Читаем The Quiet Gentleman полностью

Meanwhile, Sir Thomas, having ushered the Earl into one of his saloons and furnished him with a comfortable chair, and a glass of Madeira, had arrived at a more precise understanding of the service which had been rendered to his daughter. He chuckled a good deal over it, rubbing his hands together, and ejaculating: "Cow-handed little puss! I shall roast her finely for this, I can tell you! All's well that ends well—though I'll wager her Mama will have something to say to her giving her groom the slip! But there! she is our only chick, my lord, and we don't care to be too strict, and that's the truth! Yes, the Almighty never saw fit to give us another, and though I shan't deny we did wish for a son—for there will be no one to inherit the baronetcy when I'm gone, you know—it was not to be, and, damme, we wouldn't exchange our naughty puss for all the sons in creation!"

Gervase said what was proper, and sipped his wine, watching Sir Thomas, as he bustled about, casting another log on to the fire, altering the position of a screen to exclude a possible draught, tugging at the bell-rope to summon a servant to bring in the ratafia-wine for Miss Marianne. He was a stout little man, with a shrewd pair of eyes set in a round face whose original ruddy complexion had been much impaired by a tropical climate. He was dressed without much pretension to fashion in a blue coat and buckskin breeches, but he wore a large ruby-pin in his neckcloth, and another set in a ring upon his finger, so that he was clearly a person of affluence, if not of taste. The Earl was at a loss to decide from what order of society he had sprung, for although the cast of his countenance was aristocratic, with its aquiline nose, and finely-moulded lips, and his voice that of a well-bred man, his manners lacked polish, and he had a rough, colloquial way of expressing himself. His wife, on the other hand, had the appearance and the manners of a gentlewoman, and the style in which his house had been furnished was as elegant as it was expensive. That he had at some period during his lifetime visited the East was indicated by various specimens of oriental art which were scattered about the room. He saw the Earl glancing at the ornaments on the mantelshelf, and said: "Ay, you are looking at my ivories, my lord. I bought them for the most part in Calcutta, and a pretty sum they cost me, I can tell you! You won't find any finer, for although I don't know much about art, I won't buy trumpery, and I'm a hard man to cheat."

"You have resided in India, sir?"

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