Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- General Editors’ Preface
- General Chronology of James’s Life and Writings
- Introduction
- Textual Introduction
- Chronology of Composition and Production
- Bibliography
- The Outcry
- Book First
- Book Second
- Book Third
- Glossary of Foreign Words and Phrases
- Notes
- Textual Variants
- Emendations
- Appendices
III
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 April 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations
- General Editors’ Preface
- General Chronology of James’s Life and Writings
- Introduction
- Textual Introduction
- Chronology of Composition and Production
- Bibliography
- The Outcry
- Book First
- Book Second
- Book Third
- Glossary of Foreign Words and Phrases
- Notes
- Textual Variants
- Emendations
- Appendices
Summary
“HE can't bear to do it, poor man!” Lady Sandgate ruefully remarked to her remaining guest after Lord John had, under extreme pressure, dashed out to Bond Street.
“I dare say not!”—Lord Theign, flushed with the felicity of selfexpression, made little of that. “But he goes too far, you see, and it clears the air—pouah! Now therefore”—and he glanced at the clock—“I must go to Kitty.”
“Kitty—with what Kitty wants,” Lady Sandgate opined—“won't thank you for that!”
“She never thanks me for anything”—and the fact of his resignation clearly added here to his bitterness. “So it's no great loss!”
“Won't you at any rate,” his hostess asked, “wait for Bender?”
His lordship cast it to the winds. “What have I to do with him now?”
“Why surely if he’ll accept your own price——!”
Lord Theign thought—he wondered; and then as if fairly amused at himself: “Hanged if I know what is my own price!” After which he went for his hat. “But there's one thing,” he remembered as he came back with it: “where's my too, too unnatural daughter?”
“If you mean Grace and really want her I’ll send and find out.”
“Not now”—he bethought himself. “But does she see that chatterbox?”
“Mr. Crimble? Yes, she sees him.”
He kept his eyes on her. “Then how far has it gone?”
Lady Sandgate overcame an embarrassment. “Well, not even yet, I think, so far as they’d like.”
“They’d ‘like’—heaven save the mark!—to marry?”
“I suspect them of it. What line, if it should come to that,” she asked, “would you then take?”
He was perfectly prompt. “The line that for Grace it's simply ignoble.”
The force of her deprecation of such language was qualified by tact. “Ah, darling, as dreadful as that?”
He could but view the possibility with dark resentment. “It lets us so down—from what we’ve always been and done; so down, down, down that I’m amazed you don't feel it!”
“Oh, I feel there's still plenty to keep you up!” she soothingly laughed.
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- Information
- The Outcry , pp. 138 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016