<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
<p><span class = "dropcap">D</span><span class =
"firstword">istant</span> shores have great attractions and large
expectations. They harbour around their beaches the exile and patriot,
the king and peasant, the lawyer and artisan, the rising swindler and
ruined prince. Spotted throughout the unclaimed area of bared soil may
be seen the roughly-constructed huts and lofty homes of honest industry.
Yes, and concealed therein are hearts yearning for the land of nativity
and national freedom; hearts which sorrow after bygone days, and sink
low when brooding over the future tide of fortune which already has
stopped its gentle flow.</p>
<p>The reception on the evening of Irene’s marriage was glorious and
brilliant, as were all those given by Lord and Lady Dilworth, and,
although attended by society’s cream alone, there appeared a visible and
unhidden vacancy in the absence of her who
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_50" id = "page_50">50</SPAN></span>
so often lent a glow of gaiety to the high-toned throng.</p>
<p>There seemed to be no rival now of buried lineage to mar their
desire, or incur the jealousy of would-be opponents; no one to share
sympathetically with the afflicted sister of equality and worth; nor was
there any one present of such knightly and commanding dignity as he,
who, not many hours previous, had taken upon him the sad duty of
delivering up the keys of devotion to her who kept the door of ardent
adoration locked against his approach.</p>
<p>It would probably be a long time ere such a scene of silly jealousy
and ire would take place as that witnessed, in which the greater
majority of those present were then partakers! And, further, it would
surely be a much longer period before these guests would again share
alike in the generosity so often extended them by Lord and Lady
Dilworth.</p>
<p>Next day after Irene’s marriage was a busy one at Dilworth Castle;
hasty and numerous were the preparations for desolation and departure.
Weeks preceding the joyful event, or what should have been, were
leisurely devoted to the artistic arrangements
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_51" id = "page_51">51</SPAN></span>
in every room within the lordly manor. But, alas! so sudden now was
joy’s termination, that hours alone were the boundary of command.</p>
<p>It may be stated that Lord Dilworth owned three very extensive
estates, namely—Dilworth, Ayrtown, and Howden. The first-mentioned
extended around the castle of that name, encompassing a spacious tract
of soil indeed, and might have done justice to moderation in its most
expensive form. The Ayrtown Estate, which entirely covers the southern
portion of Cheshire, owns a magnificent Hall, the residence of the Earl
of Tukesham, and, although not considered so lucrative as Dilworth, may
be estimated a handsome dowry for the son of any rising nobleman in the
realm. The Howden Estate, on which are elegantly formed two buildings of
note—namely, Blandford Castle and Lauderdale Lodge, both exquisite
constructions of architecture and skilled workmanship, and occupied
respectively by Sir Sydney Hector and Admiral Charles Depew—lies
chiefly around the south-west of Yorkshire, and is not quite so
desirable or adapted for agriculture as the two first mentioned, being
mostly rented for grazing purposes by the numerous and varied owners
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_52" id = "page_52">52</SPAN></span>
of its rugged plots. These estates became so heavily mortgaged that
prompt sale was indispensable, and, the matter being quietly arranged
six months beforehand, the sixth day of August was the day set apart for
the disposal of same.</p>
<p>Bidders were numerous and offers low. Eventually the purchasers were
as follow:—The Marquis of Orland bought Dilworth Estate; Lord
Henry Headen purchased Ayrtown Estate, whilst the lot of Howden fell
upon Sir Rowland Joyce, the famous historian and national bard.</p>
<p>Thus were wrested from Lord and Lady Dilworth their luxurious living.
They were driven from their nursery of rich and complicated comforts,
their castle of indolence and ease. They were now thrown upon the
shivering waters of want, without a word of sympathy in the dreadful
hour of their great affliction, without home or friend to extend shelter
or sustenance, and cast afloat upon the ocean of oscillating chance to
speed across it as best they could.</p>
<p>Was Lord Dilworth therefore to be pitied? Were the torrents of gold
which were bound to trickle from these enormous lands and dwellings,
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_53" id = "page_53">53</SPAN></span>
manufactories and villages, too trifling for his use? Not a morsel of
pity was offered either him or Lady Dilworth as their circumstances
became known in the homes of their associates, who so often fed on the
fat of their folly and graced their well-lined tables always covered
with dainties of deserving censure.</p>
<p>Could human mind contemplate that she who reigned supreme amongst
society, she who gave the ball in honor of Irene Iddesleigh’s marriage,
should ere four days be a penniless pauper? Yet such was fact, not
fiction.</p>
<p>The seventh day of August saw Lord and Lady Dilworth titled beggars,
steering their course along the blue and slippery waves of the Atlantic,
to be participators in the loathing poverty which always exists in homes
sought after destruction, degradation, and reckless extravagance.</p>
<p>So soon may the house of gladness and mirth be turned into deepest
grief! How the wealthiest, through sheer folly, are made to drink the
very essence of poverty and affliction in its purest form! How the
golden dust of luxury can be blown about with the wind of events, and is
afterwards found buried
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_54" id = "page_54">54</SPAN></span>
in the fields of industry and thrift! Their names, which were as a
household word, would now be heard no more, and should sink into abject
silence and drowned renown, leaving them to battle against the raging
war of ruin and hunger, and retire into secluded remorse.</p>
<p>On the return of Sir John and Lady Dunfern from their honeymoon,
after four weeks sojourn, what was her ladyship’s consternation on
perceiving Dilworth Castle in darkness as she and Sir John swept past
its avenue on their way to their own brilliantly-lighted mansion? She
was rather more taciturn on the night of her return than even during her
stay in Florence, and it was only on her approaching her former place of
temporary retreat and touchy remembrances that words began to fall from
her ruby lips in torrents.</p>
<p>“Tell me, I implore of you, Sir John and husband, why the once blithe
and cheerful spot of peace is now apparently a dismal dungeon on the
night of our home-coming, when all should have been a mass of dazzling
glow and splendour?</p>
<p>“Can it be that she who proffered such ecstacy for months before, on
the eve of our return, is now no more? or can it be possible that we
have crossed
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_55" id = "page_55">55</SPAN></span>
each other on the wide waters of tossing triumph or wanton woe?</p>
<p>“Speak at once, for pity’s sake! and do not hide from me the answer
of truth and honest knowledge? Oh, merciful heavens!”</p>
<p>Here Lady Dunfern drooped her head before Sir John got time to even
answer a word, and drawing from his pocket a silver flask, proceeded to
open its contents, when the horses suddenly stopped, and a gentle hand
politely opened the carriage door to eagerly await the exit of his
master and future mistress from its cushioned corners of costly comfort
and ease.</p>
<p>“Tom,” cried Sir John, in great and rending agony, “kindly wait for a
few minutes, as her ladyship has been frightfully overcome only a short
time ago by the blank appearance in and around Dilworth Castle. She
fears something dreadful must surely have happened Lady Dilworth in her
absence, since she has failed to make the occasion of our home-coming a
merry torchlight of rejoicing.” Tom, who had been in Sir John’s service
for the past twenty years, was about to testify to the truth of his
remarks, when he was joined by other members of the household,
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_56" id = "page_56">56</SPAN></span>
who rushed to welcome their beloved master home once more, accompanied
by his beautiful bride, of whom they all had heard so much.</p>
<p>Sir John saw that delay was dangerous, and helping to remove his
darling Irene from the seat on which she unconsciously reclined,
succeeded in placing her on a low couch in the very room he so often
silently prayed for her presence. Bathing her highly-heated temples with
a sprinkling of cooling liquid concealed in his flask, Sir John lost no
time in summoning the village doctor, who, on arrival, pronounced Lady
Dunfern to have slightly recovered, and giving the necessary orders left
the room.</p>
<p>It was fully two hours ere she partly recovered from her ghastly
swoon, to find herself the object of numerous onlookers of the household
of which she was now future mistress.</p>
<p>Pale and death-like did she appear in the eyes of her husband, who
was utterly overcome with grief at the sudden collapse of his wife under
such a stroke of anticipated sorrow; and more grieved was he still when
he found on inquiry that the removal of Lord and Lady Dilworth from
their heightened haunt of highborn socialism must sooner or later be
revealed to
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_57" id = "page_57">57</SPAN></span>
her, who, as yet, had only tasted partly of the bitter cup of divided
intercourse and separated companionship.</p>
<p>Many, many were the questions asked by Lady Dunfern relative to Lady
Dilworth when Dr. Corbett arrived next morning to pronounce her almost
recovered, and, strange, yet true, that no one could possibly have
humoured her in such a manner to warrant recovery as the village doctor,
until she felt really strong enough to battle against the sorrowful tale
of woe with which Sir John should shortly make her cognisant.</p>
<p>On learning from his lips, so soon as her ability occasioned, the
real state of affairs concerning the emigrants who were now compelled to
wander on the track of trouble, she received the truth with awe and
smothered distress. The new sphere in which Lady Dunfern was about to
move seemed to her strange; the binding duty which tied her firmly to
honour and obedience was kept prominently in vague view; the staff of
menials would probably find the rules of her husband more in accordance
with their wishes than those which she was beginning to already arrange.
She commenced her married life with falsehood,
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_58" id = "page_58">58</SPAN></span>
and she was fully determined to prove this feature more and more as the
weeks and months rolled along. She was not now afraid of the censure of
one whose face she may never more behold, and who was the sole
instigation of plunging her into a union she inwardly abhorred. Perhaps,
had she never been trained under the loving guidance of Oscar Otwell,
her revered tutor, she would only have been too eager to proclaim her
ecstacy at her present position more vigorously. But all fetters of
power were visibly broken which she wished should remain united, leaving
her mother of her future premeditated movements.</p>
<p>As time moved on, Sir John and Lady Dunfern seemed to differ daily in
many respects, which occasioned dislike in the breasts of both, and
caused the once handsome, cheerful face of the much-respected owner of
Dunfern to assume a look of seriousness.</p>
<p>These differences arose chiefly through his great disinclination to
attend the numerous social gatherings which awaited them after their
marriage. Sir John, finding it almost impossible to stare socialism in
the face, seemed inclined rather to stick to the old rule
<span class = "pagenum"><SPAN name="page_59" id = "page_59">59</SPAN></span>
of domestic enjoyment, never forgetting to share fully his cheerful
conversation with his wife, when so desired, which, sorrowful to relate,
was too seldom.</p>
<p>Now that Lady Dunfern was an acknowledged branch of society, her
elegant presence would have been courted by all those who so often
favoured Lady Dilworth with their distinguished patronage, but her
social hopes being nipped in the bud by her retiring husband, she dare
not resent, and determined, in consequence, to make herself an object of
dislike in her home, and cherish her imprisoned thoughts until released,
for good or evil.</p>
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