The Broad Highway - Page 7/374

"Sir, I fail to see your argument," said I.

"What?" cried Sir Richard, facing round on me, "d'you think

you'd have a chance with her then?"

"Why not?"

"Without friends, position, of money? Pish, boy! don't I tell

you that every buck and dandy--every mincing macaroni in the

three kingdoms would give his very legs to marry her--either for

her beauty or her fortune?" spluttered the baronet. "And let me

inform you further that she's devilish high and haughty with it

all--they do say she even rebuffed the Prince Regent himself."

"But then, sir, I consider myself a better man than the Prince

Regent," said I.

Sir Richard sank into the nearest chair and stared at me

openmouthed.

"Sir," I continued, "you doubtless set me down as an egoist of

egoists. I freely confess it; so are you, so is Mr. Grainger

yonder, so are we all of us egoists in thinking ourselves as good

as some few of our neighbors and better than a great many."

"Deuce take me!" said Sir Richard.

"Referring to the Lady Sophia, I have heard that she once

galloped her horse up the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral--"

"And down again, Peter," added Sir Richard.

"Also she is said to be possessed of a temper," I continued, "and

is above the average height, I believe, and I have a natural

antipathy to termagants, more especially tall ones."

"Termagant!" cried Sir Richard. "Why, she's the handsomest woman

in London, boy. She's none of your milk-and-watery, meek-mouthed

misses--curse me, no! She's all fire and blood and high mettle--a

woman, sir glorious--divine--damme, sir, a black-browed goddess--a

positive plum!"

"Sir Richard," said I, "should I ever contemplate marriage, which

is most improbable, my wife must be sweet and shy, gentle-eyed and

soft of voice, instead of your bold, strong-armed, horse-galloping

creature; above all, she must be sweet and clinging--"

"Sweet and sticky, oh, the devil! Hark to the boy, Grainger,"

cried Sir Richard, "hark to him--and one glance of the glorious

Sefton's bright eyes--one glance only, Grainger, and he'd be at

her feet--on his knees--on his confounded knees, sir!"

"The question is, how do you propose to maintain yourself in the

future?" said Mr. Grainger at this point; "life under your altered

fortunes must prove necessarily hard, Mr. Peter."

"And yet, sir," I answered, "a fortune with a wife tagged on to

it must prove a very mixed blessing after all; and then again,

there may be a certain amount of satisfaction in stepping into a

dead man's shoes, but I, very foolishly, perhaps, have a hankering

for shoes of my own. Surely there must be some position in life

that I am competent to fill, some position that would maintain me

honorably and well; I flatter myself that my years at Oxford were

not altogether barren of result--"