Gilmore to himself. Then he ventured upon another question. Did the waiter know anything of Captain Marrable’s father? The waiter only knew that the Captain’s father was “a military gent, and was high up in the army.” From all which the only information which Gilmore received was the fact that the match between Marrable and Mary Lowther had not as yet become the talk of the town. After dinner Mr. Cockey proposed a glass of toddy and a cigar, remarking that he would move a bill for dispensing with the smoking rule for that night only, and to this also Gilmore assented. Now that he was at Loring he did not know what to do with himself better than drinking toddy with Mr. Cockey. Mr. Cockey declared the bill to be carried nem. con., and the cigars and toddy were produced. Mr. Cockey remarked that he had heard of Sir Gregory Marrable, of Dunripple Park. He travelled in Warwickshire, and was in the habit, as he said, of fishing up little facts. Sir Gregory wasn’t much of a man, according to his account. The estate was small and, as Mr. Cockey fancied, a little out at elbows. Mr. Cockey thought it all very well to be a country gentleman and a “barrow knight,” as he called it, as long as you had an estate to follow; but he thought very little of a title without plenty of stuff. Commerce, according to his notions, was the back bone of the nation;⁠—and that the corps of travelling commercial gentlemen was the back bone of trade, every child knew. Mr. Cockey became warm and friendly as he drank his toddy. “Now, I don’t know what you are, sir,” said he.

“I’m not very much of anything,” said Gilmore.

“Perhaps not, sir. Let that be as it may. But a man, sir, that feels that he’s one of the supports of the commercial supremacy of this nation ain’t got much reason to be ashamed of himself.”

“Not on that account, certainly.”

“Nor yet on no other account, as long as he’s true to his employers. Now you talk of country gentlemen.”

“I didn’t talk of them,” said Gilmore.

“Well⁠—no⁠—you didn’t; but they do, you know. What does a country gentleman know, and what does he do? What’s the country the better of him? He ’unts, and he shoots, and he goes to bed with his skin full of wine, and then he gets up and he ’unts and he shoots again, and ’as his skin full once more. That’s about all.”

“Sometimes he’s a magistrate.”

“Yes, justices’ justice! we know all about that. Put an old man in prison for a week because he looks into his ’ay-field on a Sunday; or send a young one to the treadmill for two months because he knocks over a ’are! All them cases ought to be tried in the towns, and there should be beaks paid as there is in London. I don’t see the good of a country gentleman. Buying and selling;⁠—that’s what the world has to go by.”

“They buy and sell land.”

“No; they don’t. They buy a bit now and then when they’re screws, and they sell a bit now and then when the eating and drinking has gone too fast. But as for capital and investment, they know nothing about it. After all, they ain’t getting above two-and-a-half percent for their money. We all know what that must come to.”

Mr. Cockey had been so mild before the pint of sherry and the glass of toddy, that Mr. Gilmore was somewhat dismayed by the change. Mr. Cockey, however, in his altered aspect seemed to be so much the less gracious, that Gilmore left him and strolled out into the town. He climbed up the hill and walked round the church and looked up at the windows of Miss Marrable’s house, of which he had learned the site; but he had no adventure, saw nothing that interested him, and at half-past nine took himself wearily to bed.

That same day Captain Marrable had run down from London to Loring laden with terrible news. The money on which he had counted was all gone! “What do you mean?” said his uncle; “have the lawyers been deceiving you all through?”

“What is it to me?” said the ruined man. “It is all gone. They have satisfied me that nothing more can be done.” Parson John whistled with a long-drawn note of wonder. “The people they were dealing with would be willing enough to give up the money, but it’s all gone. It’s spent, and there’s no trace of it.”

“Poor fellow!”

“I’ve seen my father, uncle John.”

“And what passed?”

“I told him that he was a scoundrel, and then I left him. I didn’t strike him.”

“I should hope not that, Walter.”

“I kept my hands off him; but when a man has ruined you as he has me, it doesn’t much matter who he is. Your father and any other man are much the same to you then. He was worn, and old, and pale, or I should have felled him to the ground.”

“And what will you do now?”

“Just go to that hell upon earth on the other side of the globe. There’s nothing else to be done. I’ve applied for extension of leave, and told them why.”

Nothing more was said that night between the uncle and nephew, and no word had been spoken about Mary Lowther. On the next morning the breakfast at the parsonage passed by in silence. Parson John had been thinking a good deal of Mary, but had resolved that it was best that he should hold his tongue for the present. From the moment in which he had first heard of the engagement, he had made up his mind that his nephew and Mary Lowther would never be married. Seeing what his nephew was⁠—or rather seeing that which he fancied his nephew to be⁠—he was sure that he would not sacrifice himself by such a marriage. There was always a way out of things, and Walter

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