Waynflete. Christabel R. Coleridge

Waynflete - Christabel R. Coleridge


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       Christabel R. Coleridge

      Waynflete

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066156121

       Part 1, Chapter V.

       Part 1, Chapter VI.

       Part 1, Chapter VII.

       Part 1, Chapter VIII.

       Part 1, Chapter IX.

       Part 1, Chapter X.

       Part 1, Chapter XI.

       Part 2, Chapter I.

       Part 2, Chapter II.

       Part 2, Chapter III.

       Part 2, Chapter IV.

       Part 2, Chapter V.

       Part 2, Chapter VI.

       Part 2, Chapter VII.

       Part 2, Chapter VIII.

       Part 2, Chapter IX.

       Part 2, Chapter X.

       Part 2, Chapter XI.

       Part 2, Chapter XII.

       Part 3, Chapter I.

       Part 3, Chapter II.

       Part 3, Chapter III.

       Part 3, Chapter IV.

       Part 3, Chapter V.

       Part 3, Chapter VI.

       Part 3, Chapter VII.

       Part 3, Chapter VIII.

       Part 3, Chapter IX.

       Part 3, Chapter X.

       Part 3, Chapter XI.

       Table of Contents

      Interesting.

      Cuthbert Staunton was a man with a history, and rather a sad one. He had been engaged to be married to a girl who had died within a week of the wedding-day. In the first shock of his trouble, he threw up his appointment, a recorder-ship which had been obtained for him by some legal connections, and went off on an aimless wandering, which greatly exhausted his small means, and put him out of the running for the prizes of life. He quieted down in time, however, his trouble receded into the background, and he came back to the family home, settled down, as his sisters said, into a regular old bachelor, with set little tastes and set little ways, a quiet, contented face, and a very kind heart. He had much cultivation and some literary power, and felt himself more fortunate than he could have hoped in being employed by his University as an Extension lecturer on literature and modern history. In this way he obtained interesting occupation, and a sufficient addition to his income for his very moderate wants.

      Now, at two and thirty, no one would have suspected him of having had a “Wanderjahr” in his life; but perhaps it was from an under-sense of sympathy with a not very lucky person that he had taken to Guy Waynflete; when he had met him first abroad, and then at Oxford, a year or two before the present occasion.

      For Guy was a person who did not get on well with life, he experienced and caused a great many disappointments. Once or twice at important examinations some sudden illness had come in his way and spoiled his chances. Such, at least, was his own account of his ill success, when he was pressed to give one. With other engagements he was apt, his friends said, to fail to come up to the scratch. If he undertook to play cricket, sometimes he did not turn up, and sometimes he played badly. He was musical enough to be a coveted member of various clubs and societies, but his performances could never be calculated on, and were sometimes brilliant and sometimes disappointing. There were times when his friends could make nothing of him, and no one felt really to know him. Cuthbert Staunton did not know much about him, he suspected him of more uncertain health than he chose to confess, and had discovered that the home life was not smooth for him. But he did not want to bring his own past into the present, or to inquire into Guy’s. He found him congenial, in spite of the eight or nine years between them, and did not think that his various shortcomings were due to any discreditable cause.

      “You are doing your London?” he said, as they started.

      “Yes,” said Guy, “I’ve hardly ever been in town. You know we haven’t many friends who can be said to be in London society. Most of the Ingleby neighbours come up for three weeks to a good hotel, and do pictures and theatres, and visit each other a little. I am sent up now to ‘make my way’ with some of our city business connections.”

      “By the way,” said Staunton, “what Maxwells were those who seem to have been rather unpleasantly connected with your family history? My mother was a Yorkshire Maxwell.”

      “Was she?” said Guy.

      He was quite silent for a noticeable moment, then he said, with the little ring in his voice which people called satirical, “This is very interesting. Did your mother come from the


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