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The Way We Live Now

Chapter II The Carbury Family

Word Count: 3892    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

She has declared she had been cruelly slandered; but she has also shown that she was not a woman whose words about herself could be take

absolutely and abominably foul as was the entire system by which she was endeavouring to achieve success, far away from honour and honesty as she had been carried by her ready subserviency to the dirty things among which she had lately fallen, nevertheless

tout, bald, very choleric, generous in money, suspicious in temper, and intelligent. He knew how to govern men. He could read and understand a book. There was nothing mean about him. He had his attractive qualities. He was a man who might be loved - but he was hardly a man for love. The young Lady Carbury had understood her position and had determined to do her duty. She had resolved before she went to the altar that she would never allow herself to flirt and she had never flirted. For fifteen years things had gone tolerably well with her - by which it is intended that the reader should understand that they had so gone that she had been able to tolerate them. They had been home in England for three or four years, and then Sir Patrick had returned with some new and higher appointment. For fifteen years, though

allowed herself to attempt to form friendships for herself, and among her friends was one of the other sex. If fidelity in a wife be compatible with such friendship, if the married state does not exact from a woman the necessity of debarring herself from all friendly intercourse with any man except her lord, Lady Carbury was not faithless. But Sir Carbury became jealous, spoke words which even she could not endure, did things which drove even her beyond the calculations of her prudence - and she left him. But even this she did in so guarded a way that, as to every step she took, she could prove her innocence. Her life at that period is of little moment to our story, except that it is essential that the

inly encountered hitherto much that was bad. To be scolded, watched, beaten, and sworn at by a choleric old man till she was at last driven out of her house by the violence of his ill-usage; to be taken back as a favour with the assurance that her name would for the remainder of her life be unjustly tarnished; to have her flight constantly thrown in her face; and then at last to become for a year or two the nurse of a dying debauchee, was a high price to pay for such good things as she had hitherto enjoyed. Now at length had come to her a period of relaxation - her reward, her freedom, her chance of happiness. She thought much about herself, and resolved on one or two things. The time for love had gone by, and she would have nothing to do with it. Nor would she marry again for convenience. But she would have friends - real friends; friends who could help her - and whom possibly she might help. She would, too, make s

uards, and known to have had a fortune left him by his father, may go very far in getting into debt; and Sir Felix had made full use of all his privileges. His life had been in every way bad. He had become a burden on his mother so heavy - and on his sister also - that their life had become one of unavoidable embarrassments. But not for a moment, had either of them ever quarrelled with him. Henrietta had been taught by the conduct of both father and mother that every vice might be forgiven in a man and in a son, though every virtue was expected from a woman, and especially from a daughter. The lesson had come to her

his folly she had hardly ventured to say a word to him with the purport of stopping him on his road to ruin. In everything she had spoilt him as a boy, and in everything she still spoilt him as a man. She was almost proud of his vices, and had taken delight

struggles was speaking the truth. Tidings had reached her of this and the other man's success, and - coming near to her still - of this and that other woman's earnings in literature. And it had seemed to her that, within moderate limits, she might give a wide field to her hopes. Why should she not add a thousand a year to her in

If only enough money might be earned to tide

nature, a clever woman. She could write after a glib, commonplace, sprightly fashion, and had already acquired the knack of spreading all she knew very thin, so that it might cover a vast surface. She had no ambition to write a good book, but was painfully anxious to write a book that the critics should say was good. Had Mr Broune,

lock at, ready-witted, and intelligent. He was very dark, with that soft olive complexion which so generally gives to young men an appearance of aristocratic breeding. His hair, which was never allowed to become long, was nearly black, and was soft and silky without that taint of grease which is so common with silken-headed darlings. His eyes were long, brown in colour, and were made beautiful by the perfect arch of the perfect eyebrow. But perhaps the glory of the face was due more to the finished moulding and fine symmetry of the nose and mouth than to his other features. On his short upper lip he had a moustache as well formed as his eyebrows, but he wore no other beard. The form of his chin too was perfect, but it lacked that sweetness and softness of expression, indicative of softness of heart, which a dimple conveys. He was about five feet nine in height, and was as excellent in figure as in face. It was admitted by men and clamorously asserted by women that no man had ever been more handsome than Felix Carbury, and it was admitted also that he never showed consciousness of his beauty. He had given himself airs on many sc

ly care.' 'How can I show that I care more than by wishing to make you my wife?' he had asked. 'I don't know that you can, but all the same you don't care,' she said. And so that young lady escaped the pitfall. Now there was another young lady, to whom the reader shall be introduced in time, whom Sir Felix was instigated to pursue with unremitting diligence. Her wealth was not defined, as had been the £40,000 of her predecessor, but was known to be very much greater than that. It was, indeed, generally supposed to be fathomless, bottomless, endless. It was said that in regard to money for ordinary expenditure, money for houses, servants, horses, jewels, and the like, one sum was the same as another to the fat

rs. This sweetness was altogether lacking to her brother. And her face was a true index of her character. Again, who shall say why the brother and sister had become so opposite to each other; whether they would have been thus different had both been taken away as infants from their father's and mother's training, or whether the girl's virtues were owing altogether to the lower place which she had held in her parent's heart? She, at any rate, had not been spoilt by a title, by the command of money, and by the temptations of too early acqu

ented by one Roger Carbury, of Carbury Hall. Roger Carbury was a gentleman of whom much will have to be said, but here, at this moment, it need only be told that he

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1 Chapter I Three Editors2 Chapter II The Carbury Family3 Chapter III The Beargarden4 Chapter IV Madame Melmotte's Ball5 Chapter V After the Ball6 Chapter VI Roger Carbury and Paul Montague7 Chapter VII Mentor8 Chapter VIII Love-Sick9 Chapter IX The Great Railway to Vera Cruz10 Chapter X Mr Fisker's Success11 Chapter XI Lady Carbury at Home12 Chapter XII Sir Felix in His Mother's House13 Chapter XIII The Longestaffes14 Chapter XIV Carbury Manor15 Chapter XV 'You Should Remember that I Am His Mother'16 Chapter XVI The Bishop and the Priest17 Chapter XVII Marie Melmotte Hears a Love Tale18 Chapter XVIII Ruby Ruggles Hears a Love Tale19 Chapter XIX Hetta Carbury Hears a Love Tale20 Chapter XX Lady Pomona's Dinner Party21 Chapter XXI Everybody Goes to Them22 Chapter XXII Lord Nidderdale's Morality23 Chapter XXIII 'Yes I'm a Baronet'24 Chapter XXIV Miles Grendall's Triumph25 Chapter XXV In Grosvenor Square26 Chapter XXVI Mrs Hurtle27 Chapter XXVII Mrs Hurtle Goes to the Play28 Chapter XXVIII Dolly Longestaffe Goes into the City29 Chapter XXIX Miss Melmotte's Courage30 Chapter XXX Mr Melmotte's Promise31 Chapter XXXI Mr Broune has Made up His Mind32 Chapter XXXII Lady Monogram33 Chapter XXXIII John Crumb34 Chapter XXXIV Ruby Ruggles Obeys Her Grandfather35 Chapter XXXV Melmotte's Glory36 Chapter XXXVI Mr Broune's Perils37 Chapter XXXVII The Board-Room38 Chapter XXXVIII Paul Montague's Troubles39 Chapter XXXIX 'I Do Love Him'40 Chapter XL 'Unanimity is the Very Soul of These Things'41 Chapter XLI All Prepared42 Chapter XLII 'Can You Be Ready in Ten Minutes'43 Chapter XLIII The City Road44 Chapter XLIV The Coming Election45 Chapter XLV Mr Melmotte is Pressed for Time46 Chapter XLVI Roger Carbury and His Two Friends47 Chapter XLVII Mrs Hurtle at Lowestoft48 Chapter XLVIII Ruby a Prisoner49 Chapter XLIX Sir Felix Makes Himself Ready50 Chapter L The Journey to Liverpool51 Chapter LI Which Shall it Be52 Chapter LII The Results of Love and Wine53 Chapter LIII A Day in the City54 Chapter LIV The India Office55 Chapter LV Clerical Charities56 Chapter LVI Father Barham Visits London57 Chapter LVII Lord Nidderdale Tries His Hand Again58 Chapter LVIII Mr Squercum is Employed59 Chapter LIX The Dinner60 Chapter LX Miss Longestaffe's Lover61 Chapter LXI Lady Monogram Prepares for the Party62 Chapter LXII The Party63 Chapter LXIII Mr Melmotte on the Day of the Election64 Chapter LXIV The Election65 Chapter LXV Miss Longestaffe Writes Home66 Chapter LXVI 'So Shall Be My Enmity'67 Chapter LXVII Sir Felix Protects His Sister68 Chapter LXVIII Miss Melmotte Declares Her Purpose69 Chapter LXIX Melmotte in Parliament70 Chapter LXX Sir Felix Meddles with Many Matters71 Chapter LXXI John Crumb Falls into Trouble72 Chapter LXXII 'Ask Himself'73 Chapter LXXIII Marie's Fortune74 Chapter LXXIV Melmotte Makes a Friend75 Chapter LXXV In Bruton Street76 Chapter LXXVI Hetta and Her Lover77 Chapter LXXVII Another Scene in Bruton Street78 Chapter LXXVIII Miss Longestaffe Again at Caversham79 Chapter LXXIX The Brehgert Correspondence80 Chapter LXXX Ruby Prepares for Service81 Chapter LXXXI Mr Cohenlupe Leaves London82 Chapter LXXXII Marie's Perseverance83 Chapter LXXXIII Melmotte Again at the House84 Chapter LXXXIV Paul Montague's Vindication85 Chapter LXXXV Breakfast in Berkeley Square86 Chapter LXXXVI The Meeting in Bruton Street87 Chapter LXXXVII Down at Carbury88 Chapter LXXXVIII The Inquest89 Chapter LXXXIX 'The Wheel of Fortune'90 Chapter XC Hetta's Sorrow91 Chapter XCI The Rivals92 Chapter XCII Hamilton K. Fisker Again93 Chapter XCIV John Crumb's Victory94 Chapter XCV The Longestaffe Marriages95 Chapter XCVI Where 'The Wild Asses Quench Their Thirst'96 Chapter XCVII Mrs Hurtle's Fate97 Chapter XCVIII Marie Melmotte's Fate98 Chapter XCIX Lady Carbury and Mr Broune99 Chapter C Down in Suffolk