at the time an officer of the Royal Navy, he appears to have outraged the feelings of his family by marrying a barmaid at a public-house.”

      The drowsy juryman, happening to be awake at that moment, surprised the foreman by interposing a statement. “Talking of barmaids,” he said, “I know a curate’s daughter. She’s in distressed circumstances, poor thing; and she’s a barmaid somewhere in the north of England. Curiously enough, the name of the town has escaped my memory. If we had a map of England—” There he was interrupted, cruelly interrupted, by one of his brethren.

      “And by what right,” cried the greedy juryman, speaking under the exasperating influence of hunger—"by what right does Mr. Westerfield’s family dare to suppose that a barmaid may not be a perfectly virtuous woman?”

      Hearing this, the restless gentleman

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