<p><SPAN name="c1-11" id="c1-11"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
<h4>VALE VALETE.<br/> </h4>
<p>Miss Baker was a little querulous at being left so long sitting with
Miss Todd at the corner of the garden wall; but Miss Todd was never
querulous: she was one of those good-humoured persons who never
complain, and find some antidote to every ill in life, even in the
ill itself. True, she had been kept a couple of hours and more
sitting on a stone by the brook Cedron; but then she had acquired the
privilege of telling how Mr. George Bertram and Miss Caroline
Waddington had passed those hours,
<i>tête-à-tête</i> together, on the
mountain-side.</p>
<p>"Why, Caroline, we thought you were never coming down again," said
Miss Baker.</p>
<p>"It was Mr. Bertram's fault, aunt; he is immoveable when he gets to a
certain rock up there. He has an idea of turning hermit, and
constructing a cell for himself in that spot."</p>
<p>"If I did turn hermit, it should certainly be for the sake of living
there," said he. "But I fear I want the proper spirit for so holy a
life."</p>
<p>"I hope you have not kept us all this time for nothing: you have had
some success, I trust?" said Miss Todd to Bertram, in a laughing
whisper. Miss Todd's face was quite joyous as she whispered; but then
her face was always joyous.</p>
<p>"I certainly have not done that which I intended to do," said
Bertram, with mock sententiousness. "And so far I have been
unsuccessful."</p>
<p>"Then she has rejected him," said Miss Todd to herself. "What a fool
the girl must be!" but it was a great comfort to Miss Todd that she
knew all about it.</p>
<p>That evening their plans were decided on as to leaving Jerusalem—the
plans, that is, of those whose fortunes we must follow;—Miss Baker,
namely, and her niece; Sir Lionel and his son. Of Miss Todd we may
here take our leave for awhile. She did not on this occasion marry
Sir Lionel, nor did she even have the satisfaction of knowing that
her friends accused her of wishing to do so. Miss Todd had her weak
points, but taking her as a whole, and striking the balance between
good and bad, I do not care how soon we may meet her again. To her
friends also we may bid adieu. Mr. M'Gabbery did not die of love. Mr.
Pott did propose to and was accepted by Miss Jones; but the match was
broken off by the parental Potts who on the occasion nearly
frightened poor Mrs. Jones out of her life. The Hunters sojourned for
awhile on the sides of Lebanon, but did at last return to the
discomforts of European life. Mrs. Hunter tried the effect of her
favourite costume at Tenby, but it was not found to answer. Of Mr.
Cruse, I can only say that he was dreadfully scolded by Mrs. Pott, in
that he had allowed her son to fall in love; and that Mr. Pott
threatened to stop his salary. An attorney's letter, however, settled
that.</p>
<p>It must be confessed that Miss Baker had allowed her plans to be
altered by the arrival of the Bertrams at Jerusalem; and confessed
also that Miss Baker's complaisance in this respect had been brought
about by her niece's persuasion. Their original intention had been to
go on to Damascus. Then Miss Baker had begged off this further
journey, alleging that her clothes as well as her strength were worn
out; and Caroline had consented to return home by the shortest route.
Then came the temptation of going as far as Beyrout with the
Bertrams, and Miss Baker had been enjoined to have herself patched up
externally and internally. She was accordingly being patched up; but
now things were altered again. Caroline knew that she could not
travel with George Bertram without engaging herself to be his wife;
or that if she did, their journey would not be a happy one. And she
did not wish so to engage herself without further thought. She
determined, therefore, that they would fall back upon her aunt's
plan, and return home by the easier route, by Jaffa, that is, and
Alexandria.</p>
<p>Her altered mind had to be explained, not only to her aunt, but to
the Bertrams; and she came to the somewhat singular resolve to
explain it in both cases by the simple truth. She would tell her aunt
what had happened; and she would make George Bertram understand in a
few and as kind words as might be, that under the present
circumstances it would be better that they should not be thrown into
the very close intercourse necessary for fellow-travellers in the
East. She was very prudent, was Miss Waddington; and having freed
herself of one lover because she did not like him, she prepared to
rid herself of another because she did.</p>
<p>The Bertrams were to leave Jerusalem together in a couple of days'
time. George was to go with his father as far as Constantinople, and,
having seen something of real Turks in real Turkey, was to return at
once to England. After his last visit to the Mount of Olives, he said
nothing further about the church as a profession.</p>
<p>That evening Caroline settled it all with her aunt. "Aunt," said she,
as they sat together brushing their hair before they went to bed,
"you will think me very fanciful; but after all, I believe we had
better go back by Alexandria."</p>
<p>"Oh dear, I shall be so glad, my dear. Jane says that I could not
possibly get a travelling dress made here that I could wear."</p>
<p>"You could get a dress in Damascus, I don't doubt, aunt.
<span class="nowrap">But—"</span></p>
<p>"And I really am not fit for much more riding. I don't like to
disappoint you; but if you really wouldn't mind
<span class="nowrap">it—"</span></p>
<p>"Well, I should mind it,—and I should not. But let me tell you. You
must not think that I am so very changeable, first pressing you to go
one way, and then begging you to go another, without a reason."</p>
<p>"No; I know you do it for my sake."</p>
<p>"Not that either, aunt—quite; but do listen. Mr. Bertram to-day
<span class="nowrap">made—"</span></p>
<p>"He has not offered to you, has he?"</p>
<p>"Yes, aunt; that is just what he has done. And, therefore, perhaps it
will not be quite so well that we should travel together."</p>
<p>"But, Caroline, tell me—pray do tell me; what did he say, and what
have you said? Oh dear me, this is very sudden." And Miss Baker sat
back in her chair, with her now grayish hair hanging over her
shoulders, with her hair-brush still held in one hand, and with the
other resting on the toilet-table.</p>
<p>"As for what he said, I may skip that, aunt. It was the old story, I
suppose, merely signifying that he wanted me to marry him."</p>
<p>"Well, well."</p>
<p>"As you truly say, aunt; it was too sudden. Mr. Bertram has a great
deal to recommend him; a very great deal; one cannot but like him. He
is very clever too."</p>
<p>"Yes, Caroline; and will be his uncle's heir—doubtless."</p>
<p>"I know nothing of that; to tell the truth, indeed, I never thought
of that. But it would have made no difference."</p>
<p>"And you refused him."</p>
<p>"Well, I hardly know. I do know this—that I did more towards
refusing him than accepting him; that I must have much more love for
any man I do marry than I have for him at present; and that after
what has passed, I think we had better not go to Damascus together."</p>
<p>To this latter proposition aunt Mary fully agreed; and thus it was
decided that the extra patching for the longer journey need not be
accomplished. Miss Baker would explain the matter to Sir Lionel in
her way; and Caroline would do the same to George Bertram in hers. On
one other point, also, Miss Baker made up her mind fully; though on
this matter she did not think it prudent to make her mind known to
her niece. She was very confident that the marriage would take place,
and resolved to do all in her power to bring it about. Personally,
she was fond of George Bertram; she admired his talents, she liked
his father, and felt very favourably inclined towards his uncle's
wealth. She finished her toilet therefore in calm happiness. She had
an excellent match in view for her niece—and, after all, she would
escape that dreadful horseback journey to Damascus.</p>
<p>During the next day Caroline and George Bertram were not together for
a moment—that is, they were not together alone; for they breakfasted
and dined at the same table, and he sat between the aunt and her
niece as he had done continually since he had been at Jerusalem. Sir
Lionel told him in the forenoon that they were not to have the
pleasure of the ladies' company on their journey, and rallied him as
to the heart-breaking tendency of these tidings. But George showed,
in his countenance at least, no symptoms of heart-breaking.</p>
<p>That evening, as they all parted for the night, George did press Miss
Waddington's hand more warmly than was usual with him; and, as he did
so, he did look into her face for one moment to see what
encouragement he might find there. I cannot say that there was no
encouragement. The pressure was perhaps not met by any similar warmth
on her part, but it was submitted to without any touch of resentment:
the love which shot from his eye was not returned to him from hers,
but hers were soft beneath his glance, softer than was usual with
Caroline Waddington.</p>
<p>But on the next morning they did come together. It was the day before
the departure of the Bertrams, and whatever was to be said must be
said then. Caroline watched her opportunity, and as soon as breakfast
was over—they all breakfasted in the public salon—asked him to come
into her aunt's sitting-room. She was quite collected, had fully made
up her mind what to say, and was able also to say it without
hesitation, and with perfect self-possession. This was more than
could be boasted of on the gentleman's behalf.</p>
<p>"You know, Mr. Bertram, that we are not going to travel together?"</p>
<p>"Yes; my father told me so yesterday."</p>
<p>"And you will understand the reason of it, I am sure?"</p>
<p>"Not exactly, Miss Waddington. I cannot say I do understand it. I may
have been presumptuous in what I said to you the other day; but I do
not see why on that account your aunt should be put to the
inconvenience of altering her plans. You fear, I suppose, that I
should annoy you; but you might trust me—and still may if you will
do so."</p>
<p>"Now, Mr. Bertram, you are hardly so sincere as you asserted yourself
to be, and required me to be on the mount. You are yourself quite
aware that nobody has thought you presumptuous. I have nothing to
complain of, and much to thank you for—independently of the honour
you have now done me;—for from you it is an honour. But I cannot say
that I love you. It would not be natural that I should do so."</p>
<p>"Good heavens! not natural. I love you with the whole strength of my
heart. Is that unnatural?"</p>
<p>"It is the province of men to take the initiative in such matters,"
said Caroline, smiling.</p>
<p>"I know nothing as to man's province, or of woman's province either.
By province, you mean custom and conventional rule; and conventional
rule means falsehood. I have known you but a week or two, and I love
you dearly. You, of course, have known me as long, and are at any
rate as capable of loving as I am. There would be nothing unnatural
in you loving me—though, indeed, it may be very unlikely that you
should do so."</p>
<p>"Well; I will not contradict you in anything if I can help it, except
perhaps as to that last little would-be-proud, petulant protest. But
putting out of sight all question of likelihood, what ought I to do
if I do not love you? What in such a case would you recommend a
sister to do? Is it not better that we should not be immediately
thrown together, as must so certainly be the case in travelling?"</p>
<p>"Then I am to understand that you positively can never love me?"</p>
<p>"I have not said so: but you press me unfairly, Mr. Bertram."</p>
<p>"Unfairly. No, by heavens! no pressure in such case can be unfair. I
would press the truth out from you—the real truth; the truth that so
vitally concerns myself. You will not say that you have an aversion
to me?"</p>
<p>"Aversion! No, certainly not."</p>
<p>"Or that you cannot love me? Then why not let us remain together? You
argue that you do not yet know me well enough; will not that be the
way to know me better?"</p>
<p>"If I were to travel with you now, Mr. Bertram, it would be
tantamount to accepting you. Your own sense will certainly tell you
that. Were I to do so, I should give you the privilege of coming with
me as my lover. Forgive me for saying that I cannot give you that
privilege. I grieve to hurt your feelings for a day even; but I am
sure you will ultimately approve of what I am doing."</p>
<p>"And are we to meet no more, then?"</p>
<p>"Of course we shall meet again; at least, in all human probability.
My guardian is your uncle."</p>
<p>"I never even knew that till I met you the other day."</p>
<p>"Because you have always been at school or at college; but you know
it now. I, at least, shall look forward to meeting you—and so will
my aunt."</p>
<p>"Yes; as acquaintances. It would be impossible for me to meet you in
that way. I hardly think you know or realize what my feelings to you
are. I can only meet you to tell you again and again that I love you.
You are so cold yourself that you cannot understand my—my—my
impetuosity, if you choose to call it so."</p>
<p>"In three or four months, Mr. Bertram, you will be laughing at your
own impetuosity—when I perhaps shall be grieving over my own
coldness." These last words she said with a smile in which there was
much archness, and perhaps also a little encouragement.</p>
<p>"You will tell me at any rate that I may hope?"</p>
<p>"No; certainly not. You will hope enough for anything you really
desire without my telling you. But I will not joke, as I believe that
you are serious."</p>
<p>"Oh, you believe so, do you?"</p>
<p>"Yes; I suppose I must believe so. Your declaration the other day
took me very much by surprise. I had no conception that you had any
feelings towards me of that sort. I certainly had entertained none
such towards you. Love with me cannot be the birth of a moment. I
cannot say that I will love merely because I am asked. You would not
wish me to be false even in your own favour. We will part now, Mr.
Bertram; and being apart we shall better learn to know, each of us,
how we value the other. On my part I can truly say that I hope we
shall meet again—at any rate, as friends." And then she held out her
hand to him.</p>
<p>"Is this to be our farewell?" said he, without at once taking it.</p>
<p>"It shall be if you so please. We shall meet again only at the public
table."</p>
<p>"And you will not tell me that I may hope?"</p>
<p>"I will tell you nothing further, Mr. Bertram. You will shake hands
with me as with a friend, will you not?"</p>
<p>He then took her hand, and, holding it in his own, gazed for a moment
into her face. She bore the weight of his eyes with unabashed front.
She showed neither anger nor pleasure; neither disdain nor pride; the
same sweet smile was still upon her face, somewhat playful, somewhat
hopeful, but capable of no definite construction either for making or
marring a man's comfort.</p>
<p>"Caroline!" he said at last.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Mr. Bertram. I thoroughly hope you may enjoy your
journey."</p>
<p>"Caroline!"</p>
<p>She essayed to withdraw her hand from his. Feeling this, he raised it
to his lips and kissed it, and then left the room. As he closed the
door the same smile was on her face.</p>
<p>I hope it will be admitted that Miss Waddington had played her part
with skill, and judgment, and good breeding; and not altogether
heartlessly either. She had thought much on the subject since George
had first thrown himself at her feet, and had concluded, putting the
good against the bad, and balancing the affair as accurately as facts
would enable her, that the match would be one which she ought to
regard as desirable. There were two valid reasons, however, why she
should not at once accept his offer. Firstly, he might not know his
own mind, and it might be serviceable to him to have the option of
renewing his proposal or retreating from it after a few months' trial
of his own feelings. And secondly, she hardly knew her own mind. She
could not in truth say yet whether she did love him, or whether she
did not. She was rather inclined to think she did; but it would be
well that she should try the matter before she committed herself.</p>
<p>The statement made by her aunt that George would doubtless be his
uncle's heir certainly had its weight with her. It would be wrong in
her to engage herself to a man who was without the means of
maintaining her in that rank of life in which she had resolved to
live; wrong both on his account and on her own. She felt that she
could not be a good poor man's wife. It was not the walk of life for
which she had destined herself. She had made up her mind on that
point too, and having made it up was not weak enough to be driven
from her resolve by any little gust of feeling. She did like
Bertram—much, very much, better then she had ever liked any other
man. He came up in many points to her idea of what a man should be.
He was not sufficiently collected, not sufficiently thoughtful, and
perhaps almost too enthusiastic: success in life would be easier to a
man who put less heart into everything he said and did. But years
would teach him much in this respect, and she also might perhaps
teach him something. She did like Bertram; and what objection could
there be to the match if, as appeared so probable, he was to inherit
his uncle's money?</p>
<p>Prudent as she was, she was ready to run some risk in this respect.
She did not wish to be a poor man's wife; but neither did she wish to
be an idle man's wife. What she did desire was, that her husband
should be an earnest, rising, successful man;—one whose name, as she
had herself said to Bertram, might be frequent in men's mouths, and
daily to be read in the columns of newspapers. She would not marry a
fool, even though he were also a Crœsus; she would not marry a
fool, even though he were also an earl. In choosing a master, her
first necessity was that she should respect him, then that the world
should do so also. She could respect talent—talent if needs be
alone—but nothing without talent. The world's respect could not be
had without wealth. As for love, that was necessary too; but it was
only a third necessity.</p>
<p>Such being our heroine's mind about marriage, I make bold to say that
she had behaved with skill and judgment, and not altogether
heartlessly either.</p>
<p>On the following morning, Sir Lionel and George left Jerusalem
together. The colonel had his own servant, as he always had; George
was followed by the dragoman, who had now been with him for some
time; and each had also an Arab groom. On quitting Jerusalem, Sir
Lionel had made no objection to having the entire bill settled by his
son.</p>
<p>"Well, George," he had said with a smile, "I know you are in ample
funds, and I never am. You, moreover, have a milch cow that will not
run dry. The government is my cow, and she is apt to be very chary in
her supply; she does run dry with uncommon quickness."</p>
<p>George smiled also, and paid the bill readily, protesting that of
course he ought to do so, as Sir Lionel had come there only to see
him. The colonel plumed himself at once upon having managed well; but
he was greatly mistaken. His calculation in this respect had been
made on a false basis. "George," he said to himself, "is a young man;
he will think nothing of this: a fellow at his age cares nothing for
money." George did care but little for the money, but he did care
about his father; and he understood the ways of the world well enough
to know that his father ought to have paid his own bill. He began for
the first time to experience something of that feeling which his
uncle so often expressed.</p>
<p>They started, too, with somewhat different ideas as to the purport of
their route. Sir Lionel wished to get to Constantinople, and was
content, for George's sake, to go by Damascus and Beyrout; but George
had to visit Ramah, and Gibeon, and Luz; to see the well of the woman
of Samaria at Sichem; to climb Mount Carmel, and to sleep at least
for a night within its monastery. Mount Tabor also, and Bethsaida,
and Capernaum, he must visit; he must bathe in the Sea of Galilee, as
he had already bathed in Jordan and the Dead Sea; Gadara he must see,
and Gergesa, and Chorazin; and, above all, he must stand with naked
feet in Nazareth, and feel within his heart that he was resting on
holy ground.</p>
<p>Sir Lionel did not care a straw for Bethsaida or Chorazin—not a
straw even for Nazareth. For many reasons he wished to be well with
his son. In the first place, a man whose bill is paid for him always
makes some concession to the man who pays it. He should do so, at any
rate; and on this point Sir Lionel was willing to be just. And then
he had ulterior views, which made it very necessary that George
should like him. In this respect he had hitherto played his cards
well—well, with the exception of that Jerusalem bill. He had made
his society very pleasant to his son, had done much towards gaining
the young man's heart, and was well inclined to do more—anything,
indeed, short of putting himself to real personal inconvenience. We
may perhaps add, without doing too much violence to Sir Lionel's
established character, that he himself really liked his son.</p>
<p>All this for some days carried him hither and thither, if not with
patience, at any rate with perseverance. He went to spots which he
was told had a world-wide celebrity, of the names of which he had but
a bare distant remembrance, and which he found to be arid,
comfortless, and uninteresting. Gibeon he did endure, and Shiloh, and
Sichem; Gilgal, also, and Carmel. But there he broke down: he could
not, he said, justify it to himself to be absent longer from his
official duties. He found that he was near Beyrout: he could ride
thither in two days, avoiding Damascus altogether. The cookery at
Mount Carmel did not add to his love of the Holy Land. He found
himself to be not very well. He laughingly reminded George that there
was a difference between twenty-three and sixty; and ended by
declining altogether to go backwards towards the Sea of Galilee. If
George could only be induced to think that he had seen enough of
these regions, his father would be so delighted to have his company
direct from Beyrout to Constantinople!</p>
<p>George, however, was inexorable about Nazareth: and so they parted,
agreeing that they would meet again at Constantinople. We need not
closely follow either on his journey. Sir Lionel, having had
everything paid for him up to the moment of their separation,
arrived—let us hope with a full purse—at the Bosphorus. George,
when left to himself, travelled more slowly, and thought much of
these holy places—much also of his love. He could have found it in
his heart to rush back, and catch Miss Baker and Caroline at Jaffa.
He would have done so as soon as he quitted Nazareth, only that he
was ashamed.</p>
<p>About a fortnight after his father's departure, he found himself at
Damascus, and in another week, he was stepping on board the packet at
Beyrout. When leaving Palestine, that land of such wondrous
associations, his feelings were not altogether consolatory. He had at
one moment acknowledged what he believed to be a spiritual influence
within him, and yielding himself to it, had spoken of devoting his
life to a high and holy purpose. He had, indeed, spoken only to
himself, and the wound to his pride was therefore the less. But his
high and holy purpose had been blown to the winds by a few words from
a pair of ruby lips, by one glance of scorn from a pair of bright
eyes. And he had so yielded, even though those lips would acknowledge
no love for him; though those eyes would not look on him kindly. He
could not be proud of his visit to the Holy Land; and yet he felt a
longing to linger there. It might be, that if he would return once
more to that mount, look once again on Sion and the temple, the
spirit might yet get the better of the flesh. But, alas! he had to
own to himself that he had now hardly a wish that the spirit should
predominate. The things of the world were too bright to be given up.
The charms of the flesh were too strong for him. With a sigh, he
looked back for the last time from Mount Hermon, stretched out his
arms once more towards Jerusalem, said one farewell in his heart as
his eye rested for a moment on the distant glassy waters of Galilee,
and then set his horse's head towards Damascus.</p>
<p>When a traveller in these railroad days takes leave of Florence, or
Vienna, or Munich, or Lucerne, he does so without much of the
bitterness of a farewell. The places are now comparatively so near
that he expects to see them again, or, at any rate, hopes that he may
do so. But Jerusalem is still distant from us no Sabbath-day's
journey. A man who, having seen it once, takes his leave, then sees
it probably for the last time. And a man's heart must be very cold
who can think of Palestine exactly as of any other land. It is not
therefore surprising that Bertram was rather sad as he rode down the
further side of Mount Hermon.</p>
<p>At Constantinople, Sir Lionel and George again met, and our hero
spent a pleasant month there with his father. It was still spring,
the summer heats had hardly commenced, and George was charmed, if not
with the city of the Sultan, at any rate with the scenery around it.
Here his father appeared in a new light: they were more intimate with
each other than they had been at Jerusalem; they were not now living
in ladies' society, and Sir Lionel by degrees threw off what little
restraint of governorship, what small amount of parental authority he
had hitherto assumed. He seemed anxious to live with his son on terms
of perfect equality; began to talk to him rather as young men talk to
each other than men of ages so very different, and appeared to court
a lack of reverence.</p>
<p>In his ordinary habits of life, and, indeed, in his physical
vivacity, Sir Lionel was very young for his time of life. He never
pleaded his years in bar of any pleasure, and never pleaded them at
all except when desirous of an excuse for escaping something that was
disagreeable. There are subjects on which young men talk freely with
each other, but on which they hesitate to speak to their elders
without restraint. Sir Lionel did his best to banish any such feeling
on the part of his son. Of wine and women, of cards and horses, of
money comforts and money discomforts, he spoke in a manner which
Bertram at first did not like, but which after awhile was not
distasteful to him. There is always some compliment implied when an
old man unbends before a young one, and it is this which makes the
viciousness of old men so dangerous. I do not say that Sir Lionel
purposely tempted his son to vice; but he plainly showed that he
regarded morality in a man to be as thoroughly the peculiar attribute
of a clergyman as a black coat; and that there could be no reason for
other men even to pretend to it when there were no women by to be
respected and deceived.</p>
<p>Bertram certainly liked his father, and was at ease in his company;
but, in spite of this, he was ashamed of him, and was sometimes very
sorrowful. He was young, full of vivacity, and without that strength
of character which should have withstood the charm of Sir Lionel's
manner; but he knew well that he would fain have had in his father
feelings of a very different nature, and he could not but acknowledge
that the severity of his uncle's tone was deserved.</p>
<p>It had been George's intention to stay a week only at Constantinople,
but his father had persuaded him to remain four. He had boasted that
when he returned to England he would be in a position to give back to
his uncle the three hundred pounds which Pritchett had placed to his
account. But he would not now be able to do this: his father lived
expensively; and even here, where Sir Lionel was now at home, George
paid more than his own share of the expense.</p>
<p>One of their chief subjects of conversation, that, indeed, which Sir
Lionel seemed to prefer to any other, was the ultimate disposal of
his brother's money. He perceived that George's thoughts on this
subject were by far too transcendental, that he was childishly
indifferent to his own interests, and that if not brought to a keener
sense of his own rights, a stronger feeling as to his position as the
only nephew of a very wealthy man, he might let slip through his
fingers a magnificent fortune which was absolutely within his reach.
So thinking, he detained his son near him for awhile, that he might,
if possible, imbue him with some spark of worldly wisdom.</p>
<p>He knew how useless it would be to lecture a young man like George as
to the best way in which he could play tuft-hunter to his uncle. From
such lectures George would have started away in disgust; but
something, Sir Lionel thought, might be done by tact, by <i>finesse</i>,
and a daily half-scornful badinage, skilfully directed towards the
proper subject. By degrees, too, he thought that George did listen to
him, that he was learning, that he might be taught to set his eyes
greedily on those mountains of wealth. And so Sir Lionel persevered
with diligence to the end.</p>
<p>"Say everything that is civil from me to my brother," said the
colonel, the day before George left him.</p>
<p>"Uncle George does not care much for civil speeches," said the other,
laughing.</p>
<p>"No, I know he does not; he'd think more of it if I could send home a
remittance by you to pay the bill; eh, George? But as I can't do
that, I may as well send a few civil words." Uncle George's bill had
gradually become a source of joke between the father and son. Sir
Lionel, at least, was accustomed to mention it in such a way that the
junior George could not help laughing; and though at first this had
gone against the grain of his feelings, by degrees he had become used
to it.</p>
<p>"He expects, I fancy, neither money nor civil words," said George the
younger.</p>
<p>"He will not, on that account, be the less pleased at getting either
the one or the other. Don't you believe everything that everybody
tells you in his own praise: when a man says that he does not like
flattery, and that he puts no value on soft words, do not on that
account be deterred from making any civil speeches you may have
ready. He will not be a bit stronger than another because he boasts
of his strength."</p>
<p>"I really think you would find it difficult to flatter your brother."</p>
<p>"Perhaps so; and therefore I should set about it with the more care.
But, were I in your shoes, I should not attempt flattery; I should be
very submissive rather. He always loved to play the tyrant."</p>
<p>"And I do not love to play the slave."</p>
<p>"An only nephew's slavery would probably be of a very mild
description."</p>
<p>"Yes; no harder than sitting on a clerk's stool in a merchant's
counting-house for seven or eight hours a day."</p>
<p>"That would be an unendurable bore as a continuance; but take my word
for it, George, if you could bring yourself to do it for six months,
by the end of that time you would have the game in your own hands."</p>
<p>"At any rate, I shall not try it, sir."</p>
<p>"Well, you are your own master: I can only say that the temptation
would be too strong for most men. I have not the slightest doubt that
if you would give way to him for six months, two years would see you
in Parliament." Sir Lionel had already ascertained that to sit in the
House of Commons was the dearest object of his son's ambition.</p>
<p>On the evening of that day, as they were drinking their coffee and
smoking together, Sir Lionel for the first time spoke to his son on
another matter. "George," said he, "I don't know whether there was
anything in it, but when we were at Jerusalem, I thought you were
very sweet on Caroline Waddington."</p>
<p>George blushed deeply, and affected to laugh.</p>
<p>"She was certainly a very fine girl," continued his father; "I think
as handsome a girl as I have seen these ten years. What a shoulder
and neck she had! When you used to be dragging her up the Mount of
Olives, I could not but think there was more in it than mere
scripture geography—eh, George?"</p>
<p>George merely laughed, and looked rather like a simpleton.</p>
<p>"If you were not in love with her, I can only say that you ought to
have been. I was, I know."</p>
<p>"Well, sir, I believe she is free as yet; you can try your chance if
you have a mind."</p>
<p>"Ah! I would I could. If I knew Medea's secret, I would have myself
chopped and boiled that I might come out young on her behalf; but,
George, I can tell you something about her."</p>
<p>"Well, sir!"</p>
<p>"I would have told you then, when we were at Jerusalem, but we were
not so well acquainted then as we are now, and I did not like to
interfere."</p>
<p>"It could not be interference from you."</p>
<p>"Well, but the matter is this: if my brother ever loved any human
being—and I am not quite sure he ever did—but if he did, it was
that girl's father. Had Waddington lived, he would now have been my
age. Your uncle took him early by the hand, and would have made his
fortune for him, but the poor fellow died. In my opinion, it would
assist your views if your uncle knew that you were going to marry
Caroline Waddington."</p>
<p>George said nothing, but sat sucking the mouth-piece of his
pipe-stick and blowing out great clouds of smoke. Sir Lionel said
nothing further, but easily changed the conversation. Early on the
following morning, Bertram left Constantinople, having received a
promise that Sir Lionel would visit him in England as soon as the
exigencies of the public service would permit of his doing so.</p>
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