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Richard Carvel
VOLUME 5   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXII. Lady Tankerville's Drum-major
Winston Churchill
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       _ The rising sun, as he came through the little panes of the windows,
       etched a picture of that room into my brain. I can see the twisted
       candles with their wax smearing the sticks, the chairs awry, the tables
       littered with blackened pipes, and bottles, and spilled wine and tobacco
       among the dice; and the few that were left of my companions, some with
       dark lines under their eyes, all pale, but all gay, unconcerned, witty,
       and cynical; smoothing their ruffles, and brushing the ashes and snuff
       from the pattern of their waistcoats. As we went downstairs, singing a
       song Mr. Foote had put upon the stage that week, they were good enough to
       declare that I should never be permitted to go back to Maryland. That my
       grandfather should buy me a certain borough, which might be had for six
       thousand pounds.
       The drawing-room made a dismal scene, too, after the riot and disorder of
       the night. Sleepy servants were cleaning up, but Fox vowed that they
       should bring us yet another bottle before going home. So down we sat
       about the famous old round table, Fox fingering the dents the gold had
       made in the board, and philosophizing; and reciting Orlando Furioso in
       the Italian, and Herodotus in the original Greek. Suddenly casting his
       eyes about, they fell upon an ungainly form stretched on a lounge, that
       made us all start.
       "Bully!" he cried; "I'll lay you fifty guineas that Mr. Carvel gets the
       Beauty, against Chartersea."
       This roused me.
       "Nay, Mr. Fox, I beg of you," I protested, with all the vehemence I could
       muster. "Miss Manners must not be writ down in such a way."
       For answer he snapped his fingers at the drowsy Brooks, who brought the
       betting book.
       "There!" says he; "and there, and there," turning over the pages; "her
       name adorns a dozen leaves, my fine buckskin. And it will be well to
       have some truth about her. Enter the wager, Brooks."
       "Hold!" shouts Bolingbroke; "I haven't accepted."
       You may be sure I was in an agony over this desecration, which I was so
       powerless to prevent. But as I was thanking my stars that the matter had
       blown over with Bolingbroke's rejection, there occurred a most singular
       thing.
       The figure on the lounge, with vast difficulty, sat up. To our amazement
       we beheld the bloated face of the Duke of Chartersea staring stupidly.
       "Damme, Bully, you refushe bet like tha'!" he said. "I'll take doshen of
       'em-doshen, egad. Gimme the book, Brooksh. Cursh Fox--lay thousand d--d
       provinshial never getsh 'er--I know--"
       I sat very still, seized with a loathing beyond my power to describe to
       thick that this was the man Mr. Manners was forcing her to marry. Fox
       laughed.
       "Help his Grace to his coach," he said to two of the footmen.
       "Kill fellow firsht!" cried his Grace, with his hand on his sword, and
       instantly fell over, and went sound asleep.
       "His Grace has sent his coach home, your honour," said one of the men,
       respectfully. "The duke is very quarrelsome, sir."
       "Put him in a chair, then," said Charles.
       So they fearfully lifted his Grace, who was too far gone to resist, and
       carried him to a chair. And Mr. Fox bribed the chairmen with two guineas
       apiece, which he borrowed from me, to set his Grace down amongst the
       marketwomen at Covent Garden.
       The next morning Banks found in my pockets something over seven hundred
       pounds more than I had had the day before.
       I rose late, my head swimming with mains and nicks, and combinations of
       all the numbers under the dozen; debated whether or no I would go to
       Arlington Street, and decided that I had not the courage. Comyn settled
       it by coming in his cabriolet, proposed that we should get the air in the
       park, dine at the Cocoa Tree, and go afterwards to Lady Tankerville's
       drum-major, where Dolly would undoubtedly be.
       "Now you are here, Richard," said his Lordship, with his accustomed
       bluntness, "and your sea-captain has relieved your Quixotic conscience,
       what the deuce do you intend to do?
       "Win a thousand pounds every night at Brooks's, or improve your time and
       do your duty, and get Miss Manners out of his Grace's clutches? I'll
       warrant something will come of that matter this morning."
       "I hope so," I said shortly.
       Comyn looked at me sharply.
       "Would you fight him?" he asked.
       "If he gave me the chance."
       His Lordship whistled. "Egad, then," said he, "I shall want to be there
       to see. In spite of his pudding-bag shape he handles the sword as well
       as any man in England. I have crossed with him at Angelo's. And he has
       a devilish tricky record, Richard."
       I said nothing to that.
       "Hope you do--kill him," Comyn continued. "He deserves it richly. But
       that will be a cursed unpleasant way of settling the business,--
       unpleasant for you, unpleasant for her, and cursed unpleasant for him,
       too, I suppose. Can't you think of any other way of getting her? Ask
       Charles to give you a plan of campaign. You haven't any sense, and
       neither have I."
       "Hang you, Jack, I have no hopes of getting her," I replied, for I was
       out of humour with myself that day. "In spite of what you say, I know
       she doesn't care a brass farthing to marry me. So let's drop that."
       Comyn made a comic gesture of deprecation. I went on: "But I am going to
       stay here and find out the truth, though it may be a foolish undertaking.
       And if he is intimidating Mr. Manners--"
       "You may count on me, and on Charles," said my Lord, generously; "and
       there are some others I know of. Gad! You made a dozen of friends and
       admirers by what you said last night, Richard. And his Grace has a few
       enemies. You will not lack support."
       We dined very comfortably at the Cocoa Tree, where Comyn had made an
       appointment for me with two as diverting gentlemen as had ever been my
       lot to meet. My Lord Carlisle was the poet and scholar of the little
       clique which had been to Eton with Charles Fox, any member of which (so
       'twas said) would have died for him. His Lordship, be it remarked in
       passing, was as lively a poet and scholar as can well be imagined. He
       had been recently sobered, so Comyn confided; which I afterwards
       discovered meant married. Charles Fox's word for the same was fallen.
       And I remembered that Jack had told me it was to visit Lady Carlisle at
       Castle Howard that Dorothy was going when she heard of my disappearance.
       Comyn's other guest was Mr. Topham Beauclerk, the macaroni friend of
       Dr. Johnson. He, too, had been recently married, but appeared no more
       sobered than his Lordship. Mr. Beauclerk's wife, by the way, was the
       beautiful Lady Diana Spencer, who had been divorced from Lord
       Bolingbroke, the Bully I had met the night before. These gentlemen
       seemed both well acquainted with Miss Manners, and vowed that none but
       American beauties would ever be the fashion in London more. Then we all
       drove to Lady Tankerville's drum-major near Chesterfield House.
       "You will be wanting a word with her when she comes in," said Comyn,
       slyly divining. Poor fellow! I fear that I scarcely appreciated his
       feelings as to Dorothy, or the noble unselfishness of his friendship for
       me.
       We sat aside in a recess of the lower hall, watching the throng as they
       passed: haughty dowagers, distorted in lead and disfigured in silk and
       feathers nodding at the ceiling; accomplished beaus of threescore or
       more, carefully mended for the night by their Frenchmen at home; young
       ladies in gay brocades with round skirts and stiff, pear-shaped bodices;
       and youngsters just learning to ogle and to handle their snuff-boxes.
       One by one their names were sent up and solemnly mouthed by the footman
       on the landing. At length, when we had all but given her up, Dorothy
       arrived. A hood of lavender silk heightened the oval of her face, and
       out from under it crept rebellious wisps of her dark hair. But she was
       very pale, and I noticed for the first time a worn expression that gave
       me a twinge of uneasiness. 'Twas then I caught sight of the duke, a
       surly stamp on his leaden features. And after him danced Mr. Manners.
       Dolly gave a little cry when she saw me.
       "Oh! Richard, I am so glad you are here. I was wondering what had
       become of you. And Comyn, too." Whispering to me, "Mamma has had a
       letter from Mrs. Brice; your grandfather has been to walk in the garden."
       "And Grafton?"
       "She said nothing of your uncle," she replied, with a little shudder at
       the name; "but wrote that Mr. Carvel was said to be better. So there!
       your conscience need not trouble you for remaining. I am sure he would
       wish you to pay a visit home.
       "And I have to scold you, sir. You have not been to Arlington Street for
       three whole days."
       It struck me suddenly that her gayety was the same as that she had worn
       to my birthday party, scarce a year agone.
       "Dolly, you are not well!" I said anxiously.
       She flung her head saucily for answer. In the meantime his Grace,
       talking coldly to Comyn, had been looking unutterable thunders at me.
       I thought of him awaking in the dew at Covent Garden, and could scarce
       keep from laughing in his face. Mr. Marmaduke squirmed to the front.
       "Morning, Richard," he said, with a marked cordiality. "Have you met the
       Duke of Chartersea? No! Your Grace, this is Mr. Richard Carvel. His
       family are dear friends of ours in the colonies."
       To my great surprise, the duke saluted me quite civilly. But I had the
       feeling of facing a treacherous bull which would gore me as soon as ever
       my back was turned. He was always putting me in mind of a bull, with his
       short neck and heavy, hunched shoulders,--and with the ugly tinge of red
       in the whites of his eyes.
       "Mr. Manners tells me you are to remain awhile in London, Mr. Carvel," he
       said, in his thick voice.
       I took his meaning instantly, and replied in kind.
       "Yes, your Grace, I have some business to attend to here."
       "Ah," he answered; "then I shall see you again."
       "Probably, sir," said I.
       His Lordship watched this thrust and parry with an ill-concealed delight.
       Dorothy's face was impassive, expressionless. As the duke turned to
       mount the stairs, he stumbled clumsily across a young man coming to pay
       his respects to Miss Manners, and his Grace went sprawling against the
       wall.
       "Confound you, sir!" he cried.
       For the ducal temper was no respecter of presences. Then a title was a
       title to those born lower, and the young man plainly had a vast honour
       for a coronet.
       "I beg your Grace's pardon," said he.
       "Who the deuce is he?" demanded the duke petulantly of Mr. Manners,
       thereby setting the poor little man all a-tremble.
       "Why, why,--" he replied, searching for his spyglass.
       For an instant Dolly's eyes shot scorn. Chartersea had clearly seen and
       heeded that signal before.
       "The gentleman is a friend of mine," she said.
       Tho' I were put out of the Garden of Eden as a consequence, I itched to
       have it out with his Grace then and there. I knew that I was bound to
       come into collision with him sooner or later. Such, indeed, was my
       mission in London. But Dorothy led the way upstairs, a spot of colour
       burning each of her cheeks. The stream of guests had been arrested until
       the hall was packed, and the curious were peering over the rail above.
       "Lord, wasn't she superb!" exclaimed Comyn, exultingly, as we followed.
       In the drawing-room the buzzing about the card tables was hushed a moment
       as she went in. But I soon lost sight of her, thanks to Comyn. He drew
       me on from group to group, and I was duly presented to a score of Lady
       So-and-sos and honourable misses, most of whom had titles, but little
       else. Mammas searched their memories, and suddenly discovered that they
       had heard their parents speak of my grandfather. But, as it was a fair
       presumption that most colonial gentlemen made a visit home at least once
       in their lives, I did not allow the dust to get into my eyes. I was
       invited to dinners, and fairly showered with invitations to balls and
       drums and garden parties. I was twitted about the Beauty, most often
       with only a thin coating of amiability covering the spite of the remark.
       In short, if my head had not been so heavily laden with other matters, it
       might well have become light under the strain. Had I been ambitious to
       enter the arena I should have had but little trouble, since eligibility
       then might be reduced to guineas and another element not moral. I was
       the only heir of one of the richest men in the colony, vouched for by the
       Manners and taken up by Mr. Fox and my Lord Comyn. Inquiries are not
       pushed farther. I could not help seeing the hardness of it all, or
       refrain from contrasting my situation with that of the penniless outcast
       I had been but a little time before. The gilded rooms, the hundred
       yellow candles multiplied by the mirrors, the powder, the perfume,
       the jewels,--all put me in mind of the poor devils I had left wasting
       away their lives in Castle Yard. They, too, had had their times of
       prosperity, their friends who had faded with the first waning of fortune.
       Some of them had known what it was to be fawned over. And how many of
       these careless, flitting men of fashion I looked upon could feel the
       ground firm beneath their feet; or could say with certainty what a change
       of ministers, or one wild night at White's or Almack's, would bring
       forth? Verily, one must have seen the under side of life to know the
       upper!
       Presently I was sought out by Mr. Topham Beauclerk, who had heard of the
       episode below and wished to hear more. He swore at the duke.
       "He will be run through some day, and serve him jolly right," said he.
       "Bet you twenty pounds Charles Fox does it! His Grace knows he has the
       courage to fight him." The courage!" I repeated.
       "Yes. Angelo says the duke has diabolical skill. And then he won't
       fight fair. He killed young Atwater on a foul, you know. Slipped on
       the wet grass, and Chartersea had him pinned before he caught his guard.
       But there is Lady Di a-calling, a-calling."
       "Do all the women cheat in America too?" asked Topham, as we approached.
       I thought of my Aunt Caroline, and laughed.
       "Some," I answered.
       "They will game, d--n 'em," said Topham, as tho' he had never gamed in
       his life. "And they will cheat, till a man has to close his eyes to
       keep from seeing their pretty hands. And they will cry, egad, oh so
       touchingly, if the luck goes against them in spite of it all. Only last
       week I had to forgive Mrs Farnham an hundred guineas. She said she'd
       lost her pin-money twice over, and was like to have wept her eyes out."
       Thus primed in Topham's frank terms, I knew what to expect. And I found
       to my amusement he had not overrun the truth. I lost like a stoic, saw
       nothing, and discovered the straight road to popularity.
       "The dear things expect us to make it up at the clubs," whispered he.
       I discovered how he had fallen in love with his wife, Lady Diana, and
       pitied poor Bolingbroke heartily for having lost her. She was then in
       her prime,--a beauty, a wit, and a great lady, with a dash of the
       humanities about her that brought both men and women to her feet.
       "You must come to see me, Mr. Carvel," said she. "I wish to talk to you
       of Dorothy."
       "Your Ladyship believes me versed in no other subject?" I asked.
       "None other worth the mention," she replied instantly; "Topham tells me
       you can talk horses, and that mystery of mysteries, American politics.
       But look at Miss Manners Dow. I'll warrant she is making Sir Charles see
       to his laurels, and young Stavordale is struck dumb."
       I looked up quickly and beheld Dolly surrounded by a circle of admirers.
       "Mark the shot strike!" Lady Di continued, between the deals; "that time
       Chartersea went down. I fancy he is bowled over rather often," she said
       slyly. "What a brute it is. And they say that that little woman she has
       for a father imagines a union with the duke will redound to his glory."
       "They say," remarked Mrs. Meynel, sitting next me, "that the duke has
       thumbscrews of some kind on Mr. Manners."
       "Miss Manners is able to take care of herself," said Topham.
       "'On dit', that she has already refused as many dukes as did her Grace of
       Argyle," said Mrs. Meynel.
       I had lost track of the cards, and knew I was losing prodigiously. But
       my eyes went back again and again to the group by the doorway, where
       Dolly was holding court and dispensing justice, and perchance injustice.
       The circle increased. Ribands, generals whose chests were covered with
       medals of valour, French noblemen, and foreign ambassadors stopped for a
       word with the Beauty and passed on their way, some smiling, some
       reflecting, to make room for others. I overheard from the neighbouring
       tables a spiteful protest that a young upstart from the colonies should
       turn Lady Tankerville's drum into a levee. My ears tingled as I
       listened. But not a feathered parrot in the carping lot of them could
       deny that Miss Manners had beauty and wit enough to keep them all at bay.
       Hers was not an English beauty: every line of her face and pose of her
       body proclaimed her of that noble type of Maryland women, distinctly
       American, over which many Englishmen before and since have lost their
       heads and hearts.
       "Egad!" exclaimed Mr. Storer, who was looking on; "she's already
       defeated some of the Treasury Bench, and bless me if she isn't rating
       North himself."
       Half the heads in the room were turned toward Miss Manners, who was
       exchanging jokes with the Prime Minister of Great Britain. I saw a
       corpulent man, ludicrously like the King's pictures, with bulging gray
       eyes that seemed to take in nothing. And this was North, upon whose
       conduct with the King depended the fate of our America. Good-natured
       he was, and his laziness was painfully apparent. He had the reputation
       of going to sleep standing, like a horse.
       "But the Beauty contrives to keep him awake," said Storer.
       "If you stay among us, Mr. Carvel," said Topham, "she will get you a
       commissionership for the asking."
       "Look," cried Lady Di, "there comes Mr. Fox, the precocious, the
       irresistible. Were he in the Bible, we should read of him passing the
       time of day with King Solomon."
       "Or instructing Daniel in the art of lion-taming," put in Mrs. Meynel.
       There was Mr. Fox in truth, and the Beauty's face lighted up at sight of
       him. And presently, when Lord North had made his bow and passed on, he
       was seen to lead her out of the room, leaving her circle to go to pieces,
       like an empire without a head. _
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Foreword
VOLUME 1
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER I. Lionel Carvel, of Carvel Hall
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER II. Some Memories of Childhood
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER III. Caught by the Tide
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER IV. Grafton would heal an Old Breach
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER V. "If Ladies be but Young and Fair"
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VI. I first suffer for the Cause
   VOLUME 1 - CHAPTER VII. Grafton has his Chance
VOLUME 2
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER VIII. Over the Wall
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER IX. Under False Colours
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER X. The Red in the Carvel Blood
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XI. A Festival and a Parting
   VOLUME 2 - CHAPTER XII. News from a Far Country
VOLUME 3
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIII. Mr. Allen shows his Hand
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XIV. The Volte Coupe
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XV. Of which the Rector has the Worst
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVI. In which Some Things are made Clear
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVII. South River
   VOLUME 3 - CHAPTER XVIII. The Black Moll.
VOLUME 4
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XIX. A Man of Destiny
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XX. A Sad Home-coming
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXI. The Gardener's Cottage
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXII. On the Road
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIII. London Town
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXIV. Castle Yard
   VOLUME 4 - CHAPTER XXV. The Rescue
VOLUME 5
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVI. The Part Horatio played
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVII. In which I am sore tempted
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXVIII. Arlington Street
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXIX. I meet a very Great Young Man
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXX. A Conspiracy
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXI. "Upstairs into the World"
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXII. Lady Tankerville's Drum-major
   VOLUME 5 - CHAPTER XXXIII. Drury Lane
VOLUME 6
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIV. His Grace makes Advances
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXV. In which my Lord Baltimore appears .
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVI. A Glimpse of Mr. Garrick
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVII. The Serpentine
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXVIII. In which I am roundly brought to task
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XXXIX. Holland House
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XL. Vauxhall
   VOLUME 6 - CHAPTER XLI. The Wilderness
VOLUME 7
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLII. My Friends are proven
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIII. Annapolis once more
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIV. Noblesse Oblige
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLV. The House of Memories
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVI. Gordon's Pride
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVII. Visitors
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLVIII. Multum in Parvo
   VOLUME 7 - CHAPTER XLIX. Liberty loses a Friend
VOLUME 8
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER L. Farewell to Gordon's
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LI. How an Idle Prophecy came to pass
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LII. How the Gardener's Son fought the Serapis
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIII. In which I make Some Discoveries
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LIV. More Discoveries.
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LV. The Love of a Maid for a Man
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVI. How Good came out of Evil
   VOLUME 8 - CHAPTER LVII. I come to my Own again
   Afterward