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Beautiful Joe [85]

By Root 1829 0

ago, and he won't pay either interest or principal."

"I think I've heard of him," said Miss Laura "Isn't he the man whom the boys
call Lord Chesterfield?"

"The same one. He's a queer specimen of a man. Father has always stood up for
him. He has a great liking for the English. He says we ought to be as ready to
help an Englishman as an American, for we spring from common stock."

"Oh, not Englishmen only," said Miss Laura, warmly; "Chinamen, and Negroes, and
everybody. There ought to be a brotherhood of nations, Harry."

"Yes, Miss Enthusiasm, I suppose there ought to be," and looking up, I could see
that Mr. Harry was gazing admiringly into his cousin's face.

"Please tell me some more about the Englishman," said Miss Laura.

"There isn't much to tell. He lives alone, only coming occasionally to the
village for supplies, and though he is poorer than poverty, he despises every
soul within a ten-mile radius of him, and looks upon us as no better than an
order of thrifty, well-trained lower animals."

"Why is that?" asked Miss Laura, in surprise.

"He is a gentleman, Laura, and we are only common people. My father can't hand a
lady in and out of a carriage as Lord Chesterfield can, nor can he make so grand
a bow, nor does he put on evening dress for a late dinner, and we never go to
the opera nor to the theatre, and know nothing of polite society, nor can we
tell exactly whom our great-great-grandfather sprang from. I tell you, there is
a gulf between us and that Englishman, wider than the one young Curtius leaped
into."

Miss Laura was laughing merrily. "How funny that sounds, Harry. So he despises
you," and she glanced at her good-looking cousin, and his handsome buggy and
well-kept horse, and then burst into another merry peal of laughter.

Mr. Harry laughed, too. "It does seem absurd. Sometimes when I pass him jogging
along to town in his rickety old cart, and look at his pale, cruel face, and
know that he is a broken-down gambler and man of the world, and yet considers
himself infinitely superior to me a young man in the prime of life, with a good
constitution and happy prospects, it makes me turn away to hide a smile."

By this time we had left the river and the meadows far behind us, and were
passing through a thick wood. The road was narrow and very broken, and Fleetfoot
was obliged to pick his way carefully. "Why does the Englishman live in this
out-of-the-way place, if he is so fond of city life?" said Miss Laura.

"I don't know," said Mr. Harry. "Father is afraid that he has committed some
misdeed, and is in hiding; but we say nothing about it. We have not seen him for
some weeks, and to tell the truth, this trip is as much to see what has become
of him, as to make a demand upon him for the money. As he lives alone, he might
lie there ill, and no one would know anything about it. The last time that we
knew of his coming to the village was to draw quite a sum of money from the
bank. It annoyed father, for he said he might take some of it to pay his debts.
I think his relatives in England supply him with funds. Here we are at the
entrance to the mansion of Penhollow. I must get out and open the gate that will
admit us to the winding avenue."

We had arrived in front of some bars which were laid across an opening in the
snake fence that ran along one side of the road. I sat down and looked about. It
was a strange, lonely place. The trees almost met overhead, and it was very dim
and quiet. The sun could only send little straggling beams through the branches.
There was a muddy pool of water before the bars that Mr. Harry was letting down,
and he got his feet wet in it. "Confound that Englishman," he said, backing out
of the water, and wiping his boots on the grass. "He hasn't even gumption enough
to throw down a load of stone there. Drive in, Laura, and I'll put up the bars."
Fleetfoot took us through the opening, and then Mr. Harry jumped into the buggy
and took up the reins again.

We had to go very slowly
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