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morning, and I wanted to know whether it held in law."

      It was amusing to watch the manly coolness with which the announcement was taken. Nothing was heard more energetic than, "Deuce he has!" and, "A dairymaid!"

      "I thought it better to let the ladies dine in peace," Adrian continued. "I wanted to be able to console my aunt"--

      "Well, but--well, but," the old gentleman, much the most excited, puffed--"eh, Brandon? He's a boy, this young ass! Do you mean to tell me a boy can go and marry when he pleases, and any troll he pleases, and the marriage is good? If I thought that I'd turn every woman off my premises. I would! from the housekeeper to the scullery-maid. I'd have no woman near him till--till"--

      "Till the young greenhorn was grey, sir?" suggested Brandon.

      "Till he knew what women are made of, sir!" the old gentleman finished his sentence vehemently. "What, d'ye think, will Feverel say to it, Mr. Adrian?"

      "He has been trying the very System you have proposed sir--one that does not reckon on the powerful action of curiosity on the juvenile intelligence. I'm afraid it's the very worst way of solving the problem."

      "Of course it is," said Clarence. "None but a fool!"--

      "At your age," Adrian relieved his embarrassment, "it is natural, my dear Clarence, that you should consider the idea of an isolated or imprisoned manhood something monstrous, and we do not expect you to see what amount of wisdom it contains. You follow one extreme, and we the other. I don't say that a middle course exists. The history of mankind shows our painful efforts to find one, but they have invariably resolved themselves into asceticism, or laxity, acting and reacting. The moral question is, if a naughty little man, by reason of his naughtiness, releases himself from foolishness, does a foolish little man, by reason of his foolishness, save himself from naughtiness?"

      A discussion, peculiar to men of the world, succeeded the laugh at Mr. Clarence. Then coffee was handed round and the footman informed Adrian, in a low voice, that Mrs. Doria Forey particularly wished to speak with him. Adrian preferred not to go in alone. "Very well," he said, and sipped his coffee. They talked on, sounding the depths of law in Brandon Forey, and receiving nought but hollow echoes from that profound cavity. He would not affirm that the marriage was invalid: he would not affirm that it could not be annulled. He thought not: still he thought it would be worth trying. A consummated and a non-consummated union were two different things....

      "Dear me!" said Adrian, "does the Law recognize that? Why, that's almost human!"

      Another message was brought to Adrian that Mrs. Doria Forey very particularly wished to speak with him.

      "What can be the matter?" he exclaimed, pleased to have his faith in woman strengthened. The cake had exploded, no doubt.

      So it proved, when the gentlemen joined the fair society. All the younger ladies stood about the table, whereon the cake stood displayed, gaps being left for those sitting to feast their vision, and intrude the comments and speculations continually arising from fresh shocks of wonder at the unaccountable apparition. Entering with the half-guilty air of men who know they have come from a grosser atmosphere, the gallant males also ranged themselves round the common object of curiosity.

      "Here! Adrian!" Mrs. Doria cried. "Where is Adrian? Pray, come here. Tell me! Where did this cake come from? Whose is it? What does it do here? You know all about it, for you brought it. Clare saw you bring it into the room. What does it mean? I insist upon a direct answer. Now do not make me impatient, Adrian."

      Certainly Mrs. Doria was equal to twenty. By her concentrated rapidity and volcanic complexion it was evident that suspicion had kindled.

      "I was really bound to bring it," Adrian protested.

      "Answer me!"

      The wise youth bowed: "Categorically. This cake came from the house of a person, a female, of the name of Berry. It belongs to you partly, partly to me, partly to Clare, and to the rest of our family, on the principle of equal division for which purpose it is present...."

      "Yes! Speak!"

      "It means, my dear aunt, what that kind of cake usually does mean."

      "This, then, is the Breakfast! And the ring! Adrian! where is Richard?"

      Mrs. Doria still clung to unbelief in the monstrous horror.

      But when Adrian told her that Richard had left town, her struggling hope sank. "The wretched boy has ruined himself!" she said, and sat down trembling.

      Oh! that System! The delicate vituperations gentle ladies use instead of oaths, Mrs. Doria showered on that System. She hesitated not to say that her brother had got what he deserved. Opinionated, morbid, weak, justice had overtaken him. Now he would see! but at what a price! at what a sacrifice!

      Mrs. Doria, commanded Adrian to confirm her fears.

      Sadly the wise youth recapitulated Berry's words. "He was married this morning at half-past eleven of the clock, or twenty to twelve, by licence, at the Kensington parish church."

      "Then that was his appointment!" Mrs. Doria murmured.

      "That was the cake for breakfast!" breathed a second of her sex.

      "And it was his ring!" exclaimed a third.

      The men were silent, and made long faces.

      Clare stood cold and sedate. She and her mother avoided each other's eyes.

      "Is it that abominable country person, Adrian?"

      "The happy damsel is, I regret to say, the Papist dairymaid," said Adrian, in sorrowful but deliberate accents.

      Then arose a feminine hum, in the midst of which Mrs. Doria cried, "Brandon!" She was a woman of energy. Her thoughts resolved to action spontaneously.

      "Brandon," she drew the barrister a little aside, "can they not be followed, and separated? I want your advice. Cannot we separate them? A boy! it is really shameful if he should be allowed to fall into the toils of a designing creature to ruin himself irrevocably. Can we not, Brandon?"

      The worthy barrister felt inclined to laugh, but he answered her entreaties: "From what I hear of the young groom I should imagine the office perilous."

      "I'm speaking of law, Brandon. Can we not obtain an order from one of your Courts to pursue them and separate them instantly?"

      "This evening?"

      "Yes!"

      Brandon was sorry to say she decidedly could not.

      "You might call on one of your Judges, Brandon."

      Brandon assured her that the Judges were a hard-worked race, and to a man slept heavily after dinner.

      "Will you do so to-morrow, the first thing in the morning? Will you promise me to do so, Brandon?--Or a magistrate! A magistrate would send a policeman after them. My dear Brandon! I beg--I beg you to assist us in this dreadful extremity. It will be the death of my poor brother. I believe he would forgive anything but this. You have no idea what his notions are of blood."

      Brandon tipped Adrian a significant nod to step in and aid.

      "What is it, aunt?" asked the wise youth. "You want them followed and torn asunder by wild policemen?"

      "To-morrow!" Brandon queerly interposed.

      "Won't that be--just too late?" Adrian suggested.

      Mrs. Doria, sighed out her last spark of hope.

      "You see," said Adrian....

      "Yes! yes!" Mrs. Doria did not require any of his elucidations. "Pray be quiet, Adrian, and let me


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