Wives and Daughters: An Every-Day Story - Page 281/572

It is not to be supposed that such an encounter as Mr. Preston had

just had with Roger Hamley sweetened the regards in which the two

young men henceforward held each other. They had barely spoken to one

another before, and but seldom met; for the land-agent's employment

had hitherto lain at Ashcombe, some sixteen or seventeen miles from

Hamley. He was older than Roger by several years; but during the

time he had been in the county Osborne and Roger had been at school

and at college. Mr. Preston was prepared to dislike the Hamleys for

many unreasonable reasons. Cynthia and Molly had both spoken of

the brothers with familiar regard, implying considerable intimacy;

their flowers had been preferred to his on the occasion of the ball;

most people spoke well of them; and Mr. Preston had an animal's

instinctive jealousy and combativeness against all popular young men.

Their "position"--poor as the Hamleys might be--was far higher than

his own in the county; and, moreover, he was agent to the great Whig

lord, whose political interests were diametrically opposed to those

of the old Tory squire. Not that Lord Cumnor troubled himself much

about his political interests. His family had obtained property and

title from the Whigs at the time of the Hanoverian succession; and

so, traditionally, he was a Whig, and had belonged in his youth to

Whig clubs, where he had lost considerable sums of money to Whig

gamblers. All this was satisfactory and consistent enough. And if

Lord Hollingford had not been returned for the county on the Whig

interest--as his father had been before him, until he had succeeded

to the title--it is quite probable Lord Cumnor would have considered

the British constitution in danger, and the patriotism of his

ancestors ungratefully ignored. But, excepting at elections, he had

no notion of making Whig and Tory a party cry. He had lived too much

in London, and was of too sociable a nature, to exclude any man who

jumped with his humour from the hospitality he was always ready to

offer, be the agreeable acquaintance Whig, Tory, or Radical. But in

the county of which he was lord-lieutenant, the old party distinction

was still a shibboleth by which men were tested as to their fitness

for social intercourse, as well as on the hustings. If by any chance

a Whig found himself at a Tory dinner-table--or vice versâ--the food

was hard of digestion, and wine and viands were criticized rather

than enjoyed. A marriage between the young people of the separate

parties was almost as unheard-of and prohibited an alliance as that

of Romeo and Juliet's. And of course Mr. Preston was not a man in

whose breast such prejudices would die away. They were an excitement

to him for one thing, and called out all his talent for intrigue on

behalf of the party to which he was allied. Moreover, he considered

it as loyalty to his employer to "scatter his enemies" by any means

in his power. He had always hated and despised the Tories in general;

and after that interview on the marshy common in front of Silas's

cottage, he hated the Hamleys and Roger especially, with a very

choice and particular hatred. "That prig," as hereafter he always

designated Roger--"he shall pay for it yet," he said to himself by

way of consolation, after the father and son had left him. "What a

lout it is!"--watching the receding figures, "The old chap has twice

as much spunk," as the Squire tugged at his bridle reins. "The old

mare could make her way better without being led, my fine fellow. But

I see through your dodge. You're afraid of your old father turning

back and getting into another rage. Position indeed! a beggarly

squire--a man who did turn off his men just before winter, to rot

or starve, for all he cared--it's just like a brutal old Tory." And,

under the cover of sympathy with the dismissed labourers, Mr. Preston

indulged his own private pique very pleasantly.